Author Interview – Jessica Knauss

 

Welcome author Jessica Knauss

Born and raised in Northern California, Jessica Knauss has wandered all over the United States, Spain, and England. She has worked as a librarian and a Spanish teacher and earned a PhD in Medieval Spanish Literature before entering the publishing world as an editor. She has published fiction, poetry, and nonfiction in numerous venues.

Her acclaimed novella, Tree/House, and short story collection, Unpredictable Worlds, are currently available. Awash in Talent is published by Kindle Press. Her epic of medieval Spain, Seven Noble Knights, will be published by Bagwyn Books in December 2016.

Describe your Kindle Scout winning book, Awash in Talent

So much Talent can kill you.

Welcome to Providence, Rhode Island, home of telekinetics, firestarters, and psychics!

Emily can’t escape her annoyingly Talented telekinetic healer sister without committing a crime.

Kelly must escape her pyrokinesis school and bring Emily’s sister to Boston—her mother’s life depends on it.

Appointments with Emily might drive her psychic therapist insane. With so much Talent, sometimes it’s all you can do to function in an un-Talented society. Awash in Talent is made up of three interrelated novellas, each with a different narrator.

Tell us three things we’d find if we looked under your heroine’s bed. How about the hero’s?

If I told you what was under Emily’s bed, it would be a spoiler. Then again, she’s not really a heroine! The area under Kelly’s bed is swept out daily to prevent fire-prone dust bunnies and confiscate any contraband. Patricia, Emily’s psychic therapist, likely keeps a cash escape fund under her bed along with the out-of-print editions of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

There aren’t male heroes in this book. I made a conscious decision to focus on the women’s stories, but of course there are important male characters: Emily’s teacher Carlos, who has no idea Emily passionately adores him; Kelly’s love interest, Brian, who shows her she doesn’t always have to follow the rules; and Patricia’s husband, an unrepentant slob—we’re better off not thinking about what he may or may not have left under his bed!

What is the theme of this book? If it’s part of a series, how does this book fit into the series?

I think there are at least two themes to this novel. Each narrator’s perception of love is a central concern. Love/hate between sisters, mother and daughter, scared teenagers, a mismatched married couple, adult female friends, and an obsessive and the object of her affection are all examined below the surface of the explosive events.

Second, like many paranormal books, Awash in Talent is concerned with the way difference is handled in society. In this world, people who can move things with their minds are privileged, while firestarters are shut away and feared. Un-Talented people are especially suspicious of psychics, and when captured, these people who can see thoughts are subjected to horrors worse than any known torture.

Although I didn’t envision Awash in Talent as a series, Emily’s character is so lively that I’ve started a sequel with her further adventures. Kelly and Patricia will make appearances, too!

Why do you write paranormal? 

My body of work up to this point has been magical realism, so perhaps the logical next step was to kick it up a notch and do a paranormal adventure. But it wasn’t really logical, because I’d been focusing on my realistic epic set in medieval Spain (Seven Noble Knights, coming from Bagwyn Books December 15). I loved writing that book, but sometimes I needed a break from historical accuracy. Contemporary plots and problems seem like a breeze after all that discipline! (And it turns out I couldn’t help myself: a few subtle ghosts ended up in Seven Noble Knights.)

Any tips to share with fellow authors? What’s the best advice you’ve ever heard?

Somerset Maugham is reported to have said, “There are three rules for writing a novel. Unfortunately, no one knows what they are.”

Laughter is liberating! I love the idea here because I always chafe when someone starts listing requirements, using words like “must,” “have to,” and “should.” I’ve been writing fiction since I gained the motor skills to pick up a pen. I’ve found out what works for me through experience, and it might not work for any other writer. If I had to boil it down, I’d say read great writing and do what works for you.

Or, to quote Neil Gaiman, the first rule of being a writer: “Write.”

Thanks to Jessica for stopping by this week. Be sure to catch up with her on Google+, Twitter, Pinterest, Good Reads, Facebook, and her website.

Awash in Talent is available here (as a Kindle Press book, subscribers to Kindle Unlimited can read for free)

 

#RomanticIdea with author Victoria Pinder

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Throughout June and July, check out the hashtag #RomanticIdea to discover great books and romantic ideas for summer by the experts-romance authors.

 

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~~Favorite Coffee, Favorite Crush~~

by Victoria Pinder

BLURB

Penny moves back to Miami to start her new job. She must start on Monday, so she has a list of things to accomplish.

A: Find a place to live.

B: Avoid her mother.

C: Reconnect with old high school friends. There was her best friend, Sandra, the dramatic Eva, the dark Michael, her half-brother Wyatt, and her old high school crush Jay.

Jay had never looked twice at her except as a partner in math league, but at least these people respected her.

Jay spots Penny immediately and sets a plan in action. He needs her to pretend to be his date this week. She’s practical minded and stable, which is what he needs his investors to see in him.

Penny’s caught in a whirlwind of plots. Her gold digging mother, Jay’s, Jay’s mother whose out to stop him, and her own plans are being thrown off course. Worst of it is that she’s falling for Jay, all over again.

