Saturday, March 31, 2012

Battle of the Bulge: Dr. Mike Moreno's THE 17 DAY DIET COOKBOOK



Next weekend, I fly to Chicago for the RT Booklovers' Convention.  Sadly, I have not lost enough weight as I had hoped ... so I'll post fabulous photos of the authors but not of myself.   


I have battled the bulge for my entire adult life.   Free Press offered Dr. Mike Moreno's THE 17 DAY DIET COOKBOOK for review and I jumped at the chance:

The 17 Day Diet offers a lifetime plan for shedding pounds fast in a safe and lasting way. With a diverse list of foods recommended in every phase, New York Times bestselling author Dr. Mike Moreno offers a delicious and effective way to get healthy. The program is structured around four 17 day cycles:

Accelerate—the rapid weight loss portion, which helps flush sugar and fat storage from your system

Activate—the metabolic restart portion, with alternating low and high calorie days to help shed body fat

Achieve—the phase that involves learning to control portions and introducing new fitness routines

Arrive—a combination of the first three cycles to keep good habits up for good. On weekends, enjoy your favorite foods!

I  doubt CoCo Puffs are listed in the cookbook!

Each cycle changes your calorie count and the food that you’re eating. This is not a diet that relies on a tiny list of approved foods, grueling exercise routines, or unrealistic calorie counts that leave you hungry and unfulfilled. Moderation and proper portions are key factors in the 17 Day Diet—the trick is to figure out the foods and routines that work best with your real lifestyle.

Now, The 17 Day Diet Cookbook is here to help you meet your weight loss goals in a healthy and delicious way. Packed with brand-new recipes, The 17 Day Diet Cookbook offers an easy way to prepare healthy meals at home that will appeal to the whole family. Divided by cycle, the cookbook contains easy recipes for breakfasts, lunches, dinners, snacks, and desserts. Designed for the busy home cook, these nutritious and tasty dishes take about half an hour of active preparation and do not taste like diet food. You will be able to craft great meals that will satisfy everyone you’re feeding while helping you reach your weight loss goals.

17daydietblog.com

I recently received THE 17 DAY DIET COOKBOOK in the mail and glanced through the chapters.  I have not read Dr. Moreno's previously published books related to the 17 Day Diet.  But I am going to give it a go when I return from RT.   

How about you - can you recommend a diet?  cookbook?  secret recipe to healthy living?  One randomly selected commenter will win a book choice from my convention stash.   This giveaway is open to all readers.  Comments are open through Saturday, April 7, 10 pm in Hawaii.  I'll post the winner on Sunday, April 8.

Mahalo,

Kim in Hawaii




Friday, March 30, 2012

Aloha to Edie Harris and LOVE UNTAMED



On this date in 1814, the Sixth Coalition Forces marched into Paris.  The allies - Austria, Prussia, Russia, Portugal, Sweden, Spain, several German States, and the United Kingdom defeated Napoleon Bonaparte and returned him to exile on Elba.


Writing, like a military campaign, requires a coalition - family, friends, and other authors to encourage the craft.  Today's guest, Edie Harris, has her own coalition as she writes Historical Romance.


edieharris.com


Kim:  We are nosy here at SOS Aloha - can you share your favorite sight, sound, and smell from where you live.


Edie:  I currently live in rural eastern Iowa in the Midwest United States, though not because I have any great desire to be a country girl—I'm simply renting part of a house situated on a property of about eighty acres. My favorite sight is the view from my patio, of the rolling hills of as-yet-unplanted farmland. For all that I'm an urbanite at heart, I'm loving the complete lack of motor vehicle noise; it is seriously quiet out in the country. And as for smells...well, there are cows across the gravel road, and I do not count their odor among my favorites.


From Edie's camera ...


Kim:  You wrote in your bio, Edie’s luck truly changed in the months after attending a Chicago-area Romance Writers of America conference in 2010.


What did you learn at this meeting that helped you get published?


Edie:  It wasn't so much the conference that provided the luck—though I learned a ton by attending—but my mindset afterward, which led to a change in attitude. I was trying to sell an unsalable book. That initial version of LOVE SONGS had a whiny martyr of a heroine, a hero with no motivation, a decided lack of sexual tension between the protagonists, and a very flippant style of prose.




