The Nancy Wait Interview


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Today I welcome back to my blog actress, artist, author and radio host Nancy Wait.  Nancy kindly agreed to an interview… and here it is!

Hi Nancy and thanks so much for whizzing in from New York to join us.

Haha! Thank you so much for inviting me to share. I really appreciate it.

So, Nancy, I know that you are actually a former actress, but I’ve never had a real live actress on my blog before so I hope you don’t mind me listing you as such here.

Not at all. In fact my short-lived acting career in the UK is still my only claim to fame thus far.

I have to ask you Nancy, actress or drama queen?

Actress, please! In fact I was very serious about my career until I discovered that others did not take me seriously. That was my fault of course. I can be so dense at times! I thought that others would see me as I saw myself inside, but of course a lot of people just look at your exterior—especially in the performing arts. When I was young my interior and exterior were at odds. It made me feel I was born into the wrong body! I bet I’m not alone in that feeling either. But as I’ve gotten older it’s all come out in the wash as they say. And I’m certainly more conscious of what I project. (I hope so!)

Initially, I was ultra serious about “the art of acting.”  I was sent to acting school as a  child because I was what was called “painfully shy,” never speaking up in class, and the teachers complained to my parents. My father had been an actor at one time, and he had a great love for the theatre, so off I went to Saturday morning classes to learn how to pretend to be an extrovert. Very good training it was, too!

They say that underneath every introvert is an extrovert. Perhaps not someone as flamboyant as I turned out to be, but there all the same. I continued to study at a special high school in Manhattan, then at Carnegie-Mellon’s excellent drama department—but I was never what you would call a drama queen. I think being one of five children gave me the need to be recognized and set apart from the crowd, so to speak. But I wouldn’t call myself a drama queen, as that conjures up an image of someone filled with a sense of their own importance—and that was quite the opposite of yours truly! The confidence it took to go out on stage or in front of the cameras was just as much of an act as the part I was playing.

I know that you lived in London during the 1970’s and you were also involved in the British film industry…. So would we have seen, circa 1976, a scantily clad Nancy running from the clutches of a lecherous Syd James in Carry On Camping?

I don’t think so! Though I did do something of a similar nature, Au-Pair Girls, directed by Val Guest in 1972. My professional name was Nancie Wait, as an astrologer told me it would bring me more luck. Though whether it was good luck or bad is a debatable!

Ahhhh never mind, so what brought you to London?

Such a long story! It goes back to when I was a child in New York and my mother was in her “English” period. I have English ancestry from Yorkshire, and she began with buying Yorkshire antiques and cooking English food, then reading Wuthering Heights aloud to us. Then along came the “Swinging Sixties” and the Beatles and so on, and because I was studying acting at the time and going to Broadway plays—many of which were English—a dream was born to study at Rada. We had no money of course, but I met and fell in love with a boy at college who had the same dream I did, and he brought me to London with him.

It’s actually a bit more complicated than that, having a great deal to do with my eagerness to leave home as well as live in another country, and I tell the whole sad story of that in my book, The Nancy Who Drew.

Were you a diva?  Did you demand salami on rye to be flown into Shepperton Studios from your favourite deli in Manhattan?

Honestly, Richard, I think you’ve seen too many movies! I was a working stiff like most actors were and are. It’s funny really, because when I was dreaming up my life as a young teen, I decided on acting as I was hungry for “glamour.” And then what a shock to find the profession was 95% hard work like anything else.

The only time I ever worked at Shepperton was when I was hired as an extra for The Great Gatsby. It was Myrtle’s party. The film with Robert Redford and Mia Farrow.  And what a treat it was being put in Redford’s dressing room the week before he arrived. I had to share it with two other actresses, but still—what a luxurious dressing room compared to what I was normally used to!

Believe it or not I was in a theatre company once and I’ve performed Shakespeare (didn’t understand it though); have you ever trodden the boards?  If so what was your favourite production?

My best performance and favourite production was actually a play I did while still at Rada. A Streetcar Named Desire. I played Blanche. Opportunities in the professional world—at least for an American in London—were few and far between. But I did an American play at the Traverse up in Edinburgh, and then The Country Wife at Oxford, which we took on tour. I played the Cockney maid (Cor blimey guv’nor Ed.) —and didn’t do too badly with the accent I’m told—haha!

I was actually getting called for more auditions at rep companies when I decided to chuck it all in and come back to America. I loved acting at one time, but I found “the life” didn’t agree with me. That can happen, you know.

What made you get into writing?

My father was a writer and I had a love for books. I put writers up on a pedestal. But though I wrote long letters to friends and family, I had no confidence that I could write stories myself. After I gave up acting I took a class here in New York, and the instructor used me as an example of what not to do! Looking back, it’s so clear to me that I wasn’t able to express myself on the page because I had so very little knowledge of who I was in those days. I was aware of my inner life, but I had no confidence in my ability to reveal it to anyone else. I found later that good writing depended so much upon that over-used expression—high self-esteem. You have to think well of yourself and believe that what you have to say is interesting, otherwise you’ll never stick with it. So I let go of the idea of becoming a writer—and took up art instead.

