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Archives for September 2012

Melanie Toye

September 28, 2012 2 Comments

About author & freelance writer, Melanie Toye:  Melanie Toye aims to inspire people through writing and help motivate readers to chase their own dreams. The love for writing has always co-existed in Melanie’s life through writing letters, creating play scripts to her found dream career as a story-teller. With an inspirational blog, frequent freelance writing gigs and Melanie’s first novel release, Entice Me, she is on her way to achieving her dream career as a writer. As well as spurring on all those around her to chase their own dreams.

Interview with Melanie

People would describe you as…?  Positive, go getter, gentle

Describe what the writing/editing/publishing was like for you:  Lengthy. Entice Me was first demolished when my computer crashed. Starting from scratch I rewrote Entice Me better than the original. Then I spent one and half years applying to publishers. Discovered self-publishing and all fell into place once I decided to travel down this path.

Where did you get the idea for your book, Entice Me?  Mainly I want to convey how easy it is for people to get stuck in their daily unfulfilling lives without taking the time to follow their true hearts desires. I have spoken to many people who don’t like their jobs, yet they have been working there for decades. I wondered why they just didn’t change paths. I wanted to provide a message through Entice Me to chase your dreams and follow your own path.

Take us through your typical day:  Three days a week, I am at home looking after my young son and spending any free time writing. A typical day looks like this, my young son wakes me up. I cook breakfast for us, then clean the kitchen, put a load of washing on. Go outside with my son to play with our gorgeous German Shepherd dogs. We then might go to the park or go out somewhere. Morning tea time arrives and we sit outside and eat in the shade. I love the outdoors it refreshes me and my spirit. We play games, maybe paint or draw. Then around midday my son has a two hour nap. This is when I strap myself to the computer and write, type and social network and promote my work. When my son wakes up, we play or go to the park in the afternoon then I cook dinner for when my husband returns home. We spend the evening together. My son goes to sleep at a time I would call late. I spend a little more time with my hubby. Then back to the computer for my writing, typing and promoting as well as brainstorming. This usually lasts till about midnight when I decide to go to bed. It seems uncanny that now I have less time to write, yet before I had a child I would spend about the same time or even less time than I do now writing. For me, working within a time frame each day motivates me to get what I need done.

Have you always wanted to be a writer?  Good question. I have always loved to write and write stories but I never thought of it as my dream career or any type of career for me really. One day I started writing down characters and their personalities and then the locations. How they were connected with each other and words they spoke. Then scene’s built from that and I couldn’t stop writing. After a few years of writing Entice Me and now with a blog and freelance writing for businesses I have realised this is my dream career.

Do you have any guilty pleasures?  If so, what are they?  Wow, absolutely. Do you want to know all of them? Hmm … my guilty pleasures would include secretly divulging in chocolate while no one is looking, ice cream while watching a romantic chick flick, reading in bed while everyone is asleep, getting dressed up all girly when going out and eating peanut butter from the jar by the spoonful.

What author(s) would you like to meet?  Janet Evanovich, Stephen King, Marian Keyes, Esther Hicks, Robert Kiyosaki and Stephenie Meyer. Can you imagine the mix of these authors all attending a dinner event together? Interesting conversations would be said I can assure you.

Who inspires you?  There is an endless list … but really it comes down to people going out there and making their dreams come true. It pushes me to keep going and inspires me to never give up.

What’s your favorite word?  Right now … Entice Why? Every sentence I use I want to use entice as a word. For example, ‘for an enticing read, read Entice Me.’ A bit much perhaps? But I just cannot get the word out of my head.

Facebook or Twitter?  Facebook, I feel it’s more personable. Though my husband recently told me, ‘Facebook is old.’ Sigh.

What’s the best advice you’ve been given?  To not worry about what others may think.

Can you tell us about any of your upcoming projects?  Sure, I have a couple of non-fiction eBooks that I am working on to help other writers in non-costly ways to promote their novels as well as other topics. I am also in the midst of writing my second novel, which is fantasy themed, about a woman who lives two lives. The hardest part is choosing which book to work on first.

Additional comments by Melanie:  For anyone wanting to chase their dreams, an important point is to find what will motivate you to really dedicate your time and energy to go for it.

