Monday, May 18, 2015

Love Target by Heidi Loeb Hegerich Interview & Giveaway

BLURB:
Teenager Ingrid Liebschreiber is devastated when her parents move the family from their native Munich to Los Angeles in the late 1950s. Homesick, she accepts a neighbor's offer to get her a job as a showgirl in Las Vegas.

Intent on earning enough money to return to Germany, she must grow up quickly in the neon jungle - where she is pursued by high rollers and headliners, including a vacationing Elvis.

Life's twists and turns land Ingrid in New York in the Swinging 1960s - where she is romanced by Armand: a strong, quiet, handsome businessman in "construction." Most girls dream of Mr. Right, and Ingrid's hard-won independence is challenged when she falls in love.

Will she find true romance - a man who can love her as much as she loves him? Or is "happily ever after" just a crazy fairytale?


INTERVIEW:
1) Where did you get the idea for the novel?
The novel is a memoir novel. It’s a fictionalized version of my own experiences in the first half of my life. Since the novel is a romance — a love story — I shaped the events from my life to track my quest for true love.

2) Is there a message in your novel that you want your readers to grasp?
The message is that you should never settle and you should never give up when it comes to pursuing your true love target: a partner with whom you can live happily ever after. You must seize destiny instead of succumbing to fate.

3) Why did you pick this genre? What do you like about it?
My novel naturally fell into the genre of chick lit or romance (as well as historical novel). What I like about the genre of romance is that it deals with universal powerful emotions that we all have — (excluding unfortunates who lack a pulse). In a good romance novel that is genuine — as opposed to one geared to fantasy — raw emotions roller coaster like mad — just as in real life. The reader will naturally root for a happy ending, a blissful conclusion. And so, interest is maintained through to the end.

4) Since becoming a writer, what’s the most exciting thing to ever happen to you?
Positive response from readers is the most exciting thing to happen to me. When people commit their precious time to reading your novel — and then take additional time to tell you how much they enjoyed it — it’s life boosting! It is validation that you’ve done something valuable for people.

5) What book are you currently reading or what was the last book you read?
I read a lot, and my interests are varied. The most recent book I’ve finished is The Paleo Manifesto: Ancient Wisdom for Lifelong Health, by John Durant, in which the author talks about how we’ve gotten away from our natural habitats — and this is affecting our health as a species.

7) At a book signing, do you just sign your name or do you write a note? How do you come up with stuff to say?
I usually get the person’s first name and address the note to that person — “Dear so-and-so” — then write a very brief note relating to whatever comment the person made to me about the book. I sign off with, “Love, Ingrid.” Ingrid is the name of the protagonist/narrator of LOVE TARGET, as well as my legal first name. My full name is actually Ingrid Heidi Loeb Hegerich, but I often initialize “Ingrid” to an “I.”

8) What is something people would be surprised to know about you?
I train at a gym where mixed martial artists train! I don’t spar them, however! It’s been enough of a workout punching and kicking pads held by my personal trainer.

9) How do you react to a bad review?
I erase it from my mind! What’s the point of dwelling on the negative? There have been so many positive reviews, negative reviews are to be expected. No book under the sign is for everyone. We each have our own tastes. Also, some critics are rather spiteful; some people are simply trolls. You can’t please everyone — nor should you try to. In the end, the opinions of only two kinds of people matter: 1) those who buy the book; 2) those who praise the book. These people are your true audience. As an analogy: Every YouTube video — no matter how magnificent — always has its share of thumb’s-down clicks. Should a beloved superstar such as Adele — who has more than 450 MILLION views on her video for her amazing ballad, “Someone Like You” — fret over 53,000 thumb’s downs? Or should she revel in the 1.7 million thumb’s ups?

10) How did you celebrate the sale of your first book?
By “sale of your first book,” I assume you mean the first copy of LOVE TARGET. I celebrated by smiling broadly! It was at my first book signing, at an art museum in my hometown of Reno, Nevada. I smiled a lot that day.


EXCERPT:
The witch stared past me, lost in thought. Then she shook her head.

“I don’t know,” she began, haltingly. “There will be a man, a husband. Somebody that you’ve known. Somebody” — her voice rose — “with dark hair! And . . . eyes that are lighter. Maybe blue.”

“I don’t know who this man could be,” I said to the witch.