I had done art as a child, so I was really going back to my first love.  And I was lucky to be able to make a career of it doing portraits of people and then portraits of buildings for the real estate industry. But the real benefit turned out to be the paintings I did from my imagination. Because that was the way I was able to connect with my inner life and express it. This ability to show who I was inside, how I felt, how I saw my experience, gave me a direct line to my subconscious, my intuition, and it was the way I made a visible connection to my soul life. Then, after nine years of painting, I received an inner message that I had to write about my experience as a painter. I was directed by my guides to now put words to the pictures. Give voice to the images that sprang from this deep level within. It was a tall order!

Can you tell us something about your book The Nancy Who Drew?

Well, I’ll tell you this—it took fourteen years to finally get it out there. I spent five of those years going back to college and then grad school to learn how to write. Then another five years revising it and finishing it on my own. Then some time passed looking for an agent and a publisher. Then more revising. But two things were going on in my life at that time. One was that I was raising a son with Asperger’s. He had a mild case, but it was still something to deal with. The other issue was my indecisiveness whether or not to include the idea of reincarnation as the backbone of the challenges I had faced as a young person. I put it in and took it out several times. I patched it onto the beginning and the ending, but found it didn’t really work. The problem was that I was being totally honest in relating the events of my life, and here was this idea of reincarnation I didn’t have any tangible proof for. I felt it was true, but I didn’t want to make assumptions I couldn’t prove.

So I had to get over that. I had to trust myself and believe in myself and my perception—in the clues I’d been given, the knowledge that had come my way—and just go for it. Finally, when my son left for college and I had the space in my head to do it, I just sat down and said this is it! This is my story and I’m going to tell it like it is—and to heck with asking an agent or a publisher for approval. So I self-published last year, 2011. What a relief to finally finish and get it out there!

What writing projects do you have planned for the future?

Well, I ended the story in 1977, when I came back to the States. I had been gone for seven years. My next book is the sequel, telling the story of how and why I became a painter and the tremendous change it wrought in my life. I’m in the process now of making revisions, and I plan to bring it out next year sometime.

Do you want to tell us something about your work as an artist?

Sure. One thing a memoirist doesn’t lack is the eagerness to talk about herself! I studied drawing because I wanted to draw and paint realism. It enabled me to earn my living as a free-lance artist in the 1980s—before scanners and digital cameras and Photoshop became ubiquitous—because there was a market then for architectural renderings, or building portraits as I called them. I also did a fair number of portraits of people. I’ve had some gallery shows of my other work from time to time, but they never really took off or connected with people, which is one of the reasons I feel impelled to write about them. It’s a series actually, called Journey to the Deep. Then a while back I was one of the founders of a group of artists here in Brooklyn called Brooklyn Visions, and we had many group shows. But the most pleasure I got out of it was the series of interviews I did of nine of the artists which we then published in pamphlet form. See how I tend to want to combine writing and art?

I mostly stopped painting after I got into writing, except for a series I did called Little Man. But that was a narrative too. I created a story around him and posted the video on you tube. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6udkw0odOY4

I find I’m having a resurgence of the urge to draw though, which is good because how can I continue on with the story of The Nancy Who Drew—with a Nancy who stopped drawing?

I’m going to put you on the spot now Nancy… writing, acting or painting; and why?

You know, everything we’re drawn to do or compelled to do I might say, is for a reason. If it’s creative work, then we have a need to express something. And we must keep searching and exploring, and through trial and error, find out what it is and then do it. Give it all we’ve got. 

When I was growing up I was so frightened of the world. I felt like an alien soul among the savages! I was crippled, in a metaphorical sense, like Laura in The Glass Menagerie. As retiring and shy as a little mouse! Like Isabelle Huppert’s character in that 70s movie, The Lacemaker. So the acting training was the best thing that could have happened—in order for me to become the person I wanted to be—and am today—someone who could host Blog Talk Radio shows for instance. (Opening her now big mouth when the situation calls for it!) But as I mentioned, the acting life was difficult for me, as it is for many sensitive souls—and naive young women I should add! With painting, I was able to not only connect to myself on a deep level, I was able to access an inherent power I didn’t even know I had. Painting can be quite physical when you’re standing at an easel for hours on end. And then there was the power of creation. One of my favourite titles is Rollo May’s book, The Courage to Create.

Writing is different. I can see how beneficial it’s been for me to save it for my later years. Because now I have the opportunity to put it all together, to try and salvage some wisdom from the chaos and confusion I’ve lived through. Writing things down for other eyes forces a kind of clarity we wouldn’t otherwise labour to employ. Which is something I’m sure you have found also, in your work, Richard.

And last but not least, there is this over-powering urge for communication! For sharing. For saying to people, can you relate? Do you see what I mean? Has this ever happened to you? And so on. Because we know how it is that often we don’t know what we’re even thinking or feeling until we witness someone else thinking or feeling that very same thing. And so it brings us together. We identify. And we know we’re not alone. Someone else has been there too. And the very act of writing our own stories, painting our own pictures, makes us more whole.