Guest Post, “How to Daydream”

Thank you Chick Lit Goddess for the invitation to guest post here. My name is Melanie Toye, author of chick lit fiction novel, Entice Me. I am a dream chaser and I will not give up until I achieve my destination and then I will create even bigger goals. So what about me? I hear you ask. You know dreaming is pretty easy, but for some it can be a daunting process. Let’s make it real simple.

Go outside, wait, print or write down the next steps first then go outside with your instructions. I love the outdoors, because it makes you focus in the moment, rather than taking in all the technology inside.

Once outside, lay down on a towel. Look up. See the beautiful sky and the trees close by. Breathe. Close your eyes holding the image of the glorious sky. Give thanks to yourself for taking the time out of your day to experience this moment. Feel the excitement of this new venture. Breathe.

Take a moment and think about what you really love to do in your spare time. Do you enjoying releasing your stress with a paintbrush and paint to your heart’s content? Do you find your passion is by creating new ideas when cooking meals for the family? Hold what you love to do in your mind. Then think about if you spent your whole day doing what you loved, how would that make you feel? What would your day look like? Who would you meet? Would this be a direction you would like to head towards?

Now open your eyes. Are you smiling? Life doesn’t have to be stressful or dramatic. Life can be enjoyed at every turn, if you let it. The more you listen to your inner voice the more your body and mind will be attuned your true heart’s desires. When opportunities arise you will sway automatically to what will get you closer to your destiny.

If I can give you a little magic to spur on your imagination then imagine what you can do when you give yourself the power to recreate your life to live how you want to live.

“Entice Me” by Melanie Toye

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**Contact Melanie Toye:

Melanie Toye

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Author Fan Page

Entice Me Fan Page

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Melanie Toye Tagged With: Books, Chick-Lit, Entice Me, Guest Interview, Guest Post, Melanie Toye

Toni Aleo

September 27, 2012 3 Comments

About Toni Aleo: My name is Toni Aleo! (and I’m a total dork!).  I am a wife, mother of two and a bulldog, and also a hopeless romantic.  I have been told I have anger issues, but I think it’s cause of my intense love for hockey!  I am the biggest Shea Weber fan ever, and can be found during hockey season with my nose pressed against the Bridgestone Arena’s glass, watching my Nashville Predators play!  When my nose isn’t pressed against the glass, I enjoy going to my husband and son’s hockey games, my daughter’s dance competition, hanging with my best friends, taking pictures, scrapbooking, and reading the latest romance novel.  I have a slight Disney and Harry Potter obsession, I love things that sparkle, I love the color pink, I might have been a Disney Princess in a past life…probably Belle, and did I mention I love hockey?

Interview with Toni

Describe your works in five sentences:  I have written an amazing hockey romance that I think people will love! Some are nervous because it is a hockey romance but it isn’t about the hockey, it’s about the romance. I write about real women, and men, with real problems. My books are not cookie cutter romances, they have serious topics and issues. I love my series and think you will too!

Tell us about your books?  So far there is three: Taking Shots, Trying to Score, and Empty Net. Each one follows the main leads which are trying to find love. The hockey players are hot and sexy, and the females are real, and not all perfect. Each story will make you smile, laugh out loud and even cry.

What is it about Shea Weber that makes your toes curl?  Oh lordy, don’t get me started. That man is just sex with a hockey stick…rawr.

As a busy mom and wife, how and when do you find time to write?  I have no clue. I was sitting the other day, trying to get the motivation to write Blue Lines and I said, how in the world did I write three books in a year in a half? Sheesh!

Which do you prefer, paper/hardback or eBooks?  Lately, ebooks, but the price of them are CRAZY! Omg, I do not think you should pay more than 5 bucks for an ebook, so I might have to go buy some since they are so expensive.

What is your favorite word?  Why?  Oh goodness. I doubt I can say that here so it starts with F and I say it a lot. I think it’s a sentence enhancer. Everything is so much for real when you say it. So I tend to drop the f bomb a lot. Not around my kids though! I’m a good mom! I promise!

Do you have any guilty pleasures?  If so, what are they?  Boy bands, and Disney. I have an issue but I can’t get enough!

Did you always want to be a writer?  You know, I think so. I think it has always been in me and I didn’t know. I am very wishy washy. I’ve wanted to be a lot of things, but this is sticking, and in a way I can be anything I want through my characters.

What is your favorite book you’ve written?  Why?  OH that is like asking which kid is my favorite! Lol. I don’t know, I love Taking Shots cause its my first, and Trying to Score has my heart cause its dirty and yummy, and then Empty Net is just so full of love and heartache that it also has my heart.

