Posts Tagged ‘Kate Hardy’

Ally’s Winner

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

Carolin, who posted eloquently in the comments section of the Pink Heart blog about a number of things in her ‘well’ that have inspired her creativity, is the winner of Antonides’ Forbidden Wife.

Mitch and Micah thought that she could have included Golden Retrievers among her inspiration, but they loved the idea of her twenty-year engagement (go read the post!), so they forgave her the lack of Goldens.

I found all the comments really interesting — and a little scary, as in Michelle Styles’s recollection of the drunken Icelander who tried to abscond with her son. Yes, that would make a book opening, Michelle. But I wouldn’t want to relive it all the time! At least confining it between the covers makes it manageable.

Ditto Kate Hardy’s tale about her baby daughter’s illness. It’s interesting that we use romance fictioin to ‘escape’ the difficulties of life quite often. But at the same time we also use it to exorcise the grittier moments of our own lives.

I’m glad to know that Sid and Kate found Melody’s quilts inspiring. And I will see about making Sid my version of his very own personal quilt (a dead tree in winter quilt, eh, Sid?) for his sleeping comfort.

I would love to hear more about the bits and pieces of your lives that have inspired you to do something creative. So don’t stop here. Keep sharing, please.

Maybe next time we can talk about ‘inciting incidents.” Or is that a double positive? Things that inspire that initial, “I think I’d like to write a book about that” (or poem or short story or knot garden or quilt) moment.

Who wants to go first? Well, Michelle already did with her drunken Icelander. But who else has a good inciting incident?

Micah and Mitch are tussling over the treats. They want another contest. Hmmm.

The Trouble With Charley

Thursday, June 4th, 2009


My editor is going to love Charley — if I don’t kill him first.

Why? Because she’s always telling me I should write faster, get books out more often, etc etc etc.

But that means, what? Spending more time at the computer. Working my fingers to the nub. Not to mention my brain.

I have resisted. The well of inspiration is not a gusher around here. It’s generally more of a slow steady trickle — with occasional plugs.

That was all pre-Charley.

Charley, I suspect, has ADD or ADHD or one of those acronymns that I can never get right but that means he has the attention span of, say, a chicken.

Rooster, Charley says. Attention span of a rooster.

Yes, well, whatever you want to call it, Charley needs to be kept busy. Left to his own devices, he does not stay on task.

He is easily distractable — especially by anything with a keyboard wearing pink, red or purple.

While I’m pausing for thought, trying to figure out which Greek saint’s feast day we’re going to be celebrating in chapter seven and trying to use the internet to find it out, Charley won’t wait.

He is busy making notes in his little black book about which girly laptop he wants to ring next.

I didn’t even know he had a little black book.

Everyone has a little black book, he told me. Only now they call it an address file. Liz Fielding’s sexy “Liz Machine” is in it now, and Kate Walker’s new RED Dell Mini may be next.

More trouble is brewing on the horizon, too, because Kate Hardy is expecting a new laptop whom she intends to call Seb. He has already asked Charley if he wants to go out trolling for chicks!

I hope Kate gives Seb a few rules before she unleashes him on his peer group. I’m thinking Charley may need a curfew and it won’t help if Seb can come in any time he wants.

I’m not sure Kate mentioned if Seb was another of those sleek black laptops like Charley. I’m just hoping he’s not that Lamborghini yellow one Charley spotted this morning. I don’t need him having a case of laptop cover envy.

The only way I’ve found of handling these energy bursts of Charley’s is to make him work. He finished chapter six this morning and is working his way through chapter seven.

I tried to stop there and think a bit about the next scene, but Charley didn’t want to quit.

Once he’s on a roll, he won’t settle down. He just wants to keep writing and writing and writing (which is why my editor will love him).

When I say I need a break or to go to the grocery store or think about where the story goes next, he starts prowling the internet looking for new girlfriends.

I suggested yanking out his wireless card. It’s what I used to have to do with Old Wonky when he either spun his hourglass forever or got seriously overheated. But it won’t work with Charley. His wireless card is built-in.

I’m thinking he needs some games to play. Got any suggestions? I’m not sure he’s a spider solitaire kind of guy. He might need something a bit more, er, action oriented than that.

Something with guns and spies and going undercover, Charley says. And girls with keyboards (goes without saying). Ideas welcome.

In the meantime, I know what I’m going to do with him tonight. I’m going to send him downstairs at 8:00 to watch the premiere of the third season of Burn Notice.

Only problem there is that I won’t be upstairs thinking. I’ll be downstairs, too, watching it with him.

What’s in a Name?

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

A few days ago Kate Hardy said she was stuck in her current manuscript because she hadn’t got her hero’s name right and thus he wasn’t cooperating.

People who don’t write probably think that’s daft.

It’s not. Trust me.

I have had heroes who flat out refused to say a word because I didn’t know their names. They just stood there, defying me to guess who they were. And finally, when I got it right, they opened up and eventually I got a book out of them.

Jared Flynn from my novella, Marry Go Round in With This Ring, was a case in point. He absolutely refused to do a thing until I figured out his name.

Lots of us have been tossing names at Kate for her quintessential English banker hero. Got any ideas? Go see Kate on her blog and tell her.

I’ll be curious to see who he turns out to be.

In the meantime, I have something of the opposite problem.

Not Demetrios. I know his name. I know what he does for a living. I know a lot of his backstory and he’s cooperating nicely. He even got off the street corner last night when I found him a good reason to leave and a means of doing so.

But he has a brother, George. George is a physicist. A reclusive brainy physicist.

George, against all odds, is destined to be my next hero. At least that’s what my editor and I have agreed on. This was not, let me assure you, my idea. But apparently some people, editors included, think George can be a hero.

Probably he can be.

But he’s got his work cut out for him. And so do I.

So I’m trying to get inside his head right now — even as I work on Demetrios’s book — because I know I’m going to have to do some heavy-duty thinking about this man (and probably replay Kate Walker‘s master class in Alpha Heroes) before I get to grips with what situation is going to bring out the hero in George.

You’re going to meet George’s ex-wife, Sophy, in Christo’s book, One-Night Mistress, Convenient Wife. I figure she has something to do with George being heroic, but I don’t know what. If I don’t start thinking about it now or I’m going to be in trouble when I need to start on his book.

So what do you think a physicist named George with an ex-wife named Sophy is likely to be confronted with that will make him pull up his socks, get out of the lab and act like a McAllister hero?

All suggestions seriously considered, believe me.

Just don’t tell me to change his name. One of the problems of linked books is that names stick — and authors are stuck with them — and the most unlikely people become heroes and heroines because of it.