Well all that remains is for me to thank author, actress and artist Nancy Wait once again for joining me on my blog today.  Before you go Nancy I just want to ask you one more thing.  You are obviously a very inspirational and creative person, so do you think you could delve into the vastness of your inner being and leave us with some words of wisdom?  Thanks again and do come back soon…

The “vastness of my inner being!” Oh, you do have a way with words, don’t you Richard. Well, I’ll tell you what comes right away to mind—because I’m also a writing coach, is the importance of self-revelation through any creative means. It doesn’t get any better than Socrates phrase, Know Thyself. We are all of us composed of a vastness of riches that lies in wait, as soon as we’re ready and willing to tap into it. The new world we’re entering into is one of Conscious Creation. Whatever artistic field we go into will sharpen our senses and give us a fuller sense of life and who we are in it. Music teaches us to hear. Art teaches us to see. Writing calls on us to observe and describe what we see and feel. Acting calls on us to walk in another character’s shoes, to be them for a while, and so it teaches us compassion. And the Dance! I don’t want to leave out dancing. None of us should want that. Whether we dance with sorrow or joy, or have to sit in a chair and only dance with our eyes, we mustn’t forget the dance of life and love and everything in between—and keep on keeping on! Thank you so much Richard. It’s been a pleasure!

You can find out more about Nancy’s work by clicking on the links below; and why not follow her on twitter?

Showcasing Author, Artist And Actress Nancy Wait


On Tuesday and Wednesday 4 and 5 December I am featuring the very unique and inspirational author, artist, actress and radio host Nancy Wait on my blog.  Nancy is a very interesting lady and I’m sure you will enjoy reading about her…

Bio

Nancy 2012Nancy Wait was born in Chicago and grew up in New York City. She studied acting at the High School of Performing Arts and Carnegie-Mellon in Pittsburgh. In 1969 she went to London to study at RADA and had a career in England during the 1970s, appearing in film, television and theatre, under the name Nancie Wait. After a spiritual awakening in 1976, she returned to New York and began a second career as a free-lance artist of architectural renderings and portraits. She also painted a series from her imagination, and it was after these she felt impelled to write about her life. Nancy lives in Brooklyn, NY and is currently working on a second memoir about how and why she got into painting and the massive changes it wrought in her life during the 1980s. She is also a Writing Coach and Editor, and has been a host on Blog Talk Radio for many years.

A Synopsis of Nancy’s Book The Nancy Who Drew

Who hasn’t wondered why bad things happen to them? The memoir, “The Nancy Who Drew,” plants a seed of hope that our painful experiences can have a positive outcome when we are willing to see ourselves on more than one level. It is subtitled “The Memoir That Solved A Mystery,” because when Nancy delved deeper into the events that occurred, she discovered several clues that would completely alter her perception of why things happened the way that they did.

The Nancy Who Drew is an inspiring memoir that tells the story of a shy, dreamy girl growing up in New York City in the 50s and 60s. After being cruelly betrayed by her mother, she flees to London to realize her dream of studying at RADA and becoming an actress in England. Upon her return home seven years later, disillusioned with acting and eager to start a new life as a painter, her mother confesses that she conceived Nancy “in revenge for World War II.” Strangely, this resonates with her, as if she has known it all along.

She becomes an artist, exploring her subconscious through drawing and painting. But it isn’t until decades later when she begins to write her story down that she discovers a deeper meaning of the images that have come to her intuitively through painting. When she puts it all together, including childhood drawings of a dead girl and dreams of death, she comes to a new understanding of why she might have “created her reality.” By sifting through the clues in her own life, Nancy learns about a girl who was killed by the Nazis exactly six years and six months before the day before she was born. Is this the girl who haunted her dreams in childhood? Is this the girl on her canvas? If it is, then her own life begins to make sense now. Sometimes the only way to make sense of your life is to remember the one that came before.

Nancy rises from painful experience to become her soul’s intention. Finally, when she connects to a previous death, she comes to know that betrayal is sacred when the heart can encompass the whole.

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Check Nancy out online; connect with her on facebook and follow her on twitter.
Coming tomorrow… The Nancy Wait interview.

Showcasing The Wonderful RomCom Author – Sheryl Browne


Sheryl PhotoIt gives me great pleasure to showcase friend and wonderful RomCom Author, Sheryl Browne on my blog today.

Sheryl Browne grew up in Birmingham, UK, where she studied Art & Design. She wears many hats: a partner in her own business, a mother, and a foster parent to disabled dogs. Sheryl has been writing for many years, the road along the way often bumpy.  She was therefore thrilled beyond words when Safkhet Publishing loved her writing enough to commission her to write for them.

Sheryl’s debut novel, RECIPES FOR DISASTER – combining deliciously different and fun recipes with sexilicious romantic comedy, is garnering some fabulous reviews and has been shortlisted for the Innovation in Romantic Fiction Festival of Romance Award. Sheryl has since been offered a further three-book contract under the Safkhet Publishing Soul imprint. SOMEBODY TO LOVE, a romantic comedy centering around a single father’s search for love and his autistic little boy, launched July 1. WARRANT FOR LOVE, bringing together three couples in a twisting story that resolves perfectly, released August 1 and A LITTLE BIT OF MADNESS releases Valentine’s Day 2013.

