Friday, July 29, 2005

Interview with NYT Bestselling Author, Carly Phillips!!!!!




CLG: I took a trip through your website, http://www.carlyphillips.com, and I noticed that you have written a lot of books. How long have you been writing?


Carly: I've been writing for about thirteen years now. I started when my first daughter was born. I wrote ten completed manuscripts, revised over and over, and they were rejected over and over for about seven years until I received "The Call". A long process but there's a definite learning curve and a lesson to be learned from each rejection.



CLG: I read your CINDERELLA MOMENT article. Great story. That took some determination to contact your publicist and create the basket and send your book to Kelly Ripa. Do you think this creative spirit to market and promote one's self is a necessity for authors today?


Carly: Thank you! I believe that everyone who writes a book has talent. There is a degree of luck involved in how far you go in this business, but there is also a degree of "make your own luck". You need to be in the right place at the right time (for example, I needed to be watching television that particular morning when Kelly joked about a book club), but you also need to go after what you want. Think outside the box. Don't wait for luck or fate to shine on you. Go out there and try to make your own. There'll be many failures but as I said above, every one you can learn from. Without a doubt, the first thing to do is write the book, but you should also be aware of the business, how it works, the people within it, and what you can do to promote yourself. There are ways of starting small that don't cost an arm and a leg, and you can build your career over time.



CLG: What are you three guilty pleasures?


Carly: Soap Operas (ABC), shopping, and surfing the internet.



CLG: There is the rule (and I have NO idea who began it) that says writers should write EVERY DAY. Do you follow this rule? Do you have a writing schedule? Do you think "serious" writers should have schedules? (LOL-TRIFECTA question here!)


Carly: Hahaha! I guess I don't follow the rules. The fact is, you finish a book faster when you write every day. You become part of the characters and it is easier to write when you write every day. If you're a stay at home mom with a life, a husband, friends, kids, dog etc., you just can not always write every day. At least I can't. I do have a schedule in that I have a deadline, and I know at what point I need to buckle down and turn out 25 pages a week in order to finish the book on time. I am not a writer who pours out tons of pages a day and I can't make excuses for it. I'm doing what I can do! Serious writers can't NOT write. When they write, how they choose to write, how much they write, is up to them. I really believe nobody has the right to tell someone what makes them a "real" writer.



CLG: What is the one thing that makes you feel the most feminine, and why?

Carly: Makeup and a good hair day. Sorry that's two things but they really do go together! ;)



CLG: What new work are you writing now?


Carly: I'm trying to finish up HOT NUMBER, the last in the "the Hot Zone" series about three sports publicist sisters and their sexy heroes, which is due out next year. June 2006 I believe. Then I move on to a brand new story for the next hardcover also out next summer. Tentatively, that's titled Cross My Heart. But I'm also gearing up for two brand new books this August 2005: Hot Number and Summer Lovin'. My publisher HQN is doing a fantastic "Win a Makeover in L.A." promotion with a Hollywood cosmetics company! Details will be on my website soon!



CLG: There is always an almost painfully sexy man one of your stories. What makes a man sexy to you?


Carly: A man needs to be real. I like to infuse my heroes with a reality that makes them a man you can relate to, even if he is sexy and larger than life. In my experience, the past is what defines people, so most of my heroes are defined by their past, be it something like coping with Dyslexia (Hot Stuff) or having a sister who ran away (Summer Lovin') or being the youngest child who was orphaned at a young age and raised by a bachelor uncle (Hot Number). Most of all, my hero has to be drop dead sexy and when he looks at the heroine, there's no one else who interests him ever again.



CLG: If you had three pieces of advice for the aspiring-to-be PUBLISHED author, what would they be?


Carly: 1) Write and write often. Hone your skills. 2) Finish a book, revise and send out, then move on to the next one. Don't spend a lifetime revising that one book. It's the rare author who publishes her first novel. 3) Join RWA and learn the business and do it before you have unrealistic expectations or alienate an editor! You can visit the "For Writers" section on my website for more articles and advice!

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Beginning of Women Writer Interviews Coming Friday!

Hey all.

Just a quickie. About to head over my friend's house to start working on a script together. Oh the fun. Literally. Forced to write. Maybe it will jumpstart me into this chick lit mystery I want to write BADLY. :-/

N.E.WAYS, Friday, I will post an interview I conducted with New York Times Bestselling author, Carly Phillips! Once a month (or more often if I shake a leg and get to it), I will have interviews with female writers who I love and who I admire and who oftentimes, get me pumped to want to write. They will talk about writing, why they write, and girly things.

Be on the look out!

Before I leave, just a note that SISTERDIVAS and TNC will go live this weekend. I will be making final touches Friday and sending out right after! They look great. I'm totally stoked.

:-)

Let me leave. Since I've been on official "summer break," I've been busier than ever; however, it's "busy" in my HOUSE and I look a "hot" mess...need to look somewhat presentable to my friends (which means try to pull all this massive hair into a ponytail and brush my teeth--clean clothes are optional)!

Laterz.

Monday, July 25, 2005

Moment of silence

Sir Mixalot's "Baby's Got Back" is being used (well "Sir" and the instrumentals) for a Target back to school commercial. Picture changing "I like big butts" to "I like backpacks."

