Showing posts with label adult romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adult romance. Show all posts

Friday, July 3, 2020

I DID THE THING!! Please read this post before clicking the link!

It's here!!! Please read this post before clicking the link!


My new adult manuscript, AS LONG AS YOU'RE MINE, is now available to read FOR FREE on Swoon Reads. Just download the app, and follow this link to preview the manuscript. All I ask is that you download, read, and give it a rating once you're done please! Every few months Swoon Reads chooses a manuscript from this slushpile to offer a publishing contract through Macmillan. It's based on editor opinion, reader feedback, and which manuscripts gather the most interest. So every vote, comment, and rating will help. Please note that this is a New Adult manuscript, NOT Young Adult. So it's intended for a more mature audience than some of my other works. Please feel free to share the love and spread the word on this one. I need all the help I can get!

Click Here to download the app and start reading!


About the Book

Two years ago, Rennie Cobain's heart was hulk-smashed by Mack, an Emmy-winning, altar boy turned boy band icon. After a world tour as a guitar tech, Rennie gets an offer she should refuse: on Broadway.The show stars the only guy to ever break her heart. 
There's more than dignity at risk once the director discovers Rennie’s family legacy.Out of the orchestra pit and into the spotlight; blue-haired, fame-phobic Rennie is hand-fed to the press. She’s terrified the media will resurrect her past as a homeless, emotionally abused, musical prodigy. Rennie wants to be Rennie-not Kurt’s cousin.Not a survivor.Not a victim.
Mack understands her, but their first chance at love ended in agony. Now she has to kiss him every night in front of a packed house. Trusting Mack may be the only way Rennie can embrace her talent without selling her soul.


Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Review: VIRGIN by Radhika Sanghani

Title: VIRGIN by Radhika Sanghani
Pub Date: August 5, 2014

ARC received from Penguin Group Berkley in exchange for an honest review.

Dannie says: I liked it better when it was called Forty Year Old Virgin or Losing It or...The Vagina Monologues or...you get the picture.


Okay, I admit it…I didn’t do it.

Yet.

This is normal, right?  I mean, just because everyone I know has talked like they’ve already done it doesn’t mean that they’re telling the truth…right?

It’s not like I’m asking for that much. I don’t need the perfect guy. I don’t need candlelight or roses. Honestly, I don’t even need a real bed.

The guys I know complain that girls are always looking for Mr. Right—do I have to wear a sign that says I’m only looking for Mr. Right Now?

Sooooo…anyone out there want sex? Anyone? Hello? Just for fun?

I am not going to die a virgin. One way or another I am going to make this happen.

Hey, what have I got to lose? Besides the obvious.



WHAT I LIKED


The humor--begrudgingly. Even though much of it is that crass style of humor that I'm not super crazy about, there were some good one liners, particularly once the blog excerpts start. The humor prior to that is in the vein of DOING IT by Melvin Burgess which, man did I hate that book. But, as this is intended for an older audience and is thus more appropriate humor for, you know, grownups, it makes a lot more sense. I'm just not sure it's very original. I mean the waxing scene was funnier in 40-Year-Old Virgin. The awkward teeth blow job was funnier in...hmm...I think that may have been 40 YOV, too? Something About Mary? American Pie? IDK. Some movie that came out A LONG TIME AGO. Perhaps it's because being a forty-year-old virgin is a lot more far-fetched, awkward, and oh, I don't know, humorous than being a twenty-one-year-old virgin?

The ending. I won't say more because spoilers, but I feel like this was the right ending of this particular character's journey. Which is to say, she doesn't deserve a better one. 


WHAT I LOVED


The random references to a middle grade series. I got most excited when there were references I recognized from Harry Potter, which is sort of embarrassing to admit because, yeah, this is definitely NOT a children's book. Oh and then the author references HP herself and I felt at least less alone in my awkward-perviness.

The "new" bestie on the block. Emma was probably my favorite character (even though her name is too close to Ellie and I was thus forever getting the names mixed up as I read.) Not only is she complicated and sincere, she's consistent and her personality makes sense. She also seemed to be the only of the three primary female characters with a brain a lot of the time. 

