Sunday, October 21, 2012

The Next Big Thing!



My author friend, the lovely Larissa Reinhart, tagged me in this interview game about upcoming novels (her debut, PORTRAIT OF A DEAD GUY, is a mystery that just landed on the shelves!), and I thought it would be fun to share a few tidbits from ILLUSIONS. I tagged some other authors at the bottom, so be sure to check out their answers (and their books!).

What is the title of your book?
 Illusions


Cover By The Lovely Angela Waters
Photo By The Marvelous Jenn LeBlanc

Where did the idea come from for the book?
 Long ago and far away I was a publicist. I met a lot of interesting and unusual people during that period – one of them was a popular musician who walked away from his band to completely rebuild his life.  I always thought it was the coolest thing – he said he wanted a “nice and normal woman and they don’t have those in Hollywood”.  He’s been married to the same woman – a preschool teacher – for almost twenty years and they have six children. I always thought it was a fantastic love story and decided it deserved a life in fiction.  The artist in question, along with his wife, gave a hearty stamp of approval. 

What genre does your book fall under?
 Contemporary

Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition?
 This is a good question…BECAUSE…anybody I envisioned for these characters is my age.  I originally based the visual of the character on Tim Capello (aka greased up performer on the beach in The Lost Boys). I crossed him briefly with David Coverdale but the man has a horrid personality and that just didn’t fit so I went back to Tim.  Unfortunately, Tim is now almost sixty. 

Tim Capello - AKA Greased Up Beach Guy
After The Lost Boys Tim Spent Quality Time Playing In Tina Turner's band. 


Ricky Willams is a studio musician who’s played with some big names in the past 30 years.  He’s in his fifties but he looks young enough where I think he could pull it off! Lol  

Ricky Williams


Although, I think Chad Kroeger of Nickelback could probably do the role justice. Clay Emerson is not your typical pretty boy hero.  

Chad Kroeger - Think Avril Would Let Him Play Clay? 


Believe it or not, I briefly envisioned Nancy McKeon for the heroine. Her years as Jenny Exted on The Division provided the hard as nails exterior but soft as mush interior that makes the heroine who she is.  Unfortunately, Ms. McKeon is the same age as I am, lol, so that would never work.  

Nancy McKeon

If I had to choose a younger generation actress for the part of Olivia Sheffield (nee DeHavilla) I would probably go with Amy Adams. She can be a hard-ass without coming across as too mean.  

Amy Adams
I Think She Could Pull It Off!
Olivia is a character who had to give up the great passion of her life due to injury and even though she loves teaching ballet, it’s not the same as being on the stage. Combine that with an ex-fiancĂ© who was a total jerk regarding her accident and what you have is a woman who is THISCLOSE to being bitter but because of her family she can’t quite take that step over the line. 


What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
 Everything is not always as it seems…



Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
 This particular book is an indie, figured it was time to join the indie-crowd!



How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?
 Approximately three months.

What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?
 Think of a combination of Jackie Collins, Nora Roberts and Danielle Steele!















Who or what inspired you to write this book?
 As I said earlier, a former client and his wife inspired this book. Along with a sweet little girl with special needs who dances in a friend’s ballet class.  You’ll have to read the book to figure out the connection! Lol



What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?
 Two words: HOT SEX!!



Ya'll are it!

Monday, October 8, 2012

Looking For A Hero...


With the death of a much beloved and wonderful cover model this past week I've been giving some thought to a real issue within the romance writing industry:  that of the cover model with the bad attitude. Angelo Riguero was not one of those models, far from it.  There were no strangers in Angelo's world - only friends he hadn't met yet.

The Late Angelo Riguero
One Of The  Good Guys
As a reader or an author, would you pick up a book by your favorite author if you knew that the stud on the cover thought that readers were stupid? Or that he felt readers were delusional overweight tramps who only bought the books so they could fantasize about him instead of enjoying the storyline?  Believe it or not, there are a few of those out there….  In fact, one of the men displayed in today’s blog is a complete and utter asshole who thinks that romance writers are fat, disgusting bitches who can’t get a man and that readers are pretty much fat, lonely women who need our books to masturbate by.  Yeah, that didn’t make me very happy when I heard him say it either. (And no, it's not Fabio, lol, I will say that much.)


