CMP Summer Lovin’ Blog Hop

Crescent Moon Press authors are ready for summer! We’ll be blogging about our summer loves, our romances, and how much we love summer! Have you ever had a summer fling? Do you have a favorite book about summer? What’s on your summer reading list? What are some great beach reads? We’re blogging about all of it!

Visit our blogs below and enter to win some great prizes between June 14 -17.

Grand Prize: A Kindle Paperwhite and some of our eBooks to read on it!

1st Prize: A $20 Amazon gift card, and a Swag Pack that contains paperbacks, more eBooks, bookmarks, cover flats, magnets, pens, and more!

Drop by our blogs between June 14 and 17 and enter the Rafflecopter giveaway.

Good luck and hope to see you there!

Participating blogs:

Shawna Romkey Author blog
Constance Phillips, A Writer’s Musings
Katie O’Sullivan
Summer Lovin’ – On Olympus…
Kate’s Blog
Kary Rader
Lindsey R. Loucks
Summer Lovin’, postcards, and maybe bookmarks
Jody A Kessler Summer Lovin’ Mountain Style
Official Website of Maer Wilson
Author Jean Murray ~ Wicked Romance Blog
Summer Lovin’ Heat
Hildie McQueen’s Author Site
Loni Lynne’s Blog Site
Author Avery Olive Blog
Wendy S. Russo
Cindy Young-Turner
Michelle Clay – The Darkside of Romance
the Marvelous Misadventures of Mrs. t
Shannon Eckrich

Son of a Mermaid by Katie O’Sullivan

SofM5_tourbadge

Today I’m featuring Katie O’Sullivan’s recent release, Son of a Mermaid, as part of her Splash into Summer blog tour! Before we get to some fun author interview questions, let’s find out more about her book.

SonofaMermaid_FrontCoverSON OF A MERMAID, by Katie O’Sullivan

Published May 2013 by Crescent Moon Press

YA fantasy romance

 

Book Blurb:

Shea MacNamara’s life just got complicated.

After a freak tornado devastates his Oklahoma farm, the fifteen-year-old orphan moves to Cape Cod to live with a grandmother he’s never met. Struggling to make sense of his new surroundings, he meets a girl along the shore who changes his life forever.

Kae belongs to an undersea world hidden from drylanders. The daughter of royal servants, she knows the planned marriage of her Princess to the foreign King should put an end to the war between the clans. Two things stand in the way of lasting peace: an ambitious Regent and rumors of a half-human child who will save the oceans.

Sparks fly when she meets Shea, but could the cute drylander really be the Son of a Mermaid?

Get your copy from Amazon today!

About the Author:

Katie O’Sullivan lives with her family and big dogs next to the ocean on Cape Cod, drinking way too much coffee and inventing new excuses not to dust. She writes YA and romantic suspense novels, and works as an editor making other people’s words sparkle. For the last four years, she’s been the Editor of CapeWomenOnline.com magazine and writes a column entitled “The Write Way.”

She hopes her debut YA novel, SON OF A MERMAID, will make a big splash this summer, engaging young readers with a Cape Cod tale of a boy who discovers both his roots and his destiny far below the waters of Nantucket Sound.

Find Katie online:

Follow her Blog: http://katieosullivan.blogspot.com

Like her on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/AuthorKatieOSullivan

Find her on Twitter: https://twitter.com/OkatieO

Check out her website: http://www.katie-osullivan.com

Add Son of a Mermaid on Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17184560-son-of-a-mermaid

 Author Interview:

Q: Where were you born? Are you the kind of person who likes to move around a lot, or do you prefer to live in one place?

A: I prefer to live in one place, but looking back on my life it doesn’t seem that way!

I was actually born in Fort Knox, Kentucky, while my father was stationed there, but we soon moved back to my parents’ home state of New Jersey. I grew up in a town not far from where they grew up, close to both sets of grandparents, and actually had a lot of the same high school teachers that my parents had (it was a regional school system for several very small towns!)

When I turned 18 my family moved to Vermont and bought an Inn, which was a great summer job all through college. After graduation I moved to the Boston area, met my husband, and started our family. We bought a house on Cape Cod in 2000, and moved here full time a few years after that.

Q: What sparked your interest in writing? How long have you been writing?

A: I was an early reader, and liked to write stories from a young age as well. Unfortunately all of my earliest writings are illegible as our elementary school was part of some progressive educational movement that taught us to write with the phonetic alphabet!

It really took until my daughter was in full day kindergarten for me to sit down and try to finish a book-length manuscript. And then I kept writing.

Q: What provided the inspiration for your newly released novel, Son of a Mermaid?

