Ouch! I managed to squish my little finger between the arm of my desk chair and my desk yesterday and, boy, did it hurt. I don't normally make a fuss when I hurt myself, but this deserved it. Have been typing with my little finger bandaged to it's next-door neighbour all day. Funnily enough, it hasn't made much of a difference. Maybe that's because my typing is so atrocious?
And I'm looking forward to episode 3 of Glee tonight! Sigh. To be able to sing like Lea Michele, who plays Rachel...
Monday, 18 January 2010
Wednesday, 13 January 2010
Good news and bad news
Bad news is that I'm on a deadline. Jennie and Alex's story is due in on 1st Feb. Slightly better news is that I am not scarily behind, and a slow and steady slog should see it finished and polished in time. But it does mean my erratic web presence is going to be, well...erratic. Nothing new there, then!
Good news is that I have delicous new covers for my next book, Housekeeper's Happy-Ever-After! Check out this glorious North American cover:
Good news is that I have delicous new covers for my next book, Housekeeper's Happy-Ever-After! Check out this glorious North American cover:
It's fabulous! My best cover so far - all romantic and barefoot and Caribbean paradise. Love it. Love it.
This was the first book I ever wrote - a story about a housekeeper and a playboy. All I can say is that writing your first novel is a steep learning curve. I finished the book and realised it was a bit pschizophrenic. Sometimes it was heart-breakingly sad and sometimes it was slapstick funny, and the two didn't quite seem to gel. So I put it to one side and got on with Blind-Date Marriage, which happened to be the first book I sold.
Five years on, I decided I knew how to fix it. The humour's still there (this is me we're talking about, I can't stay sensible for too long - it gives me hives), but it's balanced with the emotion now. And I added extra depth and dimensions to the hero and heroine, took out a villainous glamour model and wrote a seriously romatic scene involving sunset in the Caribbean.
Wish someone would have told me that overhauling an old book is five times as painful as writing a brand new one. But I can't regret it now. I had a soft spot for my first hero and heroine, and I'm glad they got their Happy Ever After (literally - have you seen the title?)
Funnily enough, my title for the book was The Barefoot Bride, and there Ellie is - barefoot on the cover. And my orginal working title was The Reluctant Cinderella - and I discovered it's been flashed up as part of the 'In Her Shoes' mini-series about modern-day Cinderellas. It's fate, I tell you.
And if that wasn't enough, I've been paired up with one of my favourite Romance authors, Jessica Hart for the UK edition. I'm so excited I'm going to get to read her story Oh-So-Sensible Secretary when my author copies arrive it's not funny. And I like the UK cover too. While it's not a scene from my book, like the North American one is, the slightly cheeky expression on the model's face sums up my Ellie perfectly.
This was the first book I ever wrote - a story about a housekeeper and a playboy. All I can say is that writing your first novel is a steep learning curve. I finished the book and realised it was a bit pschizophrenic. Sometimes it was heart-breakingly sad and sometimes it was slapstick funny, and the two didn't quite seem to gel. So I put it to one side and got on with Blind-Date Marriage, which happened to be the first book I sold.
Five years on, I decided I knew how to fix it. The humour's still there (this is me we're talking about, I can't stay sensible for too long - it gives me hives), but it's balanced with the emotion now. And I added extra depth and dimensions to the hero and heroine, took out a villainous glamour model and wrote a seriously romatic scene involving sunset in the Caribbean.
Wish someone would have told me that overhauling an old book is five times as painful as writing a brand new one. But I can't regret it now. I had a soft spot for my first hero and heroine, and I'm glad they got their Happy Ever After (literally - have you seen the title?)
Funnily enough, my title for the book was The Barefoot Bride, and there Ellie is - barefoot on the cover. And my orginal working title was The Reluctant Cinderella - and I discovered it's been flashed up as part of the 'In Her Shoes' mini-series about modern-day Cinderellas. It's fate, I tell you.
And if that wasn't enough, I've been paired up with one of my favourite Romance authors, Jessica Hart for the UK edition. I'm so excited I'm going to get to read her story Oh-So-Sensible Secretary when my author copies arrive it's not funny. And I like the UK cover too. While it's not a scene from my book, like the North American one is, the slightly cheeky expression on the model's face sums up my Ellie perfectly.
Housekeeper's Happy-Ever-After is out in March in the UK and April in the US.
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