Describe what the writing/editing/publishing process is like for you:  lol, its HELL! I love writing, but the editing and the publishing is a pain in my ass. I hate dealing with the editing cause I never know if it is right, and then the publishing, I have a panic attack for at least a week until the first couple 1 star reviews come in and then I just want to die cause oh no someone doesn’t like what I thought was a masterpiece. I probably need help. lol

How would you spend a perfect day?  In Disney World, with my husband and kids. If that doesn’t work, than at the hockey rink watching my guys do their thing.

Can you tell us about any of your upcoming projects?  I am currently working on Blue Lines, which is the fourth in the series. Its gonna be another heart wrenching tale, and I’m so excited to write it!

**Contact Toni and any of the links below:

Toni Aleo

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**Click HERE to read my review of her book, “Taking Shots!”

Filed Under: Toni Aleo Tagged With: Books, Chick-Lit, Guest Interview, Taking Shots, Toni Aleo

Em Barrett

September 26, 2012 2 Comments

Guest Interview with author, Em Barrett

Describe yourself in five sentences:  For some reason, bios are incredibly hard for me to write – mine always end up sounding like a terrible online dating profile! Here goes though: I grew up outside Detroit and went to college and law school at the University of Michigan (Go Blue!). I’ve been living in Chicago for five years and although I love it here, I still feel like a Michigander at heart.  Growing up, I spent a ton of time in northern Michigan (nowhere nearly as swanky as Green Island…), which inspired much of the backdrop for Leaving Green Island. Right now I’m busy working on a sequel to Leaving Green Island and spending as much as possible with my (amazing) husband and (also amazing) baby girl.

What are your books about?  Leaving Green Island is a modern love story, but I think it’s more than that as well.  The plotline focuses on protagonist Brecken Pereira’s conflicting emotions as she reconnects with an old flame while also engaged to a wonderful guy.  As she navigates these relationships, she also struggles with issues relating to her work and her friendships, generally grappling with the complex world of today’s twenty-something women.  While the romantic plotline is what drives the pace of the book, Brecken’s close and complicated friendships are central forces that shape the story as well.

People would be surprised to know that you…?  I really hate flying! While I do fly to get the places I want to go, I dread it every time.

What are your guilty pleasures?  The Bachelor, watching “Call Me Maybe” Youtube videos, and eating Jeni’s Ice Cream.

Explain what a typical day like for you:  Well, I have a baby girl who is amazingly awesome but she literally does not nap or sleep through the night. She basically does not stay asleep at all. Ever. I’m afraid that telling you what my typical day is like would scare a lot of your readers off from ever having kids, so let’s just say that my typical day and night are very busy and do not involve nearly enough sleep! 🙂

What is you favorite word? Why?  I have so many! Right now “ethereal” is definitely one of my favorites – I love how it sounds and the image it evokes.

How did you celebrate your book being published?  Leaving Green Island was published on the 4th of July, so I spent a nice long weekend hanging out with my family doing 4th of July-ish things like watching fireworks and barbecuing. If Leaving Green Island ever becomes a bestseller, I’ll definitely be taking my husband and some friends to dinner at Moto Restaurant – also the site of Brecken and Will’s engagement dinner 🙂

If you could meet another author, who would it be?  Hmm, that’s a tough one!  I think Antoine de Saint-Exupery… The Little Prince is such a unique and creative book, and it has held a special place in my heart all my life. It would have been amazing to have met Antoine de Saint-Exupery in his lifetime.

What was your favorite part of the writing/editing/publishing process?  And your least?  My least favorite part is probably the editing because it’s so tedious and never seems to be done.  As far as my favorite part, I think that was the surreal experience of seeing my book listed on Amazon for the first time.

If you weren’t an author, what would you be? Why?  Right now I work as a lawyer and I’m a mom, so if I wasn’t an author, I think those other two roles would still probably take up most of my time.  Being a writer is something I sneak in when I have bits of free time.  Looking back though, I wish I gotten an English PhD instead of going to law school so that I could be an English professor…

What is the best advice you’ve been given?  My mom is always reminding me to “be here now”.  Life goes by so quickly and we all have a lot to manage, so I think just trying to live in and make the best of each moment is really important.

