Showing posts with label Sunlounger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sunlounger. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 September 2014

Writing What You Don't Know - Researching Locations by Louise Marley

The first time I heard 'write what you know', I was a teenager working as a typist for the local council. Did that mean I could only write about typists? How incredibly boring! But as it turned out, I 'knew' quite a lot. I knew what it felt like to fall in love, to be dumped, to lose a much loved member of my family - all those life experiences authors recycle into their books. When I crashed my car, I wrote about it in A Girl's Best Friend, along with my own experiences of what it felt like to be betrayed by a friend. When I lived in Bath I wrote about that too (along with all those movies and TV dramas I had seen filmed there), in Why Do Fools Fall in Love. And, being a writer, what I didn't know I made up.

So far, so good. But what happens when you have to write about something you don't know? When you have to do some actual *whisper it* research?

When I was asked to contribute to the Sunlounger anthologies (along with my fellow Novelista, Valerie-Anne Baglietto), the brief was to write a story set in a holiday destination. No problem, I'd just come back from a holiday in Sorrento, I'd write about that (The Indecent Proposal). Well, as it turned out, it's one thing going on holiday somewhere, quite another to have to write a story about it. I dug out my holiday photos and wrote notes about everything I remembered, but it wasn't enough. I had to do some research.

In the old days I'd have headed for the library; nowadays everything is easily available online. Maybe a little too easily, because there is one huge problem with information on the Internet. It's not always accurate. (Shocker!) So I have a rule of three - check facts three times from three different sources.

When it came to writing my story for Sunlounger 2 (The Accidental Proposal) I approached it differently. I'd have my characters arrive in New Orleans as tourists and I worked out an itinerary for them. (You can see my original notes for that here). Of course, that threw up a whole load of new problems. In my original story I had them visiting one of the famous cemeteries at night - it turns out they shut at night! There was a scene where the characters are standing in the street drinking cocktails. In some States that's illegal but fortunately (at the time of writing) it wasn't illegal in New Orleans. There was another scene I'd set beside the tomb of the famous Marie Laveau but vandals had just painted it pink! So, should I make the tomb pink in my story - to prove I'd done my research and show how clever I was? In the end, I decided the authorities were just as likely to repaint it white, and even mentioning the fact that it had ever been pink (no matter how deliciously quirky) it was likely to detract from the story.

So the moral is, always check your facts. It's no good assuming an editor will spot any mistakes in your research - it's not their job! If you're not careful, the first person to spot them will be your reader - and they won't hesitate in pointing them out to you - usually in a one star review.

But no matter how brilliant your research, nothing compares to visiting a location yourself! If you do get that chance, then I recommend taking lots of photos and making lots of notes - and it is the perfect excuse for a holiday!

Online Resources

Google Earth - Perfect for 3D images of locations. Many of cities also have 'street view' allowing you to 'walk' about. Bear in mind the images are often a few years old - if you look for my house, all you'll see is a field!
Pinterest - A great resource for images and you can create mood boards (I've blogged about Pinterest here). The photos often link to blogs.
Travel blogs - A brilliant resource but remember they are opinion pieces, read more than one if you want to view your location through your character's eyes, not the blogger's!
Travel agent websites - for hotels and tourists' itineraries (if you're writing about tourists!)
Tourist Board websites - Obviously!










Monday, 23 June 2014

My Sunlounger Experience by Valerie-Anne Baglietto

Kindle Summer Sale ONLY 99p - See SUNLOUNGER 2 on Amazon UK
See SUNLOUNGER 2 on Amazon US
It started with a handbag. Well, OK, no. It didn't. But a handbag does feature in this blog post. 

It actually started with an email from the lovely, industrious Belinda Jones early in 2013. Fellow Novelista Trisha Ashley had recommended me (and Louise Marley and Margaret James) for an anthology Belinda was planning called SUNLOUNGER. The criteria was, it had to be set somewhere foreign and preferably sunny, transporting the reader to exotic shores, cities, temples, mountains... anywhere but here. Pure escapism, in effect.

And so I took up the challenge, selected Gibraltar as my setting, as I was born there and still have a lot of family on the Rock, and decided there ought to be an unconventional genie in the tale. Of course. Why not? A brass lamp and a fit genie and a young woman desperately in need of a miracle.

Now I hadn't really written a short story in years. I always scribble on until it turns into a novel. But I took up the challenge (yes, I know I've said that already, but it really WAS a challenge for me) and penned a story under five-thousand words. And something wonderful and unexpected happened - I loved the experience! I loved learning to be brief and to spin a plot that would span a single day rather than months or a year. I relished keeping characterisation spare and painting a picture of the heroine's back-story that would leave the reader with a sense of heartbreak and hope. And from reviews I received afterwards, it worked.

