Showing posts with label Birthday Bash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Birthday Bash. Show all posts

Birthday Bash: An Open Letter to Indie Authors

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  Wow! This past week has been amazing. Thank you so much to everyone who has helped me celebrate my birthday. The two giveaways will be open through the first week of September, so hop over and enter if you haven't already. I want to give a huge thank you to the authors who wrote guest posts for this event. You guys are rock stars!


Dear Indie Authors,

  I can still remember the first Indie book that I bought. It was Tracey Ward's Writing on the Wall. After holding out for years, I had finally given in and put the Kindle app on my phone to see what the fuss was about. Late at night, I was scrolling through pages of books and hoping that some would leap out to me to help me fight off insomnia. Whenever I saw Writing on the Wall, I second guessed it because zombies. I've never been a fan. But less than a day later, Tracey Ward had sold me on zombies and Indie authors. I was hooked.

  All of you are an immense inspiration. Far too many people think that traditional publishing is the only viable and legit way to be an author. How wrong they are. Every single one of you who give the middle finger to common perceptions and do it your own way are what makes me happy to be a reader and a book blogger.

  My entire life, I have struggled with anxiety and depression. Reading has always been my escape from the panic attacks and endless stream of thoughts. For a few years, depression took my passion away. I was so uninterested in reading. It was horrible. But all of the changed whenever I discovered the world of Indie authors. You guys have given me my love for reading back. You guys make me excited to sit down with my Kindle. You guys make it okay for me to spend a day in bed whenever I just need a break. You guys mean more to me than you know.

  So, thank you. Thank you for chasing your dreams. Thank you for giving me so many diverse worlds to escape to. Thank you for never giving up. Thank you for giving me characters that go against the norms and seem like real people. Thank you for giving me characters that feel like lifelong friends. Thank you for being not only an author but a friend. Thank you for sacrificing your own time to write these books. Please, don't ever stop.

Kittens and hugs,
 Kristen

Birthday Bash: Tracey Ward Guest Post

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  Right. So. I'm a fangirl for a lot of things. But one Indie author will be forever at the top of my fangirling list. And that's none other than Tracey Ward. She was the very first Indie author that I ever found. She's entirely responsible for my Indie author obsession. Whenever she agreed to write this guest post, I may or may not have done some weird jig dance freak out. The cat wasn't impressed. See, I'm rambling gushing. I'll shut up and let you guys read why Tracey Ward is my spirit animal!

Insta-love and How It Eats My Soul
by Tracey Ward
You know that Oscar Mayer commercial where the family is sitting around watching a movie together and there's a voice over that proclaims, "I don't care if you're a vampire! I love you!" and the dad buries his face into a pillow to scream until his lungs are empty and his throat is raw with rage?

That's me when I read most romances out there. It's actually the reason I finally felt the push to write a romance of my own. I'd read so much cookie cutter formulaic crap that I couldn't take it anymore. I wanted to put out something real.

Granted, I write mostly Sci Fi and none of it is remotely real, but i like to think that the love is. That the romance is the true thing that grounds the reader and gives them a genuine connection to an impossible world. And I feel like believing a bad boy with a broken past meeting an "ordinary" girl and finding her extraordinary (life changing, earth shattering, world view altering kind of extraordinary) within two minutes and promptly centering his world, heart, body, and soul around her is a bigger leap of faith than zombies and teleportation. Chill with her at an airport when she's sunburned, hungover, her flight is delayed overnight, her cell phone is dead, and the Starbucks is closed. That's a true color situation right there, and depending on how she handles it, you might want to rethink your instant eternal undying love.

I'm not saying love can't happen quickly. You shouldn't have to read a War and Peace sized tome to get to the good stuff, but you gotta work for it a little bit! I met and married my husband within 13 months. It's pretty quick but when you know, you know. But no one knows in 2 days. No one. The newness needs to wear off. You have to stop forgiving their flaws and accepting them instead. And if you can't accept them, you need to bounce. If it annoys you in the first three months, it will land you as the subject matter on CSI in ten years. That's a romance no one wants to read.

Personally, I want to earn it. I want to wait for it and anticipate it eagerly like it's Christmas morning. I want to see the feelings build and the characters grow into them. I want a journey. I want that payoff. I want to smile and sigh and say, "Finally!" when the people I've become invested in make that leap into love.

