Saturday, January 12, 2013

Excerpt From Capital Bride by Cynthia Woolf

Winners are Tiffinie Helmer and Callie Hutton!

 


New York City    April 10, 1867

On the other side of the door was her last resort.  Either this or prostitution and prostitution was not a choice.  She couldn’t raise MaryAnn in that environment, nor if truth be told, could she lower herself to live like that.  At least this way there would be some stability in her little girl’s life.
Sarah took a deep breath, turned the knob, and walked through the door to a better future for her daughter and, if she were lucky, for herself.
The office was small and precisely kept.  A single desk with a straight, high backed wooden chair, one in front and one behind, sat in the middle of the room.   She’d noticed the flowered curtains were open on the way in, curtains tied to the side.  The small area was flooded with dazzling afternoon light.  The walls were whitewashed and the desk well organized.  There were several tables with neat piles of files along one wall.  The other wall held several rows of pictures of women and men.  None smiling, as that was the way pictures were taken, but all appeared to be wedding pictures.  Below each picture was a small brass place with the names of the bride and groom and the date of the wedding.
A small, woman in her late thirties with fiery red hair, sat behind the desk.  When Sarah got closer she saw gorgeous dark blue eyes behind the wire rimmed glasses perched on the end of her nose.  Her eyes were so dark a blue they could almost be called violet.  They were striking and clear, honesty shone from them along with a “no nonsense” attitude.
“May I help you?” the woman asked.
“Um.  Yes.  My name is Sarah Johnson.  I saw your advertisement for mail order brides.”
The woman looked Sarah over, taking in her clothes, her hands clasped in front of her and ending at her face.
“First, let me introduce myself.  I’m Margaret Selby and I own Matchmaker & Company.  Please, sit down.  You’re older than the women we usually have.  You’re also better dressed and don’t appear to be hungry.  What would bring someone like you to my door?”
“I’ve been living with my great aunt.  She passed away suddenly two weeks ago and the lawyer says I need to find other lodgings.  My cousin, William, has inherited everything except a small stipend she left for me.  William is selling everything.  MaryAnn and I have nowhere else to go.”
“MaryAnn?”
“My daughter.”
“So, you are a widow?”
Now was not the time to be less than truthful, if she wanted this woman’s help.  “No.”
“I see.  How old are you, Miss Johnson?”
“I’m twenty-eight.”
“And your daughter?”
“MaryAnn is five.”
“Tell me, Miss Johnson, how did you come to find yourself with child at age twenty-two without being married?  Surely you knew how those things happened by that age.”
“My fiancĂ© was killed at Bull Run.” 
“I understand.  Many fine men were killed there and throughout the war.”
“Yes, they were.  Lee and I planned on marrying before he left.  He still had two weeks before he was supposed to go back.  He was sure the war wouldn’t last long,” she sniffled and blew her nose into her handkerchief.  “They called him back early, and then he was killed.”

“No need to go into further detail, Miss Johnson.  Let’s get down to business, shall we?”
Sarah sat straight in the chair.  “Yes, of course.”
She was more nervous now than she had been showing up on Aunt Gertrude’s doorstep six years ago, pregnant and unwed.  They’d planned on putting out the story that Lee was her husband but one of the servants overheard and passed the information on to other servants, some of them in the homes of her Aunt’s friends.
Aunt Gertrude took it all in stride.  She actually handled it far better than Sarah had.  She’d cried for days until Gertrude shook her and said to get under control and stop feeling sorry for herself.  So she’d had her beautiful MaryAnn and was raising her with Aunt Gertrude’s help.  She would be missed for so many reasons.
“Miss Johnson?  Miss Johnson.”  Margaret snapped her fingers bringing Sarah back from her memories.
“Yes, Miss Selby.  I’m sorry.”
“It’s Mrs. Selby.  Now, please pay attention.  I have several candidates that might work for you.  Two farmers in Kansas and a rancher in the Colorado Territory.”
“Do you have a recommendation?”
“Well, neither farmer has children, though they are not unwilling to consider a woman with children.  It would be awfully lonely for your MaryAnn with only you and her new stepfather for company.  The rancher, on the other hand, also has a daughter, who is seven, I believe.  They would be able to keep each other occupied while you attend to the work you’ll need to do.  Can you cook?”
“Yes.  Our cook taught me the basics.  If I have a recipe, I can follow it.”
“Then, I suggest you write down all of your cook’s recipes.  You’ll need them no matter which man you choose.”
“I’ve already got the ones I want.  I’d hoped to put them together in a book one day.  These men you’re talking about, how old are they?”
“Raymond Jacobsen, farmer in Kansas, is thirty-two.  Robert Kline, also a farmer in Kansas, is twenty-nine, and last is John Atwood, a cattle rancher in the Colorado Territory.  He’s a widower, thirty-seven and has a daughter who is seven.  I think he would be the best match for you.”
“Have you checked out these men?”
“Of course.  I’m very thorough, Miss Johnson.  I have an associate who travels for me and talks at length to each of our bachelors.  We don’t have any brutes or other disreputable types with this agency.  You can put your mind at rest.”


