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Showing posts with label E. Ayers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label E. Ayers. Show all posts

Saturday, May 23, 2015

Never Say Never to Research! Guest Blog by E. Ayers

Hi, everyone, I love being a guest on this blog because I happen to think this is one of the best blogs for readers and writers. I want to discuss that nasty little word research. No matter what an author writes, it seems at some point that author must stop long enough to do a little research. But how accurate is that research?

For the last three years, I've spent quite a bit of time doing research on the history of our "Wild" West. It all happened by accident. I wrote a contemporary romance, A Snowy Christmas in Wyoming, which is a little east-meets-west-type of story. It was loads of fun, but I had no idea that I was going to open a big can of worms. I never intended to write historical. I know several authors who do and the stuff they've had to research... Nope, not me. Never ever would I write that! Well, never say never in this business. It all happened by accident. I wrote a contemporary romance.

The contemporary that I wrote mentioned an old diary. People began to ask for the diary. When enough readers asked for it, I thought I might as well write it. So I began. But as usual, it's easy to get sidetracked. Debra Holland asked me to be part of her Christmas anthology, Sweetwater Springs Christmas, and I said yes. So I wrote about a young man who leaves Creed's Crossing, Wyoming to ask his long time pen pal, Adie Reiner, to be his wife. And as I wrote that story, I realized I had another one brewing between her older sister and a Crow Indian. That story became A Rancher's Woman.

Sounds simple, right? Quite the opposite. I was buried in research. I'd write a few sentences and then spend hours looking up something. It's been a fascinating journey for me. Having lived my life in the eastern portion of the United States, I can talk about the colorful history of the east. To make matters worse, history in school is taught mostly from the standpoint of important battles. But east is east and west is west, and I probably read three lines about the railroad being laid, a single line or two about the Pony Express, and not much more on the early settlers of the west. I had to learn everything from scratch! Plus, I hadn't been in the beautiful state of Wyoming in years. I actually managed to contact someone within the Farm Bureau who was wonderful. He was also a rancher, and he gave me all sorts of answers to the strangest of questions. Oh, yeah, I really did, I asked what color the dirt was. When he quit laughing, we had a long discussion on soil types.

I didn't want to write about pretty dresses. There are plenty of authors who do that. I wanted to write about real life. I found it in photographs, letters, and all those wonderful things that historical societies collect. Plus many companies have fabulous records. Even simple things such as pens needed hours of research. Did you know that the railroads employ historians? The Bureau of Indian Affairs was wonderful - once I reached the right people within that organization.
So after hundreds of hours of digging, and some awesome contacts, I wrote A Rancher's Woman. The Diary of Clare Coleman is still being written. That one is more difficult because it starts in the 1840's and records are sketchy.

I just finished writing A Rancher's Dream, which follows A Rancher's Woman, and that second novel should be available around the end of this month. As I wrote these, I realized that my grandmothers would have been the same age as the young teenage girls in the stories. My one grandmother and her son, my father, grew up on a self-sufficient farm. That gave me a slight edge as I’d heard all those old stories.
I know that what I've written is historically accurate, and it's a slightly different glimpse of the past than what most romance readers might expect. That's because I didn't leave out the day-to-day chores, the lack of plumbing, or all the other stuff that is not mentioned in most books about our west. And those gals who went west were tough! They had to be to survive!

What do we do when it gets a little too warm? We turn on the air conditioning. If it's cold, we use the heater. They didn't have that luxury. If it was hot, they still had to cook over a wood stove and churn cream into butter. They didn't jump in the shower to cool off! And they certainly weren't wearing corsets under silk dresses as they milked the cows. Maybe reading Roberta Gellis spoiled me. If I'm going to read historical fiction, I want it accurate. And I feel as though I owe it to my readers to write with the same care and accuracy as Roberta Gellis. (Thank you Ms. Gellis for giving me so many hours of reading pleasure and for being such an inspiration to me!)

So that dirty little word, research, has become part of my life. The diary is no longer on the back burner. It's become a labor of love. But using the Internet is tricky. I can't take a single source and assume it's correct. I try to find several sources. Wikipedia has been my friend, but I make certain I have other sources and not just the ones Wikipedia cites that will back up my info. Even photographs can have errors. They might say the photo was taken in 1880, but really it was taken in 1903. I've learned to look for those flaws.