Can you tell us about any upcoming projects?  I’m glad you asked this, because I’m hard at work on a sequel to Leaving Green Island! It will be coming out in 2013

**Contact Em Barrett any of the links below:

Em Barrett

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Filed Under: Em Barrett Tagged With: Books, Chick-Lit, Em Barrett, Guest Interview, Leaving Green Island

Kaya McLaren

September 25, 2012 1 Comment

Interview with Kaya McLaren

Tell us about your books:  I wrote CHURCH OF THE DOG fourteen years ago.  I didn’t really know what I was doing and I never intended to publish it.  So, to me, it’s a little awkward and uncomfortably personal.  It has some lovely moments in it.  That’s what I can say about it.  There’s something very genuine about that book.  But I’ve grown, so in a way, my feelings about that book are similar to seeing my high school senior picture on my grandma’s wall.  CHURCH OF THE DOG is about a semi-psychic art teacher that comes to live in a tiny ranching town in Eastern Oregon.  She settles behind Edith and Earl, who in their late 70’s fall in love with one another again.  Their estranged grandson comes home and reconciles.  It’s lovely.  It really is.

ON THE DIVINITY OF SECOND CHANCES will always be my favorite book, I think.  I love those quirky characters and the beauty of their imperfection…the beauty of trying to get it right.  Everyone gets a second chance in the way they need it most.  Isn’t that what we all hope for?  What is a miracle, but a second chance when you need it most?  In this book, Phil retires from the financial markets, and finds his new identity in learning to play the bagpipes.  His wife, Anna, finds herself annoyed by everything he does and to cope with her hot flashes, sleeps on a lawn chair in the back yard.  Inspired by menopause, she’s taken to painting raisins.  Their oldest daughter, Olive, has just broken up with a snowboard bum boyfriend and discovers she’s pregnant.  She eventually goes to live with Anna’s mother, Pearl, who likes to tap dance and shoot things. Olive’s sister, Jade is a massage therapist who sees her sassy spirit guide, and remembers people from past lives.  And finally, the youngest sibling, Forrest, has been in self-imposed solitary confinement in a tree house in the Sawtooth Mountains, but redeems himself.  I really love that book.

HOW I CAME TO SPARKLE AGAIN is my new book, the one that’s released on October 2, 2012.  I think it’s more conventional in a lot of ways and will appeal to a broader audience.  I love the characters in this book, too, because many were inspired by pieces of my friends, blended, and reassembled with pieces of me.  Jill returns to a ski town named Sparkle, after finding her husband in bed with another woman.  There, she ends up on Lisa’s doorstep. Lisa, meanwhile, is having an epiphany about holding out for true love, and eventually finds it in her long-time next-door neighbor and friend, Tom, who lives in a place they all call “the Kennel” where the residents name their dogs after beer.  Tom hires Jill to work on ski patrol, but to make ends meet Jill takes another job babysitting Cassie, who just lost her mom to cancer the summer before and believes she receives messages from her through heart-shaped rocks.  Cassie’s father, Mike, is picking up the pieces of his life as well, and finds hope for better tomorrows in his growing friendship with Jill.  Although there are some heartbreaking moments, it really is a fun and hopeful book.

Where do your ideas come from for your books:  My life.  People I know.  My books are very character-driven, and my life is always full of characters, so I’m lucky like that.

What is your favorite word? Why?  “Dinner!” I like to eat.

Who or what inspires you?  Life.  Friends.  Adventures and hardships and beauty.  I see beauty in so many things.  My great big funny family.  I wish I could share them with the world.  By writing, I kind of can.  I take little pieces of them, little bits of things they would say and weave them right in to my work.

Paper/hardback or eBooks? Why?  I’m a paperback girl.  Light, easy to hold, easy to carry.  They won’t electrocute me in the bathtub where I do most of my reading or run out of batteries on a river trip.  And I can give them away when I’m done, which I love to do.  Perhaps when I’m older and my eyes go, I’ll appreciate the eBook feature where I can change the font size, but at this point in my life, the last thing I want to do in my spare time is look at a screen of any kind.

How would you spend a perfect day?  In the summer, bareback and barefoot on the back of a big, fat, mellow horse wandering through some vast expanse of nature, followed by at least two good dogs.  But in winter, knee deep in champagne powder with a whole crew of laughing friends.  In either case, there would be a big dinner in the evening with lots of food, friends, warmth, laughter, and wine.