“Trust me,” she said confidently. “Do you have any photographs in your wallet of who this man could be?”

I didn’t have a photo of David. But it didn’t matter, since he was married.

I fished out a photograph of Armand.

The witch held it up in her crooked fingers in front of her hooked nose. She twisted her neck, turning her head this way and that, peering curiously at the photo from different angles.

She handed it back.

“You should have never been with this man!”

I shrugged. “I wish I knew who this mystery man could be.”

“It is not important,” the witch said. “You will know in good time. You can bring him into your life. And I want you to do something.”

She rummaged on a shelf and removed several objects.

“Take these two candles. Write an affirmation on a slip of paper saying that you will be with this man with dark hair that you’ve known. Then put the paper between the candles, and melt the candles together. Light each one, and when they’re soft, mold them together.”

I took the candles. Well, it couldn’t hurt to try. Might even be fun.

AUTHOR Bio and Links:
Heidi Loeb Hegerich has lived in places as varied as Munich, Las Vegas, Miami Beach, New York, Los Angeles, Squaw Valley and Reno. She has worked variously as a showgirl, business executive, entrepreneur, interior designer and real estate developer. She has traveled to six of the seven continents, and vacationed in spots as different as the French Riviera, the Andes and Afghanistan. She counts among her hobbies weight training, shooting assault rifles, and racing sand rails; she found skydiving entertaining but not as much of a rush as other pursuits.
A philanthropist for the arts, among other causes, Hegerich is now embarking on her own artistic quest as an author. The novel Love Target is her first book.

Buy links:


GIVEAWAY:
Heidi Loeb Hegerich will be awarding $30 Amazon/BN GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour.
The more you comment, the better your chances of winning. The tour dates can be found here: http://goddessfishpromotions.blogspot.com/2015/03/vbt-love-target-by-heidi-loeb-hegerich.html
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Friday, May 15, 2015

The Forty Watt Flowers by C. M. Subasic Interview & Giveaway

BLURB:
All Trisha wants to do is create something meaningful. Since she's living in Athens, GA, she brings four other women together and the rock band The Forty Watt Flowers is formed. But making good music isn't as easy as it sounds. From the jock atmosphere of the garage where they rehearse to the beer-soaked bars when they gig, these five young women struggle to find beauty in the mess of notes they try to play and the chaos of their lives.

INTERVIEW:
1) Where did you get the idea for the novel?
I was a fan of the B-52s, then REM. Through an odd bit of luck, I ended up moving to Athens, GA and was pleased as punch. Its an amazing town, with the culture of a big city but the vibe of a small town. And what a music scene! You cant swing a guitar without hitting a musician in that town. Theres an indie band for every 100 people who live there. Still to this day, its a place where the ground hums in harmony.

While there, I was reading slushpile manuscripts for Hill Street Press, who at that time was publishing stories about the South. They wanted contemporary stories that told of the New South.

One day I was sitting there reading and realized: Hey, wait a second. Theres a story missing about a band in Athens. So, I wrote it.

2) Is there a message in your novel that you want your readers to grasp?
Every day, in every moment, we each have a choice. We can be a critic who tears things apart, or we can be an artist, who unifies.

Its easy to be a critic. Were taught that in school, because its easier. But its harder to be an artist. To find the positive in things, to build on ideas rather than destroy them.

I explored how we find it easier to destroy our relationships with each other than to build on them. That sometimes we destroy ourselves through drinking or bad behavior, rather than find a positive outlet.

It is harder to create than to destroy. But isnt everything worth having worth working for?

3) Why did you pick this genre? What do you like about it?

The genre really chose me!

What I love about the rocknroll novel genre is how it intermixes reality and fiction. You need to include just enough reality and musical reference so people can connect while also creating something new.

The fine line between reality and fiction is a theme I explore quite a bit in the book, from the Tree That Owns Itself, a real landmark just down the street from the fictional bands rehearsal garage, to the near brushes with Michael Stipe of REM, the venues and local characters.

To carry this even further, for the past year and a half I have been tweeting as the band and currently have 700+ followers. The band is also on Facebook. Since last June, the fictional band has been on a virtual tour of North America, hooking up with real bands along the way. You can see the tour from the book/bands website.