I've had some training in working with old photos. Find something that you know is a certain color, and then, in theory, you can pick out everything else in the photo which is that color. I often felt as though I was looking for Waldo! Depending on the tribe, the white man's influence on their clothing changed. They wouldn't be wearing shirts or blouses made of flour sacks until they were confined to a reservation.
We gave them bags of white powdery stuff that had no taste. They didn't know what to do with it. They dumped that flour out and used the bags for all sorts of things. It's really sad. Plus every tribe has its own language. Some were similar and some were as different as Portuguese is from Swahili. Just toss out most of what you probably were taught or thought. Chances are it's wrong!

Creating a historically accurate book takes extra time. As an author, you must check, double check, and check the information again. And then it has to be applied to what you are writing. Sometimes that research yields hardly anything applicable and other times it showers you in useful info.
If the author is researching something for a contemporary novel, be creative! I know of an author who joined a dating service and made it quite clear she only wanted someone who could feed her information for her novel. She got lots of that and a few marriage proposals! Never be afraid to ask. Most people are more than willing to share their information.

When I wrote A Cowboy's Kiss in Wyoming, I needed medical help. Fortunately, I knew several doctors in a large sports medicine practice. I learned more about hip replacements than I would ever need. But that entire office was so willing to share information. And as a way of double-checking, I contacted a physical therapy group in Wyoming and got the same information with a slightly different slant. Apparently, those cowboys don't believe their doctors when they are told to stay off the horse for at least six weeks. Stubborn men! Why don't they listen?

Research is research. It makes our stories better. If you are an author, just jump in and don't be afraid of it. It's amazing what you will learn! And sometimes it’s fun. If you are a reader, do you prefer to read stories that are historically accurate or do you only want a romantic story that skims over all the not so glamorous aspects of life years ago?

When E. Ayers isn't busy writing, she's often doing photography. She'll be away from her desk most of the May 23 with her camera, but she's promised to respond to everyone as soon as she returns that evening. 

Her historical western A Rancher's Woman has been added to a Native American encyclopedia and is a USA Today Recommended Read. It is available in e-form and in paper. You can visit with her on her blog. Her westerns are sweeter than her contemporary stories but nothing is ever extremely hot. She writes down the middle.

Sunday, December 28, 2014

Guest Blog: E. Ayers: Inventory? What Inventory?

This time of year, we all start thinking about our New Year resolutions. What we should do is take a few minutes and look back. Every businessperson knows the importance of a balance sheet and inventory. So why do we forget that we are more than just authors? We have a business. Our business is writing. Our inventory is intellectual property (our writings).

Granted, most of us will never make the money that Danielle Steel or Stephen King makes, but can you imagine the value of Shakespeare's blog posts today? Anything we write has a monetary value and potential value. This post and two dollars will buy you a cup of coffee. Done laughing? It's all relative. But our writings are considered to be intellectual property and have value. And maybe, if you become very famous, that note you wrote to the teacher as to why Billy missed school…

Time to make some lists!

(If you are a spreadsheet junkie, put this info into a spreadsheet, if it's not already there.)

What have you accomplished?

Make a list of every book you've ever written and every book that you've ever published. Don't forget to include works-in-progress aka WIPs. It's often helpful to put a date next to each one. For instance if the book was written in 2010 and published in 2014, you could write 2010/2014. Or maybe you'd prefer to add when it was sold/contracted to a publisher, because we all know that selling and publishing can be totally separate dates. Use whatever makes sense to you, but list them.

Make a list of every book that you've written this year, and every book that has been sold and/or published this year.

Now you have something to actually look at! Look hard.

Did you accomplish your goals from last year?

How does 2014 compare to 2013?

If you wanted to write, sell, or publish three books this year but you only managed to do two, take a moment and evaluate why. We all can set lofty goals and the best-laid plans go haywire! What happened? Did your son or daughter make that special traveling ice hockey team and that sliced into your writing time? Were you responsible for an elderly parent, or your daughter expected you to be the babysitter for her newborn son? Family often takes precedence over our plans. Did the day job change and suddenly you were on the road twice as much or you had some huge project dumped in your lap?

List the things that prevented you from accomplishing your goals.

Maybe this year was stellar! Why? Did you commit to so many words a day and set aside a time to do that? Did you work harder to release those books? Harder how? Sometimes we all feel as though it was just the way the cookie crumbled, and this time, it crumbled in your favor. Even if you aren't certain why this year went better, list what may have been a factor. Did your blog receive more traffic this year? Did you spend more time tweeting, or did you utilize certain ads? Did your publisher help promote and how? Around here, I refer to it as the SWAG method or the Scientific Wild Donkey* Guess method. (*I promised to be polite.) We often have to make assumptions based on little evidence. So go with your gut feelings and what you think might have been a factor.