I was able to meet NYT-bestselling historical romance author Julia Quinn at that conference just for a few moments outside an elevator, which she likely doesn't remember, but she said something that stuck with me: "If you aren't in love with your characters, how can you expect anyone else to fall in love with them?" When I did eventually rewrite LOVE SONGS, I thought on her words long and hard, and I made sure to write a heroine I could like and respect at all times and a hero I was absolutely crazy about.


In the end, that was what made Audrina and William's romance work for me as an author, and (judging by the incredible feedback I've received) it seems readers are doing exactly what Ms. Quinn implied they'd do: They've fallen in love with the characters.




Kim:  What feedback did you receive from the AGONY/ECSTASY anthology?


Edie:  Quite the mixed bag of responses, actually! It seemed as if readers either really loved it or really hated it, and I completely understand why: "Shameless" (my story in the anthology) does not have a romance-novel ending—not a "happily ever after," not a "happy for now." However, that was a very conscious choice on my part, as I was writing an erotic short story—not an erotic romance. Erotica doesn't require an HEA or HFN ending, and Caro, the heroine, didn't need one; what she required was that singular interlude to mark the end of an old, unhealthy relationship and the start of her new, admittedly challenging life as an independent woman in 1859 Philadelphia. Vaughn, the hero, was able to give her that interlude.


But, like I said, there's no romance ending, and if there's one thing readers of this genre demand, it's a happy ending. Luckily, the people who appreciated "Shameless" for what it was were incredibly vocal and complimentary about it on Goodreads and other sites. I loved all the feedback I've seen, even the negative stuff. There's a sentiment we had when I worked for a newspaper, something along the lines of, "We love the hate. If they hate it, and hate it enough to comment on it, that's awesome—at least it means they're reading you." At this point, this early in my writing career, I love the hate. (But I love the love more, I gotta admit.)


The Forsythe residence on Iliad Lane
edieharris.com


Kim:  Tell us about the Iliad Lane Series and your new book, LOVE UNTAMED.


Edie:  I've always loved historical romances where the books of the series detail the siblings of a single family falling in love. We get to see the family dynamic as they relate to one another on a normal basis, as well as the reactions to any given sibling's significant other. As someone who comes from a small family (one much-younger brother), the interplay between a large number of siblings fascinates me.


The Iliad Lane series is set in the late Regency era, in London; LOVE SONGS and the prequel novella ARDENT both take place in 1823. The five daughters of Baron Forsythe are all special, each in her own way: the musical Audrina, the athletic Cadence, the scholarly Edwena, the stunningly beautiful Jocosa, and the compassionate Serenity. And they know that true love never lasts—their flighty French mother became a prime example the day she abandoned her husband and children to go "adventuring" with her new true love. Luckily for them, there are five wonderful men out there to prove these sisters wrong.




LOVE UNTAMED is the second full novel in the series, the story of the elegant-yet-tomboyish Cadence Forsythe and Benjamin Maene, the lower-class Scottish horse trainer who reluctantly—very reluctantly—falls in love with her. There are midnight mansion break-ins, secret sexy stable rendezvous, a racehorse that may or may not have a faked lineage, and a whole lot of emotional angst. At this time, I'm not certain when LOVE UNTAMED will release (hopefully later this spring), but here's an excerpt, from right after the heroine has taken an unexpected fall from her horse...courtesy of the hero:


His gut clenched as he looked down at her, her shallow breath panting through barely parted lips. He’d broken her. His temperamental descent in recklessness had broken the crazy, pretty, rich woman who’d owned his thoughts, both waking and sleeping, for the past twelve hours.


Panic twisted his guilt into something harder, more desperate, and he patted her cheek. “Hey. Hey, wake up.”


Nothing.


“Damn it,” he whispered. Bending closer, he slid his hand down to cup the back of her head, feeling with damnably trembling fingers for injury. Her coiffure made his search more difficult, so he gently pulled free several wicked-looking pins and dug his fingers into her scalp. Long waving strands fell like cool silk over his skin, and his bare fingertips felt the damp hint of sweat at their roots; she’d obviously been riding hard prior to her fall.


Then he found it: the large knot forming on the back of her skull. Thankfully, when he drew his hand away, there was no trace of blood, and he breathed an unearned sigh of relief. This time he stroked cheek, instead of patting it firmly. “Miss Forsythe?”


No response.


