Today I’m participating in a Buy
The Book Blog Tour with a review of Trouble
Won’t Wait and an interview with author Autumn Piper.
Review:
When Mandy discovers her husband’s
infidelity on Thanksgiving, she’s torn between kicking him out immediately thereby
ruining her kids’ Christmas and hanging onto a fourteen-year marriage. She even
agrees to a month’s counseling. Meantime, she meets Adam, a gorgeous hunk who
thinks she’s beautiful. While he’s a balm to her shredded ego, she won’t have a
revenge affair.
Autumn Piper uses humor and
pathos to tell a story of heartbreak and indecision. Her depiction of a woman
whose principles take a beating seems so realistic. At times, I wanted to shake
Mandy and tell her to wake up and smell the coffee—her husband wasn’t going to
change. Then Aunt Clara did it for me. She stole every scene she was in with
her down-to-earth wisdom. Just what Mandy needed—along with a brother who offered
to beat the husband to a pulp. This story of small town life where family
supports each other is a great read.
I received a complimentary copy of this book for an honest review.
Now let’s meet the author. Here’s
Autumn Piper. Welcome, Autumn. Please tell us about yourself.
I’m a mom of a teen boy and girl,
married to their dad for 21 years now, live in a small western Colorado town,
and now work pretty much full time as a content editor for Lyrical Press as
well as being the executive editor-herder. In other words, I write when I can,
which isn’t as often as I’d like, but I still get to fool with the written word
for a living. But most of that is boring. Some more interesting facts: I like
to grow Jurassic-sized house plants so big it takes things with wheels to move
them from one place to another. Also, I did hard time for 7 years as a teacher
stunt double (aka substitute teacher), all grades.
OMG, I know exactly what you
mean. I was a sub once upon a time. You lasted 3 years longer than I did.
How long does it take you to
write a book?
The fastest was 3 weeks. About 9
hours a day. And the longest was about 2 years, but we moved several states
away during that time, and life was seriously in the way.
Holy cow! Three weeks? That’s
amazing. What does your family think of
your writing?
I think the 2 teenagers are
mostly embarrassed by it, although many of their friends seem to think it’s
cool. Hubby just wants me to write more and be successful enough that we can
retire to Jamaica and live off my royalties. (LOL. Is that all? No prob.)
Where do you start when writing?
Research, plotting, outline, or...?
Usually the first scene hits me
and I just go. I won’t stop to work out a plot outline unless I need to.
What did you learn from writing
your first book?
How fun it is to finish that last
chapter. Completing a story is a wonderful feeling. I’d finished about 3 of
them before I started looking for critique groups and learned all the stuff I’d
done wrong!
If you could give the younger
version of yourself advice what would it be?
Start writing sooner! You know,
like when I was younger and had fewer responsibilities or distractions.
If I was a first time reader of
your books, which one would you recommend I start with and why?
Lone Star Trouble. It’s
“traditional” in that we get both the heroine’s and hero’s points of view, it’s
funny, the characters have great sexual chemistry, and it’s also got the
suspense element. But beyond all that…I love the cover.
What do you hope readers take
with them after reading your work?
I hope my characters are
memorable for them. And even if they don’t agree with or approve of something a
hero or heroine does, I hope they can at least understand why the character
acted that way. Human nature isn’t 100% right or wrong, good or bad. We all
make mistakes, even my characters. But if a reader can still like that
character after shaking her head and watching her mess up, then I think I’ve
done a good job.
What two authors would we find
you reading when taking a break from your own writing?
Nora Roberts, for her reliable
happy-ever-afters (and it’s so easy to find one of her books, no matter where
you are, right?) And Meg Cabot, because she’s so darn funny.
Tell us about your latest book.
Trouble Won’t Wait is
contemporary romance, but it’s also a lot like women’s fiction. We’re pretty
deep in Mandy’s thoughts and feelings for most of the book. Also, she’s
experiencing much more than the usual trope of falling for a
boss/billionaire/doctor/co-worker.
