Latest Book: False Impressions
Buy Link: http://goo.gl/rqT03b
AUTHOR BIO:
Marianne Rice writes contemporary romances set in small New
England towns. When she’s not writing, Marianne spends her time buying shoes,
eating chocolate, chauffeuring her herd of children to their varying sporting
events, and when there’s time, relaxing with fancy drinks and romance books.
Q: How did you celebrate publishing your first book?
A: My first book came out on the Monday after a school
vacation week (I’m a teacher). I had to work but had a Facebook Launch Party
that night. It was so much fun!
Q: Your novel is being made into a TV series/movie.
Who’s in your dream cast?
A: Nick Bateman is my hero inspiration for Cole Tucker.
YUM. Who cares if he can act? He’s so pretty to look at. And Theo James would
play his twin brother. Double yum. I picture Reese Witherspoon as Samantha
Chase. She’s adorable, tiny, and strong.
Q: What’s your writing schedule like? Do you strive
for a certain amount of words each day?
A: I work full time and have three active children. I
write when I can, but get most of my yearly totals done during the summer. I
never know when I’ll have uninterrupted writing times so I spend my non-writing
time thinking about my books. When I have a moment to sit down, I can bang out
my story pretty quickly. I aim for 10,000 words a week in the summer and spend
the school year editing.
Q: How much of yourself is hidden in the characters in
the book?
A: I haven’t put myself in my books yet but there are
tiny bits and pieces of people I know scattered throughout. Nothing obvious,
though. A trait here; a trait there. I don’t want to model a character after a
family member or friend…too intimate.
Q: Of all your characters, who’s your favorite, and
why?
A: From my McKay-Tucker series my favorite is
definitely Cole Tucker. He’s hilarious and the king of cheesy pick-up lines,
but he’s hurting inside and has a soft, sensitive side that makes my heart
melt.
Q: If you could change something about your first
book, what would it be?
A: I’d lighten it up a bit. Writing Cole’s story in
False Impressions made me realize how much I love incorporating humor into my
books.
Q: Do you eat comfort food/listen to music when
writing?
A: Actually, when I’m on a writing binge it’s kind of
like dieting. My fingers are moving so quickly across the keyboard; I don’t
want to interrupt my flow so I don’t stop to eat. Or drink. Or go to the
bathroom.
Q: How do you choose names for your characters?
A: In my first series, I used names that were on my
baby name list that my husband and I couldn’t agree on. In my upcoming series,
either the hero or heroine in each book is named after one of my nieces or
nephews.
Q: Give one advice tip to an aspiring author.
A: Don’t stop writing. When you’ve written your first
book, edit, edit, edit, and hook up with an RWA chapter. They’re the best.
Attend conferences and workshops to help your craft. And then write the next
book. And then the next. The more I write, the more I learn. I’m so glad I didn’t
spend years trying to publish my first book. I actually wrote eight books
before the first one got published.
Q: What genre would you like to try writing that you
haven’t yet tried?
A: I’d love to write women’s fiction, but I don’t have
a story developed yet. The contemporary romance stories fill my head quite
easily.
Q:. Have you ever used an incident from your real life
into one of your books?
A: Oh, yes, but not exactly as it played out. My
fourteen year-old daughter was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes seven years ago.
I tried incorporating it into my current WIP, but it was too close to home.
Instead, I used Type 1 Diabetes as a way for my heroine in False Hope to find
out about her birth father. It’s not the focus of the book, but an every day lifestyle
that hundreds of thousands of children and adults have to live every moment of
their life.
Q: How many stories are swirling around in your head?
Do you keep a mental list, a computer file, or a spiral notebook filled with
the ideas?
A: Too many. I keep a mental list of my ideas, but
they usually branch from one book and turn into a series so the characters make
a cameo appearance before “their” book. I keep a character spreadsheet with
their traits, flaws etc. and think about their full story while I’m writing.
I’m working on book 2 in my Rocky Harbor novels (I project six books) and
recently came up with an idea for another series. So, do I write the six books
in this series before beginning the next, or start the next series? Decisions.
Fun Stuff:
Q: What is your favorite holiday and why?
A: Christmas. I love decorating, lighting candles,
shopping, wrapping, the smells, and reading stories by the fire. It’s cozy and
fun.
Q: What are two things people might be surprised to
know about you?
A: I love to run in dirty, muddy obstacle races. And
the only reason I exercise regularly is so I can get away with sneaking obscene
amount of chocolate into my body. I hate exercise, but I have no food
self-control. So it’s a must.
Q: As a child, what did you want to be when you grew
up?
A: A secretary. I thought filing papers would be fun. Then
in kindergarten I wanted to be a nurse. Taking temperatures and blood pressures
would be fun, right? But then a girl in my class told me nurses have to give shots.
Yikes! I’m needle-phobic (ironic that I have a Type 1 Diabetic in the house,
eh?) so I quickly changed my career path. Interior designer, chef, baker, and
teacher. Teacher won out but I do a lot of cooking and baking.
Q: Favorite
food.
A: Anything
chocolate. And lemon. And Italian. And Chinese. I have a hard time narrowing
things down.
Q: Favorite
happy memory.
A: My wedding
day. The birth of my children. My first publishing contract. Watching my
children play sports. Again, I can’t decide on one!
Q: Favorite
drink.
A: Frilly
flavored-vodka drinks (love martinis). Frozen mudslides. Green Cleanse Tea to
help me detox after drinking the above.
Q: Hot
summer days or chilly winter nights?
A: Hot summer
days. But I couldn’t handle them year round. I do love my winter nights.