WHAT I WANTED MORE OF


A more original primary theme. This is not my type of book, and honestly I can name at least three titles that did the "virginity loss quest" story that conveys the awkwardness and agony that is new sexuality in a less campy, more well-written, conflict-filled way. The writing was not great, but more than that, the plot itself wasn't really original. And some of it straight up didn't make sense.

Some depth and complication to the L.I. ***warning minor spoiler here*** Honestly and truly I kept hoping Chris the Emo would make a reappearance. He was the only male character who seemed like an actual person in the entire book. Instead we get this assclown. Really, this is a book that if I were reading for pleasure I would put down for one very simple reason: I honestly didn't care if any of the characters met their story goals. More than that, I sort of hoped they didn't.

More scene and less introspection. Since I wasn't really crazy about the MC I wasn't crazy to spend as much time in her head as we did. There was far too much introspection [read: whining] in the first half of the book for me. As a reader, I would have stopped reading before I got to the more balanced second-half that has both stronger dialogue and more entertaining narrative.

More organic/authentic dialogue. Wow. For real. There were times throughout this book that the dialogue felt so much like dialogue that it was painful. I questioned if the writer spent much time around actual human beings, or if she had critique partners at the very least. The conversations did not feel real to me at all.

A more likable main character. While I definitely found Ellie sympathetic (emphasis on the pathetic), she was too shallow to champion for me. I really dislike weak MCs who need the other characters to provide their insights. And I fully agreed with her childhood bestie that the MC's behavior toward guys over the year were increasingly desperate.  And beyond all that I found the character to be internally inconsistent. So she's done all this internet research and is absolutely crass and yet she doesn't have the skills to call a male escort service if she's really that desperate to get rid of her oh-so-terrible virginity? This isn't even getting into the fact that I felt like her whole quest and story goal made her unlikable to begin with. I was hoping for more of an arc to her personality as well as the overall character. I didn't get it. 

Less [definitely not more] virgin shaming.  I tend to keep my mouth shut on the whole anti-slut-shaming movement in general, because, well, I just do. But for me, it's not okay to say "slut shaming is bad" but to be totally okay with virgin-shaming, which is what a lot of the narrative in the first few chapters felt like for me. I don't think it's okay for New Adult novels to have a "fuck anything that moves because being a 21 year old virgin is pathetic" theme. For an older audience, I'm still not crazy about it, but I get the theme and humor and where the author was coming from. It's just not for me personally. But for me, and not even being someone who was necessarily a late bloomer myself, I was a little irritated by the lack of any female character with the perspective waiting is good.

Short story long, this one didn't do a lot for me. Well, no. It irritated me a lot. Not only was I not crazy about the major story elements as a reader, but the writing is just simply not good. Chances are many of you will think I'm wrong, though. If you're a fan of painful virginity stories, Bridget Jones' Diary, The Vagina Monologues, Losing It, and Forty-Year-Old Virgin and you don't mind those ideas being borrowed upon heavily, this could be a fun read.

Monday, May 26, 2014

Book Blitz: DOCKED by Rachael Wade



Docked by Rachael Wade 
Publication date: May 26th 2014
Genres: Adult, Contemporary, Romance

A new, sensual Adult Contemporary Romance from author of the Amazon bestselling PRESERVATION SERIES, THE REPLACEMENT, and LOVE AND RELATIVITY. Coming to e-readers everywhere May 26, 2014.

It’s not water that paralyzes Anya Banks—it’s the ocean. Tumultuous and powerful, sleek and unpredictable, it’s just like Tanner Christensen, owner of Trident Voyager, the cruise ship she’s been talked into boarding by her vivacious, foodie fanatic best friend and co-worker, Lana. Tanner exudes confidence, and his raw masculinity is hard to resist. But Anya came aboard to work, face her demons, and then get the hell back to dry land.

Until Tanner convinces her to take the plunge.

She quickly dives into a fun, carefree arrangement with him and embraces her goal to be brave, no matter how loudly her shaky knees tell her to abandon ship. For twelve days, Tanner’s all hers. For twelve days, she’s his goddess. Once the cruise is over and the ship docks, she won’t be the same. But being brave always costs something, and this time, it might cost her heart.




