Meet the Author: Cynthia Robinson

Cynthia Robinson was born in Tennessee, has lived and traveled extensively abroad, and holds a Ph.D. in Art History from the University of Pennsylvania. She is Professor of Islamic and Medieval Art History at Cornell University. The Will of Venus is her debut novel.

When did you start writing professionally?

I have written fiction off and on throughout my life, but have always had “day jobs” -- anything from bartending and catering to my now quite serious academic career. I am a professor of Medieval and Islamic Art History, and have published widely for an academic audience (which is what you have to do if you want to get tenure and then a full professorship). Especially during the tenure process, academia can be all-consuming, so I had actually parked the fiction thing for a number of years until relatively recently. 

The Will of Venus is my first published novel, but I have one other novel finished. It has been submitted to a small, independent press; we’ll see what happens there. I have recently written my first short-short story, and have begun to send out excerpts and chapters to contests and journals. I also plan to begin a methodical and serious search for a literary agent (Venus happened without one) during the next few months, so we’ll see where this all goes. One thing is certain, however: now that I have started writing again, I don’t think I’ll stop anytime soon!

Why do you write women's fiction?

At first glance, Venus definitely looks to most people like Chick Lit, and most of the sites that have featured or reviewed it are Chick Lit sites. That doesn’t bother me at all—I am delighted for anyone to read or review it. At the most basic level, the interchange between author and reader/reviewer is an investment of the reader’s or the reviewer’s time, attention and energy, and I am appreciative of the investment any reader or reviewer dedicates to my work.

I wouldn’t say, though, that I necessarily set out to craft stories for an exclusively female audience—as a matter of fact, I know that a number of the reviews on Venus’ Amazon page were written by men. It is true that my central characters or protagonists are almost always women, probably because of my own lived experience. It has always been more of a challenge for me to “write men,” so that is one of the goals for my next project—three of the most important characters are men, and they seem to be on their way to becoming three-dimensional without much help from me at all.

I think members of all genders can learn a lot from reading a narrative constructed from the perspective of someone of another gender.

What is your novel The Will of Venus about?

The central character is Livia, a thirty-seven-year-old Manhattan chef. When the narrative opens, Livia has just received a letter from her sister, Danae, who lives in New Orleans with her husband, asking her to come down for her fortieth birthday (Livia will be making dinner). Danae has made some rather theatrical declarations in the past about just cutting her losses and getting out (i.e., committing suicide) if she isn’t happy by her fortieth birthday, and Livia has a sinking feeling that her sister—who she knows is not happy—might actually be serious about this.

Livia books a ticket to New Orleans and then turns to her friend, Éster, an aspiring santera, for some white magic to insure the success of her efforts to save her sister from herself. The trouble starts when Livia mixes these filters and herbs with another set of santería spells she has been using to keep the romantic side of her life under control.

It’s a bit of Flannery O’Connor meets Gabriel García Márquez – not that I am seriously comparing myself to those two literary giants, but in terms of there being a lot of Southern material (Livia and Danae grew up outside Baton Rouge, Louisiana), laced with a generous helping of magical realism.

How did you get your novel published? Tell us about your journey to publication.

This novel has followed a long and winding road. I wrote it a number of years ago. I was living in Manhattan at the time, and had some very near misses at getting an agent and believe that if I had persisted, I probably would have found one. When I moved out west to take up my first tenure-track teaching position, though, I dropped the ball on the fiction writing. As I mentioned above, there is enormous pressure on tenure-track faculty to publish in the academic realm, and when you combine that with all of the other duties attendant to a teaching position at a research university, it can be pretty overwhelming.

Recently, though, I was approached by Shoto Press—a friend of mine is involved with that group, and he had read Venus back when I first wrote it and loved it (see, another guy!). He asked if I would be interested in publishing digitally (Shoto is an all-digital operation) and I thought, why not? 