Hi Richard!  Thank you so much for hosting me! I’m thrilled to be here on your fabulous blog! Today, I’m sharing the second of eight excerpts from Warrant for Love. I hope you enjoy! Please do leave your comment and (appropriate) suggestions as to what YOU might do if you found yourself in Lee’s situation.

Warrant for Love

Love, blackmail, lies, adultery, entrapment.
Three couples in a twisting story that resolves perfectly.

Life for Paul sounds like your typical country song. He comes from a broken home, his wife is divorcing him, he’s got no place to live, he’s losing custody of his son, and his sergeant, who’s sleeping with his wife, is a loud-mouthed braggart who won’t let up on him – not even at work.

Leanne’s caught her (now) ex cheating on her again, but before she can give him the what-for, she’s wrongfully arrested for soliciting – by Paul and his partner. One thing leads to another and things could be looking up for Paul, except for Leanne’s friends – quarrelling mom Nicky and financial goddess Jade – have it out for her ex.

Leanne wants closure, Paul wants a home, and Nicky and Jade want revenge. Blackmail, lies, adultery, entrapment. Will it all work out in the end or will Paul uphold the law? It sounds like he needs a Warrant for Love.

Excerpt:

Leanne was still reeling as she stood on the street corner, her thighs so cold they resembled freshly plucked turkey. She tried hard not to cry as a patrol car cruised by, and wondered obliquely where Richard had parked his BMW whilst indulging in the kind of sex that left naked footprints on the windscreen.

Ten minutes ticked by and still there was no taxi in sight. She turned back towards the phone box and oh, joyous relief, a car pulled up. The taxi. It must be.

But it wasn’t. It was Richard, taking his life in his hands. ‘Leanne, come back,’ he called through the open passenger window. ‘I’ve said I’m sorry.’

Leanne glared at him, then away.

‘I don’t know how else to say it. Come on, darling. It’s pouring with rain. Get in and I’ll drive you home.’

Get back in there, next to him? On the seat he’d been shagging the trollop with size ten feet in?! Was the man on a suicide mission?

‘Why? Want business, do you?’ She oozed sarcasm.

****

‘Blimey, there’s devotion to duty for you.’ Paul nodded at the hooker on the street corner. ‘She must be desperate, touting for business in sub-zero temperatures.’

‘So must the punter. Bit past her sell-by date, isn’t she?’ Mike observed drolly.

‘Which makes you what, Mike?’ Paul slowed down to get a closer look. ‘Aged? Or is that ageist?

‘Distinguished looking,’ Mike retorted. ‘Men are like good wine. They improve with age. Women don’t.’

Paul shook his head. ‘She’s actually quite fit looking.’ He gave her a leisurely once over. ‘Nice arse.’

‘I suppose, if you like that sort of thing.’

‘That’s just it though.’ Paul noted her dress. Skirt, short and tight — very nice, but not red light. And she wasn’t exactly giving the creep in the car the come on. ‘Doesn’t look the sort, does she? Doesn’t seem very…’ he tried to put his finger on it ‘…streetwise. Know what I mean?’

‘Uh, oh, the man is actually fancying some tom on the prowl. You are not getting enough, mate. If you need to get laid, I can put you in touch with a cracking little bird. Goes a bundle on uniforms. Not too fussed what’s in them either.’

‘Fun-ny. And I don’t. Thanks all the same.’ He didn’t, either, given his ineptitude at relationships. Wouldn’t mind trying this one on for size though, Paul mused.

Uh-uh. He pulled himself up. What was the matter with him? She charged for it. He looked her over again. He still wasn’t convinced somehow. She just didn’t fit the MO. ‘What d’y’think? Move her on, or go around again?’

Mike looked at him askew. ‘Give her a chance to shift her backside, you mean?’

‘She hasn’t actually propositioned the guy yet, Mike, has she?’

‘She’s on the pull, mate,’ Mike scoffed. ‘I’d bet my pension on it. Go on, go round again. Ten-to-one she’ll be quoting her price list when we get back.’

Paul supposed he was right.

Still thought she was a bit upmarket for a street corner, though.

****

‘Leanne, for the last time, will you get in the car?’ Richard eyed the passing patrol car worriedly. ‘Please,’ he added, as she gave him a look that could curdle milk. ‘I’ll drive you home and we’ll talk about… things.’

What things, Lee wondered. The colour scheme she was considering for the bedroom? Her miserable day? Her even more miserable future?

Alone.

On her own, without he who fancied himself as Ashley Cole, a total babe magnet. More like Mr Big from SACT… Lee wished she’d pointed out his expanding midriff, breezing into town to bonk her, then blowing out again. But he wasn’t Mr Big, was he? She might have had some post-coital chocolates if he was. And she wasn’t Cheryl Cole or Carrie Bradshaw. She had absolutely no panache and precious little oomph. If she had, she’d kick his arse with her Jimmy Choo shoes and exude confidence, instead of trying to look invisible on a seedy street corner.

Lee couldn’t believe she’d invested in him, heart, soul… and money. She swallowed back a fresh crop of tears that threatened to spill over, recalling how he’d convinced her, tears brimming in his own lying eyes that the Inland Revenue were about to drag him off in shackles.