***  Cynthia Woolf was born in Denver, Colorado and raised in the mountains west of Golden. She spent her early years running wild around the mountain side with her friends.

Their closest neighbor was one quarter of a mile away, so her little brother was her playmate and her best friend. That fierce friendship lasted until his death in 2006.

Cynthia was and is an avid reader. Her mother was a librarian and brought new books home each week. This is where young Cynthia first got the storytelling bug. She wrote her first story at the age of ten. A romance about a little boy she liked at the time.

She worked her way through collegeand went to work full time straight after graduation and there was little time to write. Then in 1990 she and two friends started a round robin writing a story about pirates. She found that she missed the writing and kept on with other stories. In 1992 she joined Colorado Romance Writers and Romance Writers of America. Unfortunately, the loss of her job demanded she not renew her memberships and her writing stagnated for many years.

In 2001, she saw an ad in the paper for a writers conference being put on by CRW and decided she'd attend. One of her favorite authors, Catherine Coulter, was the keynote speaker. Cynthia was lucky enough to have a seat at Ms. Coulter's table at the luncheon and after talking with her, decided she needed to get back to her writing. She rejoined both CRW and RWA that day and hasn't looked back.

Cynthia credits her wonderfully supportive husband Jim and the great friends she's made at CRW for saving her sanity and allowing her to explore her creativity.

Don't forget to comment for a chance at a copy of
Capital Bride or a $5 Starbucks gift cert!!

LINKS FOR CAPITAL BRIDE
AMAZON -
http://amzn.com/B00AM3CNQ4
BARNES & NOBLE - http://bit.ly/UBnOpz
KOBO - http://bit.ly/12kQNCu  
SMASHWORDS -
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/263984

TITLES AVAILABLE
CAPITAL BRIDE
CENTAURI DAWN
CENTAURI TWILIGHT
CENTAURI MIDNIGHT
TAME A WILD HEART
TAME A WILD WIND
TAME A WILD BRIDE
THE SWORDS OF GREGARA – JENALA
THE SWORDS OF GREGARA – RIZA
COMING SOON
THE SWORDS OF GREGARA - HONORA

 

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

My Journey to Indie Publication by Cynthia Woolf

Today, I bring you the indie journey of an incredibly prolific author whom I've know for 12 years.  We met at Colorado Romance Writers and it was Cynthia as president in 2006 who handed me my Newsletter Article of the year award!

Saturday I'll post an excerpt from her new book Capital Bride.

Please join me in welcoming Cynthia Woolf.
____________________________________________________

My Journey

Thank you, Leslie Ann, for having me on your blog today.  I’ll be giving away a copy of my new book, CAPITAL BRIDE, to one lucky commenter and a $5 Starbucks card to another, so be sure and leave me a comment.

I’ve been very lucky in my publishing journey. I was laid off June 17, 2011.  Though I continued to look for a “regular” job, I knew this layoff was an opportunity to fulfill my dream of writing and I grabbed on with both hands.  But, let me back up a bit.

I was in the hospital in April 2011, recovering from a severe anxiety attack.  You see, I thought I’d had a heart attack.  But it was just anxiety, brought on by my current job and soon-to-be lack of job.  I found out in April that I was being laid off in two months.  Though I was unhappy in my job by this point, I was even more scared not to have one.  Hence the reasons for impending anxiety attack.