So at least this leg of the journey was very unorthodox. I think, though, that, for future projects, I am going to try to do it the old-fashioned way—I don’t really think the publishing world is ready to take digital-only operations seriously. It has been difficult for us to get the book reviewed, or to get promotional opportunities, for example, through B&N. Even though they accepted Venus for their Nook (and they don’t accept everything, so we were happy about that), we ran into a lot of walls with them when we wanted to do promotions, because we didn’t have a paper product. And I have to confess that I like the feel of a “real book” in my hands!  I do have a Kindle and I love it for travel and for the ease with which you can just stick it in your bag and take hundreds of books along with you that way, but for the next one, I want to go a more traditional route, which will be a great deal more difficult—I will need to find an agent, for starters.

Where do you find the inspiration for your stories?

I find that almost all of my stories germinate initially from bits and pieces of the past (and this includes not only things I have lived, but things that other people have told me they have lived). These bits and pieces may be events, dreams, conversations, or personalities, but they morph, almost immediately, into something other than the reality from which they proceed.

Given my knowledge of medieval material, you might expect that I would draw more on that, but thus far that hasn’t happened.  I have one thing begun that is set in 10th-century Spain, but I haven’t been able to decide whether it is a novella or a short story or a novel proper, and even though I like it well enough, it keeps getting displaced by other projects.  Maybe some day…

What is the most challenging part about being a writer? What is the most rewarding?

The most challenging part has got to be getting published, and as I outlined above, I am just now undertaking the journey toward ‘traditional’ publication. It might be a long one.

Most rewarding: when something comes together and you know it’s good; when someone whose opinion you value highly tells you it’s good; giving a reading and realizing that people are spellbound. Warning: these things don’t happen every day, and I have yet to have them all happen on the same day.

Why should people buy your book?

Well, first of all because it’s only 99 cents! A total bargain! Seriously, because I believe they will enjoy it. It has been read by everyone from a serious professor of English literature to two of my doctors to a couple of my students—men and women, of a variety of ages—and they have all loved it. You can kind of take it on whatever level you want to: there is some very funny stuff in there, so that it feels almost farcical at times, and yet there are serious and poetic moments as well. You can take the implicit social critique seriously if you so choose, or you can laugh at it, up to you.

Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?

I myself find that I need to be disciplined about writing every day, or almost every day. But then I am a very organized and schedule-oriented person (as my S.O. is fond of saying, “Routine is freedom”); others may find that too constrictive. I have a particular niche in the day that I have now trained myself (over the last several months, that is, since I have started writing again) to envision as “writing time.” It doesn’t happen every day, of course, but the goal is to have it happen every day. Sometimes I don’t feel particularly inspired (it’s sort of like scheduling sex, I guess – you aren’t always in the mood!), but I at least try to do some editing or re-writing, and I often find that I get a couple of decent paragraphs out of myself even when I didn’t think I was in the right frame of mind.

Having a few of friends who are willing to read your stuff and give you honest, unvarnished feedback is invaluable. I have one friend with whom I swap critiquing services and his comments are always incredibly useful. I would like to start a fiction workshop, but my efforts thus far haven’t really gelled. I think you need at least three participants, and everyone needs to be compatible—not an easy thing to put together, as I am discovering.

Finally, being persistent and thick-skinned (all the while remaining open to constructive criticism!) are probably not bad qualities to cultivate.

What are you working on now?

Right now I am in the middle of writing a novel based on the murder of a young woman that happened in my town while I was growing up. I want to use that platform not in order to construct a classic who-dun-it, but rather to consider the effects the discovery of the body and the ensuing investigation have on a smallish university town in upstate New York (I have moved the setting from my childhood home to a place that looks and feels very much like where I live now). A number of current issues are weaving themselves into the narrative, such as the foster care of adolescents, difficult family relationships, and adolescent access to technological tools that they don’t always use with a great deal of wisdom. As I said above, three of the principal characters are men, which is new for me, and it is thus far a pretty exciting ride.
--

Thanks for answering our questions, Cynthia!