He tried not to notice the harsh contrast between his skin and hers. His hands were chapped and callused from working day-in and day-out with the horses. His knuckles were large, lending his fingers an almost misshapen appearance, and his roughened skin was dark and reddened compared to her fair complexion. It felt criminal, touching her pristine perfection with his raggedy hands.


Clearing his throat, he tried again. “Miss Forsythe?” Then, “Cadence?” It annoyed him how much he liked the rolling of her name on his tongue.


A frown appeared between her slashing black brows.


At this sign of renewed awareness, the knots of tension in his shoulders eased somewhat. “C’mon, Cadence, wake up now.” His thumbs swished back and forth over her cheekbones, warming the skin, pinkening it, and he couldn’t seem to stop the action. “Wake up and…and see to your horse, Cadence.”


2012 Copyright by Edie Harris


Thank you so much for having me on your blog! This is my first guest appearance anywhere—I'm so excited about it that I'm worried I'll overuse exclamation points. And there's nothing worse than overused exclamation points, as we all know. (!!!)




Mahalo, Edie, for joining us at SOS Aloha!  Edie is generously giving away a copy of LOVE SONGS to one randomly selected commenter.  To enter the giveaway,  leave a comment about which daughter of Baron Forsythe you most resemble:  the musical Audrina, the athletic Cadence, the scholarly Edwena, the stunningly beautiful Jocosa, and the compassionate Serenity.


I believe I relate with Serenity!


Comments are open through Saturday, March 31, 10 pm in Hawaii.  I'll post the winner on Sunday, April 1.


Mahalo,


Kim in Hawaii


To learn more about Edie and her books, check out her social media:


Official Site: edieharris.com
Daily Blog: authoredie.com
Twitter: @edieharris




March Madness continues here at SOS Aloha! All commenters in March will be entered into a special drawing for prizes from RT in Chicago. 3 US, 3 Canadian, and 3 international readers will win a package with books and goodies. Comments can be made at:


- SOS Aloha, sosaloha.blogspot.com
- Aloha On My Mind, alohaonmymind.blogspot.com
- My guest posts at the Reading Reviewer (Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday) at marygramlich.blogspot.com


I'll post the winners of March Madness on Monday, April 2.



Thursday, March 29, 2012

Aloha to Christine Nolfi and THE TREE OF EVERLASTING KNOWLEDGE



Returning to SOS Aloha is the multi-talented Christine Nolfi!   She visited us last year to celebrate TREASURE ME at this link.   Christine prepared a special post for her new book, THE TREE OF EVERLASTING KNOWLEDGE!



From what imaginings does a book arise? Some novels spring to life after weeks of playing the “What if” game. Other books are born directly from experience. 



Seventeen years ago, I adopted a sibling group of four children from the Philippines. The trip to Cebu was a revelation—local families struggling simply to get by wore the sweetest smiles. The missionaries running the shelter worked with unmistakable joy. My children, too, seemed imbued with a special goodness that stood in contrast to their difficult start in life. 



As years sped by and my kids grew ever stronger, they became standouts first in elementary school then later in high school and college. They became the type of young adults who were always willing to help a friend or offer comforting words. They laughed often and spread joy through churches and classrooms like fairy dust empowered with love. And I was left wondering: How can any child suffer greatly in early childhood then grow up to be so surprisingly good? 



That question drove the development of The Tree of Everlasting Knowledge.

In the novel, Ourania D’Andre and Troy Fagan struggle with dark impulses. Like so many of us, they’ve become cynical and no longer trust the healing qualities of love. Yet both are inevitably drawn to the light. They choose love over hate because it’s in their nature to do so. By learning to release a million regrets, they build a better world for themselves and the people they care about.

I believe these lessons speak directly to the miracle of the human heart. We do possess the power to heal despite every hardship we face. Yes, bad things happen. But in the end, good people prevail.

It’s easy to turn on the news or glance at a newspaper’s garish headlines and conclude that humanity bears rot at its core. Don’t believe it. Every day, in every corner of our pretty blue planet, average folks perform extraordinary acts of kindness. A stranger offers a helping hand. A mother comforts her child. A class of first graders in Wichita, Kansas raise money for other children on the opposite side of the earth. A middle-aged man takes his son to a ballgame then flashes the proof of his love across FaceBook.

Good people prevail.