But just in case, I always keep a pillow nearby...

I was born in Eugene, Oregon and studied English Literature at the University of Oregon (Go Ducks!) It was there that I discovered why Latin is a dead language and that being an English teacher was not actually what I wanted to do with my life.

My husband, my son and my 80lbs pitbull who thinks he's a lapdog are my world.

Birthday Bash: Amy Dunne Guest Post

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  The guest post today is from Amy Dunne. It's one that I have been anticipating all week. LGBTQI is something that is close to my heart and that I am very passionate about. I'm constantly trying to diversify my reading list by adding LGBTQI literature to it. The world needs more of it and more authors like Amy Dunne. Whenever I read this guest post for the first time, it brought tears to my eyes. I hope you enjoy this post as much as I did. And don't forget to head over to the kick-off post to enter to win a copy of Amy's book, Secret Lies.

Throughout my teenage years I read anything and everything I could get my hands on. I’ve always enjoyed reading, but it was more than reading for pleasure that was driving me. I was searching for something unknown, but I felt certain I’d recognise it as soon as I found it. And I did, in my early twenties.

I’d just graduated from university, returned to live with my parents, and my first serious relationship which happened to be with a woman, had ended badly. My Catholic family weren’t thrilled at my newly discovered sexuality and made it clear that this phase was over, and I should concentrate on the straight and narrow. The relationship with my ex hadn’t been a positive experience and as a result I’d lost some friends. I felt alone and depressed.

One night while buying books off the internet, I came across a section I honestly hadn’t seen before. Gay and lesbian fiction. It was like a bolt out of the blue. Excitement and nerves coursed through my veins, as I perused the lists of books. In my naivety, I was surprised and couldn’t believe how many books were available. I purchased one just to see what it was like. When it arrived, I searched my room for the perfect hideaway and decided I’d only read a few chapters. Seven hours later and totally sleep deprived, I realised I’d finally found what I was looking for.

All those years spent reading books I’d secretly been searching for something I could relate to. I wanted to feel represented in the pages and feel an affinity to a character. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve always enjoyed reading mainstream fiction and I still have certain favourite authors whose latest work I eagerly buy and read. But I found my reading experience was different when I started to feel more for the characters and stories. For instance, I’ve never been great with reading sex scenes. When I read one of these scenes in a mainstream heterosexual book (even before I fully accepted the fact I was a lesbian) I always feel...meh. It held no appeal whatsoever. When I read a sex scene in a lesbian fiction book, I blush, go bright read, skim the pages etc, but aside from by Catholic prudishness, it does invoke feelings and emotions. Reading about the attraction, flirtation, feelings, emotions, romance, and love between two women is something I can 100% relate to.

I also appreciate that these days most lesfic books have a happy ending. I know that sounds bizarre and some claim it’s not realistic, but I don’t want doom and gloom all the time. In the not so distant past most lesfic books ended with tragedy. The main protagonist/s would suddenly come to their senses and realise they weren’t really a lesbian and what they were doing was morally, ethically, socially, and religiously wrong, so they would find the error of their ways, marry a suitable man, produce children, miraculously embrace their inner domestic goddess, and become a pillar of their community. Those who didn’t embrace heterosexual life would often end up being diagnosed as mentally ill and deeply unhappy. In some cases, they might die or commit suicide. Not exactly the cheeriest of reading material.

Today, lesfic is growing from strength to strength. There’s a wide range of high quality fiction available from a variety of publishers and indie authors. If you want to read a lesfic novel about pirates, ghosts, vampires, werewolves, spies, zombies, the future, history, surviving in space, erotica, or a contemporary romance, there are lesbian books out there for you. Basically, there’s pretty much any genre you can think of. And I love the diversity of the stories and characters. There are books for everyone’s taste. My wife refuses to read anything weird—by weird, she means anything supernatural or out of the ordinary. She has yet to run out of lesfic reading material which shows how much fiction is out there. I still read anything and everything with the exception of erotica. I also tried my hand at writing lesfic.

After university I worked with vulnerable young people in care, and one day I asked one of the young people why they didn’t enjoy reading. They said the characters and stories were always about the popular and perfect people, and that wasn’t who they were. At that time, YA fiction was still new and sparse, and so it dawned on me that this person was right. I made up my mind to write a YA novel that showcased the strength and resilience that the young people I worked with showed on a daily basis.