Q: What is
the top thing on your bucket list?
A: Is it sad
to say I don’t have one? I’d love to make the NY Times Bestseller list some day
J
Q: If you could have a super
power, what would it be?
A: I’d actually like a special toy. A remote control
that allows me to pause, fast forward, and rewind the world. I can turn it up,
turn it down, and change the “channel”. That would make me happy.
Where can we find you?
Sign up for my newsletter J
Recovering
alcoholic and former party animal, Cole Tucker would be an idiot to start
something with his newly hired right-hand woman, Samantha Chase. It figures he
can’t seem to keep his mitts of the sexy, five-foot-nothing single mom who can
toss a sack of shingles over her shoulder and rewire a house better than the
crew from Extreme Home Makeover. Her incredible strength and self-confidence
draw him in; something Cole has pretended to have for years. All he has to show
for himself is his uncanny use of pick-up lines, a hand-me-down farm and some
small-town rental properties. When he learns Samantha’s husband and daughter
were killed by a drunk driver, the shame of his past experience with a DUI and
near-death accident is the last thing he wants to mention to her.
Samantha
has no problem accepting her new boss, flaws and all. His simple life is
charming and exactly what she hoped to find for herself and her son in Newhall,
New Hampshire. Cole wins her over by befriending her fatherless son and making
her laugh again, something she hasn’t done in four years. When she learns about
his shady past with the bottle, her heart tells her to forgive, but the painful
memories of her past are too deep to overlook.
Excerpt:
Shutting
off the ignition, Sam dabbed her lips with tinted Chapstick and hopped out of
her truck. Loud country music bellowed from the right side of the duplex.
Something about tequila and clothes falling off. Not exactly the song she
wanted to make her entrance with.
Her
knocking didn’t stop the music or bring anyone to the door, so she turned the
doorknob and let herself in, following the music, or rather the voice of the
slightly off-key man singing along to the country song. Spotting the radio, Sam
turned it down slightly and cleared her throat.
“Hello?”
The
singing stopped and a man emerged from around the corner. He paused midstride
and stared. Mr. Tucker was not the bald, over-weight, wrinkled man she’d
expected. It had been years since she felt any type of attraction toward a man.
And this one, with dark coffee eyes and Patrick Dempsey dimples covered in a
light scruff, did unfamiliar and unwanted things to her body.
“Did
it hurt?”
“Did
what hurt?” she asked, confused.
“When
you fell out of heaven?”
Sam
raised an eyebrow and chewed on the inside of her cheek, unsure of how exactly
to answer. “It was a pretty big fall, but I made the landing.”
The
man tipped his head back and laughed. “So what brings a pretty little lady
around this grungy old worksite?”
Great.
Already being talked down to. “We had an appointment.”
“We
did?” He took off his ball cap and ran his arm across his forehead. “I’m pretty
sure I’d remember setting up a date with you.”
“Mr.
Tucker, I’m—”
“Cole.
Mr. Tucker is my dad.” He turned his baseball cap around and put it on
backward, giving him a boyish charm.
“Yes.
Sorry. Cole, I’m Sam. You left a message on my phone to meet you here at nine.”
Cole
looped his thumbs in the front of a pair of jeans that were worn and torn but
fit him like a glove, and rocked back on his heels, studying her from head to
toe and back again. She knew what he was thinking and wanted to ward off any
doubt in her abilities. “I assure you, Mr. Tucker, that I am highly qualified.
Probably more so than anyone else you have working on site. I’ve been doing
electrical work since I was twelve—”
“Which
was what, last year?”
“I
may be petite, but I can carry my own.” Sam placed her hands on her hips and
didn’t look away from his piercing stare. “I’ve been wiring homes for over
fifteen years, I can fix any plumbing problem you throw my way, I can lift more
than I weigh and know my way around any power tool you have. I understand your
reluctance to hire someone like me … someone as little as me, but since your family
name is so reputable in town, I assume you’re not the type to discriminate
against women; so if you want to hire me on a trial basis, I would not object.”
She folded her arms across her chest and cocked her head. He had a good ten
inches on her, probably a foot, but she didn’t feel threatened.
The
man squinted down at her and rubbed a hand across his jaw. “Okay, short stuff—”
“Sam.”
“Okay,
Sam. We’ll give it a try. I have two more windows to put in upstairs and could
use a hand. You ready to work?”
Sam
looked at her watch and bit her lip. “I’ll give you an hour of free labor and
then time to think about your decision.” She walked to the stairs and took two
at a time, waiting for her new boss at the top. He looked reluctant but
gestured to the back bedroom where she gave him the best hour of her life.
Enjoyed the interview ladies. False Impressions sounds like a great read.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Rose. It was fun to write!
ReplyDeleteHi Marianne (there are few "Mariannes" who spell their name right ;-) )
ReplyDeleteThanks for having me today.
-The other Marianne
Nice interview. I love meeting new authors. Really, really enjoyed your excerpt. Love your bio too.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Cara. I love meeting new authors as well. What did authors do before social media????
ReplyDeleteWhat a great interview. It's wonderful meeting you. I love the cover and excerpt. All the best!
ReplyDeleteThat's cute that you used your baby names list! I enjoyed the interview and excerpt, Marianne. Thanks for joining us today. Best luck.
ReplyDeleteGreat excerpt. I enjoy short heroines since I've been teased about that physical trait all my live. Thanks for joining us today.
ReplyDeleteLoved the excerpt! False Impressions sounds like a wonderful book. Thanks for the lovely interview; it's always nice to meet new authors.
ReplyDeleteThank you, ladies. It was a fun book to write.
ReplyDelete