About the author:

Christine’s debut, Treasure Me, and her March 2012 release, The Tree of Everlasting Knowledge continue to earn 4- and 5-star reviews on Amazon, GoodReads and other sites. Christine has been writing novels full-time since 2004. Look for her next release, Second Chance Grill, in several months.

Contact her at www.christinenolfi.com and @christinenolfi on Twitter.

The Tree of Everlasting Knowledge on Amazon in print (link) and Kindle (link)

Treasure Me on Amazon in print (link) and Kindle (link)
Barnes & Noble (link)
BAM (link)




Mahalo, Christine, for joining us at SOS Aloha!  I am giving away a Kindle copy of THE TREE OF EVERLASTING KNOWLEDGE to one randomly selected commenter.  To enter the giveaway,

1.  Can you share an experience that would inspire you to write a book?   

When I was a Lieutenant, I had a few zany adventures that might be worthy of a humorous contemporary romance.

2.  This giveaway is open to all readers.

3.  Comments are open through Saturday, March 31, 10 pm in Hawaii.  I'll post the winner on Sunday, April 1.

Mahalo,


Kim in Hawaii


March Madness continues here at SOS Aloha! All commenters in March will be entered into a special drawing for prizes from RT in Chicago. 3 US, 3 Canadian, and 3 international readers will win a package with books and goodies. Comments can be made at:

- SOS Aloha, sosaloha.blogspot.com
- Aloha On My Mind, alohaonmymind.blogspot.com
- My guest posts at the Reading Reviewer (Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday) at marygramlich.blogspot.com

I'll post the winners of March Madness on Monday, April 2.




Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Aloha to William j. Barry and SEBASTIAN AND THE AFTERLIFE II - AGENTS OF THE REAPER




Pop culture is a buzz with the supernatural in books, TV, and movies.   Today's guest, William j. Barry, knows something about the supernatural.  From his bio,

Ever since grade school, William enjoyed penning original short stories. They were a good outlet for his overactive imagination. William grew up in the Augusta, Georgia area before moving to Athens, Georgia where he obtained a bachelor’s degree in psychology from The University of Georgia.

After college, William returned his focus to writing. Sebastian and the Afterlife was his first novel. The book was signed by TWCS Publishing House and released in February of 2011. He followed that book with Agents of the Reaper, the second installment in the Sebastian and the Afterlife middle-grades/teen fantasy novels. It was released February 9th, 2012.

Besides writing, the author also enjoys writing and recording music and filmmaking. William is married and currently lives on the outskirts of Athens, Georgia.



Kim:  Tell us about Georgia - what is your favorite sight, smell, and sound.


WjB:  Georgia is nice. If it gets cold, it doesn’t stay that way for long.  But it gets entirely too hot in the summer.  The mountains in north Georgia are pretty but I am more of a beach person myself. There are some nice areas along the coast. I like doing things outside on occasion, but I have to admit I’m not the outdoors-type in general. We live in Athens, a small college town with a large music scene. The music scene is one of the main reasons I moved here in the first place. There’s a tremendous amount of support for the arts in general. There are some great restaurants too. As for sights, smells and sounds, it’s tough to pick favorites. I really love the home where we live, and in the spring we have a number of Dogwood trees that bloom in our yard. That’s a nice sight for me.  There’s a local coffee company named Jittery Joe's, and walking into their roasting house is truly a delightful smell. As for sounds, I always appreciate hearing an excellent local or national band putting on a great live show at a downtown venue.




Kim:  You have appeared in some films - how did that happen?


WjB:  Growing up I did a lot of drama in high school and at the local college; I’ve always loved performing.  I’ve been a huge fan of cinema for a long time and thought it would be fun to act on film.  Some friends of mine were into filmmaking and I was able to act in a couple of their short college films. This furthered my interest in appearing in some feature-length movies. A few years ago I answered an ad in a local entertainment newspaper that announced a casting call for an independent zombie movie. I went and put forth my best zombie stagger and got to be a townsperson/zombie in the film ‘Pushin’ up Daisies’ that came out in 2010. It was a great little horror/comedy (more comedy than horror).  It seemed to do really well in the festival circuit. After being involved with that project I decided to seek out more movie roles. A friend clued me into a casting agency out of Atlanta. (Atlanta is only an hour or so from here). Through them I got to be in a group of football fans in the new 20th Century Fox flick ‘Neighborhood Watch’ that’s coming out this summer. Ben Stiller was in the scene we were shooting; it was cool to watch him act in person. He was super nice to everyone. I’d like to do more movies in the future… I really enjoy the work.