She should have let them. She should have been thinking about her own needs, not his. Her son’s needs. His imminent university fees…

She’d been a fool. What on earth had possessed her to think her life was incomplete without a man. Without him?!

‘Leanne, come on.’ Richard sighed. ‘It’s late. You can’t hang around here on your own.’

Oh, but I can, she was about to say, but didn’t. It would be more than childish. It would be madness. She could be mugged or murdered, which would do her son no good at all. In the absence of the taxi, then, it was him or the street corner.

And he was the lesser of the two evils, she supposed. Marginally.

She pulled herself up to her full five-foot-three, and tugged her skirt down a bit. And when she got home, she’d show him the door, and tell him she’d post his shirts on in a jiffy bag, an extremely small jiffy bag.

‘Right, yer are, mate,’ she said, facetiousness full on as she wiggled to the car as tartly as she could in shoes not made for walking. ‘It’s fifty quid for full sex. Thirty for a hand job. No kissing. Cash-up-front and no cheques.’

Good God, her eyes boggled as Richard had the temerity to actually look shocked. Then boggled some more as a patrol car screeched up to spew policemen like something out of Ashes To Ashes.

One officer dashed around to invite Richard to step out of the vehicle and the other one advised Lee he was arresting her.

‘Excuse me?’ She laughed incredulously.

‘On suspicion of soliciting, madam,’ the officer informed her, stony-faced. ‘You do not have to say anything, but it may harm your defence if you do not mention anything which you later rely on in court…’

‘Soliciting?!’ Lee gawped at him. Had the whole world gone mad? ‘I am not!’ she assured him. ‘Do I look like a solicitor?’

‘Prostitute,’ the officer corrected her, his eyes full of insinuation.

And roving all over her, Lee noticed.

Unbelievable! She followed his gaze down and realised she absolutely did look like a tart. Her new white Wallis shirt was so wet it was showing her black bra beneath, nipples protruding embarrassingly therein, and the skirt was as miniscule as the officer’s brain. Lee glared at him and made a mental note. Avoid selecting attire according to man’s desire ever again. Mental note two. Avoid men.

‘Do you mind?’ She dragged the officer’s attention away from her too obvious bits.

His mouth twitched into a smile. ‘No.’

‘Moron,’ Lee muttered.

‘Anything you do say…’

‘Oh, don’t be ridiculous! He’s my boyfriend.’

‘Of course he is. And we always charge our boyfriends fifty pounds, do we, madam?’

‘No, we do…’ Good Lord, did he really think she was…

Lee’s heart sank. ‘I was joking,’ she uttered, bewildered. ‘We had an argument and I flounced out of the car and he…’

‘Yes,’ the officer said, with a heard-it-all-before shake of his head. ‘And the pigs are primed and ready to fly.’

‘Were you born stupid?’ Lee snapped, frustration and humiliation spilling over. ‘Or do you have to work at it?’

‘Not too hard, no,’ the officer replied, deadpan. ‘For future reference, you might like to note that insulting an officer of the law is a sure-fire way to get yourself up on a second charge.’

‘But I’m…’ Lee clamped her mouth shut as he produced his handcuffs.

Oh, the utter, total humiliation. This was never in her fantasy. The handcuffs and uniform, yes, but not the prison bit.

She glanced worriedly towards Richard… but Richard wasn’t there, where he had been. He was climbing back in his BMW. He was starting the engine. He wasn’t? He was.

‘I don’t believe this.’ Lee stared after him, devastated as Richard drove off without even a backward glance.

Finding footprints on the windscreen for her boyfriend’s car as evidence of his infidelity was worst case scenario for Lee. What would YOURS be?  What would you do about it?  Witty but NOT too rude suggestions, please.  One name will be randomly selected from the blogs taking part to receive a copy of Warrant for Love.

Warrant for Love - coverFind out more about Sheryl:

Sheryl’s Website

Safkhet Publishing

Amazon.co.uk

Amazon.com

Author Facebook     

Romantic Novelists’ Association

Sheryl is a loveahappyending featured Author and Editor.

Twitter: @sherylbrowne

A Warm Welcome Back To Author Stephanie Keyes


Hi Stephanie! Would you tell us a little bit about yourself?

Sure. My name is Stephanie Keyes. I write YA for YA readers and for those of us who will eternally be YA. I’m a mom, a wife, a book addict, a gadget freak, and love of breakfast foods.

Do you have anything you would like to say to your readers?

I’ve been fortunate enough to meet and interact with quite a few readers and potential readers in the promo stage for The Star Child and it’s been great. There’s something about the YA audience in general, that makes it wonderful to interact with. If you’re new to my work and The Star Child, then I hope you’ll check it out.

When did you realize that you would like to write and publish a book?

I’ve always had this in the back of my mind, on an informal bucket list so to speak. However, I never took it seriously until I got the idea for the book. Then there was this little voice in the back of my mind saying “Hey, this could be what we were thinking about…”. I just rant with it and whenever; I decide to do something, it’s important to me to follow through.

Can you tell us a little bit about your book The Star Child?

Definitely! It’s about Kellen St. James, who turns eighteen years old on the day of his graduation from Yale. He’s on the field for graduation and gets pulled through a portal into a dream that he’s had every night since he was six years old. That was the year that he met Calienta, the beautiful little girl that he thought might be his only friend.