Meet the Author: Lori Verni-Fogarsi

Lori Verni-Fogarsi has been a freelance writer, journalist, columnist, and seminar speaker for more than fifteen years. Momnesia is her first novel, and she is also the author of the nonfiction book Everything You Need to Know About House Training Puppies and Adult Dogs.

When did you start writing professionally?

My professional career in writing started off in an unusual way! In 1993, I opened my first business--a dog training school. I decided to start a monthly newsletter to send to clients, vets, groomers, etc. I was pleasantly surprised when shortly after, magazines started contacting me for writing assignments. At first, I was asked to write only about dog behavior, but then things progressed to include small business marketing, parenting, and eventually fiction, as people enjoyed my "writing voice" that was evident, even in my nonfiction work. 


My career has progressed over the years to include working as a journalist and newspaper columnist, seminar speaker, small business consultant, and more! My first book, Everything You Need to Know About House Training Puppies and Adult Dogs, was published in 2005.

Why do you write women's fiction?

There are so many life issues that are specific to women; many of which we tend to feel "alone" about. I think there is incredible pressure on women (some of which we put on ourselves), to be "perfect." Perfect mothers, perfect career women, perfect runners of our households, perfect daughters, wives, neighbors, etc. One of the things I personally enjoy when I read women's fiction is the sense of being understood; not feeling like I'm the only one who feels a certain way.

My goal in writing women's fiction is to put a humorous, yet realistic and heartfelt twist on the issues we face. I enjoy putting emotions into words about things most of us barely dare think, even in the privacy of our minds! Presenting it with a certain level of candid humor helps bring even the more dire emotions into perspective. 


How did you get your novel published? Tell us about your journey to publication.

I began by following the traditional route: querying agents. I received a lot of great feedback including many requests for the full manuscript, and numerous heartfelt personal letters from top agents saying that I had strong writing and they loved my novel, but due to changes in the industry they simply couldn't take on another project. Even their referrals to other agents yielded the same results.

After a long and frustrating year of querying, I was reading an article in Writer's Digest Magazine. It was called something like "50 Things Authors Must Do For Their Book to Be Successful." It included obvious things like social networking and blog posting, but also included things like personally phoning and visiting bookstores to try and get events scheduled, booking and paying for your own travel, advertising in trade publications, etc. I remember feeling shocked, and saying to myself, "Remind me again... why would I pay an agent and a publisher to produce my book and receive lower per-book royalties if I still have to do and pay all this?"

Having been self-employed my entire life and having a strong business marketing background, I realized that perhaps going the traditional route wasn't right for me, considering the new way the industry works. However, I didn't want to self-publish, as there is a sea of self-published authors out there whose work is not professionally edited, and I didn't want to be a part of that crowd either.

My solution? I opened my own publishing company, Brickstone Publishing. I set up the entire business correctly as a professional micro-press, hired a professional editor to edit Momnesia, commissioned an artist to custom-paint the cover art, and hired a professional graphic designer to make the rest of the cover perfect. Meanwhile, I studied the publishing industry and learned all I needed to know to execute a professional book launch, from ISBN to ARCs and beyond.

Where do you find the inspiration for your stories?


Generally, they come from wildly embellished versions of my own experiences, or those of my friends. I also work from imagination: What would it be like if such-and-such happened? For example, my next novel is about a couple of almost-empty-nesters. Their combined family of four kids are just about all off to college and they've just ordered new, white furniture when a pregnant teenage girl shows up on their doorstep and announces she's the daughter they never knew they had! (There is a first chapter preview of my next book at the end of Momnesia!)

What is the most challenging part about being a writer? What is the most rewarding?

Without question there are two things I find the most challenging. One is the revising of the manuscript. Definitely not what I consider the fun part of being a writer, but certainly one I understand is necessary in order to turn out top work. The other? Not worrying about the fact that people assume everything they read in my books is a thinly veiled accounting of my own personal life!

The most rewarding is when people--actual strangers!--buy my book and love it. It's one thing for your mother or best friend to read your book and love it, but receiving five star reviews from total strangers? It's a charge to say the least!

