Let’s get to know… Nikki Moore

Nikki Moore author photo - guestThis is my first Let’s Get to Know post, and today I’m welcoming Harper Impulse author Nikki Moore.

Nikki Moore lives in beautiful Dorset and writes short stories and sexy, pacy romances. A finalist in several writing competitions including Novelicious Undiscovered 2012, she graduated from the Romantic Novelists Association New Writers’ Scheme after four years and and has contributed to their magazine Romance Matters. She has far too much fun attending the annual RNA conference and has previously chaired a panel and taken part in a workshop at the Festival of Romance.
She blogs about some of her favourite things – Writing, Work and Wine – and believes in supporting other writers as part of a friendly, talented and diverse community.

You can find her on Facebook or on Twitter, and she invites you to pop in for chats about love, life, reading or writing!

Nikki Moore, Crazy Undercover Love - guestWhen uber-feisty career girl Charley Caswell-Wright takes on the assignment as PA to the gorgeous Alex Demetrio, CEO of Demetrio International, she’s there under entirely false pretences; to get her life back on track. Having lost the job she worked so hard to earn, she’s determined not to give it up so easily, especially when she didn’t deserve to lose it in the first place.
Mr Dreamy CEO is her only chance of clawing back her career – and her reputation. So she has to keep things strictly professional… boy, is she in trouble!

Available on Amazon.

Congratulations, Nikki! Here’s to great sales.

 

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Book launch at the Chocolate Museum

There is nothing like a book launch to provide new reading matter, bring inspiration, and get those creative juices flowing again, and what could be better for a Choc Lit author than to attend a book launch held at the Chocolate Museum?

Janet and myself

Janet and myself

On Friday the 4th of April 2014 fellow Choc Lit authors Janet Gover and Beverley Eikli – both Australian – treated us to a glass of wine and some chocolate sampling (I sampled a lot!) at the Chocolate Museum in London’s Brixton area.

“Flight to Coorah Creek” is Janet’s first novel with Choc Lit and her fourth in total (she was previously published by Little Black Dress). Set in the Australian outback, it features a female pilot (just love that!), a handsome flying doctor, and a single mother on the run.

Beverley (on the left) with fellow Choc Lit author Melanie Hudson

Beverley (on the left) with fellow Choc Lit author Melanie Hudson

Beverley’s second novel with Choc Lit, “Maid of Milan”, is a Regency tale of redemption, forgiveness, and a woman’s dark past catching up with her. I look forward to reading both titles.

J & B book launch - cocoa cup

 

 

 

The venue being a museum, I did of course have a little nosey-around and fell in love with this gorgeous 18th Century cocoa cup. Note the two handles – it would have enabled even a young child to drink from it without spilling. And what do you think of this wonderful mural depicting cocoa beans? J & B book launch - mural

There were also many different kinds of chocolate on sale – so many it was almost impossible to choose! – but I settled for a pack of Melange Chocolate, this one 71% cocoa and flavoured with raspberry and rosemary. Not much left of it now as you can see…

J & B book launch - chocsAll in all, it was a great evening, and it was particularly lovely to meet some of the many book bloggers who so generously give up their spare time to blog about new titles. You can find them here:

 

Cosmochicklitan
Shaz’s Book Blog
Fabulous Book Fiend

I plan to visit the Chocolate Museum again very soon.

 

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Are writers different to other people?

The answer to that is simple: of course not.

Writers are the same as everyone else, with the same joys and sorrows, dreams and fears. We have jobs, friends, family, stresses and pressures, bills to pay, decisions to make, homes to keep in (some) order, free time and holidays, maybe cars and gardens to maintain. We experience inclement weather, train delays, industrial action or political change just as everyone else. Being a writer doesn’t mean the river Thames won’t flood into your back garden.

We’re not celebrities (well, most of us aren’t). We live our lives in obscurity and rarely get recognised in the street because of the job we do.

But there’s one small area where we do differ from others: we’re always working.

Always.

Notebook

A writer friend told me once that she was lying on her bed staring at the ceiling when her husband walked in and asked her a mundane household question.

Enraged, she snapped, “Oh, go away, I’m working!”

“But… but you’re just lying there,” he replied, nonplussed.

“Yes, I’m working. In my head.”

I nod with recognition at this scenario. I never switch off either, not even at night. That’s why I have pen and paper at the ready on my bedside table for when I wake up in the early hours with an important plot point which I must write down immediately because it’s guaranteed that I won’t remember it in the morning.