Now, eleven years later, she shows up, telling Kellen that he’s part of a prophecy that involves saving the world from darkness. In no time at all, Kellen finds himself on the run and involved with Calienta in a way that he never has before. Will they make it in time? Will they end up in love? Read and see!

Which came first for you, the characters or the plot?

In this case, Calienta was the first character that I thought of. After that I sat down to write her story and the first thing that came out was a prologue with Kellen meeting her when he was six years old.

Where can we purchase The Star Child?

It’s available from Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and through the Inkspell Publishing website.

Can we expect more novels from you in 2012?

I just finished book two in The Star Child trilogy and am working on editing it now. It continues the story of Kellen, Calienta, and Gabe. It’s entitled The Fallen Stars.

Are you reading anything interesting at the moment? If so, what is it?

The Nine Lives of Chloe King by Liz Braswell.

Why this genre(s)?

Because I love the idea, that magic could exist in the real world. I just keep searching for it.

Can you tell us a few do’s and don’ts for aspiring authors?

Sure! Here are a few that I try to live by:

  • Be nice to everyone, even if they don’t deserve it. This has always been my approach to life. I wrote and taught Customer Service training in the corporate world long before I started writing and I carried this over. Treat everyone with respect and kindness and you’d be surprised at how people respond to this. Not a new concept, I know!
  • Don’t trash authors, publishing houses, peers, anyone. Here’s why: Twitter, Facebook, Blogs… those messages have a way of getting around. People remember how you interact and see that as a reflection of how you’ll interact with them. Beyond that, it’s not professional.
  • Be professional. If you want to submit to publishing house or agent, don’t ask them what you should submit. Go to their website and do the research. Act like a professional and people may just enjoy working with you!

What is your take on editing your work (pre-edits I suppose before it gets passed to an editor)—do you hate it? Is it a strong point for you?

I do hate it, but it makes a good book a great book. Ironically, I think that it is a strong point for me. I’ve always been very open to feedback and whenever I get a kernel of feedback, I take it and try to apply it.

About the Book

The world is about to be cloaked in darkness. 
Only one can stop the night.

Kellen St. James has spent his entire life being overlooked as an unwanted, ordinary, slightly geeky kid. That is until a beautiful girl, one who has haunted his dreams for the past eleven years of his life, shows up spinning tales of a prophecy. Not just any old prophecy either, but one in which Kellen plays a key role.

Suddenly, Kellen finds himself on the run through a Celtic underworld of faeries and demons, angels and gods, not to mention a really ticked off pack of hellhounds, all in order to save the world from darkness. But will they make it in time?

About the Author

Stephanie Keyes holds an undergraduate degree in Management Information Systems as well as a Master’s in Education. A seasoned, facilitator, Mrs. Keyes worked in Training and Development for an international telecommunications corporation for twelve years; spending the first eight years of her career as a Software Trainer and Technical Writer and the last four working in Human Resources and Employee Development.

In May of 2012, Mrs. Keyes left the corporate world to focus on her family and her writing full-time. She also operates a freelance graphic and instructional design business, Sycamore Road Design.

Inkspell Publishing will release her first novel, The Star Child, on September 21, 2012. She is now currently at work on the second book in The Star Child Trilogy, The Fallen Stars.

Keyes lives in Pennsylvania with her husband, two children, and Riley the dog.

Contact Stephanie
Website: www.stephaniekeyes.com
Facebook:http://www.facebook.com/pages/Stephanie-Keyes/150860604966160
Twitter: www.twitter.com/StephanieKeyes

Buy The Star Child http://www.inkspellpublishing.com/1/post/2012/09/happy-book-birthday-stephanie-keyes.html

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Paperback copy and posters are open to US, UK and Canada only. ebook giveaway is international.

Author Stephanie Keyes Reveals The Cover For Her Novel “The Star Child”


My friend and author, Stephanie Keyes, in conjunction with her publisher, inkspellpublishing, today reveals the cover for her wonderful novel, The Star Child.  Like myself, Stephanie is a featured author at loveahappyending.com and I had the greatest of pleasure in meeting her and her husband, Aaron, when they both came over to the UK to  attend the loveahappyending.com event, A Summer Audience, here in Tetbury in June this year.  It’s a great pleasure for me to feature Stephanie on my blog.

So….. what’s it all about?

The world is about to be cloaked in darkness.

Only one can stop the night.

Kellen St. James has spent his entire life being overlooked as an unwanted, ordinary, slightly geeky kid. That is until a beautiful girl, one who has haunted his dreams for the past eleven years of his life, shows up spinning tales of a prophecy. Not just any old prophecy either, but one in which Kellen plays a key role.

Suddenly, Kellen finds himself on the run through a Celtic underworld of faeries and demons, angels and gods, not to mention a really ticked off pack of hellhounds, all in order to save the world from darkness. But will they make it in time?