What are you reading right now?  I’m reading my fourth manuscript, THE EMBERS. It’s due in less than two weeks, so I’m re-reading it and polishing it up.  Lately, though, I’ve been rereading my favorite book of all-time, SOLAR STORMS by Linda Hogan.  At the same time, I’m slowly working my way through BLINK, and an anthology of poetry called FOR LOVERS OF GOD EVERYWHERE.

How did you celebrate your first book being published?  On the day my first book was published, I went to work at the Sun Valley Lodge and massaged people.  Some guy was there doing some painting, and I don’t know how it came up, but I told him, and he was really, really happy for me.  I’ve often thought of how funny it was that this stranger gave me the sweetest moment of that day.  My parents and my uncle sent me flowers to my first book event.  That was sweet.  And my soul sisters threw a party for me after my book event in the town where I used to live.  When Penguin republished my first two books, I celebrated by buying a skateboard, and then taking a trip to Costa Rica where I learned to surf.

Do you have any guilty pleasures? What are they?  In the winter, after a long day of teaching third and fourth graders, I love to crawl into the bath and read.  I stay there for hours.

What is the writing process like for you?  Well, sleeping in is important.  That space between dreaming and waking up is a really creative space where I get ready to write and come up with ideas.  Then I have to get up and right to it while my brain is still calm and clear.  If I try doing other things first and coming back to it, my brain is usually too busy and distracted.  Sometimes a run will clear my mind, especially if I’m listening to instrumental music.  I picture the scenes I will write like a movie with a soundtrack.  If it’s not too warm, I put on my magic writing socks—these beautiful striped wool socks a reader knit for me, and something about them calms me down and helps me focus.  For this book, I have one notebook full of notes I took when interviewing different people or organizing ideas.  I also made an index card for each chapter using a specific color for each character and clothes-pinned them in rows on my curtains—one row for each day, in the order they happen.  That was great.  In the last month, my writing process has been rough.  I’ve had to evacuate my home due to wildfire and wildfire smoke.  I have no routine and waste a lot of mental energy figuring out where I’m going to be tomorrow, and I can’t see my index cards all over my curtains.

If you could meet any other author, who would it be?  Jane Goodall.  She’s my hero.  What a phenomenal soul.  But if I could meet two authors, I’d like to go eat dessert with Sarah Addison Allen.  Her books were like life rafts for me last winter when I was going through a cancer scare and had to have a surgery.  It was such a great reminder about what a blessing a good escape can be sometimes.

Can you tell us about any of your upcoming projects?  You bet!  I’m putting the finishing touches on THE EMBERS, about a group of women who try to save a summer camp from going under, but really save themselves and each other.  It’s good.  It’s really good.

**How I Came to Sparkle Again will be released on October 2nd!!**

**Contact Kaya at any of the below links:

Kaya McLaren

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Filed Under: Kaya McLaren Tagged With: Books, Chick-Lit, Guest Interview, How I Came to Sparkle Again, Kaya McLaren

Nikki Jefford

September 13, 2012 4 Comments

Author Bio:

Nikki Jefford is a third generation Alaskan who loves fictional bad boys and heroines who kick butt. She is the author of the Spellbound Trilogy and upcoming Aurora Sky: Vampire Hunter series.

Nikki married the love of her life, Sebastien, while working as a teaching assistant in France. They now reside in the not-so-tropical San Juan Islands, 70 miles northeast of Forks, Washington.

GUEST POST

Taking Risks in Young Adult Romance

I don’t know about you, but when I was in high school I was super interested in boys and curious about kissing and sex. I gathered what information I could from magazines like YM, Seventeen, and Cosmopolitan; and TV series like Beverly Hills 90210.

I’ve always loved reading, but by the time I was a teen, teen novels didn’t have enough heat in them so I switched to reading historical romance.

One of my favorite things about being an indie YA author, is having the freedom to write and release the kind of book I would have loved reading when I was growing up.

There’s a prank scene in the first book of my Spellbound Trilogy, Entangled, where the main character wakes up in a boy’s bed instead of her sister’s after “The Switch” (they’re sharing a body every 24 hours). This disturbed a couple of readers who sent me emails, but the majority loved being surprised throughout the book and appreciated an author who took risks.

If this went through New York, I know they would have made me take it out because they don’t want to offend readers or, more likely, parents. In my opinion, if you’re not offending anyone, you’re being boring.