This note-taking isn’t limited to night time. Throughout the day I’m constantly thinking about my characters and their situation, and I’ll be people-watching if I’m out somewhere, eaves-dropping on conversations and writing things down on whatever I can find: till receipts, napkins, leaflets etc. Once I took notes of an entire conversation between two people who sat behind me on the bus (as much as I could capture as I don’t do 100wpm shorthand…).

Some might regard this as borderline spying – I don’t see it that way. I’ll probably never meet these people again, and if I do, it’s unlikely that I would connect them with my note-taking, nor would they recognise themselves if they read my book. For me it’s about the human condition in all its triviality, getting an insight into people’s personalities, and then sharing this insight on the page. It’s not about judging or feeling superior, but simply about learning.

So if you see me sitting on a park bench staring at nothing in particular and looking pensive, it’s not because I’m sad or lonely; I’m actually working!

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Why reading makes me happy

Recently I posted this photo of my bedroom bookshelf on Facebook, with the words “survival kit – books waiting to be read!” This is by no means the only books in my home. I have them on my bedside table, in the living room, in my office cum guest room, in the kitchen (although those are mainly cookery books), on the landing. Basically there are books everywhere. Books, books, books – why do I have so many?

Bedroom bookshelfBecause they’re like old friends, and they make me happy. Or more specifically, reading makes me happy, not forgetting other sources such as the e-books I have on my e-reader, library books, and the ones friends recommend and let me borrow from time to time. It’s not necessarily about owning a physical book but about having access to what’s inside it – the story.

As an adolescent I would devour one title after the other (plus, ahem, Marvel magazines…) and quickly ended up reading everything on my own shelves at least twice. I would then spend hours at our local library (back when our small village still had one!), often sitting on the floor cocooned by the richness around me. I read my way through the children’s classics among others “Charlotte’s Web” and “The Railway Children”, then graduated to romances and authors such as Barbara Cartland, Victoria Holt, and Mary Stewart, and afterwards to grittier books by e.g. Charles Dickens, Elizabeth Gaskell and Raymond Chandler, as well as Jane Austen and the Brontës.

I like to think that my reading tastes are varied and eclectic, not allowing particular genres and styles to restrict me. The contents of my bookshelf is an illustration of this – here’s everything from crime [Dick Francis], romance [Fiona Harper], historical [Jenny Barden], epic drama [Madeleine Miller], the literary novel [Patrick Neate], to comedy [Danny Wallace], sci-fi [Connie Willis], young adult [Katherine Marsh], paranormal [Barbara Erskine], gothic [Daphne du Maurier] and fantasy [George R R Martin]. These authors are all ready to take me by the hand and guide me through their own unique and fantastical worlds.

And I can’t wait to join them!

Posted in Lifestyle | 14 Comments

MY TOP 5 READS OF 2013

Life After LifeLife after Life by Kate Atkinson
This book starts with a bang, literally, as we see the heroine Ursula shooting Hitler before his rise to power.
I’ve read books by Kate Atkinson before, and enjoyed them, but it was the tag line for this one which caught my eye: “What if you had the chance to live your life again and again, until you finally got it right?” This idea completely wow’ed me, and it was also the subject we discussed most in our book club – what if.
In the book we follow Ursula on her epic journey from birth in 1910 till shortly after World War II, in the beginning with her going back to being born again and later back to various times when she was at a crossroads and had to make a decision about something. These are not necessarily important life-changing decisions, but often trivial and the kind people make every day, such as taking a different route home. These seemingly unimportant details have far-reaching consequences for the future, so much so that the story burned like an after-image in my memory.

Close to the WindClose to the Wind by Zana Bell
This well-written historical romantic adventure was a delight to read. I loved the descriptions of life on board the ship on the long journey from England to New Zealand, as well as the descriptions of Madeira and South African where the ship makes a stopover. The “newness” of New Zealand took me by surprise, and I felt as though I’d been given a privileged insight into the birth of a nation, albeit briefly.
The character Georgina is simply splendid as she develops from being a headstrong miss and sometimes very close to earning herself a slap, to a mature woman aware of her own power and sensuality. Even in her disguise as a boy she fascinates the hero, Captain Harry Trent, and when her disguise is blown, he doesn’t stand a chance. The perfect read if you’re in search of a novel which contains the right mixture of adventure, romance and danger.