A: We walk the dogs along our beach almost every day. I love to watch the waves rolling and crashing. It’s easy to imagine that there must be stuff going on beneath those waves and spin stories about the merfolk that live in Nantucket Sound.

Q: I confess that most of what I know about mermaids comes from Disney. Ariel is a favorite in our house. I’m assuming your mermaids don’t swim around performing undersea concerts. What about mermaids appeals to you?

A: For as long as I can remember, I’ve been fascinated by mermaids. When I came up with the idea for these characters and these stories, I thought it would be a great opportunity for publication, since there aren’t many contemporary YA stories out there with, you know, mermaids. Sadly, most of the agents I queried weren’t on the same page. Luckily, Crescent Moon Press took a chance with me and my story. *Yea*

Q: How long did it take you to finish it? How many drafts did you write before you were satisfied?

A: LOL. This book went through many revisions. I started writing it as a side project when I was busy with edits on my first romantic suspense novel that got picked up for publication. So, I guess I started writing the first draft in 2009?

As Son of a Mermaid is my first foray into YA, I wasn’t confident at first that I understood the market and took all the advice I got in rejection letters to heart. I mean, one agent told me that there was too much violence and no one would stomach the death of a young child. That was before The Hunger Games hit it big, obviously.

In the end, I amped up my own reading of current YA and realized it’s a really wide market and the most important thing was for me to be happy with the characters and their arcs. And then find a publisher who was on the same page as me. Luckily, I found Crescent Moon Press!

Q: How would you describe your path toward publication?

A: Long, lol. When I started out I thought it would be much easier. Finishing a manuscript is a long haul, but that’s only the beginning of the work when you’re looking to be published.

Q: Do you have any advice for aspiring writers?

A: Write. Just write. And find a support network outside of your spouse and immediate family. And find good hiding places for your chocolate stash, or the kids will steal it and you’ll be left in the middle of the night scouring the cabinets for stray chocolate chips…

Q: Name a few authors who have inspired you and describe why.

A: As an English major in college, I’ve felt inspired by many, many authors over the years. I’m also an insatiable reader with eclectic tastes so again, many, many inspirations out there.

Some recent books that inspired me to tackle the current YA market? Bear in mind that these books have nothing to do with mermaids, but made me realize YA could be anything I wanted it to be… Cassandra Clare’s Mortal Instrument series, Scott Westerfeld’s Uglies series (and Peeps, for being an anti-Twilight view of vampires), Stephanie Meyer’s Twilight series (I know everyone knocks her books, but they are compelling and make great beach books – and I loved Host too, for the record.)

I was also reading Carl Hiasson’s YA books when I was working on Son of a Mermaid, and loved the idea of sliding some environmental messaging into a book aimed at younger readers. His HOOT, FLUSH, and SCAT books have lots of action and adventure, but also point out serious problems with how some people treat Mother Nature.

Q: What are you currently writing?

A: I just signed a contract recently for a second book about Shea MacNamara, which starts up a few weeks after book one ends. The editing process hasn’t started yet, but when that’s done I may think about a third book…

Q: Coffee, tea, or hard liquor? (or all three?)

A: All three, lol, and each has a time and place. Although, I only drink tea in the morning if I’m sick or if I’m dead out of coffee beans. Otherwise I’m a coffee-first-thing-all-morning-long type of person. Always.

Q: What books are you currently reading or on your to-be-read list?

A:  just finished The Grave Winner, by Lindsey Loucks, another Crescent Moon Press author. Next on my list is The Fault in Our Stars, by John Green… but I may have to take a break from that to read the last Sookie Stackhouse book coming out. (Talk about guilty pleasures! I loved the first half of this series sooo much, but the last two haven’t been as satisfying. I’m hoping Charlaine Harris gets back on track and wraps the series up with a bang in lucky number thirteen!)

Q: And now for the bonus fluff question: If you could be a character in your one of your favorite novels, which character would you be and why?

A: Hmmm. This is an interesting question! I always wanted to be Nancy Drew when I was growing up – I even named my sailboat Sleuth, like Nancy’s boat – but looking back she was always too concerned with what Ned Nickerson wanted and needed him to rescue her. I’d rather be able to do my own rescuing sometimes, like Clary from the Mortal Instruments… although I don’t think I’d want to necessarily trade places with her, either. There’s too many secrets in her life!

Thanks so much for stopping by! And be sure to check out Katie’s book!

Author interview: Maer Wilson

I’ve very pleased to have Maer Wilson on the blog today. Maer’s novel, Relics, was just released this month and looks to be another outstanding novel from Crescent Moon Press! Let’s take a look at Relics and then move on to the interview questions.