At the same time, if you self-publish, you have to watch that you don’t get too carried away. My copy editors make minimal comments as to things that could cause problems, but ultimately I make the final call.

I’m releasing the first in a new vampire slayer series, Aurora Sky, this winter and have struggled with the sexual content for over a year and whether it’s appropriate or not. I ended up removing a sex scene before sending it off to my copy editor. I feel much better about that. It took place in an already heated situation and overall I think it detracted from the scene and relationship.

There is another sex scene I’m leaving in and I am very curious (and nervous!) to see how it will be received. It’s awkward and comical. The safer bet would be to remove it, but I can’t bring myself to cut it. It reminds me of a scene in the 1992 comedy This Is My Life, starring Julie Kavner and Dan Aykroyd, when one of the daughters has sex with her boyfriend and it’s the ultimate letdown. I was cracking up during the scene. I’ve never seen anything like it before or since.

But it was great! I saw that as a teen and was like, “Oh my God, that’s probably what the first time is truly like.”

One of my top priorities when writing is to surprise people as much as possible and give them a truly enjoyable reading experience. I’m not out to write an award-winning novel or brilliant prose. The best compliment I can receive is a reader telling me they couldn’t put my book down until they knew how it ended.

That’s how I know it’s worth taking risks.

**Contact Nikki at the below link:

Nikki Jefford

Filed Under: Nikki Jefford Tagged With: Books, Guest Post, Nikki Jefford, Taking Risks in Young Adult Romance, Writing

Breaking the Rules

September 12, 2012 7 Comments

Book review for “Breaking the Rules”

“Breaking the Rules” by Cat Lavoie

When Roxy Rule’s best friend and roommate, Ollie, gets a new job in England she’s happy for him.  Nothing will change, she tells herself.  When the two share a kiss right before he leaves, it catches Roxy by complete surprise.  After revealing what happened to their friends, not bothering to mention it to her fiance (because it didn’t mean anything, right?), she decides to ignore it and move on with her hectic life as an assistant for “boss who makes her want to stab herself with a letter opener.”  Not only does Roxy have to deal with her boss, Roxy’s sisters move in with her (one sister is pregnant and one who’s in a premature midlife crisis), which creates even more havoc on her life.  Arguing with her fiance about her never-ending credit card balance due to buying kitchen supplies that she can’t live without, and dealing with the drama in her life, Roxy puts her dream about being a chef on the back burner.

What will Roxy do when she can no longer put up with her fiance and his overbearing mother?  Will Roxy help her boss out when she needs her most?  Most of all, what will Roxy do when she finds some news that changes everything?

A few months ago I decided that I wouldn’t be taking anymore request until after the year so that I could focus on my own books.  When I received an email from Samantha of Marching Ink asking me to read and review Breaking the Rules, I read synopsis and knew immediately that I had to read the debut novel by Cat Lavoie!  It seemed like it would be a great Chick Lit read, and seemed not too far off about a friendship when I had when I was younger.

From the first sentence to the last period, Breaking the rules was a delight to read!  I read it in three days and loved the characters, especially Rox!  She had me laughing the whole time, and though I was a little nervous about what she would say and do in certain situations, she didn’t let me down — especially in the end!   (Read the book to find why I was on the edge of my seat).  As for Roxy’s fiance, his behavior and words really annoyed me, but I understood that by the end.  I enjoyed Roxy’s sisters’ characters.  While all the sisters were dealing with their own personal drama, I liked how they came together when it was needed.  Last, but not least, there’s Ollie who I liked a lot, but wished there would’ve been more of him, maybe by emails or phone calls just to keep him more involved with Roxy.

There were a lot of twists and turns and I liked that.  There was nothing that the brilliant author hadn’t explained or make the reader wonder.

Overall, I LOVED this book!  If you’re wanting to read a fun and entertaining book about family, love, and relationships, then Breaking the Rules is the book for you!

I give this book 5 stars!

**Buy “Breaking the Rules!”

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**Click HERE to read my interview with Cat Lavoie!

Filed Under: Book Review, Breaking the Rules Tagged With: Book Reviews, Books, Breaking the Rules, Cat Lavoie, Chick-Lit

Cat Lavoie

September 12, 2012 3 Comments

About the author:  Cat Lavoie was born in the small town of Jonquière in Québec, Canada. At the age of nineteen, she packed up her things (mostly books) and moved to the big city of Montreal where she currently lives with her tempestuous cat Abbie—who is both adorable and quite possibly evil.