Then, guess what? I was asked if I was interested in doing it all over again for SUNLOUNGER 2. So I bit Belinda's arm off and plucked Gran Canaria from a list of potential sun-soaked destinations. Again, it was a pleasure to write *coughs* - when it was going well - and I ended up with an eight-thousand word story this time. But I allowed my narrator to tell the tale, and that was the length she wanted. As it fitted with Belinda's new maximum word count, I gave my narrator a break. She deserved it; she'd pulled the story straight out of her soul and I think it was painful for her. Sometimes I feel as if I am a medium, and some spirit is telling me their story, murmuring their heartbreak and dreams in my head, especially when I'm working in the first person POV. Anyway, it got written, and now it's there in black and white, or sepia, or whatever colour you prefer for your eBook reading, for the world to hopefully enjoy.

And so now we come to the handbag. Seriously, I'm a bag-aholic (it's in my surname, after all) so there had to be a handbag coming into it somewhere. Directly below, in fact. 
I treated myself to it with birthday dosh, and took it proudly down to London when I attended the Sunlounger Party at Trader Vic's at the end of May. As bags go, I felt it perfectly encapsulated the whole Sunlounger ethos, and I got a few comments about it. I also took a man with an Hawaiian shirt to the party, but it turns out he felt surplus to requirements and went for a wander along Park Lane instead, where he promptly managed to get himself lost for an hour. I know, don't ask.

Made by the lovely Tracy of Tracy's T-cakes
With debut author Stephanie Wahlstrom (left)
So here are a few photos from the party, mainly involving cocktails and cakes. Unfortunately fellow Novelista Louise Marley couldn't come along to London with me, so I had to enjoy the Mai Tais and the gorgeous cupcakes on her behalf as well as indulging for my own sake. It was a hardship, which you can probably tell from my face. No? Oh. Well, hopefully, if it's repeated in 2015, I'll be able to drag her along.

Belinda Jones (left) and a few of the SUNLOUNGER authors at Trader Vic's













To make up for it this year, though, Louise and I are throwing a mini SUNLOUNGER 2 launch with our Novelista friends early in July. I hope the sun shines, and even though there won't be cocktails, as anyone familiar with the Novelistas can testify, there will definitely, categorically be cake!

www.valerie-annebaglietto.com
Twitter: @VABaglietto
Facebook: Valerie-Anne Baglietto Author


Tuesday, 22 April 2014

"My Writing Process" Blog Tour - Valerie-Anne Baglietto

Firstly, thank you to the lovely Sharon Booth for kindly inviting me to tell you all about my writing process in this Blog Tour.

Sharon is a member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association New Writers’ Scheme, currently putting the finishing touches to her first full-length novel and working on a draft for her second. These two books will comprise the first half of a series of romantic comedies set in the fictional North Yorkshire coastal village of Kearton Bay. You can read all about Sharon here.

The idea behind the Blog Tour is to answer some questions about your writing process and nominate three other writers to continue this on their own blogs (or in the Novelistas’ case, our shared blog).

So here goes…

My Writing Process:

What am I working on?
This is a strange year for me, as it’s not what I regard as normal. I’m literally trying to get my house in order, as we’re going to be having some building work done and there’s a lot of “stuff” I need to sort through first. I’ve been putting it off for years (mainly because I’ve been too busy writing!) but I have to face it sometime or my family will suffocate under piles of paperwork, old clothes and toys - and junk I don’t even remember buying, although I must have thought it was a good idea once. So anyway, in between all this, I am working on several writing projects, so I’m just going to highlight a couple of them, or this blog post will go on forever.

Firstly, my long novella/short book THE TROUBLE WITH KNIGHTS IN SHINING ARMOUR is being re-released very soon with a fresh new cover, so if any bloggers and reviewers out there would like a copy, please feel free to get in touch using the contact details for Novelistas Ink.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00DNJCBSE

Secondly, I started off 2014 working on my story for the BELINDA JONES’ TRAVEL CLUB SUNLOUNGER 2 anthology, which comes out in June. I really enjoyed taking part last year, it was such an amazing experience, so I was thrilled to be asked again. My story is called PANDORA AND THE MUSIC BOX. Here’s the gorgeous cover for this year’s collection - I’m already in love with it...



How do my stories differ from others of their genre?
The problem is, I’m not sure what my genre is precisely, but with the rise of ebooks I think that there are many writers who can say this nowadays. I like to describe my stories as contemporary fairy tales for adults, but they’re not re-workings of any fairy tales currently in existence, they’re entirely new. And they’re very much grounded in reality, not in a fantasy world. I like to write about genuine, ordinary people caught up in extra-ordinary situations, such as ONCE UPON A WINTER, where an abandoned wife finds out her husband belongs more to a fictional world than the real one, and the implications this has on her children. Perhaps the best classification would be ‘magical realism’? The main thing is, I’ve met many kind readers through social media who say they’re fans of my work and want me to carry on in a similar vein. So I must be doing something right, and I sincerely hope the ideas keep flowing, as I haven’t felt this enthused about my writing in years.

Why do I write?
This is probably the easiest question to answer. I write because I have to. Because if I don’t have a story or a cast of characters fluttering like butterflies in my brain, I quickly become depressed, “not myself”. Plucking plots and people out of my imagination is simply who I am, too much a part of me to ignore. I’ve been doing it since I was a small child, and even if I’m not actively writing a story, ideas are always formulating; but if I’m not excited by them, I’ll experiment with something else. A writer always needs to keep growing, stretching, reaching out.