My debut novel, Secret Lies is a classed as a YA story and was published by Bold Strokes Books in December 2013. It addresses the gritty themes of abuse and self-harm, but also explores everything that comes with experiencing first love and accepting sexuality. It’s had positive reviews and what I’ve found to be the case is that you don’t have to be a young adult to enjoy it. YA fiction is just another genre, not a reading age. YA fiction is huge today! I’m proud to say I enjoy reading it and I’m not alone.

I’ve had the pleasure of speaking to many readers about their thoughts on Secret Lies and their ages range from fifteen to seventy-five. At least half of those readers also identified as heterosexual, which goes to show you really don’t have to identify as LGBTQI to enjoy reading our books. All that matters is that there’s a good story.

So, if you’re looking for high quality stories and you’re open to the prospect of LGBTQI protagonists and relationships, there are a wealth of novels in a vast variety of genres just waiting for you to read. Enjoy!

Amy was raised in Derbyshire, England. She attended Keele University and graduated in 2007 with a BSc in philosophy and psychology. After graduating, she worked for a while with vulnerable young people. She's now concentrating on developing her writing. She's married to her best friend and lovely wife Lou. They share a love of Dolly Parton and live with their two gorgeous cats and very naughty dog. Amy loves to hear from her readers. You can find her at:

Birthday Bash: Kira Adams' Top Ten

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 Today I am so very excited to have someone that I consider not only a fabulous Indie author but a friend here for the birthday bash. A lot of times, I wonder how Indie authors manage to do what they do. Without the support of a large publishing house behind them, they often have to take the job of author, editor, publisher, and publicist by themselves. It's inspiring and mind-boggling. Krista Pakseresht, who writes as Kira Adams, shares some of the things she's learned as an Indie writer. Stick around for her Top Ten then head to the kick-off page to enter to win copies of her amazing books!

1. Beta readers are invaluable. One of the first things I did when I decided I wanted to write more seriously was join the site, Goodreads. There are hundreds of people on there who are interested in beta reading, and they all do it out of the kindness of their heart—asking for no monetary compensation. Each and every one of my books went through multiple rounds of beta readers who helped me address problems with the plot, flow, characterization, and even sometimes, spelling and grammar. I honestly believe if it were not for Goodreads and the beta readers help, I wouldn’t be the author I am today.

2. Where is the rush? I hastily made the decision to publish my first book after being fed up with my life in general—I would not recommend this. I missed minor formatting errors and settled for the story as it was even though I had inner doubts about it. Although thousands of readers were happy with the version that was published, I have already edited it once and will probably revise and update the published copies once more if I decide to delve back into the story. I also missed the opportunity to promote at all. Even though I have found book bloggers (and thank God for them), it is still very hard work. I would recommend taking your time to publish your novel.

This is the format I would follow if you are interested in self-publishing: Write the story, edit the story, have the story beta read, put the story away for a little bit of time to breathe while you begin something new, edit the story again, have it beta read one more time, edit it for the final time, format it for e-books and paperbacks, promote, promote, promote, publish.

3. Join online writing communities such as Wattpad, Figment, Authonomy, Scribophile, etc. Joining a site like Wattpad has been life-changing for me. It is a website that merges readers and aspiring writers with published authors and even agents sometimes. You are able to post your stories chapter by chapter and others have the opportunity to read, comment, and vote on your works as well as follow your profile and add your books to their libraries. There are also forums you can join that give advice on the ins and outs of the industry. A majority of the website is the younger generation, tweens and teens, however Wattpad is filled with aspiring writers and published authors of all backgrounds.

I joined the site in September 2013, and since then I have 645 followers, over 7000 votes, and upwards of 35,000 reads on some of my stories. Even though I have not and will not ever receive any monetary compensation from having my stories on Wattpad, I will be a lifer. I cannot tell you how much of a community it is and how supportive my followers have been for me as well as advice I’ve been given on improving my novels; I cannot say enough great things about Wattpad. I think I should be their mascot!

