Friday, July 19, 2013

An apology.

I have the best intentions. I often receive emails that are going to require more thought and time than I have at that moment, and I don't answer immediately because I want to come back later and address it when I have time to give that email the required attention.

And then it falls off my radar. It's on my desktop waiting, but I forget about it anyway.

I truly need to respond to such emails immediately, even when I'm afraid the real answer will offend someone, the real answer being, "I'm terribly sorry but to respond to this properly would take more time and energy than I currently have. I suggest you google this subject and start there for your answers."

I want to help people. I don't want to blow them off. And yet, I end up doing just that, blowing them off by not answering.

That said, when I was asked a question by a former student, 'What’s the best way to get your foot in the door in the field of writing?' I had no easy answer, no fast answer. As a former student, he may have missed the class where we talked about that, but the answer right now is, who knows? Self-publishing is easier and easier all the time, but will you get noticed in the thousands of self-published books? What will make you feel successful?  Selling a few to family and friends and having some nice reviews on Amazon? Selling a few dozen?  A hundred? Or hitting a best seller list?

There are so many answers to 'getting your foot in the door' and they are usually found in the sidebar on this page, links to articles on that subject. Sometimes I've linked to articles in previous entries that would answer your question. 

Beyond that, I'm sorry I don't have any easy answers, or even complex answers, at my fingertips, nor do I have the time to dig out answers beyond what I give in class.

The issue I feel most compelled to address right now is, in the most self-centered of wanting-to-be-helpful ways, how to respond to questions from people who have no idea they have asked a complex question that has no easy answer without angering them, instead of shoving it aside to deal with later and losing it.

Suggestions, anyone?

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

My latest book--available in digital today!

Once described as 'if Erma Bombeck wrote a romance novel...' Beguiled Again is now available on Amazon for Kindle and from Book View Cafe in formats for all reading devices. Originally published by Silhouette Desire, this edition is updated.
Review copies available.
"This bountifully gifted author is sure to become an instant reader favorite, combining a lively humor, sensual fire and sensitive romance into top-notch entertainment! Melinda Helfer, RT BOOK REVIEWS
Meet Cecil. Coming to Amazon and Book View Cafe July 17, 2013! 
Meet Cecilia. Available at Amazon and Book View Cafe July 16, 2013!


Order Jeff shook off Cecilia and her high school crush seventeen years ago, and he’s made an orderly, boring, safe, successful life for himself as an accountant. Just the way he wants things.

Chaos Cecilia’s taste for driven, orderly men has left her divorced with three kids and two half-incomes. But nobody’s looking over her shoulder, criticizing her for being messy and disorganized. Life is never boring, is always filled with laughter and energy. Just the way she wants things.  

Disaster From the moment she sucks him into her sticky, single-mom universe, Jeff can’t keep it together anymore. Her checkbook is a nightmare, her oldest kid hates him, and she’s lush and messy, mouth-watering and independent and annoyingly unforgettable. And he can’t stay away. Cecilia is a fighter. She doesn’t need Jeff turning up again, making her feel like she’s still fourteen years, treating her like she can’t manage her life without his assistance. Why, why, why does he keep trying to help?

To make matters worse, Jeff is hotter than ever, and a single mom can’t afford a sex life.

Plus, his parrot hates her.

In this battle between order and chaos, between hostile kids and cranky parrots, between romance and responsibility, is heartbreak inevitable?

Or this time, can love win?

Oh, and while you're at it, subscribe to the planetpooks newsletter for free stuff and book announcements!

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Pearls of Wisdom from Max




"I am tired of all this sash about writers writing what they know or writing what they want to know. Writers write what they need to know. Genre and setting are negotiable. Internal need is not. Writers are seekers of truth. And we will find that truth, whether we are seeking it on the planes of Mars, in ancient Egypt, on a pirate ship, or through the eyes of a ghost cat."

Max Adams
Author of The New Screenwriter's Survival Guide; Or, Guerrilla Meeting Tactics and Other Acts of War   
Founder of The Academy of Film Writing