List what went right for a change. Don't forget to include those SWAGs.

And as soon as you know what you made in 2014, include that information in this list.

If you guest blogged 23 times, list those posts. If you've posted on your blog 130 times, list it. Again it's intellectual property, and you need to keep track of it.

One last thing: make backups of everything! Send it to the cloud, a flash drive, to your mom's hard drive, or to a CD for the safe deposit box. You really need a secure backup of what you own. Computers fail and they can take your property with them! Or worse yet, you could have a fire and lose everything in your home. We need to make backups regularly, but at the end of each year you should have one big backup for everything you've written that year. Don't forget to add your inventory list you just made! Simply label it 2014 End of Year.

You've laid your business out in front of you. You know what you have or don't have, and you know why you did or did not succeed in reaching your goals in 2014. Now you are ready to make New Year resolutions, except this time you aren't making pie-in-the-sky, off-the-cuff, or whatever you want to call it, resolutions. You are setting legitimate business goals.

Make a list of those goals no matter how minor they seem.

List each goal and what it will take to achieve them. You are creating a business plan! The plan becomes your driving force behind your dreams and aspirations. Stick to your plan unless there's a major alteration to that plan. If you commit to 300 words a day, do it! If something goes wrong and you miss a day or five, jump back in and try to catch up even if it's only 25 extra words per day. Keep your goals reasonable. We'd all like to make two million sales this year.

Break the goals down into chewable pieces. If you are selling fifteen books a day, it's reasonable to set a goal for 25 or 30. Releasing that next book might mean you'll start selling 50 a day. If that happens, adjust your goals accordingly! This business works exponentially and it changes in a split second. Never be afraid to adjust your goals or your plans to reach those goals.

Keep your goals in sight. Print them out and stick them on the bathroom mirror or wherever suits you. You want to see them at least twice a day. It will help you to stay focused.

Remember your public image! It's much too easy to scoot out of the house wearing sweats and old tennis shoes, but is that the way you want to run into a fan? That doesn't mean you have to look as though you just stepped off the runway. Think clean, neat, and presentable at all times! You are the CEO of your business and you have a public image.

Take your right hand and place it on your upper left arm. Put your left hand on your upper right arm. Now give yourself a hug! You've just graduated from carefree hobbyist to a professional businessperson.

We are in the business of creating intellectual property. There's plenty more that we all should be considering even if we aren't ready to make certain moves quite yet, such as creating an LLC, Limited Liability Corporation, or its equivalent if you live in another country. Unsure if this is something you need to be doing? Talk to a professional. Often banks have financial councilors available for free to their patrons, or check with your attorney. If you are making more than a few dollars, add consult with financial planner/attorney to your goals.

Even if you've not finished your first manuscript, walk through these steps anyway. Do it now and next year it will be easier. There's plenty to think about that goes beyond writing. Who inherits your intellectual property? You may not be the CEO of a Fortune 500 company but you are the CEO of your business no matter how big or small it is. Act successful, keep your chin up, and maintain a positive attitude. Success will come.

Almost anyone can be an author; the business is to collect money and fame from this state of being.

A. A. Milne

BLURB:
This holiday season, you'll find the spirit of Main Street alive and well in this collection of twelve heartwarming stories. The Authors of Main Street have priced the Christmas on Main Street boxed set inexpensively as their holiday gift to you.

Nobody's Cinderella by Joan Reeves, A Snowy Christmas in Wyoming by E. Ayers, What if...this Christmas by Kelly Rae, The Christmas Wish by Tori Scott, Her Christmas Cruise by Mona Risk, The Christmas Con by Jill James, A Light in the Christmas Cafe by Kristy Tate, A Potters Wood Christmas by Leigh Morgan, A Smoky Mountain Christmas by Carol DeVaney, The Christmas Gift by Pepper Phillips, Small Town Glamour Girl Christmas by Stephanie Queen, A Baby for Christmas by Susan R. Hughes.

Buy Link: Amazon

BIO:
E. Ayers is a multi-published and Amazon best-selling author of western and contemporary romances. Her books are never too sweet or too hot. She writes down the middle. She is proud to be part of the Authors of Main Street, an elite group of award-winning and best-selling contemporary authors.