4. Your friends and family will come around. Don’t be offended if your friends and family don’t read your stories right away or even bother to buy them when they are released. Things to keep in mind, everyone has their own life and are busy living it—they will support you when they see the hard work. Also, factor in what genre you are writing in because not everyone will be interested in Young Adult or New Adult Romances.

5. If you have the opportunity to have a critiquing partner who will swap a few chapters at a time, TAKE IT. While beta readers can be helpful to no end, a critiquing partner can and will become passionate about your work; they will push you to write new chapters and even though they won’t go easy on you just because you’ve built a rapport, they will support you to no end.

6. Go with the flow. As much as I love outlines and have used them plenty of times in the past, I have always been a firm believer in writing what you feel is right in the moment. My stories with the biggest recognition have not been planned out, I believe that’s what kept the intensity building from start to finish. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying there is anything wrong with outlines, I am just saying if your gut is telling you to write something, don’t feel confined to your outline.

7. The ups and downs of Print-on-Demand. When I published my first two novels, I chose the website Createspace to help with the paperback copies I would be needing. I love how self-sufficient their website makes you feel and how quickly they can approve everything for publishing (within 24-48 hours).

Pros: Createspace is very easy to use and navigate.

Cons: The royalties are about 30% your book price, which in the grand scheme of things isn’t much.

8. You do not have to pay a fortune for a cover that could compete in the traditional publishing world, trust me. One of the best decisions I ever made was asking a peer on Wattpad to make my covers professionally for me; little did I know, she actually wanted to be a cover designer! I approached her and we worked out a 6-book deal for a VERY affordable price. She not only works with me to make sure I am satisfied in full, but she has a ridiculously fast turnaround. Sometimes it’s as quick as 24-hours. Her name is Emmy Logan and she is the creator of Cover Me Designs, do yourself a favor and check out some of her creations—you won’t regret it.

9. Find Book Bloggers who review self-published titles. Reach out but be respectful, some of them may agree to review your book even though it doesn’t interest them. Be content and satisfied with each one that that takes the time. They are essentially who is going to help create buzz and build an audience for upcoming titles.

10. If you do not want to deal with the hassle of formatting the eBook—DON’T. I’m not going to release her name in fear she may get too booked up for me to use her on future projects; but, I found a decent eBook formatter who gets it ready for both platforms, Epub and Mobi within a week or two for $20. Twenty dollars is nothing compared to the headaches and hours you’ll spend trying to get everything right.


  Krista Pakseresht has always been a dreamer. From the first time she opened her eyes. Creating worlds through words is one thing she is truly talented at. She specializes in Young adult/New adult romance, horror, action, fantasy, and non-fiction under the pen name Kira Adams. She is the author of the Infinite Love series, the Foundation series, the Darkness Falls series, and the Looking Glass series.

Birthday Bash: Brandi Kennedy Guest Post

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  Last month, I attended TNVAE. It was AWESOME. If you ever have the chance to go to a signing event near you, GO. The experience was surreal, amazing, and inspiring. At TNVAE, I got the chance to briefly meet Brandi Kennedy. She was such a sweetheart and had some of the best swag! I'm really excited to share her guest post today!

"How To (And How NOT To) Review A Book"
by Brandi Kennedy
  Hi, Pretty Little Pages readers! I'm Brandi Kennedy, author of the Kingsley Series, the Selkie Trilogy, and Fighting For Freedom. For those of you who've never heard of me, I'm a fairly fresh new indie author, specializing in romance but unable to stick to one solid genre. Due to my adventurous - or maybe ADHD - nature, I've touched the fringes of several genres, while still sticking with what I love ... the art of romance, the relativity of characters that feel real, the honesty of a love story we can believe. I write characters that pull your heartstrings, make you mad, bring you to tears, and drive you to slam the book shut - only to come back again later because you just can't go without knowing the rest of the story.

But I'm not here to talk about that. I'm here, first and foremost to wish Kristen a kick-ass birthday. And secondly, I've promised a guest post, and I try to always deliver. So today I want to tell you how to - and how NOT to - write a review.

Lately, I've seen the internet go a little crazy over several issues that all revolve around the value of a book review. I mean really, we authors seek out book reviews like a starving man searches for crumbs - because our careers are made and broken by the power of reader reviews. By the all-encompassing power of "word-of-mouth". So, what are the issues?