Why should people buy your book?


My hope is for readers to buy my book for the same reasons I buy books: Because you enjoy escaping into some other person's world for a time. Because you want to laugh, cry, feel understood, feel better or worse about your own life. To FEEL, I guess, in general.

Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?

Yes. Three main things. 1) Just write your book. Don't worry about what you're going to do with it later; it can never be published if you still haven't written it! 2) Make sure it's professionally edited. Even though I've actually worked as an editor and proofreader on other people's work, I still had a professional, impartial editor go over my book, and it's important! 3) Be patient: If your goal is to have your book be successful, don't expect it to be a project that takes only a few months.

--

Thanks for answering our questions, Lori! 
--

To be entered to win a copy of Momnesia, please leave a comment. The winner will be randomly chosen on March 29th.

Meet the Author: Caroline Burau

When did you start writing professionally?

I started writing for newspapers as a columnist and reporter in 1999. I loved the writing, but didn’t always love the fact-finding – the times when I had to try to extract information from people who didn’t necessarily want to talk to me.

In 2003, I became a 911 dispatcher for a county sheriff’s department and began writing about my job, which is how my memoir Answering 911: Life in the Hot Seat came about.

Why do you write women's fiction?

Sugarfiend
started out as literary fiction, but slowly became “chick lit” because I realized I had a lot to say about the diet and fitness industry and that I wanted to say it in a way that wasn’t preachy, but humorous. I started my first diet when I was ten, so I’ve been obsessing about this topic for kind of a long time.

What is your novel Sugarfiend about?


Sugarfiend
is about a 25-year-old sugar addict named Estelle who reaches her rock-bottom on the diet/binge roller-coaster, quits her job, and goes on an all-you-can-eat Caribbean cruise. But Estelle is shocked – and mad as heck – when she find as many fitness classes and diet seminars as there are pasta bars and chocolate buffets on what’s supposed to be her vacation from it all.

Fueled by a few too many vodka-soaked smoothies, Estelle throws moderation overboard, and it lands her in huge debt. Broke and alone, she’s forced to take a job to pay it all back – as a fitness consultant on the ship. Hilarity, skullduggery, and even some nudity ensue. Huzzah!

Why did you choose to self-publish your novel?

It was surprisingly easy to find a publisher for my first book, Answering 911, because it was a memoir about a profession that hasn’t been written about much, if at all. I had hoped my success in non-fiction could help with Sugarfiend, but novels are more difficult because there are so many and they are more of a risk for the publisher.

After querying more than twenty agents about Sugarfiend, I decided to self-publish, knowing that without a publisher behind me, I would probably sell fewer copies than my first book, but eager to get it out into the world. Writers often say nothing is ever truly finished, just published. After several thorough edits, I knew Sugarfiend was good and I was ready to be “finished.”

Where do you find the inspiration for your stories?

I find inspiration in the absurd and in issues that affect me as a woman, and there seems to be no shortage of either.

What is the most challenging part about being a writer? What is the most rewarding?

Marketing my books and public speaking make me queasy, but are necessary evils when promoting a book, especially when you self publish.

It’s so rewarding when someone tells me I’ve written something they can relate to or that just made them laugh. A friend recently told me she was laughing too loudly while reading my book on the treadmill at the health club, which is both awesome and ironic.

Why should people buy your book?

If you’ve ever argued out loud with a baked good or a Pilates DVD, Estelle’s adventures will make you giggle. Also, I’ve recently discovered vintage dress shopping online, and it makes crack addiction look downright sensible.

Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?

Writing doesn’t always feel magical, but just keep at it because not writing becomes a hard habit to break. And then when you have something written, be willing to edit the hell out of it. It’s not about getting it perfect on the first try.

When you decide what to write, do some research to make sure the market is not already saturated with similar books. Think of what makes your book unique, or it will be hard to sell. Still, don’t write about anything that you’re not passionate about. Most authors don’t make their living at this. You should love your book just for the sake of it. Just the existence of it should make you want to squeal with glee.