Wedded in a WhirlwindWedded in a Whirlwind by Liz Fielding
I don’t read many Mills & Boon novels, but there are a small number of authors whose books I will always pick up. One of them is Liz Fielding, and whilst I always enjoy her true-to-life romances, Wedded in a Whirlwind particularly stood out for me.
Don’t be put off by the schlocky title (the publishers’ choice I suspect, not the author’s) because it really doesn’t do the book justice. In fact it’s an earthquake and not a storm which throws the heroine Miranda and the hero Nick together – literally. Trapped underground in total darkness and with only the barest of survival aids at hand, we watch the reluctant characters go from coping with their life-threatening predicament, to baring their innermost feelings, to falling in love, all by touch, sound and scent alone.
When they finally overcome their fears, inner fears as well as those brought on by the situation, and emerge into daylight, they see each other exactly as they did before, and not for one moment does the situation seem contrived or unbelievable. Pure genius!

Game of ThronesGame of Thrones, vol. 1, by George R. R. Martin
I never saw the TV series, but when two friends whose opinions I really rate recommended this series of novels – independently of each other! – I decided to read it. I was hooked and enthralled from the start, even spellbound one might say.
The violence is visceral and matter-of-fact, yet Martin doesn’t dwell on it like some other authors do, but makes it integral part of the world he has created. But there’s more to this series than violence. It’s a story of passion, honour, and infinite beauty amidst the misery and the squalor of war. The characters, including the minor ones, are utterly real, each with their own motives which make total sense to his/her story, and even the magical/mystical element has a sense of truth to it.
A word of caution, though: have a break between the books in the series, because they don’t half mess with your mind!

BlackoutAll Clear by Connie Willis
A sequel to Blackout, and a tale of living through the London Blitz – with a difference. Eileen, Polly and Mike are time-travelling history students from 2060 stuck in London during the Blitz, trying to locate each other and to find a way home.
It’s a story of resourcefulness, theirs as well of the contemps (i.e. the people living in the time they’ve travelled to), of wit, compassion, and a discovery that it’s impossible not to affect the past and not get involved with the contemps, no matter how much they try to only observe. The British wartime spirit bounces off every page, and the reader experiences everything almost first-hand as the time-travellers experience it.
It’s a very long book, possibly over-long, following an equally long book, but it’s worth it for the final denouement which blew me away even though the clues were there all along.

[Apologies re. the “Click to Look Inside” captions – these images are from Amazon]

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“My Writing Process” Blog Hop

Many thanks to Christina Courtenay for inviting me to take part in this ‘blog hop’ – you can find her post from last week here.  All the participants have to answer four questions (see below) and then pass the baton to others.  I asked Evonne Wareham to take part, and her blog will appear on 17th Feb so please don’t forget to check it out!  You’ll find her link and a short biography at the end of this post.  Thank you for stopping by!

Image
Q & A:-
1)    What am I working on? – At the moment I’m working on my 3rd romantic suspense novel. This one, like my 2nd novel “The Elephant Girl”, is also set in London, and this time the action takes place in and around a casino in the less salubrious part of Soho. The story features a young trainee croupier, an enigmatic barman, and a casino owner running from his past. It’s a modern and (very loose) re-telling of the fairy tale “The Little Mermaid”, with plenty of secrets, lies and skeletons in the closet.

2)    How does my work differ from others of its genre? – I’m aware that this must sound rather self-aggrandising, but I think what sets my work apart from many other books in the same subgenre is that I focus my stories and plots around complex family issues and the kind of betrayals that ordinary people suffer in their everyday lives. However, it’s not all doom and gloom – because I write romantic fiction, I give my characters plenty of opportunity to redeem themselves and find that happy ending which is so often denied people in real life.

3)    Why do I write what I do? – Absolutely no idea! The stories just come to me, but I’m very inspired by fairy tales and classics such as the brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Andersen, Shakespeare and Charles Dickens, and I think that these classic story lines work their way into my writing through my subconscious mind.

4)    How does your writing process work? – I’m very organised and write detailed outlines which I tend to follow quite closely. I have to because my stories all contain a number of red herrings and false clues, and it’s important that I know what’s going on, otherwise it’s easy for the plot to run away from me.

The lovely Evonne Wareham has agreed to join the blog hop, and you will see her post next week (17th February):

Evonne is a Welsh author of European set romantic suspense – corkscrew plots, hot heroes and the heroines who can’t resist them. Her blog can be found at: http://evonneonwednesday.blogspot.com

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The RNA Conference 2013

This year’s RNA conference was held at the conference centre of Sheffield University, curiously named The Edge. As always the conference was superb and ran like clock-work, aside from a few hick-ups which were no one’s fault, and which we all took in our stride (like broken air conditioning in sweltering heat…).