Relics 200x300Blurb:

Most of Thulu and La Fi’s clients are dead. Which is perfect since their detective agency caters to the supernatural. So, a job finding relics for an ancient daemon should be simple.

The daemon needs the relics to keep a dangerous portal closed. His enemy, Gabriel, wants the relics to open the portal and give his people access to a new feeding ground – Earth.

Stunning humanity with their existence, portals to other worlds begin to open and the creatures of magic return to Earth.

When Gabriel threatens their family, Thulu and La Fi’s search becomes personal. The couple will need powerful allies in the race to find the relics before Gabriel does. But maybe that’s what grateful dead, magical allies and daemonic clients are for. 

When the creatures of myth and magic return to Earth, they’re nothing like your mother’s fairy tales.

Get your copy today: Amazon | Barnes & Noble

Add it to your Goodreads shelf

Watch the book trailer on YouTube 

Interview with Maer

Thank you for letting me visit today!

Q: Where were you born? Are you the kind of person who likes to move around a lot, or do you prefer to live in one place?

A: I was born in Kansas, but spent very little time there as my father was in the Air Force and we moved around a lot when I was really young. Maybe that’s why I prefer to stay in the same place, now. I do enjoy traveling, but love coming home to my own house when it’s done.

Q: What sparked your interest in writing? How long have you been writing?

A: Since I was young and in school. I’ve mostly written character studies and things like that. Bad poetry in high school. About twelve years ago I tried my hand at writing a play. It was awful. Five years later I recreated it as a screenplay that was much better. It was only three years ago that I decided to try a novel and here I am.

Q: What provided the inspiration for your newly released novel, Relics?

A: That came out of a gaming experience. I’d had an idea about a married heroine in a Paranormal novel, but hadn’t done anything more than jot down a note. I created the names Thulu and La Fi to give to some gaming friends of mine, but realized the names belonged to my characters instead. And who they were fully formed in my head very quickly.

Q: How long did it take you to finish it? How many drafts did you write before you were satisfied?

A: The first draft took five weeks to write. I revised it, had it beta read, revised some more and started to submit it. After about eight months, I found out that a cliff hanger ending for a first novel was an almost impossible sell, so I ruthless ripped out the second half of the book and completely rewrote it, making it a standalone novel. Again, I wrote that very fast. By the time I revised, rewrote and added more beta readers, it was a little over a year after I first started writing it the first time that it was ready for submission again. I can’t even say how many times I revised, rewrote and tweaked this last version. I’d get an idea and run to add it or change something. I’d probably still be tweaking if I could. J

Q: How would you describe your path toward publication?

A: I did the usual “find an agent” thing for about ten months. Because that’s what we do right? We get an agent. At first, I was hopeful, but as I learned more about the publishing industry, I quickly devised a Plan B: apply to a small press and forget about the agent. The more I found out about the traditional route, the more I realized it wasn’t for me. Mostly due to the time. Being olderish, I didn’t want my book to take two to three years to see print. So, I almost began to look forward to agent rejections. Almost. Once I’d decided I really wanted a small press, I began researching and found a few I liked. Crescent Moon Press was my first choice. Of course, after agent rejections my confidence wasn’t very high and I had no expectations. I was so pleased when I heard from them very quickly to submit and it wasn’t long before they offered a contract. I’m thrilled to be a part of the CMP family.

Q: Do you have any advice for aspiring writers?

A: Read everything you can get your hands on, especially in your genre. And make sure your manuscript is the best you can make it. I think too many new writers are in such a hurry that they don’t take advantage of the tweaking and revising that will make their work even better. Revising time is important and the polishing could make the difference between getting published or not.

Q: Name a few authors who have inspired you and describe why.

A: Tim Powers because he encouraged me to write and I adore his style. George R.R. Martin for his ability to surprise me and J.K. Rowling for her storytelling talent.

Q: What are you currently writing?

A: Do interviews and blogs count? J Seriously, I’m doing a final revision of Book 2 in The Thulukan Chronicles, Portals, before I submit it. And I’ve started Book 3 of the series.

Q: You also run the increasingly popular MythBehaving podcast. How did you get involved in podcasting?

A: Thanks for asking about that, Cindy! I began writing for a gaming fansite, Corellian Run Radio about a year and a half ago and they also do a podcast. As one of the staff writers, I’ve participated in many of the podcasts. When I sold my book to CMP, Carla Clifton, who runs CRR suggested doing a literary podcast. It just took off from there.

Q: Coffee, tea, or hard liquor? (or all three?)

A: Herbal tea and hard liquor. Not mixed together.

Q: What books are you currently reading or on your to-be-read list?

 A: I’m almost done with Lindsey R. Loucks’ The Grave Winner. I was very lucky and received an Advanced Reader Copy and I love it. Next will be Mila 2.0 by Debra Driza.