Twitter http://twitter.com/ayersbooks
Shared Blog http://authorsofmainstreet.wordpress.com/
Blog http://ayersbooks.wordpress.com/
Amazon Author Page http://amzn.com/e/B005AYJ0XE
Authors of Main Street Newsletter http://ow.ly/xel3e

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Interview of Author E. Ayers

Latest Book: Campaign, A River City Novel
Buy Link: http://amzn.com/B00LYWD668

BIO:
E. Ayers is a multi-published and Amazon best-selling author of western and contemporary romances. Her books are never too sweet or too hot. She writes down the middle. She is proud to be part of the Authors of Main Street, an elite group of award-winning and best-selling contemporary authors.

Q: How did you celebrate publishing your first book?
A: I danced on the ceiling for a few days. It was actually quite lonely. I had no one to really share the news with other than one author friend. My mentor was furious with me for going independent and not through New York. She swore I had made a huge mistake. And my children decided I was crazy for even thinking someone might buy my book or want to read it. They still don’t support my choice of a career.

Q: What’s your writing schedule like? Do you strive for a certain amount of words each day?
A: I don’t have a set number of anything. I get up and grab my coffee and start. I leave the computer long enough to eat or occasionally run errands and I’m back at it. My big break comes from being part of a local writer’s group that meets once a week to write and twice a month as a general support and critique group.

Q: What is the most important thing you do for your career now, as compared to when you first started writing?
A: I spend a lot of time promoting and interacting with readers and other authors.

Q: How much of yourself is hidden in the characters in the book?
A: Probably way too much! Yet, I’ve never written any character that I could point to and say that’s me. In fact, many do things that I never would do or could imagine myself doing. But I think it’s difficult not have bits of the author come through in the writing.

Q: Of all your characters, who’s your favorite, and why?
A: I get asked this a lot! Dallas is my favorite female character. She just marches to a different drummer. As a child, her abilities and talents were suppressed and disregarded. Being kicked out of her childhood home was actually a blessing in disguise.

Q: Do you eat comfort food/listen to music when writing?
A: I want total quiet when I’m writing. I don’t want anything to sidetrack me. Most of the time, I write during the wee hours of the morning when nothing is happening and even the email is quiet.
I allow myself two squares of Lindt, 90% Cocoa, Supreme Dark chocolate per night. That’s my treat!

I can look at food and gain weight so I’m very careful about what I eat. And sitting at a computer for hours every day is not exactly a healthy lifestyle. I just tell myself that chocolate is an antioxidant and good for me, then I happily indulge.

Q: How do you choose names for your characters?
A: I love names and always have. I like finding names that match my characters and I’m not afraid to use a last name or even a first name that might be unfamiliar to some Americans. We’re a melting pot and I love ethnic names. It’s part of who we are.

I’ll use those names to my advantage in a story. Plus I think it adds diversity. We aren’t all named Mary and Tom Smith. And Tom Smith is just as apt to be a Black male as he is to be part Asian, Hispanic or pure blooded American Indian. Names can be nothing or everything.

Q: If you could give a younger version of yourself advice, what would it be?
A: Write those books and get them published! Of course the industry was quite different then, and I had no idea how to even go about publishing anything. I just wish I had started when I had little ones taking afternoon naps!

Q: Have you ever used an incident from your real life into one of your books?
A: Oh, those are scattered all through my books, but the biggest one is the start of A Skeleton at Her Door. I was part of a huge neighborhood Halloween event and I knew there were several people getting their makeup done ahead of time so that it could be done quickly the night of Halloween. I opened my door a few days prior to the big event to the most amazing skeleton. I dragged him inside and called my girls to see him. The oldest came downstairs first. She walked around him and admired him. But when the second daughter came down, she sat on the steps and informed me it was not who I thought it was. Omigod! I dragged some totally drool-worthy guy into my house and I didn’t know him? Yep!

Q: Any part of a book that drives you crazy as you write: beginning, middle, or end?
A: The middle of a full-length novel. I’m not a plotter, I just go with my characters, but sometimes I have to have a little heart-to-heart chat with them. Can’t have a saggy center! I can’t let them derail a story or do something totally out of order. Nor will I let them do anything stupid.

Mentally I get lots of story starts that never go anywhere, because there’s nothing special or unique about them or their story. Once I get beyond that point, I expect my characters to cooperate and play by the rules. They never do!

The ending can be a little tension-filled as I tie up the loose ends.

Fun Stuff:
Q: What is your favorite holiday and why?
A: Halloween! As a child, it was terrific fun. We ran through the neighborhood with complete freedom that doesn’t exist today. But I love that change in the season, the colors and pumpkins. I love pumpkins and all the yummy foods of the season.

Q: What are two things people might be surprised to know about you?
A: I had traveled most of the world before I got married.

At seventeen, I had almost two years of college credits.

