She's baaackkk! Nancy Gideon, friend, mentor, all-around great gal. No, she didn't pay me to say all that. Long-time readers of this blog have met Nancy before. Maybe you think you know her. Bwahahaha.
Nancy does this thing on her blog where she asks visiting authors to answer 20 questions about themselves. For her visit here, I thought turning the tables on her was fair play, especially since I'll be answering her questions next Tuesday on her blog.
So without further ado, here's Nancy Gideon's 20 Questions: Getting to Know Your Favorite (or soon
to be Favorite!) Writer
Getting to know you:
1.
Spa
day or gym workout?
I enjoy a gym workout . . . it’s
getting me there that’s the hard part. Once I’m home, a tremendous
gravitational pull sets in. But no one
has to twist my arm to get me to the spa. I had my first pedicure and massage
this past year and I’m a convert! Sigh .
. .
2.
Night
owl or early bird?
Definitely early bird. I’m one of those obnoxious people who is wide
awake the minute my eyes open . . . and totally functioning as soon as I inhale
my first Keurig cup. I’ve never had to
set an alarm clock in my life. I get up
at 5:00 a.m. to knock out pages before I have to go in to my day job. I love
the freshness of mind and the quiet. I
only write after work if my deadline demands it.
3.
Broadway
or museum?
I LOVE Broadway! Ever since my sister snuck me in to see Hair (without telling my mom about the
nudity!), I’ve been hooked . . . to the point of taking in three shows during
one trip to NYC. I’ve seen some awesome
performances: Liev Schreiber (who is much hotter from the third row center!) in
Talk Radio, Christopher Plummer and
Brian Dennehy in Inherit the Wind, Angela
Lansbury in her Tony winning role in Blythe
Spirits in New York, Stacy Keach’s
bare butt (not the highlight of King Lear)
in D.C., but my favorite will always be the touring production of Les Miserables here in my hometown. Museums . . . I’m not overly fond of
inanimate objects.
4.
Five
words you use to describe yourself.
ADD with OCD rising – OooooShiny!
5.
If
I had a free afternoon, I’d ______
Nap! That’s the thing I miss most
from my pre-work outside the home days – writing until 1:00 p.m. then snoozing
with a warm pet until the kids came home at 2:30.
6.
Favorite
books from childhood
The Black Stallion
series and myths and legends collections. I went from that to my mom’s Agatha
Christie’s. I was always reading
something – usually age inappropriate like Heinlein, Asimov or Allister Maclean.
7.
What
music are you listening to? While you
write?
I can’t listen to music while I
write, but I always equate a particular type of music to each book I’m working
on. The kind of music my characters enjoy tells me a lot about them. And then there’s the mood music for the
setting or time period. My playlist could include anything from Native American
flute and cool jazz to Mozart or my son’s collection of German heavy
metal. I like it all. With this latest
series I’ve amassed a large selection of local artists’ CDs during trips to New
Orleans.
8.
Your
first kiss . . .
Ahhh, yes. Elementary school with a yummy older
neighbor. Good enough to memorialize in Prince of Shadows. Except it was
a garage and not a garden shed.
The Written word:
9.
Favorite
type of hero
Oh, bad boys, definitely. I always like the ones I can redeem that have
some hard miles on them. Given a choice
between a “Thug” (i.e. Clive Owen, Jeremy Renner, Jason Statham) and a “Pretty
Boy” (i.e. Jude Law, Colin Firth, Orlando Bloom), I’d take the Thug.
10. What type of fiction heroine would
you be, Jane Eyre or Lara Croft?
If I had the knees for it, Lara
Croft. I’m a believer in making things
happen, not just dreaming about them or letting someone else make them come
true for you.
11. Favorite genre to read? Is it what
you write?
Suspense. I love a good thriller or chiller by Dean
Koontz, Sandra Brown or Lisa Gardner, and
always include an element of suspense in all my books.
12. What would you love to write that
you haven’t?
Young adult or New Adult. I’ve got a couple of great series ideas I’ve
been toying with. I wish I’d had those kinds of options when I was a teen. And
I’m thinking second gen from my current series . . .
13. What are you reading right now?
Funny you should ask. It’s a sci-fi space romance called The
Pilot by someone you’re intimately familiar with . . . Diane Burton. Your geek love of Star Trek and Firefly
oozes from it . . . in a good way.
(Thank you kindly for the plug.)
A Writer’s Life:
14. Which is easier, the synopsis or
the book?
The synopsis is easier . . . as
long as the book isn’t written. I enjoy
telling a story and have never had trouble spin one. But the book is definitely more fun!
15. Are you a lights, camera, action or
behind the scenes writer?
I would love to be a behind the
scenes writer who never surfaces except to take checks to the bank. The hermit in me would thrive on it! But somehow that never works out. I seem to
always be volunteering for something, taking on some project, offering to helm
a promotional effort, speak at some event, do a chat or interview, write guest
blogs, give something a quick read for continuity, learn to manage my own
website (and Joomla isn’t easy!) all while on a deadline. Okay, I’ll admit it. I excel during that last
minute rush - otherwise I’m a hopeless
procrastinator.