About The Author:

Stephanie Keyes was born in Mt. Lebanon, Pennsylvania and has worked for the past twelve years as a corporate educator and curriculum designer in the Telecommunications industry. She holds a Master’s degree in Education with a specialization in Instructional Technology from Duquesne University and a B.S. in Management Information Systems from Robert Morris University. She is a classically trained clarinetist, but also plays the saxophone and sings. When she’s not writing, she is a wife to a wonderfully supportive husband and mother to two little boys whom she cites as her inspiration for all things writing. The Star Child is Mrs. Keyes’ debut novel and will be released on 21 September 2012 in both paperback and eBook format.

Website: http://www.stephaniekeyes.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/stephaniekeyes

Facebook:  http://www.facebook.com/pages/Stephanie-Keyes/150860604966160

Giveaway Details(Open for USA and UK):

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Rafflecopter link for the giveaway (WordPress)

http://www.inkspellpublishing.com/1/post/2012/07/star-child-cover-reveal.html

Celtic knot designed antiqued bookmark – Will go very good with this book!

Guest Writer


I am proud to welcome my latest guest, Author and Sai Baba devotee Anita Bacha to my blog.  Anita has a truly wonderous story to share with us….. over to you Anita.

Anita Bacha was born in 1948 in Mauritius. She studied law in London and trained as a Barrister.  She is a also a former Public Prosecutor and Senior Magistrate.  From 1988 until 2004 she joined the Executive as the President of the National Adoption Council, set up by the Government of the Day to put a stop to the sale and traffic of children in Intercountry Adoption. Henceforth she worked as Legal Secretary in the family firm ‘Bacha and Bacha Chartered Accountants and Auditors’ in Bond Street, London. In 2005, she was called upon by the newly elected Prime Minister of Mauritius, Dr.Navin Chandra Ramgoolam to chair the Central Authority for Intercountry Adoption. She came back to Mauritius to assume her new responsibilities. She is, at this day, still holding office. In March 2008, she was elevated to the rank of Commander of the Star and Key of the Indian Ocean (CSK) on the occasion of the 16th anniversary of the National Day Celebrations by Sir Aneerood Jugnauth, the President of the Republic of Mauritius and in recognition of her valuable contribution in the field of child protection and in community work. She is married, the mother of four grown up kids and the grand- mother of five.  In 1978, she unexpectedly discovered the Spiritual Master ‘Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba’ and that encounter marked the true start of her spiritual life. She was inspired by Sri Sai Baba to write two books- THE MAKER OF MIRACLES (2006) and MY JOURNEY WITH GOD (2008) where she gives detailed accounts of her experiences of spiritual life as a follower of Baba. She joined the Sai Fold in 1978 as an active member of the Sri Sathya Sai Centre of Curepipe in Mauritius, a voluntary association based on the spiritual teachings of Sri Sathya Sai Baba. In 2007, she was selected as Ladies Convener and Executive Member of the Centre. She is nowadays actively engaged in spiritual, social and community work.

“MIRACLES ARE MY VISITING CARDS” Bhagawan Sathya Sai Baba.

We often hear stories about the miraculous healings and cures of Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba. Most of them sound absolutely out of this world. In her book ‘The Divine Leelas of Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba’, Srimati Purnaiya, a long-time devotee of Baba, wrote ‘to save the life of a man, Baba operated on him with His bare hands and without anesthesia’. This sounds most incredible and utterly impossible to those who have never personally experienced such a miracle. I was one of them until approximately six years ago when my life was saved by the divine intervention of Baba.

In June 2004, I was living in Mauritius. As far as my memory goes, it was icy cold that winter. I woke up at four in the morning for prayers and meditation. After the recital in my prayer room, I returned to my bedroom for meditation as it was far too cold for me to meditate in there. In my bed, I lay down in “dead man” posture for meditation. I had read in one of the books of Charles Penn, an American devotee that Baba had advised him to do so after he had complained about waking up in the early hours of the day and not being to fall asleep again.

So there I was in my bed and in meditative pose when I felt a long finger poking deep into my left breast. At the same time, I heard a voice calling to wake me up- Heeeeeeeeh! I opened my eyes and lo! Baba was standing by my bedside and smiling at me! Next moment, he was gone…disappeared into thin air.

I forgot all about the incident in the coming days but my heart kept telling me to go to London. I am British and my son Yogen lived and worked in London.

Finally, in January 2005, I arrived in London. I immediately started to attend to my personal matters which included my mail. I found a letter from NHS inviting me for a routine mammogram which is addressed to all women over 35. The appointment date had expired, having been fixed to a date in June 2004. Nonetheless and by the Grace of God, when I phoned the X-ray department, they agreed to give me a new appointment for the following week. I went for it.

One week after the mammogram, a letter arrived from NHS inviting me for a second one. Puzzled but fearing the worst, I decided to have a second X-ray. This was followed by an appointment for a medical review at hospital. There I was examined by two lady doctors. They inquired about my general health and then asked whether I had a lump in my breast. Which breast, I asked. I was feeling on top of the world and had no problem with my breasts at all. I was told that the X-ray had showed a small lump in my left breast.  Hand examination was followed by a scan and finally I was asked to lie on a couch, half naked for a needle test of my left breast. As the needle pierced my skin and flesh, I realized that Baba had poked my left breast with his finger at that very spot.