After the attack, still in the hospital, and I can’t rest.  I have insomnia and with all the tests…I simply couldn’t calm down, so I asked my husband to bring me a pad and pen.  That night I finished my second book, Centauri Dawn.  It was the first one I would publish.
After I got out of the hospital, I was talking to my friend Michele Chambers, who writes as Michele Callahan, and she told me I could publish it myself and told me how.  That was the beginning and I haven’t looked back since.  I also haven’t had another bout of anxiety and my blood pressure is great. I  think that self publishing agrees with me. :)
 
Michele gave me the resources I needed to publish my book.  She told me about KDP (Kindle Direct Publishing) and that I’d need a professional cover and an editor for the book.  I found both a cover artist and an editor and was off to the races.
My books languished in obscurity for months.  I published three more books by the end of the year and was still not selling very many.
What finally broke me through the obscurity bubble was a blog tour arranged by Black Lion Tours.  The book that they were promoting, Tame A Wild Bride, took off like gang busters.  It took with it the other two books in the Tame series, Tame A Wild Heart and Tame A Wild Wind.
I Tweet and Facebook as well.
Tweeting being my most effective marketing tool.  I also blog whenever possible.  I pay for advertising when it’s a venue I know I’ll get a return on, like Ereader News Today but it’s very hard to get onto that one.  They open up for spots in January and are full for the year within hours.

Any venue that is free, I take advantage of.  And to be honest, I’ve got my books on so many venues right now, I don’t remember what all they are.  Several of them have buttons or banners on my website.  That’s how I ‘earn’ free advertising.  I advertise for them and they for me.  It’s a win-win situation. 
I’ve tried Facebook ads (didn’t work) and Twitter ads (also didn’t work for me).  I advertise on just about anything I come across where it’s less than $25 for a reasonable ad.  What is reasonable varies with the site and will vary with what you believe is appropriate for your budget and your books. 
The other thing I do that has given me lots of exposure and a visible increase in sales is to participate in blog hops. 
What happens with a blog hop is that you write a blog about a particular subject.  On your blog you have links to the other blogs in the hop and they have links to yours, so someone doesn’t have to look you up, the just click on the link and go there.  The blog hops usually offer a grand prize like a Kindle fire or Nook.  I also offer several prizes.  The comments increase dramatically with a hop.  It’s not unusual for me to get almost 100 comments from one blog during a hop.
Another thing I do and I highly recommend is that you have your own blog.  My blog hosts guests three times per week.  I may blog myself on Friday of that week especially when I have a new book to promote.  Always leave a day for yourself whether you end up using it or not.  You can always have your friends and critique partners blog on that day as well.
In association with your blog, join Triberr.  It gets you exposure like you wouldn’t believe.  I average more than 1100 hits per day on my blog and have had 1600 in one day during a blog hop.  This leads to sales.

Make sure all your books are shown on your blog with the links to the websites where they can purchase them.
Lastly, though just as important if not more so, is to get reviews of your book.
Submit to every review site you can.  The more reviews you have on Amazon and the other outlets the better.  Amazon does not accept author reviews for books anymore, so you can’t have other authors, even those who bought the book rather than were gifted it, review your books.  Trust me, it’s devastating when they take them down.
I recommend diversifying and listing your book everywhere possible for sale. I get most of my sales through Amazon, that is true and I’ve tried their Select program.  It was not effective for me.  I didn’t have any more sales and more importantly I didn’t get any borrows.  The payment for borrows and the five free days are really what sets Select apart from being like any other sales venue. That being said, several of my critique partners participate in Select with great results so it just depends on you and your books.
The road to publication has not been a smooth one but has had its bumps and rocks and holes I've had to watch out for.  Most of what I do is "trial by fire."  I try something and either burn with it or find myself soaring.
I’d love to hear your ideas and what you do that works for you.  What works for one person does not necessarily work for another as we all know from other aspects of our lives.  I hope I’ve given you a few ideas to help you promote your own work. 

________________________________________________________________________
 
Thanks Cindy for being so candid about your journey.  See more about Cindy at www.cynthiawoolf.com

Don't forget, comment today and on her excerpt Saturday for a chance at her latest book and a Starbucks Gift Cert. Yum. I'll post her bio on Saturday as well, it's really fascinating.
LINKS FOR CAPITAL BRIDE
TITLES AVAILABLE  
CAPITAL BRIDE
CENTAURI DAWN
CENTAURI TWILIGHT
CENTAURI MIDNIGHT
TAME A WILD HEART
TAME A WILD WIND
TAME A WILD BRIDE
THE SWORDS OF GREGARA – JENALA
THE SWORDS OF GREGARA – RIZA 
COMING SOON
THE SWORDS OF GREGARA - HONORA