To say I'm disgusted is an overstatement. That's EXACTLY what I want my kids thinking about. "Hey, ain't this music from the guy who wrote about big butts?"

The world is so twistedly pitiful. I want to pimp slap the exec who stood up in a boardroom and said, "Look, I know EXACTLY what kids want these days. I know what will get them and their parents in the stores to buy school supplies. BIG BUTTS. Wait, wait, wait, let me explain."

I don't EVEN want to know what that explanation would be.

*sigh*

Briefs...

It's late, so I'll be brief...

1. Worked hard today. Created websites for SisterDivas Magazine and TNC Magazine. Have to do a read-through this week before they go live.

2. Did a little work on my new personal site. Hope to have it done in a week or two.

3. Organized my work for next week...it'll be busy. Can't believe I'm still SO busy despite this supposedly being my "summer break" now.

4. Lived through a HUGE storm. Lightning. Thunder. Torrential downpour. Fallen trees. Electricity off for about two hours. Needless to say, I didn't know WHAT to do with all that semi-darkness, heat, and silence. I could have lay and drifted off to sleep, but no. I grabbed a flashlight and finished reading a new book on Andrea Yates. It's a phenomenal book, by the way: The Unspeakable Crime of Andrea Yates: "Are You There Alone?", by Suzanne O'Malley. It's a moving, detailed story/account of a horrifically tragic event. Been the best thing I've read in a while.

Tomorrow, I will hang with my friend, T...we have Mondays and Tuesdays to hang because she works (and when not working, she is sleeping) the rest of the week and weekend. I don't have anything HARD scheduled, so I do plan to work on my book at some point tomorrow.

Wish me luck. Hope to have a report on me having done SOMETHING on it soon! :-/

Nitey nite!

Thursday, July 21, 2005

Hip Hop HURRAY....and a piece of short fiction!!!!!

FINALLY. The book is D-O-N-E! I went to school, again, and helped to finish put the academic book to bed. It will be Fed-Exed to the publisher tomorrow morning. I'm SO glad to get it out of the way. I'm cranky and pissed and tired as hell as a result of having spent the last three days at school, but I am going to try hard to get over it.

I came home, got me a pizza and wings and just vegged out while surfing the net. Tomorrow, I'll be doing a bit of running around before hanging out with my bud, Bill. *HEY BILL!* :-)

Got some projects I'll be working on this weekend. Just bought the sites for SisterDivas and The Nubian Chronicles magazines, and for my own personal website. My website will offer a bio, info about my novels, and occasional reads for everybody. There will be a link to HERE...never fear, I rant and whine TOO much to not have this place, rest assured. LOL SOOOO, this weekend, I will be working on the magazines and on some writing of my new novel idea. I'm very serious about getting writing done over the next four or so weeks. Lord knows how much writing I'll get in once the semester begins.

ANYWAY...it's bed time. I'll go and surf the TV now for a bit.

I'll leave you all with a short piece of fiction. I wrote it about a year ago, but I took it out today and tweaked a bit. Hope you enjoy. More later! :-)

**********
The Little Gray House

There was something remarkable about the little gray house on the corner of Smith and Vine, despite the shutters that dangled from the windows and the porch steps that threatened to crumble with each heavy foot that climbed them. If you managed to climb the porch steps and live, you could peer into the Windex-cleaned windows and see Omar, the eldest son, dribbling his ball on his mother's just waxed, hardwood floors. She doesn’t come yelling after him. She will be too busy chasing the baby, Taylor, who at eight months, can’t stop crawling and tottering around the house, pulling the vacuum's cord out of its outlet and trying to stick his just-from-his-mouth, juicy fingers into the slits. A mother half-near losing her mind races after her kids. Typical day in a family.

If you could enter this little gray house, with its crumbling porch steps and dangling shutters...if you could walk up on this mother who is yelling, "Taylor, come here. Don't touch the outlet, Baby. You can get hurt," you would notice that she's barely touching on 30, but the faint lines on the corners of her eyes and the few, sparkling silver strands of hair laced in her black mane, makes her look older, well-lived, almost worn.

If you could see into her dull brown eyes, you would see that she just wants some time to herself to do what she loves: write. That's why she waits. Waits until the kids are finally asleep and her husband rolls in from his 14-hour-a-day job at the plant, tired and cranky. With her three men asleep, she will trudge up the stairs to the attic: her shop, where she sits with her old, black typewriter and types the stories that should be her life. Stories that only she will read because her husband tells her that writing is silly; her stories won't pay the bills. Stop trying to do things, he tells her. Your role is here, in the house, with the boys, and me.

But I want to write, damn it, she screams inside her head as she picks up Taylor and ushers Omar into the dining room for dinner. She eats. One bite. A few more, but mostly, she watches her sons and thinks, one page. If I can write just one page tonight, all this will be worth it. Blood throbs through the thick vein that takes up residence at her right temple because she knows writing will be the last thing on her agenda tonight. It's Friday, which means Harry will come home, eat his dinner, and will expect her to lay in their bed while he takes the last of her energy and will eventually leave her spent beside him, dozing off only to awaken and repeat the day again.