16. Live to write or write to live? Day
job?
I write because I can’t NOT
write. I live to write, but I have to
work to live. I’ve worked a full time 9-to-5 for the past 12 years for an
attorney and as much as I enjoy our clients, I wish writing included health
insurance . . .
17. How many submissions did you send
out before publication?
This was back in the ‘80s, in the
heyday of romance. I was woefully
ignorant of the process when I sent out my first attempt – a rightfully
forgotten saga that took place partly in China that somehow got a request for a
full manuscript. After that rejection, I
wrote three more complete historicals before picking the best to try
again. I got a request for the full then
had to feverishly type it up on a manual Smith Corolla from my longhand copy. In two weeks, I got THE CALL from Carin Cohen
at Zebra Kensington and had a long sales history with them after that.
18. First person you call when you get
a sale
Persons, plural. My fabulous critique group. When I get THE CALL at work, I’ll close my
office door then frantically dial until I reach someone . . . then let the
squealing begin. We’ve seen each other through all the ups and downs . . . and
this is the biggest high imaginable.
19. What’s on your desk?
Here at work? Scanner, two phones, laser printer and
4-in-1, Dictaphone headset, CPU, backup drive, bottled water and pop empties, coffee
cup, mail for scanning, files to open, Post-it notes, fuzzy seasonal animal, pictures
of grandson, sundry office supplies all in a regimented row, legal pads with
all phone notes for the past four years and CDs. At home, 4-in-1, phone with dead battery,
IPad, headset, scattered notes to self on last WIP, folder with latest PR
materials, envelopes with tax deductions for 2012, collection of favorite DVDs,
floppy disks of old books that I just got the rights back to, hand lotion,
picture of critique group, typewriter dust collectors, Tarot cards, pictures of
latest hero, coaster for coffee cup, laptop, endless To-do list, and cat hair.
20. When can we get your next book and
what’s it all about?
Prince of Shadows,
Book 8 in my By Moonlight series will be out 5-27-13 (my birthday!) as another
Pocket Star e-exclusive. It features my
favorite hero to date - darkly dangerous, rowdy, tattooed, rock and roll prince
Cale Terriot. The setting moves from New Orleans to Lake Tahoe and the break
was nice. I started jotting down scenes from the book on my lunch hour and
suddenly had 150 pages – in the middle.
After filling in the start and ending, I had to painfully cut over 100
pages to meet word count - and will be
putting some of them up as extra content on my website. Here’s a sneak peek:
PRINCE
OF SHADOWS
A
gentle lady held hostage in a deadly play for power, Kendra Terriot’s only
means of survival for herself and her family is to play to a careful courtship
game. The one she chooses from the dangerous Terriot heirs will inherit the
coveted crown, but the one she longs to have rescue her belongs to another.
Favored
son of their cruel clan leader, the only calm in Cale Terriot’s necessarily
violent life is his childhood love for his delicate distant cousin whom he’s
pledged to make his queen. With Kendra at his side, he knows he can become the
kind of ruler his family needs, but first he must learn how to become the kind
of man she desires.
In
a treacherous race for control, where weakness means death, can Cale prove he’s
not the beast his beauty fears and still protect her, especially once her
chosen love returns to free her? The only way to win her respect could mean
surrendering his throne. The only way to win her heart could mean letting her
go.
Nancy can be found at:
website: http://nancygideon.com
Twitter: @NancyGideon
Again since turnabout is fair play I have to tell you what I'm reading--Nancy's latest book Betrayed by Shadows, which is available at Amazon and Barnes & Noble. What a terrific book--kick ass heroine and sensitive hero. Don't get me wrong about Giles, though. He's tough and hard with a conscience. Love that in an alpha male.
Nancy, thanks for stopping by today and letting us get to know you better.
Good to know I'm not the only one with cat hair on my desk.
ReplyDeleteGreat interview, Diane and Nancy!
Loved the interview, ladies! Bad boys are so fun to write and read, aren't they *wink* Love the covers on your new series, Nancy! Best of luck and keep those fabulous books coming!!
ReplyDeleteGreat interview! Oh, I remember the days of manual typewriters! Makes me wonder how we survived before laptops.
ReplyDeleteOh, Patty, you aren't THAT old, are you? Typing with correction tape sure taught us to appreciate cut and paste and delete!
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, one great interview. I truly enjoyed it. And best of luck to both of you. Yeah me too with the MANUAL typewriter. When electrics were invented, what could be easier? HAH! Correction tape. Does anyone remember typing stencils to use to print multiple copies. Now there was a challenge!
ReplyDeleteGREAT interview! Like your questions, Diane, and your answers, Nancy. Especially, "ADD with OCD rising – OooooShiny!" I can identify with that. And Christopher Plummer and Brian Dennehy together? That must have been some production! Loved the blurb for "Prince of Shadows" and am looking forward to it, having enjoyed, "Betrayed by Shadows" so much. Hope the rest of your tour is wonderful!
ReplyDeletediet and exercise.
ReplyDeleter.d1@myfairpoint.net
I would love to see a YA series by Nancy!! It would surly be interesting!
ReplyDelete