Rachael Wade is the Amazon bestselling author of The Preservation Series, The Resistance Trilogy, and the upcoming sci-fi series, The Keepers Trilogy. When she’s not writing, she’s busy learning French, watching too many movies, and learning how to protect animals and the environment. Visit her at www.RachaelWade.com and www.LightsOnOutreach.com, or come chat with her on Twitter via @RachaelWade





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Friday, May 2, 2014

Fangirl Friday: An Interview with BURN ME Author Shelley Watters!


It's Fangirl Friday here on the blog and today I'm delighted to welcome fellow PitchWars mentor Shelley Watters whose latest novel BURN ME was released this week. Here's a little bit about Shelley and her new book baby! And stay tuned for the e-Book GIVEAWAY at the bottom of the post!

Title: Burn Me 
Author: Shelley Watters
Genre: Adult Romance
Publisher: Swoon Romance
Publication Date: April 29th 2014
Formats: eBook

When Katrina Hale's brother dies in a house fire, she's determined to prove she's stronger than everyone thinks she is. But grief can do strange things to a person and Katrina knows all too well how the death of a loved one can change a person. As the romance in her current relationship fizzles, she focuses on her work and fights the undeniable attraction she has for Greyson Neal.


Firefighter Greyson Neal is the type of guy girls dream about. But Greyson isn't interested in other girls. He wants the one woman he can never have: Katrina. As the two struggle with their feelings, Kat must choose between her career and her heart, and fight to keep them both when an arsonist threatens to take it all away.

Add to Goodreads!    Purchase on Amazon!


Tell us a little about your writer's journey so far:

I’ve had a love of creative writing all my life. As a child, I wrote my first horror novel titled “Child Fear”. The rest is history!

My real path to publication started when I quit my job as an epidemiologist to be a stay at home mom. I realized that I had time to spare and could finally pick up the pen again and write. I never, ever, considered the possibility of being published at that time. But, a few months later I had a full-length YA novel completed, and found myself signed up for Nanowrimo. The resulting novel from that Nano was an early rendition of BURN ME, which comes out next Tuesday from Swoon Romance! At the time, it was filled with sex scenes and no plot. My critique partners insisted that I was truly an erotica writer, not a romance writer. I think I proved them wrong.

I signed with a top agent for that first YA novel that I finished (my followers would recognize this book titled first as BLUE LOTUS, then re-titled as WAIT FOR ME). The agent had great ideas for submission, but ultimately had personal problems get in the way of their professional life and we parted ways.

Fast forward about six months, after licking my wounds and reassuring myself that I did not, in fact, suck, I queried and found a new agent. That agent followed through and got a few of my novels in the hands of editors, but no sales. Eventually we parted ways as well.

After a pretty rocky start to my publishing career, I decided to take a huge step back. I stopped writing all together for quite a while. I co-hosted writing contests like Pitch Wars and Pitch Madness with Brenda Drake, helping others get agents  all the while sitting on my manuscripts. I did NOT want to query anymore. Strike three and you’re out was my theory, and I didn’t want to be out. Out of the blue, I came across Tamara Mataya’s  #PitchMas contest on Twitter. I pitched BURN ME there and got an instant request from the wonderful Georgia McBride at Swoon Romance. A week later I had an offer of publication.

Since I was familiar enough with the publishing community and the publishing process (and had lots of friends in the know who could help me identify any red flags in the contract) I had no problems negotiating the contract without an agent.

So I guess I would say I’m one of those “un-agented” success stories!

Okay, let's hear your Twitter Pitch! 

Here’s the pitch that got me the request that got me the book deal for BURN ME:

An affair w/ fellow firefighter forces Kat to choose her job or her heart, & fight for both when an arsonist threatens it all. ACR #PitchMas

(ACR=Adult Contemporary Romance)

What inspired you to write this book? How is it a book only you could write?

I’ve always been fascinated with firefighters. Honestly, when I chose a topic to write for 50k in a month, firefighters were the first thing that came to mind.

I think BURN ME was a book only *I* could write because I wanted to write a romance novel that not only enticed the senses, but also stayed accurate in the firefighting scenes. I made so many firefighter friends along the path to writing BURN ME and really wanted to portray firefighters in an accurate sense, not just how TV and movies portray the “romanticized” side of firefighting. I wanted to show that these are real people who have lives, feelings, make mistakes, fall in love, just like everyone else, but that they are more than that – they are heroes because they chose to put their lives on the line for strangers, people who they’ve never met and will probably never meet again. They don’t do the job for a “Thank you”, they do the job because they love it.