How does my writing process work?
My writing routine has to remain flexible, because I have three children and the youngest is still only nine. I write while they’re at school, squeezing it in around all the usual chores. I can be very disciplined when I need to be, though. I edit as I go along, then I edit again at the end. If I have the luxury of time, I put my story away for a few weeks before going back to it with fresh eyes; that helps a great deal with the cutting and polishing process. I’m not a great planner; the story tends to unfold as I go along, although I more or less know where it’s going to end up, and I do make notes along the way. I’ve recently started using Pinterest for inspiration, as I’ve got no room to hang a physical ideas board anywhere. It’s a great concept if you’re a very visual writer and love to share images as well as words with your readers. You can find my Pinterest profile here.

On odd occasions when I’m working to a deadline, I might put in a few hours at the weekend. Social networking, promoting, marketing - a now-necessary aspect of a writer’s life - can fit in around everything else, because it’s easy to hop on to the iPad for a few minutes while waiting for the pasta to boil for dinner or while the washing machine finishes the spin cycle.

I’m basically a housewife, mum, writer, publishing entrepreneur (in my mind, at least) and anything else I need to be while mooching around the house wearing baggy joggers and old stripey slippers and refusing to answer the phone or the door to any cold-callers. For a few hours a day when I’m on my own, I am In Control. It’s a heady feeling!

www.valerie-annebaglietto.com
Twitter: @VABaglietto
Facebook: Valerie-Anne Baglietto Author


The next three writers I’d like to nominate for the Blog Tour are fellow members of Novelistas Ink, each with their own individual talent, showcasing the diversity of writing within our group. I’m very proud to count them as friends.

(In alphabetical order)
Anne Bennett, the very popular author of bestselling sagas mostly set during 1920 – 1950. They often link Ireland and Birmingham, where Anne’s roots lie. Anne is a well-loved writer who enjoys meeting her many fans at book signings and author events.

Annie Burrows, an Amazon bestselling author who has sold over half a million copies of her Regency romances in twenty-one countries. Her books have been shortlisted for the Festival of Romance Best Historical read, and been awarded the Cataromance Reviewers Award (twice). She is currently published by Harlequin Mills & Boon.

Louise Marley (the UK version) writes romantic comedy and romantic suspense, and sometimes mixes the two. Louise has consistently been a Kindle bestseller and her books are all available on Amazon.


Monday, 8 July 2013

Sunbathing by Knight by Valerie-Anne Baglietto

OK, OK. Forgive the pun in the title. I just couldn't resist, though. How else could I bring together two very different books, connected by one launch party? Anyway, before I get a barrage of comments, I'll drop in a photo of some cakes, to distract you all.

Did that work?


Well, Friday 5th was the official Novelistas' joint celebration for the launch of the Belinda Jones' Travel Club SUNLOUNGER anthology and THE TROUBLE WITH KNIGHTS IN SHINING ARMOUR. Louise Marley and I both have short stories in SUNLOUNGER ('An Indecent Proposal' and 'Genie of the Rock') and the KNIGHTS book is my latest release.

Cue, another pic:

You can see I brought suitable props. Stripey goody bags, great for the beach, and knight's helmet and sword, courtesy of my son's dressing up box. And, yes, I did have a fit of the giggles before I even had one sip of champagne! 

You might be forgiven for thinking my latest story is an historical, but both the KNIGHTS book and SUNLOUNGER are very much contemporary women's fiction. 

For Sunlounger (and KNIGHTS, too) Louise and I had to draw heavily on our imaginations and memories to craft our stories, as they're set during long, sultry, summer days, but were mostly written when snow and ice lay thick on the hills and valleys of North Wales.

SUNLOUNGER - the Ultimate Beach Read!
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00DP3R99Y


My SUNLOUNGER story is set in Gibraltar, and possibly features a genie, but you would have to read it to find out for sure!

Louise's SUNLOUNGER tale takes place in dreamy Sorrento, for fans of hunky, rumpled rock stars, ice cream, and Limoncello. A fun and evocative read. Highly recommended!

In fact, the entire collection of SUNLOUNGER stories, over forty in total, offers a varied selection of fabulous stories, truly something for everyone. And each one is set in an exotic foreign location, so you really do get a world trip for the price of one book.



The Trouble With Knights In Shining Armour
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00DNJCBSE
As for my my new release, THE TROUBLE WITH KNIGHTS IN SHINING ARMOUR, the action unfolds on a rambling old country estate in North Wales, where things are not quite what they seem; a modern day fairytale for fans of Once Upon a Time and Merlin. (Currently at the promotional price of 77p.)


All in all, the launch lunch went very well, although we were missing a few Novelistas, who were there in spirit. The only upside to this was more cakes and champagne for the rest of us, but I would have gladly swapped my share to have everyone there to join in the fun!


Novelistas Ink has now 'broken up' for the summer, although we'll still be posting on this blog and our Facebook page, www.facebook.com/pages/Novelistas-Ink, so keep in touch.

Let's enjoy the sunshine while we have it, and make the most of these gorgeous summer days and knights (sorry, sorry)! 

All best wishes,
Valerie-Anne x