Q: As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?
A: An architect. That kept changing but whatever it was, it was always math based. I was looking at an engineering or a pure math degree. Except I met husband, and the rest is history.

Q: Favorite food.
A: I don’t have an absolute favorite, maybe cheese. (Remember chocolate is not a food, it’s an antioxidant.)

Q: Favorite happy memory.
A: Sitting on a boulder in the middle of Peddler River eating a picnic lunch with my husband. The dogwoods and redbuds were blooming in the under-story of the large trees. The water swirled and flowed so swiftly we almost had to holler to be heard above it. The sun was warm, but the air was still crisp. It was picture perfect in every way, just nature and us.

Q: Favorite drink.
A: Oh, pick one – coffee, tea, or scotch.

Q: Hot summer days or chilly winter nights?
A: Winter nights! You can always add blankets, but you can’t cool down enough when it’s super hot!

Q: What is the top thing on your bucket list?
A: I don’t really have a bucket list, but I have a goal. I want an RV and I want to go to Wyoming. But I want to stop and visit so many friends along the way. Have camera, toothbrush, and my laptop!

Q: If you could have a super power, what would it be?
A: Sometimes I think I’d like to climb into people’s head and see what they are thinking, but then maybe it’s better if I don’t know such things.

Tell us where to find you: website(s), publisher’s page(s), blog(s), Facebook page(s), etc. List them all!
(Twitter) @ayersbooks
(Website) http://www.ayersbooks.com
(Shared Blog) http://authorsofmainstreet.wordpress.com
(Blog) http://ayersbooks.wordpress.com
(Amazon Author Page) http://amzn.com/e/B005AYJ0XE

BLURB:
Brad Shoemaker was blindsided when he discovered that love could be silent, and Kathryn “Ryn” Demary is mute. But when Mayor Bruno Giovanni is forced into early retirement, he chooses Brad to run in his place. Ryn is determined to campaign at Brad’s side, but instead of being an asset, she just might be his biggest liability. Ryn finds herself campaigning not just for Brad to become mayor but also for his love. Politics can get dirty and Ryn’s caught in the middle.

EXCERPT:
A few minutes later, Bruno, Ryn, and Brad walked into the lobby, where every reporter who thought he or she was going to cover another boring council meeting, suddenly had questions. Brad smiled as he shook Bruno’s hand for the fifth time in less than two minutes as cameras captured their images.

Soon Kate stepped into the swarm and whisked her husband away, leaving Brad to face the press alone.

Ryn smiled as she watched Brad. She was so proud of him and what he was doing. Then she heard her name.

“Yes, she was with me that night.” Brad smiled broadly.

Oh, what a night. She bit the insides of her cheeks to keep from laughing.

“Is she your girlfriend?” a reporter asked.

Oh, I do want to hear this answer.

“Yes.”

That’s it? Nothing more?

Another reporter held a microphone to her face. “Ms. Demary, are you going to help him campaign?”

She smiled as her fingers flew across her tiny keypad. She held it up and then signed, “I’m willing to help in any way I can.”

“She’s mute. Is she deaf?” another reporter chimed in.

“I can hear.”

“Her hearing is fine. She answered you.” Brad moved closer to where she stood.

The tall man who held the microphone asked, “Shoemaker, you know how to sign?”

“I’m taking a crash course in it. I can understand quite a bit.” He reached over and put his hand on her back. “Her ability to communicate, as easily as she does, is amazing. She was volunteering at the Give Youth a Chance headquarters the other day and helping a young man with his Spanish.”

“How, may I ask?”

“Via her computer.”

“Really? I wish I’d seen that.”

“If you all paid a little more attention to what that organization is doing, you’d discover what a huge benefit they are to the community. With your writing skills, you should be out there volunteering a few hours a month.”

A dark-skinned man put his hand on Brad’s shoulder. “Quiet date, huh, Brad?”

Brad looked at her with a sheepish grin and winked. “Real quiet.”

She frowned at him playfully and gave him a poke in the ribs, and typed, “That’s because he barely gives me a chance to talk.”

The reporters laughed and began to disperse.

“Hungry?” Brad asked.

“Yes. You seem to know those men.”

“We are a small town in many ways. The guy who is my age…we went to school together. Known him all my life.”

She nodded. You have no idea what a small town is.


Anything else you’d like to add?
My website is about to be completely redone! I’m excited, can’t wait for the new look. But in the meantime, sign up for the Authors of Main Street Newsletter. Once a month we send out a letter letting you know what the authors on Main Street are doing, including new releases.(Authors of Main Street Newsletter) http://ow.ly/xel3e

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