What's your favorite thing about writing?

Getting to play God. I am in control of my character’s destiny (or so they let me think). I get to control everything about a scene and it’s so liberating having that much power.

Also, the research. I get to ogle lots of hot firefighters and call it “research”. haha

What's your least favorite thing?

I have a hard time putting my editor brain away when I write. I’m a perfectionist, so sometimes it’s hard to set that brain aside and let my creative brain take over. First drafts are generally extremely painful.

Now it's time to brag a little--What do you love most about your book?

This is a tough question. I love how much this book has changed over the course of writing and revising it. Like I said in the first question, it started out mostly sex scenes with no plot. So for me, it’s surprising and exhilarating how it’s turned into this rich, sexy, dark, romantic book that hopefully will keep you turning pages until the end.

I’m going to cheat, but the hot firefighters throughout the book are also what I love most. Imagining those scenes was lots of fun. ;)

Who was your favorite character to write? Why?

Greyson Neal. For some reason all of my firefighter books seem to come easier in the male POV than the female, and Greyson was such a strong, alpha hero that he took over almost every scene when I was first writing BURN ME. He was such a fun character to write and I loved how while yes, he was strong, he was also sensitive.

What has surprised you most about publishing post-agent (in other words, something unpublished writers may not know about how the process goes after you get an agent)?

Hmm. Considering I got a book deal without an agent, even though I had two over the course of my publishing career, I’m not sure how to answer this. I think the most important thing is to write a spectacular book. Don’t worry about rushing to query the first thing you write. Work on your craft, work on telling the absolute best novel you can. Because in the end, just because you find an agent who loves your work as much as you do, you might discover that they aren’t able to sell it, or just not the right fit for you and your work. Then you could be back in the query pools again.

Another thing that was surprising is the hurry-up-and-wait that is trademark in the publishing industry. You have to be patient, REALLY patient. Which is again why I say work on your craft, work on writing the best books you possibly can. Because in the end that’s where it’s all going to come down to – the agent gets the novel into the editor’s hands, but then it’s up to YOUR writing, YOUR storytelling, to sell it.

Okay, now a little about you. (And yes, I stole these questions from In the Actor's Studio with James Lipton.)

What is your favorite word?
Awesome (Wait, did you mean favorite, or the word that you over-use the most?)

What is your least favorite word?
Sighed (My characters tend to sigh a LOT in early drafts)

What turns you on? 
Alpha heroes

What turns you off? 
Arrogance

What sound or noise do you love?
My kid’s laughter

What sound or noise do you hate?
My kids fighting

What profession, other than your own, would you most like to attempt?
 I did it for over five years before quitting to do this - epidemiology
  
If Heaven exists, what would you like to hear G-d say when you arrive at the pearly gates? 
“Great job living life to the fullest. You can come in anyway.”

Finally, what's the one question you've always wanted to answer in an interview? (And of course, you have to answer it!)

Haha I don’t have a witty answer to this one! So I’ll just go with “What’s your favorite movie and why?”

Another hard one to answer (which is obviously why I’m not good at this! ;) ) I’m going to cheat and say the Lord of the Rings movie(s). They’re so epic, so beautifully done, so well acted and written that I’m sucked into their world. Peter Jackson is a genius and I’d love to meet him one day (or better yet, have him direct one of my novels-into-movies!). Dream big or go home, right? ;)

Thanks so much for stopping by the blog, Shelley! I wish you all the book sales!


Thank you so much for having me! I had a blast!

About the Author

    





Shelley Watters grew up in Tucson, Arizona and currently resides Chandler, Arizona. She graduated from Arizona State University with a Bachelor’s in Sociology with a focus on Women’s Health Issues and continued on to get a Master’s certificate in Public Health Epidemiology. After serving many wonderful years in the public health sector as an Epidemiologist, she left the field to raise her family and re-discovered a long-lost passion: writing. While her days are filled with extra-curricular activities, her nights are devoted to slinging words across the page. Her novels sizzle with the heat and passion that only growing up in the southwest can bring.




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