What are you working on now?


Most recently, I’ve been writing weekly blogs for
www.women.com, which is keeping my writing chops up and bringing me new readers for both books.

In long-term projects, I have started a new novel about a 911 dispatcher with a sixth sense. I am also interested in researching and writing a true-crime book about a local abduction case, which would be a complete departure from anything I’ve done.
 
--

Thanks for answering our questions, Caroline!

Meet the Author: Wendy Chen

Wendy Chen writes novels for those who enjoy chick lit and lighthearted fiction. Her debut novel Liar's Guide to True Love was published by Carina Press last month. She lives in Northern Virginia with her family where she is working on her next novel.
 
Wendy joins us today to answer some of our questions to get to know her better. Enjoy! 
 
When did you start writing professionally?
I started writing Liar's Guide to True Love an embarrassingly long time ago. It took me forever to complete, mostly because I took about five years off from doing any writing. I had given up on the manuscript and decided to focus on my day job. But it was always in the back of my mind, so I finally decided to focus on it about three years ago while I was on maternity leave.
 
Why do you write women's fiction?
I've loved women's fiction since I was in junior high and my older sister left her romances lying around all over the house. I started on historical romances and kept reading other sub genres ever since. My love for reading turned in to a desire to write some time during my high school years. 
 
How did you get your novel published? Tell us about your journey to publication.
It certainly is not easy to get published, especially when different sub genres fall in and out of favor. Like many authors, I pursued a traditional print path first, with attempts to find an agent to represent me. Liar's Guide to True Love was rejected by every agent that I submitted to. The ones who read it had a lot of nice things to say about it, but I was told that the chick lit market just wasn't big enough anymore. Then a wonderful mentor of mine suggested Carina Press, so I emailed my manuscript in to them. I honestly did not expect to hear back, and when I didn't after a few months, I decided to self-publish digitally. I even hired a graphic designer to do a professional looking cover for me. I was working on final edits and trying to figure out all the various e-reader formats when I got the call from Carina Press that they wanted to publish Liar's Guide to True Love. I've been really fortunate to be able to work with such a great team and a great editor.
 
Where do you find the inspiration for your stories?
I get inspired by every day things that happen to me that I might find funny or silly. For example, there's a scene in Liar's Guide where my heroine wears two different shoes by accident. That actually happened to me and I went through the entire day before I finally realized it.
 
What is the most challenging part about being a writer? What is the most rewarding?
The most challenging part is by far the discipline that goes into the actual writing. That's something I did not fully appreciate until I was about twenty thousand words into my first manuscript. I thought I could just write whenever inspiration hit, but then I realized that was getting me nowhere and I really had to sit in front of my computer and force myself to write something, even if it was terrible and got edited out later.  
 
Why should people buy your book?
I think readers can identify with my characters and will get a good laugh out of Cassandra and her friends. My writing appeals to lovers of chick lit and general romance -- and what romantic doesn't love weddings?
 
Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?
You hear this all the time, but you really can't take rejection personally.
--
To find out more, visit http://www.wendychenbooks.com and connect with Wendy on Twitter and Facebook.

Meet the Author: Michelle Betham

Michelle Betham is a British independent author of two novels. Her second novel, Too Much Trouble in Paradise, is a lighthearted, fun romance set mainly on the Spanish Canarian island of Tenerife. Molly Parker is a 30-something Geordie girl who moves to Tenerife with her best friend after her divorce from her professional darts-playing husband who she left behind in the North East of England. Molly settles into her new life nicely with a lovely home, a good job, and her fiance until her ex-husband shows up and declares his undying love for her, which could change everything.

Today, Michelle joins us to answer some of our questions to get to know her better. Enjoy! 