Kim:  You are also writing screenplays and music - what inspires you to write for these mediums?


WjB:  I have been writing stories as far back as I can remember, but I wrote my first song at the age of nine. Initially I took piano lessons, but then when I turned 12, I started taking classical guitar at the local college. That was followed by classical voice a couple of years later. I never aspired to be a classical musician; the lessons were just a means to help me write my original popular-style music. Lyrics for songs have always just come to me from whatever I’m going through. Over the years, my musical style has been influenced by whatever artists I was really into at the time. It may not be evident to everyone, but when I listen to old recordings, I can hear when I was going through a Nirvana phase and when I was really into Smashing Pumpkins or listening to a lot of Tom Petty. Though I’ve always been somewhat influenced by the music I like, I’ve always strived to be different from them, it’s important to me to be distinctly original.
              
As I mentioned before, I really love film. I get a lot of great ideas (well, I think they are great) from all kinds of places, and some of them would be great for movies. Like when I was studying a lot of psychology in college, I wrote a mystery screenplay about a man with multiple personalities trying to figure out which of his personalities murdered someone. To me, screenplays are so much easier to write than books. They are really short in comparison… and in very simple language.  I can easily write a full-length screenplay in less than a month if that’s the only creative project I’m focused on. I have some aspirations of making films one day; perhaps even casting myself (like Woody Allen did). I get inspiration for screenplays from a lot of random places, often when something happens to me and I find it amusing … then my mind goes on a tangent. I would like to write my Sebastian and the Afterlife books into screenplays someday when I get the time. I always pictured John Cusack as my character Sid.




Kim:  Please introduce us to Sebastian, the Afterlife, and Agents of the Reaper.  What inspired the series?


WjB:  Sebastian is an average 17 year-old boy.  He likes to play sports, has a great family and a girlfriend he loves more than anything in the world. The only problem is that he’s just died. Sebastian wakes up in a surreal spirit realm that is somewhere between mortal life and the afterlife. It is a place where some spirits are given the opportunity to find closure before moving on. The Grim Reaper is in charge of this realm and his agents act as his police, making sure the laws are obeyed. Sebastian ends up at Sapentia, a kind of high school for the departed where ghosts can learn about their new abilities. There he settles in and makes new friends. But this mystical realm is also plagued with soul pirates. These individuals are constantly trying to kidnap innocent spirits to drain them of their spirit energy. Sebastian longs for his lost love, Sarah, who is still alive in the mortal world. As he tries to find his peace, he and his new friends are caught in the middle of a devious pirate plot to take over the spirit realm.
                
I had grown up writing short stories and had always aspired to write a full-length novel. I knew I wanted it to be YA dark fantasy, but I didn’t know much else. I wanted to write something I hadn’t seen before. One night I came up with the two lead characters, Sebastian and Sarah. I realized the core of my story would be the love between these two. I knew there was going to be some great barrier between them. Then I had a realization…what barrier could be greater than death? At that moment I knew I would be writing a ghost story. But I also wanted to create the rules and a fantastical universe for the story to take place in. Then I remembered a couple stories my mother had told me growing up. She claimed to have seen a ‘shadow’ in the room on two separate instances before someone had died. It wasn’t that the shadow was good or bad, it was just there to collect the person’s spirit. I always thought that was kind-of spooky… I guess that’s why it stuck with me. In my mind I always associated her stories with the Grim Reaper. When I started writing a ghost story, I wanted a hierarchy in the spirit realm, and it just made sense to put the Reaper on top. But I wanted to make him how I felt he was from my mother’s stories… not bad, but just a guy doing his job. Once all these pieces started coming together in my mind, the story just flowed as if it wanted to write itself. I love pirates as a romantic-notion villain, and I needed some bad guys for the story, so I went with it. I did a rough outline for the entire book the next couple of days after I had these epiphanies, and then began writing. I think the dark atmosphere in the book may come from my love of dark gothic tales and most things Tim Burton. I was also really into an album called ‘The Black Parade’ by My Chemical Romance.  I think that certainly helped contribute to the melancholy mood. But I really feel like my two main characters, Sebastian and Sarah, inspired the storyline. 