The first is a little thing that I tend to think of as "review bullying". There's a craze of authors who, in a desperate race to get to the top of the publishing world, encourage their street teams and other fans to go out and troll the internet, bashing other authors with bad reviews, regardless of whether they've actually read the book - or whether they actually liked it. Honestly, I don't really need to say a lot on this subject - we all know that it's wrong on all counts. On the part of the authors who take part in this sort of thing, it's selfish and greedy - and really just bad business to take advantage of reader loyalty in this way. And I feel that if you have to take someone else down in order to build yourself up at the cost of someone else's dreams ... it shows something much more shameful than a probable lack of solid talent. If you have to crush other people to get to the top because you already know that you can't shine on your own merit, that speaks terrible things for way more important things than your bestseller ranking.

But like I said before - there isn't a need to really expand on that. People who know it's wrong won't participate in it, and the people who don't know? THey won't be listening to me anyway.

There is another thing I've seen a lot of craze about though, and this one bothers me quite a lot. There's a lot of fuss in the literary world about reviews, both because authors need them, and because sometimes, authors hate them. A positive review has the power to pick an author's heart right out of his or her chest and send it on a high that no street drug could ever duplicate. And it lasts for days. But a negative review? A negative review can make us cry, can wrench at our hearts and send us into a depth of very real despair. A negative review can make us just give up; it can make us just pack right up and quit the game.

It doesn't have to, though.

I've read a lot of stuff about how "if you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all," and "never leave a review less than three stars," and "try to always be positive." But let's face it, some books just suck. Some books are improperly formatted and that distracts from the pleasure of the reading experience. Some books have grammar that would make a fifth-grader cringe. Some books are filled with spelling errors, punctuation errors. And sometimes, no matter how well-written a book may be, or how perfectly polished, or how incredibly spot-on in every way ... it just wasn't YOUR kind of book.

And let me let you in on a little secret: if you thought the book sucked, YOU SHOULD SAY SO. Sure, you can say it nicely, because, "Man, this book sucked! The author is an idiot who should just stop wasting oxygen!" is pretty hurtful and not even a little bit constructive. But you could say, "This book was well-done but not for me," or "This book might have been great with better editing/formatting/characters/etc." The point of a review is not to sugarcoat every single thing you read until every book on the planet is a solid happy five stars - at that point, those five stars become meaningless anyway. No, a review is your way of speaking out and telling other customers about your experience, while also telling your author what they can do better next time. If you're going to leave a review - and you really, really should - you owe that author gentle and constructive honesty. Even if it's going to be a 1-star dose of gentle and constructive honesty. To that end, I'd like to offer my favorite four "Do"s and "Don't"s of a Good Book Review.

DO:

  • List things you liked about the book. Talk about the character you liked best, the way the author paints a scene for you, the dialogue of the characters, the realism of the story, etc.
  • Mention things that bothered you. Offer constructive and kindly spoken criticism about things that could be improved in the author's future works. This is where to gently mention formatting/grammar/timeline/plot/character/etc. errors that popped out at you and distracted from your reading experience. Feel free to gently include your thoughts on the cover and the blurb too, because we as authors can't fix what we don't realize is wrong.
  • Tell the author how to do better or catch your eye more definitively next time. "I might have give more stars if ..." is not necessarily a bad thing to write, so long as it's written kindly.
  • BE KIND. While constructive criticism is a GREAT tool for writers off all kinds, please remember that your words DO have power. Use that power responsibly - because otherwise, Karma is going to kick your ass, and you'll deserve it.


DON'T:

  • Bash the author personally in a review. His or her personal lifestyle is not on trial and has nothing to do with the book itself. You should be reviewing the book as a consumer purchase, not the author as a person.
  • Be mean just for the sake of being mean. If you didn't like the book, you can say so without being purposely hurtful.
  • Go on a tangent. Talk about the one book that the review is about - the good, the bad, and the ugly, but keep your review pointed and concise as much as possible.
  • Link to or advertise another book in your review. That's just bad behavior. Seriously, you should know better.


And there you have it, my top four "Do"s and "Don't"s of a Good Book Review. For more information about where you can find and gently review my books, and to watch for an upcoming article about how an author can stand up and take reviews with poise and courage, please explore my website, AuthorBrandiKennedy.blogspot.com.

