My interview with Sherril Bodine was up on blog on 12th August. She wrote "Written in the Stars" with Patricia Rosemoor, who is my guest today to answer some questions about herself and their book. Meet her and enjoy our little chat.
Hello
Patricia! It’s a great pleasure to have you as my guest at FLY HIGH! I’ve
already discussed “Written in the Stars”
with Sherrill a couple of weeks ago and now it’s your turn. Could
you briefly present yourself to our readers?
Written
in the Stars is my fourth project with Entangled Suspense – my next is Animal
Instincts, to be released in November. I cut my teeth on romantic suspense
writing for Harlequin Intrigue, Blaze and Bombshell. I also co-wrote a couple
of urban fantasy romantic thrillers for Del Rey with another author. Sherrill Bodine and I have been part of the
same critique group for twenty-some years and have long been good friends.
Romance
and black magic, past and present,
suspense and adventure. “Written
in the Stars” promises to be a real
gripping page- turner. Where did you take inspiration for such an
intriguing blend?
I
believe in crossover fiction. I love to read it. Love to write it. So I’m willing to put any elements together
in a story and make them work. I mostly write romantic thrillers that have an
element of adventure and/or the paranormal, but many of my novels also have a
built in mystery, as well.
I’m particularly curious about the heroes in
your novel: Will Grey, Innis Foley and Morgan Murphy. Are
they inspired to real men or to other literary figures? Can you tell us
something more about them?
Sherrill would have to speak to Will. As to Innis and Morgan—one
is the hero and the other the villain, and Cordelia eventually knows this even
as she tries to figure out which man could be a potential murderer. My men are
both driven, both trying to overcome their pasts. Both want Cordelia. But one
is willing to kill the other to get her. They are products of my imagination.
What about love in “Written in the Stars”?
One lifetime wasn’t enough...
As for the two heroines, what are they like? Do they share any
personality traits?
Of course. They care about duty and honor and protecting the
innocent, especially the people they love. They are fierce, and while they may
be afraid, they are fearless in pursuit of love and of justice.
Was writing about the past, the 17th century, hard? How did you
cope with that?
Not difficult for me at all—Sherrill wrote the historical half. :)
We had a say in each other’s stories, but we wrote our own visions of what
these characters would be like.
What was the thing you most liked writing for this story? What was
instead the page/moment you had to work the hardest on?
My website will tell you “Patricia Rosemoor Writes Dangerous
Love,” and that’s exactly what I like best about my story. The big finish
involves heroine, hero and villain in an underwater face off, and it is not
only exciting and action oriented, but one of the most compelling pieces of the
romance.
I’m not sure what I worked hardest on. I work hard on everything I
write and try to find something I can love about every scene.
What are you like as a reader?
I love thrillers, and even if they’re not classified as a romantic
suspense, I always hope there is romance of some sort in everything I choose to
read. I also love urban fantasy, and
again prefer stories with some romance. I prefer paper, but I read e-books, as
well, and more and more am drawn to the ease of a reader. I’m particularly fond
of reading in my garden, but alas, I live too far North to do that year-round.
If you could live in a book, which one would you choose and which
character would you like to be?
I do live in the books I write. I am the heroine. The hero. The
villain. I find it satisfying to switch rolls. :)
What is the latest book you read and what instead do you have on
your night-stand at present?
I just finished Brilliance by Marcus Sakey, who was one of my
graduate students at Columbia College Chicago. And before that I read The
Lincoln Lawyer, and before that Mockingjay and Catching Fire, and before that
Gone Girl. Right now I have an espionage thriller on my Kindle Fire that I’m
reading to give another former student a quote. Not sure what I’ll read next,
but I’m always on a roll reading in the summer. There’s that garden that is so
tempting...
How would you advertise “Written
in the Stars” in about 50 words?
When Elizabeth arrives at Dunham Castle to marry the heir to the
Duke of Lennox, she is drawn to the Duke's bastard son. Will defies all for
their love, and his jilted half-brother places a curse on them both.