Writers on The Edge...

Writers on The Edge…

The workshops were great, and I particularly enjoyed Melinda Hammond’s talk on procrastination (something I do a LOT – hmm), and Fiona Harper’s lecture on the structure of the romantic novel. The best thing about the conference, however, is catching up with old friends and making new ones. Because I was one of the contacts for the first time conference-goers, I had the privilege of talking to people I might otherwise not have thought to approach, and one them even bought my book!

By the end my head was buzzing, and although I was relieved to be home, I was also a little sad that it was over so quickly. I’ll leave you with some photos from the conference which I hope speak for themselves.

Roll on #RNAConf2014!

The conference centre

The conference centre


Residential block E (my window is on the 1st floor to the left)

Residential block E (my window is on the 1st floor to the left)


View from the kitchen window - glorious sunshine!

View from the kitchen window – glorious sunshine!


Goody bags being packed by volunteers

Goody bags being packed by volunteers


All 180 of them!

All 180 of them!


Relaxing in the bar (a must!), with Jane Lovering, Sarah Callejo, Chris Stovell, Christina Courtenay, Janet Gover, Rhoda Baxter & Kate Thomson

Relaxing in the bar (a must!), with Jane Lovering, Sarah Callejo, Chris Stovell, Christina Courtenay, Janet Gover, Rhoda Baxter & Kate Thomson


Melinda Hammond giving her talk

Melinda Hammond giving her talk


Friday night kitchen party!

Friday night kitchen party!


Was delighted to see my new book in the conference bookshop

Was delighted to see my new book in the conference bookshop


Adrienne Vaughan, Lizzie Lamb, Cathy Mansell and Margaret Kaine enjoying a shaded spot on Saturday afternoon

Adrienne Vaughan, Lizzie Lamb, Cathy Mansell and Margaret Kaine enjoying a shaded spot on Saturday afternoon


Chris Stovell and Janet Gover at the gala dinner on Saturday night

Chris Stovell and Janet Gover at the gala dinner on Saturday night


Anna Boatman (from Piatkus Entice) and Jenny Barden sat across from me at the gala dinner

Anna Boatman (from Piatkus Entice) and Jenny Barden sat across from me at the gala dinner


Kate Johnson (on the right) wins the Elizabeth Goudge trophy

Kate Johnson (on the right) wins the Elizabeth Goudge trophy


The food at the conference was slightly, ahem, inventive, but this vanilla cheesecake was truly delicious!

The food at the conference was slightly, ahem, inventive, but this vanilla cheesecake was truly delicious!


My handbag for the gala dinner was much admired (hands off, everybody!)

My handbag for the gala dinner was much admired (hands off, everybody!)


Back at the kitchen Biddy Coady raises a glass to a wonderful conference. I second that!

Back at the kitchen Biddy Coady raises a glass to a wonderful conference. I second that!

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The story behind the story

Blueprint For Love - high res

Available from Amazon here

By that I don’t mean the research which went into writing it or even the blurb, but instead the story of how my novella came to be published. Blueprint for Love, a sweet romance mystery (so, no beheadings in this one, folks), is now out as an e-book through the imprint Choc Lit Lite.

This is the digital only arm of my publisher Choc Lit, and it aims to publish novels or novellas between 30,000 to 100,000 words, not necessarily featuring the hero’s point of view. You can see their guidelines here.

But I digress. How did this story get out there in the end? Well, I’d been a member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association New Writers’ Scheme for a number of years, and although I was getting very good reports from the readers, my writing wasn’t “quite there yet”. After yet another positive report on a full length novel which failed to make agents and editors sit up and take notice, I thought that perhaps I wasn’t meant to write longer fiction and decided to write a novella instead. It went through the NWS, was read by the extremely helpful Cara Cooper, and I then sent it to My Weekly Story Collection, which is part of the publisher D. C. Thomson.

Again a few positive noises were made but sadly it wasn’t for them. Frustrated I shoved the story in a bottom drawer while I figured out what to do with it next, and in the meantime signed a publishing contract for a full length novel with Choc Lit. When they later announced the launch of their Lite imprint, I dusted off the story and sent it to them. Fortunately the Tasting Panel liked it, and Choc Lit accepted it!

My advice to anyone trying to have their work published is never to give up. Just because a piece of writing isn’t suitable for one publisher doesn’t necessarily mean that the story is bad – often it’s a case of being in the right place at the right time.