What was your favorite book(s) when you were a child?
Oh, definitely The Famous Five and Malory Towers series of books by Enid Blyton. I loved those books! They took me to another world, worlds so different to mine, but once I started reading them I couldn’t put them down! And those Famous Five books were the inspiration for a lot of our summer school holiday fun as children as we re-lived the adventures of Julian, Dick, Anne and George, riding around the streets on our bikes. Although, my small Yorkshire Terrier Sparky had been most unwilling to join in and play the role of Timmy! Those books gave me escapism, and they sealed my love of reading.
 

What is your favorite book(s) now?
To be honest, I’ll read anything from Jill Mansell to James Herbert! I grew up reading anything I could lay my hands on, so I’ve got a wide range in tastes when it comes to books. I do, however, have favourites. Anything by Jackie Collins for example. I love the way she can draw me into a story and before I know it I’m completely lost in the book! Great holiday reads. I like a good horror book, Stephen King and James Herbert being particular favourites – although I remember reading The Dark when I was about 13 and it gave me nightmares for weeks afterwards! All the Harry Potter books are a must-read for me. They made many a long journey to work bearable. Again, it’s this escapism thing. I just loved the way those books completely transported me to another world so far away from my own. And the fact that JK Rowling wrote books that appealed both to children and adults is something I admire greatly! But chick lit is by far my favourite genre to read. Authors such as Lisa Jewell, Jill Mansell and Marian Keyes are all favourites, to name but a few. And I loved the Shopaholic series of books by Sophie Kinsella. Good stories, a lot of humour, great characters.
 
When did you start writing?
As soon as I could hold a pen I think! I’ve always loved writing. Right from a very early age I was scribbling things down, making up stories. I’ve often been accused of living in a dream world, of having my head in the clouds but that’s because I’ve always been thinking about the next story, the next scenario, or making up another character in my head! I used to make up stories and write them down all through my childhood, and even in my teenage years I had notebook after notebook filled with ideas. I remember we had to write a novel in the Sixth Form at school as part of our English course and my teacher gave me some good feedback on mine. I wish I knew what I’d done with that actually. It could have been useful! Writing is a love that’s never gone away. It’s always been there. When one of my lecturers at college asked me what I’d like to have achieved by the age of 30, I told her that I’d like to have a book published. I had to wait another 10 years or so before that happened, but during that time I continued to write, continued to gather ideas, and I always knew I’d do it one day. Somehow!

When did you decide to become an author and why?
I decided to become an author, to pursue the dream seriously, about two years ago. It had always been my dream, but I’d always been too busy to dedicate the time needed to take writing seriously. There was too much going on for me to give it the time it deserved, and I wanted to be able to give it everything. But after we returned home from living on the Spanish Canarian island of Tenerife for a couple of years, and opened up our own IT business, working from home meant I finally had that time I’d always needed to concentrate totally on my writing. 

I’d also had a story in my head for the past 20 years, something which had started way back in the early 90’s and all through those years I’d collected ideas, created the characters, kept the story alive until the time was right to finally put pen to paper (or fingers on keyboard!) and write it all down. I did just that in the autumn of 2009, the result being my first book No Matter What, an epic romantic saga of love, jealousy, obsession and betrayal! It was the book I had to write to get it out of my system, and I’m very proud of it because it stayed true to that idea I had way back in the early 90’s. So, I’m always going to love that book.

Becoming an author wasn’t something I wanted to do on a whim. It’s been a lifelong dream, writing is something I love, and to be able to do it every day is a privilege. I want to be able to take people to another world – just like some of my favourite authors have done to me – to allow them to get lost in my stories, to get involved with the characters I create. That’s why I wanted to become an author. But, more than anything, I just want people to enjoy my books.
 
How did you come to the decision to self-publish your novel(s)?
I’d tried going down the conventional route of trying to acquire an agent with all three of my completed novels, but all I ever got back were rejections. Some came with some useful and encouraging advice, but the majority were the usual one-line rejection e-mail. And for a time I let it get to me, becoming more and more disheartened with every rejection I received, leading me to re-edit all three novels quite dramatically, convinced it was my writing that was the problem, when it was mainly the fact that new authors just weren’t worth agents taking a risk on right now.