Brandi Kennedy is a freelance writer, novelist and poet. A woman of varied interests, she loves photography, music of all kinds, knitting, crochet, and of course, mothering her two young daughters. Currently, she finds her home in the heart of Knoxville, Tennessee, among the mountains and the members of her extended family.

Birthday Bash: Anna McCormally Dream Cast

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  I am completely obsessed with dream casts! I love hunting down the perfect face that I envision for my favorite characters. What else I love? Whenever authors make their own dream casts! Whenever I read, I always see the book like a movie playing out in my mind. If I can put a face to the characters in my mind, it makes the experience that much more enjoyable. Today, I'm really excited to have Anna McCormally here to give us her dream cast for The Six Days. Don't forget to visit the Birthday Bash Kick-Off post to enter for a chance to win copies of The Six Days.

  I was so flattered when Kristen asked me to be part of her birthday celebration...and so excited when she suggested that I do a dream cast for The Six Days!

Giant Squid Books, which put out The Six Days last April, is a small, brand-new company (thanks again Kristen for helping us spread the word!) and Hollywood is not exactly breaking down my door trying to get the rights to the movie version. Although--if there ARE any Hollywood producers reading--I have a screenplay and I’m willing to negotiate!

For now, if a book will do it for you, good luck in The Six Days giveaway that Kristen is hosting! Giant Squid Books is giving away a paperback and two ebooks. I hope you win and I hope you love the book.

THE BEST FRIENDS
Jamie and Nia, the double protagonists of the book, have been best friends for as long as they can remember--a friendship challenged in The Six Days by the revelation of long-kept secrets.

Dream casting: Matt Lanter as Jamie Carpenter 
Jamie is the main character of The Six Days. He’s not very heroic. Actually, he’s kind of a mess. He’s seventeen, bad at school, and the book opens with him sleeping through his alarm after being grounded for breaking someone’s nose in a fist fight.

Dream casting: Alexia Fast as Nia Jacobs 
Nia is Jamie’s best friend. She grounds him. All I can say about these two is: they’d do anything for each other. But the book is about them growing apart.

“Nia arrived with her rose-gold hair a tangled mane around her face. In her cutoff overalls with the brass buckles fastened slightly askew over a white t-shirt and the cinnamon sprinkling of freckles across her nose, she was strangely, oddly bright against the flickering fluorescent light of the store. Nia was always more real than everything else around.”


THE CARPENTER FAMILY
The Six Days is ultimately the story of a family, with the three Carpenter brothers at its heart. When the youngest brother, Danny, is kidnapped at the beginning of the book by a witch who holds him ransom for a family secret (spoilers: MAGIC) Jamie and Cal immediately set out to rescue him.

Dream casting: Joshua Bowman as Cal Carpenter 
Cal is one of my favorite characters. He starts as kind of a square and ends as the sweetest guy you’ve ever met. He suffers a lot in the story, because he cares about his brothers and falls in love and gets his heart smashed into a billion pieces more than once. But even when he’s suffering (and even when he’s kind of pathetic), Cal is never cruel. Simply put: Cal is your best friend’s big brother, the one who’s always quietly looking out for you.
Dream casting: Jan Uczkowski as Danny Carpenter
It’s Danny’s kidnapping that is the catalyst for the story--because taking care of their little brother is the only thing Jamie and Cal can agree on. But Danny, who’s the youngest and most good-natured of his brothers.

“Of the Carpenter boys, Danny was the one who remembered their mother the least and resembled her the most: blond and blue-eyed with a tendency to turn pink in the sun. The most defining feature of Danny’s appearance, however, was not inherited: the curling shiny scar that ran up his right arm all the way up to his neck, from wrist to throat, the skin there cracked and shiny and tight. The scar was another thing that had happened the night their mother left; it was another thing none of them could really remember, and another thing they did not talk about.”


Dream casting: Katee Sackhoff as Rachael 
Rachael (Carpenter), the long-missing mother, shows up in The Six Days mostly in flashbacks and dreams, preserved as the badass she was when her sons were born. She battled her whole life to have it all--to be a powerful witch and a loving mother and a girl deeply in love with her husband. She’s not in the book very much...but her legacy is the catalyst for the story and when Cal, Jamie and Danny learn what she left them, it changes their lives forever.
Dream casting: Edward Norton as Thomas Carpenter 
Thomas Carpenter is Jamie, Cal and Danny’s father. He fell in love with a witch and when she left him to return to the magical world, he lost the love of his life and was left with three sons and a hatred of anything magic.