Interestingly, that mentality blossomed in the 90’s for reasons unknown.  For a long time it went ignored.  We, as authors, had a hint that it was out there; we just had not encountered it in person yet.  Slowly, over time, the day came when one of us finally saw some true colors.  My own 'true color' moment happened about ten years ago when I finally had the opportunity to choose my own cover model.  The guy was someone I knew through a friend, and he fit the character  - until he opened his mouth.  He made condescending comments regarding the buyers of romance novels and he had a less-than-nice attitude regarding the people who bought our books.  While it made me uncomfortable, there was little I could do since contracts had been signed and there was no escape clause for being offended by the model’s bad attitude. 








    





        








That one moment put me on high alert for the rest of my career.  From that point on I vowed that I didn’t want some ass on the cover of my books.  My next four books all had flowers on the covers because there was no way to vet models with those particular publishers.  





























Then came Heart of Stone – again I was offered a chance to choose my model.  I chose a model recommended by a friend and only found out later that I had not asked the right questions. That guy turned out to be someone who not only thought badly of romance authors and readers, he spoke disparagingly of both. 



However, I was ready that time.  I demanded that the model be replaced, and I was pushy about it.  Bear in mind, it’s never a good idea to make demands of a big press, but this was a smaller publisher that was making good money from this particular book and didn’t want things to get messy.  They quickly replaced Model One with Model Two. Model Two proved to be a fantastic guy who I got to know very well – along with his wife, his kids, AND his evil little Chihuahua aptly named “Hemorrhoid”.


'High alert' evolved into 'completely wary' from that point on, though.   I made it a point that I had to know the guy before he made it onto the cover.  Yes, I know that’s a bit of a stretch, but if the guy wasn’t a nice guy in some way, I didn’t want him on the cover of my book.  To me it was a no-brainer.  






When the late hubby and I started developing the NABSU series, I  knew exactly who I wanted on the cover.  I made it a required part of my contract.  My long-time friend (and former PR client) Jonathan Joss, aka the voice of John Redcorn on FOX’s King of the Hill, was more than happy to step up to the plate. 



I knew Jon respected what I did; he’s never been disparaging of my career or my fans; he’s somebody who, as a public figure, appreciates the fans of any medium because he understands that without them, there’s no career.  Jon flew up to South Dakota, where we had one heck of a fun photo shoot (nothing like wardrobe changes in a cemetery along a busy street!), and that gave me literally hundreds of photos to choose from for the next six books. 







        




























Now, yes, most of the time we authors don’t get a say. Not all publishers are open to letting their authors have a say regarding their covers or allowing authors to have much input with their individual art departments.  Thankfully, Indie publishing is changing that – and for the better, in my opinion.  Indie authors are responsible for their own covers; therefore, they can actually go looking for whoever they want to grace the cover of their books.  




I had heard that author/photographer Jenn LeBlanc used nice guys who were as sweet as they looked, so when I started looking for the perfect cover model for my upcoming book, Illusions, I contacted her. What I had heard proved to be very true.  Jenn’s model, Karl, looked very close to how I had pictured hero, Clayton Emerson.  Interestingly enough, Jaci, the woman modeling with him, was pretty darn close to how I envisioned Olivia Sheffield, Illusion's heroine – it was the perfect pairing as far as I could tell.
Karl Biermann - The Cover Model For Illusions
The Proof That Sold Me On Karl & Jaci!
Jaci Horsing Around The Photoshoot
Karl Being Manhandled By Our Favorite Photographer

One of the first questions I asked Jenn when I contacted her was whether Karl was a nice guy.  Jenn made it clear that Karl was a very nice human being and told me that she only worked with nice guys.  That told me that I was okay to move forward with the book cover.  Had I found out otherwise, I would have kept on looking no matter how closely Karl had resembled the hero in Illusions.  (Interestingly, I’ve never heard a female model make disparaging remarks regarding romance readers.  In fact, there have been quite a few over the years that I’ve heard compliment the dedication of our fans and speak appreciatively of the attention their covers have brought to their careers.) 

The Finished Product!
 


More and more authors are looking to find their own cover models, and they’re choosing men that they themselves would or could be friends with. They want approachable cover guys who will be nice to the fans and will remain nice when they walk away.   As Jenn so aptly put it, “I don’t work with douchebags”.   Another author told me, “I refuse to work with any guy who wouldn’t date a fat chick. If he has no ability to see inside the soul, he doesn’t belong on the cover of one of my books.  As a fat chick hearing this from a very skinny colleague, I found it an amazing stand to take.