 

FavoriteCoffee200x300EXCERPT

“Home, sweet, err…coffee.”

Getting out of her car, Penelope brushed her worn jeans to get out a small wrinkle. Not that it mattered. She smelled the coffee drawing her to the door. The delicious aroma of freshly brewed java that could wake her up waited inside. Gainesville had coffee shops, but nothing that held her heart like this place. In high school, this place was her mecca. Her stomach grumbled for the familiar drink.

The coffee shop looked almost the same as it had years ago, except for the aluminum tables and wooden chairs with red cushions. She remembered the plaid chairs and brown tables, but the place still calmed her, like she was coming home.

She stepped up to the counter. “I’ll have a cinnamon dulce nonfat latte, please.”

Leaving Gainesville after college had always been the plan. Just never back to Miami, but she’d changed. She could live here now.

She checked her lip gloss while she waited for the latte at the counter.

When she accepted the promotion from part-time to full-time, she knew she would have to face her mother and the catch of the month, Lars, her mother’s plastic surgeon. What that woman would do for a free tummy tuck.

The job she’d accepted had offered to triple her salary, provided she moved to the Coral Gables office. Somehow, she’d avoid her mother until necessary. What was the man’s name with money this week? Penny ignored that last call, knowing the man with the largest wallet always took precedence over whatever Penelope needed. She watched the barista get the nonfat milk and finish her latte. She’d succeed here, now. She had to.

She’d call Sandra, Eva, John, and Michael later. Wyatt, her half-brother, was stationed overseas, so she’d wait for his weekly call. These people were her real family.

The man handed her the latte. The first sip gave her the strength to do this. The tightness of the ride dissipated while she tasted her liquid savior. Sighing, she tasted heaven, the wake-up to her day.

“Penelope.”

Though the unmistakable voice was deeper, she knew who it was without even turning. Her high school crush, who never noticed her beyond her brain. Pulling at her pink tank top, she wished she’d worn better clothes. “John Jay.”

His steely blue eyes and sandy blond hair were the same color, but his build had grown more muscular. The leanness of his youth had given way to broad shoulders and hard, muscular arms. He had a straight, faded scar on his left cheek that was new—probably a bar fight. Rich boy wore his fancy, perfectly fitted polo and jeans, and was definitely hotter with age. His million-dollar smile and devastating dimples sparked a warm flush that sped through her all the way to the tips of her toes.

“I’m going by Jay these days. It’s less formal.” He winked at her, turning off his tablet and pointing her to his table.

“It’s a good name, but I still prefer Dimples,” she teased. “It’s what I called you on online whenever I needed you.”

His rich, deep laugh sent that familiar spark through her.

Damn. Rich boy knew his effect on women, including her. He could manipulate her when she went quiet, but she’d learned a lot in college. She’d not let him weaken her.

 

LINKS

AMAZON US  http://amzn.to/1SrKB7I

Website: http://www.victoriapinder.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/victoriapinder1

Twitter: https://twitter.com/victoriapinder

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

victoria-with-heart-on-streetVictoria Pinder grew up in Irish Catholic Boston before moving to the Miami sun. She’s worked in engineering, after passing many tests proving how easy Math came to her. Then hating her life at the age of twenty four, she decided to go to law school. Four years later, after passing the bar and practicing very little, she realized that she hates the practice of law. She refused to one day turn 50 and realize she had nothing but her career and hours at a desk. After realizing she needed change, she became a high school teacher. Teaching is rewarding, but writing is a passion.

During all this time, she always wrote stories to entertain herself or calm down. Her parents are practical minded people demanding a job, and Victoria spent too many years living other people’s dreams, but when she sat down to see what skill she had that matched what she enjoyed doing, writing became so obvious. The middle school year book when someone wrote in it that one day she’d be a writer made sense when she turned thirty.

She’s always been determined. She is amazing, adventurous and assured on a regular basis. Her website is  www.victoriapinder.com.

Member of Florida Romance Writers, Contemporary Romance, Celtic Hearts and Savvy Authors.

 

For a free novella of Returning for Valentine’s Please Click here: http://victoriapinder.com/returningforvalentineshorttimeoffer

 

Romantic Ideas to spend this spring/summer with your favorite guy…

  1. Visit an art museum
  2. Walk on the beach (I know cheesy but it’s what my husband likes to do when we’re bored)
  3. Go food shopping together and pick out something for each other to add to the cart
  4. Plan a vacation or a cruise for a year away and talk about what you want to see or do (sometimes the planning is the fun part.)
  5. Watch a movie together while snuggling
  6. Take a dance class and use a groupon coupon
  7. Visit a winery or local agriculture (perhaps apple picking)
  8. Rent a boat or a canoe or kayak and hit the water (Or water ski if you’re adventurous)
  9. Picnic in a local park somewhere
  10. Go online to one of those places where you get coupons, like groupon, and pick something together that you’ve both never done… in Florida they have everything from helicopter rides, hot air balloons and