I was diagnosed with breast cancer and had surgery a few weeks after. The cancer was found to be very small in size and had not spread to other parts of my body. Matter of fact, only a ‘lumpectomy’ was done to remove the tumor; my breasts were saved.

I recovered very quickly from the trauma and went back to work.

I am ever so thankful to Baba for saving my life! I would have hated to die of cancer knowing the irreversible damage which the disease does to women. The All- Compassionate and Merciful Lord had stopped the growth of the tumor and guided my steps to London, opening one door after another until my final recovery.

– Anita Bacha –

Anita’s pages on Amazon:

http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B002F390Q0

http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=ntt_at_ep_srch?_encoding=UTF8&sort=relevancerank&search-alias=books&field-author=Anita%20Bacha

Guest Writer


The latest guest to tread the boards on my blog is Author Sheryl Browne and I’m sure you’ll be interested to read all about her and her latest book.

Author Biography – Sheryl Browne

Now residing in Worcestershire, Sheryl grew up in Birmingham, UK, where she studied Art & Design. She wears many hats: a partner in her own business, a mother, and a foster parent to disabled dogs, currently giving home to a feisty, but partially blind, midget Jack Russell and an OAP cross collie/lab.

Creative in spirit, Sheryl has always had a passion for writing.  A full member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association for some years, she has previously been published in the US and writes Romantic Comedy because, as she puts it, “life is just too short to be miserable.”

Sheryl’s new novel, RECIPES FOR DISASTER, has just been released by Safkhet Publishing.  Recipes for Disaster is deliciously different; fun recipes combined with romantic comedy make this book unique and cater to the romantic comedy and cookery readers at the same time. A man’s point of view also appeals to male readers who want to cook or learn how. The book had a wonderful reception in its first week on the market: over 5,000 Kindle copies sold!

A word from the publisher: Sheryl originally approached Safkhet with her book previously published in the US. She knew Safkhet had no list for the type of book and yet was not quite ready to give up hope. Kim, the editor who received her submission, loved her writing style and asked if she would like to write a romantic comedy cookbook. Having just the recipe names to work with, Sheryl gave it a go and managed to convince everybody else on the Safkhet team that a new imprint was needed. An imprint for Sheryl’s books and more just like it. Something to cheer up the reader, something bright and something that combines fun reading with recipes.

Safkhet signed Sheryl for three more books to be released within the next 18 months. They will all be published both in print and for the Kindle. Safkhet will soon accept submissions for this new imprint; up to four titles are planned for publication per year.

LINKS:

Safkhet Publishing

http://www.safkhetpublishing.com/books/soul/9781908208057/Recipes_for_Disaster.html

Amazon.co.uk

http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=sheryl+browne&rh=i%3Aaps%2Ck%3Asheryl+browne&ajr=0

Amazon.com

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=sheryl+browne#/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=recipes+for+disaster&rh=i%3Aaps%2Ck%3Arecipes+for+disaster

Website: www.sherylbrowne.com

Author Facebook     

http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Recipes-for-Disaster/245372252189480

Romantic Novelists’ Association

http://www.romanticnovelistsassociation.org/index.php/about/author/sheryl_browne

loveahappyending featured Author http://loveahappyending.com/sheryl-browne/  

Twitter: @sherylbrowne

Guest Writer


A huge round of applause please for my latest guest writer….. put your hands together for the one and only Bonnie Trachtenberg….

Bonnie Trachtenberg is the award-winning, bestselling author of Wedlocked: A Novel. She was senior writer and copy chief at Book-of-the-Month Club and has written seven children’s book adaptations. She has also written for three newspapers and penned countless magazine articles. Trachtenberg lives on Long Island with her husband, four cats and a dog.

You can learn more about Bonnie and read her blog at: http://www.BonnieTrachtenberg.com.

Find her on Facebook: http://www.Facebook.com/BonnieTrachtenberg and http://www.Facebook.com/Wedlocked

Follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/#!/writebrainedny

Buy Wedlocked on Amazon:

http://ning.it/qC1y2V

Buy Wedlocked on Amazon UK

http://ning.it/sEStFV

Buy Wedlocked at Barnes and Noble

http://ning.it/pPRGvC

On what should be the happiest day of her life, Rebecca Ross is panic stricken. Rebecca has just wed Craig Jacobs, but she realizes she put more thought into choosing her florist than she did in choosing the man she’s just pledged to love for the rest of her life.

Before Craig, Rebecca, a talented Long Island girl, dreamed of following in her grandmother’s footsteps with an acting career. Unfortunately, she was cut down to size by years of disappointment, and by her first love-a Hollywood director. She returned to Long Island a lost and broken woman, and ended up in the last place she ever wanted: her old bedroom at her parents’ house.

But Rebecca’s mother, an overzealous convert to Judaism, has a long held dream too: marry off her three daughters to Jewish men. So no one is more thrilled than her when Rebecca meets and marries bon vivant Craig Jacobs, the man who has won over the whole family. Too bad they’re all about to discover that underneath his charismatic shell, this Prince Charming is anything but! “Wedlocked is a funny, warm, and engaging story about life, love, marriage and family.

“This page-turner is the perfect summer read!” -Wendy Walker, bestselling author of Social Lives