“Thomas Carpenter was not an old man; he was not yet fifty. But in appearance he was aged beyond his years: his hair, the same dark shade as Jamie and Cal’s, was graying around the temples and his forehead was lined with the troubles of a much older man. If he had been a kind person, people might have pitied him, abandoned by his wife with three sons to raise—but Thomas Carpenter had made it clear that he preferred to suffer in solitude.”


THE QUEEN'S COURT
Dream casting: Lorraine Toussaint as Queen Io
Queen Io is kind of a badass. She’s ruled Nahar, the Queendom of the humans in Emanu, for fifty years. She defends the weak and champions the Old Magic over the flashy magic of the witches, who think humans are there to be ruled over.
Dream casting: Zoe Kravitz as Sadia
Sadia is a princess, but for her being royal has mostly meant hard work and anxiety. When we meet her she’s about to take over a tumult-ridden Queendom from her mother--and she’s not sure she can do it. Another one of my favorite characters--I think I relate to self-doubt, and the challenge of learning to be fearless in the face of failure.

“She was one of the tiniest people Jamie had ever seen. Like the Queen she was dark-skinned but where age had whitened Io’s hair this girl had inky black curls caught back simply at the base of her neck. She wore white, which was stark against her skin; she stood with her hands clasped behind her back, the sharp edge of her collarbone like a shard of shattered dark china.”


Dream casting: Braeden Baade as Rowan
What can I even say about Rowan? He swoops in to save Cal, Jamie and Nia and deliver them safely to Io. But he’s not what he seems. Are his chiseled jaw, rippling muscles, and charming personality a facade? Is it all a bluff? Is it a double bluff? Whose side is he on, anyway? And who gets to make out with him? These are the questions we ask when we think about Rowan and look at Braeden Baade at the same time. Oof. I’m feeling feisty. We better move on.




THE WITCHES
Dream casting: Scarlett Johansson as Rebecca
You have villains...and then you have Rebecca. Her mother was killed in front of her when she was just a kid and she’s spent her whole life alone, thinking about nothing but getting revenge on the person responsible--so it’s not a big surprise that she’s a little crazy. You almost have to admire her a little bit.
Dream casting: Jessica Chastain as Kyrie
Maybe Rebecca is misunderstood...but no matter how you look at it, Kyrie is the true villain of the story. She’s the second most powerful witch in the world of witches, and she got there, basically, by betraying her best friend. She has ideas about witches are supposed to be like and she doesn’t care for humans.

“Kyrie was dressed richly from head to toe in wine red and gold in a robe that was fastened in the middle with a golden belt inlaid with jewels, with sleeves that fell and draped over themselves in rich layers all the way down to the floor. There were rings on every one of her fingers and around her neck a strange piece of jewelry: a small golden bottle, worn on a long chain. Her skin was creamy, her hair a rich dark red; her nails were long and sharpened to points, and they were painted gold. Her lips and her eyelids were gold as well and black paint around her eyes sharpened to points at the corners like cats’ eyes, the kohl stark against the silver of her eyes.
Kyrie was so beautiful that she might have been carved from stone: elegant, and timeless, cold. She was so terribly perfect that it almost hurt to look at her; but at the same time, there was something familiar about her that tugged at Jamie, something he couldn’t quite place…”


Dream casting: Sean Connery as Venn
The head of the Council of witches, Venn is calm and less showy than Kyrie, but just as dangerous. He doesn’t play a huge role in the book...but this is my dream cast, and I really wanted Sean Connery!







That’s about it. Happy birthday, Kristen, and thanks for the opportunity to gush about my characters on your blog!

Birthday Bash: Karen Gordon Guest Post

Click the banner to go to the kick-off post with two huge giveaways!
  I am so excited to share this guest post by Karen Gordon, author of Burnouts, Geeks, and Jesus Freaks: A Love Story. Whenever I read this guest post, it made me tear up. Karen really struck a nerve with why I support Indie authors. Thank you for the kind words, Karen. You are a rock star! Don't forget to visit the Birthday Bash Kick-Off post to enter the giveaways for a chance to win a copy of Burnouts, Geeks, and Jesus Freaks: A Love Story.