4) Since becoming a writer, whats the most exciting thing to ever happen to you?
Every time another writer tells me my work inspired them is a thrill like no other. When someone walks up to me and says, Oh, this was so great! it was just great! Amazing. I loved it. It was just so great! Its not in the words they use, but in the excitement in their voice. Nothing is as amazing as that.

5) What book are you currently reading or what was the last book you read?
I recently finished re-reading Jacob Slichters So You Wanna Be a RocknRoll Star. He was the drummer for the band Semisonic, famous for their song Closing Time. His book is a non-fiction account of what it was like to almost be a rock star. I wrote a review for the website, DownToJam, a social networking site for musicians to meet musicians.

Im currently reading Funny Girl by Nick Hornby.

7) At a book signing, do you just sign your name or do you write a note? How do you come up with stuff to say?

I always try to write a note. So far, this has been working: 

Heres to inspiration in everything you aspire to.

Or a variation on that theme. Unless I know the person. Then its well personal.

8) What is something people would be surprised to know about you?
Ive travelled over 1,500 by canoe throughout Northern Ontario and Quebec. It is some of the most beautiful country in the world, but also the most brutal. When the bugs are bad, youre eaten to death. But when the sun has set and you know that youre the only group of people for hundreds of miles it is hard not to feel humble. The land and its dangers loom large. The cry of the loon haunts. Fish jump. To be there is both terrifying and stunning. I know that makes it sound awful, it isnt. Its quite a beautiful thing, actually. Because you have a cup of hot chocolate in your hands and a fire before you and the smell of the air is blissful. You feel like a part of the earth.

9) How do you react to a bad review?
Every review, good or bad, is more about the person writing it than the book. The book is just the launching pad.

With a good or bad review, I try to take into consideration where that person is coming from. Then I feel around for what is a legitimate point versus the ones that are not.

If a review is extremely passionate and pointed, I console myself with the knowledge that at least my work elicited passion! At the same time I know that when someone reviews a work, what they are doing is trying to make the book into what they want to see. They are trying to make the work their own.

Probably the worst reviews, the ones that really hurt, are the ones not written. When you send the book out to someone who has promised to read it and give you feedback and you never hear back, that really hurts.

A ranting review means you made them angry. A glowing review means there was a connection made. Hearing nothing means that how you feel, all the work you put into it, doesnt matter.

10) How did you celebrate the sale of your first book?
The moment that mattered more to me than the first sale was to see the book in print for the first time. To feel the firm binding, open the pages, see the beautiful type and know that every word in here (other than the copyright page and the blurbs) was mine. My baby was born.

EXCERPT:
First Rehearsal, Aline & Trisha

Trisha sat on the curb beside her. "Aline, I’m not an experienced musician or anything. I have no idea what we’re doing. I’m just—"


"You’re going to do very well at this, I can tell," Aline said.

"How?"

"I just can, that’s all."

Their gazes met. Aline’s smile was so open, like a warm bath.

Trisha asked, "When you write a poem, how do you do it?"

Aline bit her lip. "A poem for me …" She shook her head, started again, "The first thing I do is I get all quiet and I listen."

"Listen?"

Aline nodded. "I start with something that resonates with me," she said. "It’s like I’m looking for the seed. That seed has to shake, like all of inside me is just going B-O-I-N-G-!  B-O-I-N-G-!"

Trisha repeated, "Boing."

Aline sang, drawing it out, "B-O-I-N-G —I-N-G!"

Trisha repeated, "B-O-I-N-G —I-N-G!"

Aline smiled. "You got it." Then with eyes intent on that interior space of hers, she continued, "Well, that boing gives me a beat. Some days, there’s nothing there. Other days, there’s ten or twelve ideas screaming and it scares me. And then I—"

A thought rang like a chord, high and clear in Trisha’s thoughts. She wasn’t sure if it was because of what Aline had said, or if she’d just needed the space to let it appear. But there it was. She jumped up.

"Aline?" she said.

"Yes?"

"We need to get back in there."

AUTHOR Bio and Links:
C.M. Subasic

Colleen is award-winning editor who started her writing life as a playwright. She has had 7 plays produced across Canada and worked with the likes of Samantha Bee (yes, from The Daily Show) and Leah Cherniak.