Kim:  What's next for William j. Barry?

WjB: I’m in the middle of writing the third Sebastian and the Afterlife novel, the first draft is due in June so I will be focused on that in the immediate future. It’s currently scheduled to come out March of 2013. I have plans to introduce a new young adult series tentatively released in the fall of 2013. I was also hoping that 2012 would be my return to music. I already have three songs recorded toward a full-length album I’m working on. It’s pop/rock with plenty of tasty synthesizer. I hope to release it later this year.I’d like to do another movie sometime too. I have a good friend that wants to film one of my recent screenplays, so hopefully that will materialize eventually. But these days, everything takes a back seat to my writing, so I guess I’ll work hard and see what I can accomplish.



Mahalo, William, for joining us at SOS Aloha!   My fourteen year old is currently enjoying SEBASTIAN AND THE AFTERLIFE II:  AGENTS OF THE REAPER - review to come (after he cleans his bedroom!).    I am giving away a Hawaiian "supernatural" souvenir to one randomly selected commenter.   To enter the giveaway,

1.  Leave a comment about the supernatural - what is your favorite myth about it?

On Oahu, recently departed souls "jump" to the afterlife from Ka'ena Point (here, here, here, and here at ALOHA ON MY MIND).

2.  This giveaway is open to all readers.

3.  Comments are open through Saturday, March 31, 10 pm in Hawaii.  I'll post the winner on Sunday, April 1.

Mahalo,

Kim in Hawaii

To learn more about William and his books, including links to purchase, check out his author page at THE WRITER'S COFFEE SHOP at this link.  


March Madness continues here at SOS Aloha! All commenters in March will be entered into a special drawing for prizes from RT in Chicago. 3 US, 3 Canadian, and 3 international readers will win a package with books and goodies. Comments can be made at:

- SOS Aloha, sosaloha.blogspot.com
- Aloha On My Mind, alohaonmymind.blogspot.com
- My guest posts at the Reading Reviewer (Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday) at marygramlich.blogspot.com

I'll post the winners of March Madness on Monday, April 2.



Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Aloha to Alma Katsu and THE TAKER



BREAKING NEWS - H50 and NCIS: LA filmed the crossover episode near my house on Joint Base Pearl Harbor Hickam.  Check out my photos at ALOHA ON MY MIND at this link.




The National Cherry Blossom Festival is underway in Washington, DC. This will delight today's guest, Alma Katsu!  What will also delight Alma is the paperback release of her hardcover debut, THE TAKER.   From her bio,

Alma Katsu lives outside of Washington, DC with her husband, musician Bruce Katsu. Her debut, The Taker, a Gothic novel of suspense, has been compared to the early work of Anne Rice and Elizabeth Kostova's The Historian. The novel was named a Top Ten Debut Novel of 2011 by the American Library Association and has developed an international following. The Reckoning, the second book in the trilogy, is coming out in June 2012. The Taker Trilogy is published by Gallery Books/Simon and Schuster. 



Kim:  What is your favorite sight, sound, and smell of the DC area?


Alma:  My favorite sight is easy—the Cherry Blossoms! Though the first time I saw them was in a typically DC-workaholic way: I was being driven down to give a briefing to the Secretary of HHS at o-dark-thirty and looked up from my notes just as we were passing the Tidal Basin. I couldn’t believe how gorgeous they were up close, with no other people around.


Sound? That’s a tough one. I’d have to say the sound of my husband playing the guitar. He’s been a professional musician on the DC scene for over 30 years now, including the once-near-famous band The Factory.


Smell? You got me there. I don’t have a very good sense of smell.


Kim:  Those Cherry Blossoms created an awesome auroma!   Can you share the challenges and rewards of a journalist? novelist?


Alma:  I haven’t been a journalist for a long time: so long ago, in fact, that it was pre-computers in the newsroom! I enjoyed being a music critic, though I was more into doing interviews than reviews. It was in the 1980s and I got to meet a lot of now-famous musicians like the Cars, the Go-Gos, and Joan Jett. The challenge was that I was really young and didn’t know what I was doing, and as a freelancer you don’t get as much guidance from editors as you would if you were on staff.


The challenges of being a novelist are many, foremost being making money. It seems to be incredibly hard to sell books these days, whether to a publishing house or to readers. I’m new to this, with my second book coming out in a few months, and while I’ve been incredibly lucky by any standard, I am gobsmacked at how difficult it is to get people to take a chance on an author they’ve never heard of. My hat is off to any author with a following.