An incurable Anglophile since her university days where she studied English Literature, she can often be found daydreaming about her next trip to London. Since she’s an expert at the art of procrastination, Cat is easily distracted by cooking and home improvement shows—even though she’s not particularly good at either.

Cat grew up watching soap operas and legal dramas and—had she not decided to be a claims analyst by day and write chick lit by night—she would have probably become a designer suit-wearing lawyer. Or a character on All My Children (which is what she really wanted to be when she was twelve).

Cat is not sure whether she’s a geek or a nerd—and is afraid she might be both. Breaking the Rules is her first novel.

Interview with Cat Lavoie

You’re an author! How does it feel to have your book published?  It feels so awesome! These last few months working on edits and getting everything ready for Breaking the Rules’ release have been really exciting.

Facebook or Twitter?  Both. I left Facebook for a few years and—for the longest time—my only social media outlets were Twitter and my blog. But now I’m back on Facebook and I love how I’ve connected with readers and other writers in such a short time… so now I’m trying to balance both.

Did you always want to be a writer?  As far as I can remember, I’ve loved stories and books. When I was in grade school, I used to beg my teacher to let me stay inside during recess so I could read at my desk. Being a writer was definitely one of my dreams when I was growing up.

What is your snack and/or drink of choice when writing?  Oh no. This is the part of the interview where I reveal my crippling addiction to Lays Salt & Vinegar potato chips and Cadbury’s Dairy Milk chocolate bars! But I also drink a lot of water (with tons of ice cubes) when I’m writing. So it’s not all bad!

Where did you get the idea for “Breaking the Rules?”  I was having a conversation with a male friend about the age-old question: can a man and a woman really be just friends? Then I started asking myself: what if a lifelong platonic relationship got really complicated, really fast? The characters and the rest of the story just grew from there.

How long did it take to write it?  I worked on it on and off for a few years, taking notes, doing research and outlining. But once I decided to focus on completing my first draft (i.e. stop working on the outline and actually write the story) it took me a little under a year.

What was your writing/experience like?  Painfully slow. I tend to edit as I write and I have trouble moving on with the story until I feel the sentence/paragraph/chapter I’m working on is ‘perfect.’ It was definitely a challenge to silence my inner editor long enough to finish writing the first draft.

When your book was published, how did you celebrate?  I seem to recall a horribly uncoordinated happy dance in the middle of my living room that scared Abbie (my cat) and sent her hiding for cover. Then I had a celebratory dinner with my best friend. (Followed by another happy dance when I got back home.)

Paperback or eBook?  Why?  Mostly eBooks. As a tech geek and a shopaholic, I love the fact that I can carry all my books with me everywhere I go and that I can go from wanting a book to owning that book in just a few simple clicks.  But I still love the look and feel of a physical book, though. When I really love a novel, I usually end up buying a copy for my bookshelf.

What authors inspire you?  That’s a tough one because there are so many! I’d have to say my main inspiration is Sophie Kinsella. Reading “Confessions of a Shopaholic” helped me find my voice. From that moment on, I knew I wanted to write chick lit. And I love authors like Marian Keyes who combine humor with more serious issues.

What’s the best advice you’ve been given?  The best writing advice I’ve ever been given is: “write the book you want to read” and “write.” For the longest time, I was talking about writing, thinking about writing and even writing about writing… but I wasn’t really writing. So that advice really hit home.

Are you working on anything now?  If so, would you like to share anything?  I’m currently working on the first draft of my second novel called Zoey & the Moment of Zen. It’s the story of a woman who gets sent to an island resort by her friends and family to help her get over an ex-boyfriend. Hopefully, hilarity will ensue.

**Contact Cat!:  Cat blogs about the writing life and posts adorable pictures of Abbie over at the Catenabi Chronicles.  You can also find her on Facebook and Twitter!

**Click HERE to read my 5 star review of Cat’s debut novel, Breaking the Rules!

Filed Under: Cat Lavoie Tagged With: Books, Breaking the Rules, Chick-Lit, Debut novel, Guest Author, Guest Interview, Writing

Llucia Ramis

September 10, 2012 Leave a Comment

About the author:  Birthday: April 23, 1977.  Place of birth: Palma, Majorca (Balearic Islands).