Searching for a sunken treasure ship, Cordelia is pursued by both
a salvager and a treasure hunter, and is
haunted by a dream-vision in which one man is the killer and the other the
victim.
Chased by evil, two women discover their own magic to fight the
villain's curse.
Ok. Final questions: What was it like to write this book with
Sherrill?
Writing with Sherrill was a pleasure. We could keep our own
voices, bring to life our own visions, all the while making sure our two
stories became one piece that worked seamlessly together.
About Patricia Rosemoor
With 90 novels and more than seven million books in print, Patricia Rosemoor is fascinated with “dangerous love” – combining romance with danger. She has written various forms of romantic and paranormal romantic thrillers, even romantic horror, bringing a different mix of thrills and chills to her stories.
Patricia has won a Golden Heart from Romance Writers of America and two Reviewers Choice and two Career Achievement Awards from RT BOOKreviews, and in her other life, she teaches Popular Fiction and Suspense-Thriller Writing, credit courses at Columbia College Chicago. Three of her Columbia grad students and two students from other venues are now published in novel-length fiction.
SKIN is her first original indie thriller. With 53 Harlequin Intrigues since 1985, she is now writing romantic suspense for Entangled Publishing.
About Written in the Stars
“A passionate tale of destiny, danger and dark magic—and a love so powerful that it conquers time.” Mary Jo Putney, New York Times Bestselling Author.
‘A love so deep that it can last through centuries?
In 1601, Lady Elizabeth York’s star-shaped birthmark proclaims her a child of magic. When she arrives at Dunham Castle to marry Carlyle, heir to the Duke of Lennox, but finds enchantment in the eyes and touch of Will Grey, the Duke’s bastard son. Bewitched by Elizabeth, Will defies all for their love, and his jilted half-brother places a curse on them both.
Searching for a treasure ship sunk long ago, present-day marine archeologist Cordelia Ward is pursued romantically by both salvager Innis Foley and treasure hunter Morgan Murphy. She is haunted by a murderous nightmare where one man is the killer and the other the victim, but which man is her enemy, which her soul’s mate? Can a journal that belonged to her ancestress, Lady Elizabeth York show her the answers…in time to save her true love?
Chased by evil, two women discover their own magic to fight the villain’s curse on the Posey rings that draw them to the men they are destined to love.
Read an excerpt
He leaned into her so close his breath laved her face. “How about I make you an honest offer—a partnership.”
She stuck her right hand against his chest and backed off. “I don’t think so. You and I have very different goals.”
“I thought we both wanted to find the motherlode of The Celestine.”
“I’m a marine archeologist and—”
He captured her hand before she could remove it. “And I’m a pirate?”
“I didn’t say that, but you are looking for treasure, while I am looking for artifacts.”
“Not that I see the difference, but how about I offer you this.” From his pocket, he pulled a diamond-studded gold chain from which hung a crescent moon set with sapphires.
Cordelia’s eyes widened.
“Exactly.” He took her right hand from where he’d trapped it and placed the artifact in her palm.
The touch of metal and jewels to her ring electrified Cordelia. Startled, she gasped at the power but wrapped her fingers around the jeweled moon so she wouldn’t drop it. Her heart beating too fast, she took a closer look and recognized its age. This was no modern copy of something old.
Fearing he’d found this on his earlier dive, would somehow beat her to the motherlode, she panicked. “All right, partners, then, but we need to work out details—”
Before she could finish, he curled his fingers over her hand with the crescent and kissed her.
Her wrist burned.
Her ring tightened.
Her head went light.
The chain trapped between their hands connected them like a live wire, kept them from pulling apart. The current spread to every pore of her body, to her head, to her toes, to her feminine center.
She had never felt so alive, so sure of herself.
Until the kiss ended.
- Patricia’s Website | Facebook | Goodreads
- Written in the Stars on Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Kobo Books
- Publication Date: August 12, 2013
- Published by Entangled Publishing - Suspense Imprint
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