  Writing is a lonely business. Self-publishing is a lonely business. When I had dreams of being a writer, those dreams always included lunches with my editor or agent to discuss my latest work. I would get to wear a super-cool, artsy outfit and have my lunch paid for at some uber-cool, trendy restaurant. (I need to stop re-watching Something’s Gotta Give.)

  Writing doesn’t include those lunches, or Diane Keaton’s XL cottage on the beach, but it does include a lot of great things I hadn’t counted on.

  Until I published my first book there is no way I could have understood the high that comes from connecting with a reader. When someone loves your characters and your story as much as you do … there is a magical feeling that comes close to hanging with a best friend, sipping cocktails, sharing memories. Every good review (and even some of the mediocre ones) gives you this high. I can float around for at least two, maybe three days, on that connection.

  Then there’s Kristen. She got me, she really, really got me. But let me back up, because before she connected with me through my novel, she had to be one of the brave, kind souls who agreed to give a first-time Indie author a chance. I sent out over a hundred review requests and I only sent those to the reviewers who welcomed Indie published books. Indie is a growing trend, but not everyone is on board yet. Kristen is out in front of the pack, not only giving Indie authors a chance, but also really getting behind the Indie movement and helping to promote self-publishers in any way she can. (I was one of her first Pretty Little Indies to be interviewed – a squeee-with-delight thrill if there ever was one.)

  I am so grateful there is a Kristen. I’m grateful there is someone who not only likes my writing but supports the fledgling, frenetically-changing industry I work in.

  I’m writing my second novel now. Some days (like today) I sail through writing a chapter then read it back to myself and fist pump the air because I feel like I nailed it. On days like today I can’t wait to share this novel with Kristen and the others I’ve connected with. Other days, I when I read back what I have written it sounds more like a jumble of disconnected sentence fragments. It would be easy to get discouraged and throw in the towel when that happens. But I don’t, because those same reviewers have told me, over and over, that they want to read this story, the sequel to my first one. So I go back and rewrite, refocus, rework the weak parts because I don’t want to let them down.

  There’s a little Indie bookstore where I live in Memphis, TN. It’s called Burke’s Books. It’s a place where mega-selling author John Grisham does a book signing for every book he releases. Because when he released his first one, and no one had heard of him, they gave him a chance.

  I still dream of being a writer – specifically a successful writer. I dream of book signings and large cottages by the sea financed with my books sales. And I dream of reviews of my newest mega-seller on Pretty Little Pages that start with … “I’ve supported this author from the beginning.”

  Karen Gordon was born and raised in the suburban paradise of St. Charles, MO, on the outskirts of St. Louis. She earned a B.S. in English from the University of Central Missouri (BS being the operative term) and a M.A. in Media Communications from Webster University, where she graduated in a hot pink mortar board because she didn’t like the school colors.

  She currently resides in Olive Branch, MS (formerly Cow Pen) on the outskirts of Memphis, TN with her 2.5 super-smart kids, and an amazingly-funny, cute, geeky husband.

  When not writing, she is a stay-at-home mom (chick in charge) and part-time teacher. Any down time is spent reading, catching up with friends and obsessively worrying about every little thing.

  Burnouts, Geeks and Jesus Freaks: a love story is her debut novel. She is now frantically trying to recall her college years to write the sequel, Popstars, Friends and Lovers.

Kristen's Indie Author Birthday Bash Kick-Off


  Hey, y'all! Today is the day of my glorious escape from the womb. And since this past year has been filled with discovering Indie authors and their amazing books, I wanted to celebrate with some of my favorite Indie authors. Grab a chair and relax; we have an entire week full of giveaways, guest posts, and dream casts for you!

Schedule
Wednesday, 20th: Kira Adams Guest Post
Thursday, 21st: Amy Dunne Guest Post
Friday, 22nd: Tracey Ward Guest Post

Authors Participating

Giveaways
International Giveaway
One grand prize winner will receive an ebook copy of every book donated.
Second place winners will receive one ebook or prize each.

US Only Giveaway
One winner per prize.
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