I volunteered to participate in a blog tour and answer the four questions below. I was supposed to find three other authors to answer the same questions on January 6th but I could only find one, so I hope you’ll pop over to visit her too–next week. Caryl has a new book coming out in early 2014.
1. What are you working on right now?
I’m working on a career plan for 2014. These days, publishing is a little like walking down the detergent aisle. There are way too many choices. Should I try for an agent? A traditional publisher or a small press? Those are questions I wrestle with. I heard recently the chances of getting our digital rights back from a traditional publisher are pretty slim. That makes me want to investigate smaller presses and stick with the ebook market. Then I confuse myself by asking… why should I care about digital rights? Aside from my career plan, I’m working on a couple of romantic suspense novels and a romantic comedy.
2. How does it differ from other works in its genre?
I don’t know that my work differs in any way from what’s out there. That’s sad, isn’t it? If it does differ, readers will have to tell me.
3. Why do you write what you do?
Do I have a choice? I write what comes to me–romantic comedy, romantic suspense, women’s fiction. The other day I got an idea for a time travel. I have the beginning and the ending but no middle. The middle is always the hardest part for me. When ideas pop into my head, I start writing.
4. How does your writing process work?
I don’t have a tried and true, real-to-me process. Each story dictates how I write it. The Groom Wore Blue Suede Shoes was outlined chapter by chapter. The Last Daughter was the easiest to write. It came to me all at once, pretty complete. I wrote the synopsis first. My short stories were taken from novels that didn’t sell or are unfinished. There’s no method to my madness.
I don’t have a tried and true, real-to-me process. Each story dictates how I write it. The Groom Wore Blue Suede Shoes was outlined chapter by chapter. The Last Daughter was the easiest to write. It came to me all at once, pretty complete. I wrote the synopsis first. My short stories were taken from novels that didn’t sell or are unfinished. There’s no method to my madness.
I wish I could get organized in 2014 and actually learn how to ‘churn’ out books, novellas and all kinds of stories. All tips welcome.
Don’t forget to visit Caryl McAdoo on January 6th.
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