            


























Some might wonder, what’s the point? Why should we even care about the guy on the cover? Who cares if he’s a total ass?  We do, because we write about love and romance. Love and romance are supposed to contain kindness, gentleness and humility.  Heroes can be flawed; heroes can even be stupid or make bad decisions, but they should never be cruel. To have a book showcasing a model who makes cruel and nasty comments about the genre he himself is a part of is wrongPlain and simple.





Many readers will tell you that to find out that the model on the cover of the book they love is a complete jerk kills the mood of the story entirely.  Long-time romance reader Erin states: "I would never read a book with an asshole on the cover".  Cherlyn added that she would "never buy a book if the man on the cover couldn't show up at a conference and be nice to everybody".   Missy shared that she "could never read a book cover to cover and feel at ease with the story if the stud on the front had made horrible comments about romance readers". 






They're not alone in this opinion, many of us authors feel the same way.  Author Samantha MacDouglas says: “Why give a reader a reason to not read your book? If a cover model offended me, that would be reason enough for me to not pick up a book, even by an author I really liked. Besides, if he's disrespectful, it might come across on the cover. Readers might get that sense from him, even if they don't know who he is or how he feels. On top of which, if he turns his nose down at us, he doesn't need to be making money off of us. There are plenty of good-looking men out there, I'd vote to find another.”  
More of Jenn's Awesome Work! 




















A Proof Becomes A Book Cover


Jenn's Got A Thing For Kilts! 





















I freely admit to being part of this crowd.   If I find out that some guy on the cover of one of my favorite author’s books is a total idiot, I won’t read that book. Sadly, that’s money out of that writer’s pocket because the guy on her cover is a moron.  And, as Samantha said, why should an arrogant cuss be making money in conjunction with our books if he secretly can’t stand us or our readers?    

 Karl & The Lovely Brittany Strike A Different Type Of Pose! 

It would also make it hard to interact with said cover guy if I ever had to deal with him in person at a writers’ conference.  In fact, I did have something like this happen, and I know a few other authors who have experienced the same.  I heard a certain cover model making some very rude remarks regarding both romance authors and readers before going out to participate in a cover model contest.  On stage, he was Mr. Debonair, but backstage he was all about how fat and gruesome these women were.  To be blunt, that pissed me off.  It was too late to pull him from the contest, but I made damned sure he was never allowed to participate again. Once word got out regarding his attitude, his modeling opportunities dried up. The last I heard, he was working in a gas station. 


A colleague told me about a cover model who had been on several of her books and how she was sent some emails in which the guy was saying horrible things about romance readers in general: how they were all no-class people with no love lives, no looks, and were generally all overweight with no prospects.  This author notified her publisher that she no longer wanted this particular model considered for any of her future books because he didn’t appreciate a good thing.  She literally threatened to take her business elsewhere.  Her publisher didn’t want to lose her, so the man was cut from their roster - not just for her books but for all of their books. To my knowledge, that particular company has never used the model again.  Ironically, that guy is still part of our industry.  He still appears on the occasional book cover, but he is in no way the hot ticket he once was – because, again, word got out, and authors don’t appreciate models who have no respect for them or their fans. 





















There is good news here, though: guys with bad attitudes are slowly being weeded out and replaced with men who are just as gorgeous but far more humble.  I see this as a definite plus for the romance-writing industry.  For too long the entire genre has been ridiculed and dismissed as “trash”.  It’s been a long, hard road to develop our reputation, and I, for one, refuse to allow cover models with bad attitudes to set us back.  Indie publishing has placed the control into the authors' hands as to who will be on their covers and who will design the final product.  This is a major boon to the majority of romance writers out there. 

I Get To Share A Cover Model With The Great Connie Mason!
How Cool Is That??!!

I’ve never met Karl in person, but Jenn has, and her word is good.  Since he’s a nice person who respects romance authors and their readers, I am more than happy to refer him for other projects.  That goes for any model I use in the future.  As long as they respect us and respect what we do, they’ll have a job. As long as they exhibit kindness where the fans are concerned, they’ll continue to be on covers. The minute they display a bad attitude, they should consider their career in this industry to be over.   


Looking For A Few Good Cover Models? 

Check Out Jenn LeBlanc!!