I kind of hit a brick wall at that point, not really knowing what to do next and I let that dream of becoming an author slip further away, thinking it was never really going to happen. But then a friend of mine sent me some information on self-publishing eBooks on Amazon, and after reading up on it and realizing how easy it was (as long as you have an IT expert husband with you!), I suddenly got all that excitement back and the dream was re-born!

I re-edited (again!) No Matter What and Too Much Trouble in Paradise – my first foray into the world of chick lit -- and got them up there on Amazon as quickly as I could. I have a third completed novel yet to be published because I'm still re-editing that one, and I've also started work on a new novel, another foray into chick lit set in my native North East England, and I think it's going to be another fun one to write.
 
What is the most challenging part about being a writer? What is the most rewarding?
From a personal point of view, the most challenging part about being a writer is the discipline it takes to really knuckle down and give writing a novel the time it needs. It’s difficult to get into a routine when you first start out, and it’s hard not to get distracted sometimes. And writing can also be quite a lonely job because you have to spend a certain amount of time on your own with only these characters you’ve created for company, so it’s important to get out and remember there’s a real world out there too!

The most rewarding part of being a writer, for me, isn’t just finally seeing your books out there and available to buy after decades of doing nothing but dreaming about it, it’s when people tell you they enjoyed reading them. When I see a good review for any of my books, or someone tells me how much they enjoyed the story or how involved they got with the characters, that’s what makes it all worthwhile to me. To know that my books can generate real feelings in people, that they managed to get involved in the story, that’s the best reward for me. Because that’s why I write.

Where do you find the inspiration for your stories?
You’d be surprised! I get inspiration from so many things! I can be watching a TV programme or a movie and suddenly something will just pop into my head and I’ve got to go and write it down before I forget. I never go anywhere without my notebook and pen!

One of my main sources of inspiration, though, is music. I’m a huge music fan and so many records have inspired stories or characters for me. I can hear a song and get a whole chunk of storyline out of it just by listening to the lyrics.

But, of course, a lot of inspiration has also come from real life. We lived in Tenerife for a number of years, and I really wanted to write a book set on that island because I loved living there and it’s somewhere I’ll always hold dear. It’s a beautiful place. So, that’s where I got the inspiration to write Too Much Trouble in Paradise, the story of a recently divorced woman starting out on a new life in a new country. I used a lot of my own experiences of living abroad and put them in the book. But my Geordie background was also an inspiration. I was born and brought up in the North East of England, which is a very friendly, very funny part of the world and I think us Geordies have a wonderful sense of humour! A lot of the characters in the book are Geordies and I hope I’ve managed to portray some of that Northern English humour in there! Molly – the main character – has a lot to deal with in Too Much Trouble in Paradise and I hope she manages to deal with it all in the only way a good Geordie girl can! I suppose you could say real life and a very vivid imagination are the best forms of inspiration for me!

Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?
Never give up! If you love writing, then keep on doing it, and don’t let anyone tell you it can’t be done. Don’t let anyone tell you it’s an impossible dream. With the advent of eBooks and digital self-publishing it has become easier, but it is hard work. I am only publishing my books as eBooks at the minute and right away you’ve lost some potential readers who still haven’t warmed to the idea of Kindles or reading books on PC’s, so you have to work extremely hard at marketing your own work. But it’s not impossible to achieve your dream, if you’re willing to put the work in. I’m still fairly new to all of this, so I’m still learning as I go, but I’ve met some lovely people along the way and learned some useful and valuable advice. In reality, when you self-publish, the real work begins after you’ve written the book, but don’t let that put you off. It can be fun! So, if you really want to become an author, and you love writing, then go for it. Never give up. Just be prepared for hard work! 

--
For more information about Michelle and her books, you can visit her blogs at http://michellebethamwriter.blogspot.com and http://michellebethamindieauthor.blogspot.com.
--
What do you think of this interview? Leave a comment to let us know. Thanks!