Academic background:  Col·legi Públic de Pràctiques (Palma), Institut Joan Alcover (Palma), degree in Journalism for the Communication Sciences at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (Barcelona).

Awards received:  Josep Pla Award for the novel Egosurfing (2010),  Bartomeu Rosselló-Pòrcel, in recognition of work in the field of cultural entertainment (2010),  “Maupassant, mots passants” for a short story in French, awarded by the Alliance Française and Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona.

Interview with Llucia Ramis

Describe the book in your own words:  This novel is about thirtysomethings in Barcelona who are freelancers or artists, and have no real responsibilities or relationships. Nothing has changed since their twenties, but they are already starting their midlife crises. All their things are temporary: Mcjobs, apartments, roommates, lovers. They don’t know how to make decisions. They imagined a different future for themselves, but they’re not really worried yet. They go out every night and drink a lot of beer to forget their problems. They’re still having fun.

Describe any of the major figures, personalities, and characters within the book:  The main character is a journalist. She wakes up next to a strange guy on her thirtieth birthday and thinks she’s getting too old for that sort of thing. Her best friends are a coworker who has just gotten fired, a painter, a psychologist addicted to antidepressants, and a lawyer who’s about to get married. The lawyer is planning her bachelorette party and she invites all of her exes. One of them is also an ex of the main character.

How did you come up with the idea for the book? How did it come to be?  When I was thirty, I was engaged to be married. I organized a party with all my ex-boyfriends to say goodbye to my sexy single life. At that time my dream was to make love in the Sagrada Familia. At my bachelorette party, I realized that all of my exes were still lost; their lives hadn’t changed at all: They were the ones left standing in a game of musical chairs. My generation is not very focused. The recession doesn’t particularly affect us because we live in a constant recession. In the end, I didn’t get married and I wrote a novel. But it’s not autobiographical.

How did you come up with the title of the book?  Since I’m a journalist myself, I know that the clearer you are with journalists the better. I wanted to make a headline. The title explains what’s in the book.

What are your top five favorite books? Why?  Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You, by Peter Cameron, is a tender, fun, and intelligent portrait of New York after 9/11. I also like Anne Sexton’s poetry, because it’s very visual and intense, and The Journalist and the Murderer, by Janet Malcolm. And Saul Bellow, J. M. Coetzee, Ann Beattie, Alice Munro, Antonio di Benedetto, Daniel Clowes . . . I’m sorry, I can’t list only five books!

What are your top five favorite films? Why?  The Usual Suspects, Being John Malkovich, and The Third Man, because they blur the line between reality and fiction, and you can see how they construct the story. And I also like Clerks and Diamond Flash, a very strange, disturbing, and shocking film by the Spanish cartoonist Carlos Vermut. I think he chose the actors through a casting by Skype. All of them are amateurs.

What are you favorite blogs or websites? Why?  Núvol (www.nuvol.com/) is a digital newspaper about Catalan culture.  Patrulla de Salvación (http://patrulladesalvacion.com/) and Mongolia (www.revistamongolia.com/) are irreverent websites that satirize the treatment of information and culture by the mass media.  El Estafador (elestafador.com) manipulates you with information just like everybody else, but at least it’s open about it and tells you. It’s an online comic.

Are there any holidays or milestones you are particularly keen on?  April 23 is Saint George’s day, and in Catalonia it’s also the day of the book, because we commemorate the death of Shakespeare and Cervantes. Years ago, women gave books to men, and men gave roses to women. But nowadays everybody buys books and roses. The booksellers are on the street, there are big crowds all day long, and publishers estimate that they make forty percent of their annual earnings! For Catalan people, Saint George is like Valentine’s Day is for the rest of the world, so it’s the best day of the year. I was born on April 23, and so I always imagine that this celebration of love is my own birthday party.

The TV program I cannot live without is:  I can live without TV.

My desert island book is:  The book I’m writing. It would be terrible to not be able to finish it because I’d left it at home.

Writer I’d like to have lunch with:  Roberto Bolaño. Again.

I used to think I would be:  An archaeologist like Indiana Jones.

**Contact Llucia:

Llucia Ramis

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Filed Under: Llucia Ramis Tagged With: Books, Guest Interview, Llucia Ramis, Things That Happen to You in Barcelona When You're Thirty

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