I love the writing part but that is hard, too. As you all know, you have to force yourself to keep at it every day, even when the words aren’t flowing. You have to try to stay away from the Internet and concentrate on the pages in front of you. I know I’m in trouble when even housekeeping looks tempting.


Hawaiian heiau (temple) has a Gothic feel ....


Kim:  Did you intend to write a modern Gothic work? What influenced and/or inspired THE TAKER?


Alma:  I think I was born to write Gothic fiction. It was more popular then, not only literature but television and movies. I grew up loving all things Gothic and naturally have that sort of disposition. On top of that, I grew up in a spooky house in a spooky town. I jokingly call it was spookiest town in New England, and there’s no shortage of them up there, you know. It seems like everything had a ghost story attached to it.


I set myself a challenge when I started The Taker. I wanted to see if I could write a story that would stay with readers. You know, a big sweeping story with characters that would haunt you after you’d read the story, where you end up feeling like your best friend moved away because there are no more pages to read. That’s what all storytellers want to do, right? Tell a great story. I feel like I grew up reading great stories, stories that become part of our culture—Alexander Dumas, Robert Lewis Stevenson, Edgar Allan Poe—and I wondered if I could do it, too. I’m not saying that I succeeded, but I figured I’d learn more about writing if I aimed high.




Kim: Indeed, you aimed high! From Booklist's starred review, “Readers won’t be able to tear their eyes away from Katsu’s mesmerizing tale.”   Gallery Books is giving away a paperback copy of THE TAKER to one randomly selected commenter:


True love can last an eternity . . . but immortality comes at a price.


On the midnight shift at a hospital in rural St. Andrew, Maine, Dr. Luke Findley is expecting a quiet evening. Until a mysterious woman arrives in his ER, escorted by police—Lanore McIlvrae is a murder suspect—and Luke is inexplicably drawn to her. As Lanny tells him her story, an impassioned account of love and betrayal that transcends time and mortality, she changes his life forever. . . . At the turn of the nineteenth century, when St. Andrew was a Puritan settlement, Lanny was consumed as a child by her love for the son of the town’s founder, and she will do anything to be with him forever. But the price she pays is steep—an immortal bond that chains her to a terrible fate for eternity.


To enter the giveaway,


1.  Leave a comment about Gothic Fiction - do you have a favorite author?   What attracts you to it?


2.  This giveaway is open to US residents only.   But I will giveaway a Hawaii "Gothic" souvenir to one international commenter.


3.  Comments are open through Saturday, March 31, 10 pm in Hawaii.  I'll post the winner on Sunday, April 1.


Mahalo,


Kim in Hawaii



To learn more about Alma and her books, check out her website at www.almakatsu.com.


To learn more about the National Cherry Blossom Festival, check out its website a www.nationalcherryblossomfestival.org.




March Madness continues here at SOS Aloha! All commenters in March will be entered into a special drawing for prizes from RT in Chicago. 3 US, 3 Canadian, and 3 international readers will win a package with books and goodies. Comments can be made at:


- SOS Aloha, sosaloha.blogspot.com
- Aloha On My Mind, alohaonmymind.blogspot.com
- My guest posts at the Reading Reviewer (Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday) at marygramlich.blogspot.com


I'll post the winners of March Madness on Monday, April 2. 

 




Monday, March 26, 2012

Aloha to Prince Kuhio Day


Britain has the "People's Princess" - Diana. Hawaii has the "People's Prince" - Jonah Kuhio Kalanianaole.  Prince Kuhio Day is a state holiday, celebrating the life of Hawaii's beloved statesman. From Hawaii Link (at this link),

Prince Jonah Kuhio Kalanianaole was born on March 26, 1871 in Kukui’ula, at Ho’ai. Kuala in the Po’ipè area of Kaua’i. His parents were Kahalepouli, ruling chief and son of the last king of Kaua’i and Kinoiki Kekaulike, sister of Queen Kapi’olani. Historical accounts say that Kuhio was tagged with the nickname “Prince Cupid” by a French teacher when he was very young because of his chubby stature and good-natured personality.

Kuhio grew up in the royal household of Kapi’olani and her husband, King Kalakaua on O’ahu, and was raised as part of the court. He was in line for the throne, when Queen Liliuokalani was deposed in 1893.