Her plays include Back Alley Boys about the hardcore punk scene in Toronto, Eye am Hear which tells the tale of a luddite teenage squatters at some undetermined punkish time in the future, A Brief Case of Crack Addicted Cockroaches about the relationship between the media and politics featuring a city councillor who smokes crack (which was never produced because it was too off the wall) and Interbastation about the beauty in ugliness and the ugliness in beauty. Her novel Public Image tied for second in the Anvil Press International 3-day Novel competition.

In addition to her work as a playwright, Colleen puts on the dramaturgy, editor and script doctor hats for a range of publishers, producers and writer clients. She has a Master in Creative Writing from the prestigious UBC Department of Theatre, Film and Creative Writing and has taught play writing at the university level. She's also done the Board of Directors thing with the Playwrights Guild of Canada, The Playwrights Theatre Centre in Vancouver and other arts organizations.

She was managing editor of Taking the Stage: Selections from plays by Canadian Women which was selected as the "most saleable dramatic publication of the year" by the Canadian Booksellers' Association. She has also been awarded Arts Council grants by the province of Ontario and Nova Scotia. She has served on the judging panel of several internationl novel awards. Her one-person play Interbastation was selected as one of the top-10 best shows by CBC Winnipeg in 1998.

She lived in Athens from 1999 to 2001 and, while there, reviewed and edited manuscripts for Hill Street Press.

Colleen currently resides in her birthplace, Toronto, with three grey cats and a drawer full of lint brushes.

LINKS:




GIVEAWAY:
The author will be awarding a $20 Amazon or B/N GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour, and a print copy of The Forty Watt Flowers (US/Canada only) to 2 randomly drawn hosts.
The more you comment, the better your chances of winning. The tour dates can be found here: 
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Thursday, May 14, 2015

Bring Me Home by Candi Wall Excerpt & Giveaway


BLURB:
Home is Where the Heat Is, Book 1

Miya Jackson always believed life had more to offer outside Dead End, Texas. So when circumstances turned her life upside down, she took her chance to break free. A few years—and some brutal doses of reality—later, her little sister’s wedding brings her back to the hometown she left behind.

The last place she expects is to end up is in the arms of the man she’s tried and failed to forget. One scalding, passionate night is all it takes to make her rethink her damn good reasons for leaving.

Shawn Dalton always hoped this day would come. Hell, he and Miya have a history, and any misunderstandings can be fixed if she’ll only stay in one spot long enough. Now that’s she’s back, he’s determined to make her see that she belongs in Dead End. With him.

Her obstinate nature is intact, but he can deal with that. It’s the cold, detached woman she’s become that worries him. Melting that wall—and reminding Miya of her roots—is going to take every hot, sinful moment he can wrangle.

EXCERPT:
Years of holding him accountable withered under the desire drenching her veins. If she didn’t get ahold of her emotions, she was in trouble.

“Oh, please,” she muttered weakly. “Like you would have thought or believed anything different if the roles had been reversed.”

“I would have given you a chance to explain.”

“Spoken like someone who never had to deal with that kind of hurt.” She poked a finger against his chest. “I never would have let myself get in that situation. I would have known it wasn’t you. You don’t get to blame beer or Susan.”

“I blame myself.” He dragged a hand through his hair. “I wish I could change the past.”

“But you can’t.” At least that was the truth. “Neither can I. So let’s leave it be.”

That should have been the end of it.

“No. I can’t.” He lowered his head, his lips only a breath away. “You must have hated me.”

He was so close. It didn’t matter what the past threw at them. She wouldn’t stop him if he pressed closer… How could she when she wanted his kiss—and so much more? He’d always been her weakness.

“I think I still hate you,” she managed. She’d spent so much time trying to forget… How could his simple touch make her want what she’d left behind?

“No. There could never be hate between us.”

AUTHOR Bio and Links:
Candi Wall is probably the only person whose real name is more epic than any pseudonym she could have come up with – even as an author! She writes because the voices in her head have to come out somehow. Animal rescue-ess, mother of four, and soccer mom by day, she spends her free time writing – often on napkins at kids’ games because she never knows when a juicy story will reveal its delicious self. She once wrote a sex scene at a wrestling meet. Shhhhhh!


You can find her on:


Buy Here:





GIVEAWAY:
Candi will be awarding a $10 Amazon or B/N GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter during the tour, and a $10 Amazon or B/N GC to a randomly drawn host.
The more you comment, the better your chances of winning. The tour dates can be found here: 

a Rafflecopter giveaway