BLURB:
Good things may come to those who wait, but trouble waits for no one…
Cheating is a dealbreaker...or
so Mandy’s always thought. But when she catches her husband getting some
“strange,” she realizes how hard it is to cut and run, or even file papers. She
agrees to a month of counseling, which will give her time to grieve the loss of
her marriage before she has to tell the world—and the kids. Then she meets
Adam, who gives her a hunky—if mysterious—shoulder to cry on, and that
thirty-day waiting period seems like an eternity.
Adam has no problem confessing
that he’s watched Mandy from his window for months as she runs by his house. If
he told her why, though, she’d freak out for sure. He knows they’ve got a
future together, if he can think of a way to explain his past. And he’s sure
the rat-bastard who cheated on her is putting the moves on her again, but he
won’t be the revenge guy. The month-long cooling off period she agreed to is
lasting forever, and might just be indefinite, if trouble keeps getting in
their way.
WARNING: Eccentric old lady
pushing salt-of-the-earth advice, bossy big brother, kooky counselor,
super-secretive hunk, and perfect justice served amidst adult situations and
language.
B&N BUY LINK: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/trouble-wont-wait-autumn-piper/1112799381?ean=2940015920970
AMAZON BUY LINK: http://amzn.to/UvfJBb
EXCERPT:
I snap the phone shut.
Adam pats my back.
I’m feeling a little proud, and a lot sick. A wicked combination of
nerves, exhaustion and barely eating has me shaking, my heart racing, legs
suddenly weak.
“Hey, you okay?” Adam’s voice is soft, worried.
I can only nod. If I speak I’ll be sick all over my shoes. After a
minute or so, I’m not lightheaded anymore, and stand. God, how embarrassing, to
go all weak in front of him!
“You’re pale.” He strokes my cheek with his fingertips. I must look
awful, but he seems concerned, not disgusted. “You’re freezing. Come on.” He
leads me toward his house.
Halfway to his back gate, it comes to me: I cannot go in there, not in
this mood.
“Adam. Hold on.”
He stops and faces me.
I press my eyes with the heels of my hands. “Do you want to be
my revenge?”
His laugh is warm, lusty. “Would there be opportunity for advancement?
A possibility for a permanent position?”
“Probably not at this point. Revenge would be a temp position only.”
“Then, no. I’ll keep arms’ reach away from you, Scout’s honor.”
Arms’ reach, rather than arms’ length… Freudian slip?
BIO:
I write
contemporary romance and women's fiction/mom-lit. My stories often have a high
heat index to match their American southwest settings. Known by my writing
buddies as "Angst", I have a penchant for making my characters
suffer. My novels may be tributes to the old saying, "No pain, no
gain", but my hero and heroine always get the happily-ever-after they so
deserve.
I love sunny
days, hot bread, the ocean, and that fluttery feeling I get inside at the first
spark of a great romance. In between being a wife, mom of two teens, writer,
and editor, I like to read, take morning walks, make people laugh (this
probably happens when I break into a jog!), garden, and play Jigsaw World on
Facebook. (sad but true)
For me, an
excellent book has characters you can sympathize with or hate (sometimes both
at once), a story you simply must see through to the end, and realistic
dialogue. Give me those key elements, and I'll read any genre or time period,
any author.
One last question, Autumn. Where
can readers find you?
On Facebook, I’ve still got the
layperson’s page, so I’m AutumnPiper.Author
Twitter, @AutumnPiperAuth
My website:
http://www.autumnpiper.com/
Thanks for stopping by and good
luck on your Blog Tour.
Thank you for having me, Diane. Great interview questions. :)
ReplyDelete~~Autumn
Nice work, ladies.
ReplyDeleteAnother on my TBR list. Sounds like a great read.
Thanks, Margo, and thank you for coming by!
ReplyDelete--Autumn