Posts Tagged ‘Modern Mythology’

Wild, Tethered, Bound: My New Book Cover

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

I’m so incredibly excited about this novella, which features a love story between a dryad and a modern day chimera. This cover is perfect. I want to kiss the art department over at Harlequin.

I particularly love the look of the trees in the moonlight, and the fact that they have captured her in such a beautiful pose–I mean, there are even goosebumps down her arm!

Most of all, I love the wispy gown she’s wearing, which could be clothing or it could be the magical tendrils she uses to tether nature together. This cover suggests a speculative element and I think it’s stunning.

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The Napping Nymph

Monday, June 8th, 2009

Well, I’ve finished the first draft of my first full-length novel for Silhouette Nocturne, tentatively titled “POISONED KISSES.” It ended up having more explosions and gun battles than I would have otherwise predicted. In any case, I packaged it up and sent it off to the group of kindly souls who agreed to be my alpha readers. I am nervously awaiting their verdict, and trying not to edit anything in the meantime.

The thing with fiction–for me–is that it needs to sit. I need to give it a little time to breathe, and I need to come to it with fresh eyes. Unfortunately, with a tight deadline, four weeks of breathing time is about all I’m going to get, so I’m letting my knife-wielding nymph of the underworld nap while I work on something new. (The gods of Olympus all know, she’s earned a little shut-eye!)

My second Nocturne is due in January, and I want to get a head start so that I can give it lots of breathing room. I’d originally wanted to continue my Greek Gods theme for my modern mythology series, but those aren’t the only Western myths that interest me. I’m also interested in Arthurian legend and I have an idea that has gripped me and won’t let go.

I love building urban fantasy around familiar stories like Camelot. What’s more, I love the idea of setting the book in my home state of Maryland and I have started an outline accordingly. It’s going to have spooky mirrors and wild ponies galore. It will also take full advantage of the Eastern Shore and all its creepy lore! (Why am I rhyming?) 

This time, I’m not going to write by the seat of my pants. This time, I’m going to have an outline. (I promise this every time, and I do outline, but it never seems to resemble the end product. This time will be different, I say.) To this end, I’m using a book called “First Draft in 30 Days” by Karen Wiesner. The title is a bit of a misnomer. You don’t have a first draft at the end of 30 days so much as a very detailed outline, but for my purposes that will do. Theoretically, by July 1st, I’ll have a complete outline for what just may be the most swooningly romantic modern-but-historical book I’ve written yet.

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