After Hawai’i was annexed as a Territory of the United States, Kuhio plunged into the political scene in the new territory. He became a prime mover behind the effort to establish county governments with elected officials. He was elected Hawaii’s delegate to U.S. Congress in 1902 and held the post for 10 consecutive terms. Prince Kuhio died in 1922 at the age of 50 at his Waikiki home.


Do you have a special holiday in your town, county, state, and/or country?  One randomly selected commenter wins a book choice from my convention stash.  This giveaway is open to all readers.  Comments are open through Saturday, March 31, 10 pm in Hawaii.   I'll post the winners on Sunday, April 1.

Mahalo,

Kim in Hawaii


March Madness continues here at SOS Aloha! All commenters in March will be entered into a special drawing for prizes from RT in Chicago. 3 US, 3 Canadian, and 3 international readers will win a package with books and goodies. Comments can be made at:

- SOS Aloha, sosaloha.blogspot.com
- Aloha On My Mind, alohaonmymind.blogspot.com
- My guest posts at the Reading Reviewer (Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday) at marygramlich.blogspot.com

I'll post the winners of March Madness on Monday, April 2. 


Prince Kuhio Memorial on Kauai. For more pictures from Kauai, jump over to ALOHA ON MY MIND at this link.
 



Sunday, March 25, 2012

Women's History, Guest Bloggers, and Weekly Winners!




Aloha!   March is Women's History Month in the US.   Check out this link of trailblazing women in the military (from my friends at RomVets).  


Easter is around the corner and so is my trip to RT!  I'll have limited computer access from Sunday, April 8 - Monday, April 16.   So I'll be writing my daily posts in advance.   I have a few openings in my schedule - would you like to be a guest?  I welcome your book reviews, author spotlights, or other posts related to books and blogs!    I am also seeking guests at my travel blog, ALOHA ON MY MIND - would you like to share a travel story?   For more information, contact me at sos.aloha@yahoo.com.


 



We have winners at SOS Aloha!


Luck of the Irish Blog Hop:
- Foretta wins a book choice from my convention stash!



Spring Break:
- Jeanne M. wins a book choice from my convention stash!




Forever's Western Romance Blog Tour with RC Ryan and Katie Lane:

- Tracey D., Carol M., and Dani are the winners!
- Natalija is the international winner of a paniolo (cowboy) souvenir! 



Amanda Forester's TRUE HIGHLAND SPIRIT:
- Raonaid is the winner!




Barbara Lampert's CHARLIE:  A LOVE STORY
- Linda M. is the winner!




Jack Caldwell's THE THREE COLONELS:  Jane Austen's Fighting Men
- Nancy is the winner!




Leigh LaValle's THE RUNAWAY COUNTESS
- Alba is the winner!




Winners - please confirm you would like to receive your book/prize by sending your mailing address to sos.aloha@yahoo.com.




And Scotland was a winner on this day in 1306 - Robert the Bruce was crowned King.   England did not recognize his authority and the Pope excommunicated him.   Fourteen years later, Scottish noblemen signed the Declaration of Arbroath, asserting their claim to Scotland's independent sovereignty:

....for, as long as but a hundred of us remain alive, never will we on any conditions be brought under English rule. It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom – for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself. 



Four hundred years later, many Scots migrated to the English colonies in the New World.   Perhaps the Declaration of Arbroath inspired the Declaration of Independence (at least 9 signers had Scottish bloodlines).


Today I give one winner the independence to select a book choice from my convention stash.  This giveaway is open to all readers.  Comments are open through Saturday, March 31, 10 pm in Hawaii.  I'll post the winner on Sunday, April 1.



Mahalo,


Kim in Hawaii



Dunfermline Abbey where Robert the Bruce is buried.


March Madness continues here at SOS Aloha! All commenters in March will be entered into a special drawing for prizes from RT in Chicago. 3 US, 3 Canadian, and 3 international readers will win a package with books and goodies. Comments can be made at:

- SOS Aloha, sosaloha.blogspot.com
- Aloha On My Mind, alohaonmymind.blogspot.com
- My guest posts at the Reading Reviewer (Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday) at marygramlich.blogspot.com

I'll post the winners of March Madness on Monday, April 2.


Princess Kaiulani studied in her father's homeland - Scotland.