Q: And now for the bonus fluff question: If you could be a character in your one of your favorite novels, which character would you be and why?

 A: Oh, I love this question! So many to choose from, but I think I’ll go back to one of my early loves and the Anne McCaffrey Dragonrider series. Lessa captured me years ago. Since I love dragons and Lessa bonded with her queen dragon she would have to be the one.

Cindy, thanks so very much for letting me do your interview!

Thanks so much for stopping by!

Bio:

Maer AuthorAfter a successful career being other people, and later teaching others the many tricks of that trade, Maer Wilson has decided to be herself for a while. Turns out she’s a writer. She’s always loved stories, especially fantasy, mystery and sci fi. Maer was born in the Year of the Dragon and has a dragon-themed room in her home, but sadly no dragons in the back yard. When she’s not writing, Maer plays online video games, teaches college and reads. She also co-hosts the literary podcast, “MythBehaving” and writes for two gaming fansites. She lives in the high desert of Southern Nevada with her two dogs, a chihuahua and a poodle. Relics is her first novel and will be released by Crescent Moon Press on May 1, 2013. You can visit her website at maerwilson.com.

Follow Maer: Website | Facebook | Twitter

Cover reveal: Relics by Maer Wilson

Relics 200x300

Book Blurb

Most of Thulu and La Fi’s clients are dead. Which is perfect since their detective agency caters to the supernatural. So, a job finding relics for an ancient daemon should be simple.

The daemon needs the relics to keep a dangerous portal closed. His enemy, Gabriel, wants the relics to open the portal and give his people access to a new feeding ground – Earth.

Stunning humanity with their existence, portals to other worlds begin to open and the creatures of magic return to Earth.

When Gabriel threatens their family, Thulu and La Fi’s search becomes personal. The couple will need powerful allies in the race to find the relics before Gabriel does. But maybe that’s what grateful dead, magical allies and daemonic clients are for.

When the creatures of myth and magic return to Earth, they’re nothing like your mother’s fairy tales.

Book trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=un2PHs5oGwg

 Maer’s Bio

After a successful career being other people, and later teaching others the many tricks of that trade, Maer Wilson has decided to be herself for a while. Turns out she’s a writer. She’s always loved stories, especially fantasy, mystery and sci fi. Maer was born in the Year of the Dragon and has a dragon-themed room in her home, but sadly no dragons in the back yard. When she’s not writing, Maer plays online video games, teaches college and reads. She also co-hosts the literary podcast, “MythBehaving” and writes for two gaming fansites. She lives in the high desert of Southern Nevada with her two dogs, a chihuahua and a poodle. Relics is her first novel and will be released by Crescent Moon Press on May 1, 2013. You can visit her website at maerwilson.com.

Links

Maer’s Website: http://maerwilson.com/

Maer’s Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/pages/Maer-Wilson-Author/149085628472833

Maer’s Twitter:  https://twitter.com/MaerWilson

Relics at Goodreads:  http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17767013-relics

Cover reveal: The Grave Winner by Lindsey R. Loucks

Single tree in field during winter 2

Title – The Grave Winner
Author – Lindsey R. Loucks
Genre – YA Paranormal/Fantasy Romance
Publisher – Crescent Moon Press
Release Date – May 15, 2013

Blurb:

Leigh Baxton is terrified her mom will come back from the dead — just like the prom queen did.

While the town goes beehive over the news, Leigh bikes to the local cemetery and buries some of her mom’s things in her grave to keep her there. When the hot and mysterious caretaker warns her not to give gifts to the dead, Leigh cranks up her punk music and keeps digging.

She should have listened.

Two dead sorceresses evicted the prom queen from her grave to bury someone who offered certain gifts. Bury them alive, that is, then resurrect them to create a trio of undead powerful enough to free the darkest sorceress ever from her prison inside the earth.

With help from the caretaker and the dead prom queen, Leigh must find out what’s so special about the gifts she gave, and why the sorceresses are stalking her and her little sister. If she doesn’t, she’ll either lose another loved one or have to give the ultimate gift to the dead – herself.

authorphotoBio:

Lindsey R. Loucks works as a school librarian in rural Kansas. When she’s not discussing books with anyone who will listen, she’s dreaming up her own stories. Eventually her brain gives out, and she’ll play hide and seek with her cat, put herself in a chocolate induced coma, or watch scary movies alone in the dark to reenergize.

She’s been with her significant other for almost two decades.

Links:

Add The Grave Winner to Goodreads.

Check out Lindsey’s website.

Follow Lindsey on Facebook.

Follow Lindsey on Twitter.