So here is Blueprint for Love, finally seeing the light of day. And don’t you just love that fabulous cover designed by Berni Stevens?

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The dreaded edits – Part 3

PDF file showing annotations

PDF file showing annotations in the document, as well as the editing tool bar

On the 3rd of May I blogged about copy edits, the 2nd stage of editing my novel. Today the subject of this blog is proofing, which is the last stage before the book goes to the printers.

Proofing is done in writeable pdf format. You open the proof file which you’ve received from your editor, click on Comment, and this opens an Annotations box, which is full of helpful editing tools such as “delete”, “insert”, “replace with” and more, which allow you to make comments on the actual typeset document.

In contrast to the 1st and 2nd editing phase, proofing is only for minimal changes like missing words, repetitions, punctuation mistakes, etc., and a final spell check. Because the document has already been typeset to look exactly like your book will in print, you can’t make too many changes as this carries the risk that the text will go over the page and will have to be partially typeset again.

Having said that, if you discover that both you and your editor have missed out a word which will then take the text over the page, there’s usually scope for deleting a word further down or on the next page, so it balances out or so only two pages will have to be typeset again.

Unfortunately (or fortunately depending in perspective…) this is also the stage where you suddenly notice all those tiny little mistakes you never saw before because back then you were concentrating on getting the story right, and then the language. I never realised there were so many ways to use the word “flick” – my characters flick their hair, flick the light switch, flick the kettle on, flick through the pages of a book. Needless to say, I flicked some of those in the trash!

So what happens next? After the proofing stage the book goes back to the typesetter who incorporates the last few changes. Off it then goes to the printers, and a few weeks after that you’ll take delivery of a box of shiny new author copies.

Is it now time for me to sit back and rest on my laurels? Hmm, maybe not. There was something else I needed to do. What was it?

Oh, yes, write another book…

A sight like this makes it all worthwhile!

A sight like this makes it all worthwhile!

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The RNA Summer Party 2013

The RNA Summer Party was fantastic. I love the ambiance at The Royal Overseas League, and the canapes were delicious, especially those tiny pots of fish and chips (I had three!). But as always there are so many lovely people to talk to and only a limited time. I did manage to catch a few, and here are the photos to prove it.

I’ll be cheeky and begin with this year’s contenders for the Joan Hessayon Prize, because I’m happy to say I was one of them!

The contenders for the Joan Hessayon Prize for New Writers. Left to right Carol McGrath, winner Liesel Schwarz, Jenny Barden, Liz Harris, Joss Alexander, Cathy Mansell, Serena Clarke, Anne Stenhouse Graham, and me

The contenders for the Joan Hessayon Prize for New Writers. Left to right: Carol McGrath, winner Liesel Schwarz, Jenny Barden, Liz Harris, Joss Alexander, Cathy Mansell, Serena Clarke, Anne Stenhouse Graham, and me. Best foot forward, ladies, as the photographer told us to!

Judy Astley, Jenny Colgan winner of the Romantic Novel Award, Rowan Coleman (shortlisted for the Romantic Novel Award), and Tamsyn Murray

All smiles, left to right: Judy Astley, Jenny Colgan, winner of the Romantic Novel Award, Rowan Coleman (shortlisted for the Romantic Novel Award), and Tamsyn Murray

Liesel Schwarz winner of the Joan Hessayon prize, Tim Ardizzone, and Mags Cullingford

Liesel Schwarz, proudly holding the trophy for the Joan Hessayon prize, Tim Ardizzone, and Mags Cullingford

Pia Fenton, our newly elected chairman, and Jon Astley

Pia Fenton, our newly elected chairman, and Jon Astley

Party ladies, left from right, Giselle Green, Pia Fenton, Jenny Barden, Liz Fenwick, agent Carole Blake, and Janet Gover

Party ladies, left to right: Giselle Green, Pia Fenton, Jenny Barden, Liz Fenwick, agent Carole Blake, and Janet Gover

Janet Gover, Liz Harris, and Liz Ringrose

Janet Gover, Liz Harris, and Liz Ringrose

Jane Bidder and Gill Stewart, the RNA's newly elected Treasurer

Jane Bidder and Gill Stewart, the RNA’s newly elected Treasurer

Brigid Coady and Julie Cohen

Brigid Coady and Julie Cohen

Me and NWS member Karen Aldous

Me and NWS member Karen Aldous

And, of course, many many more were present, but my poor camera refused to cooperate further!

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