Meet the Exquisite Quill Authors


Showing posts with label Lois Winston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lois Winston. Show all posts

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Author Interview: Lois Winston



EQ Welcomes Author Lois Winston

EQ: Welcome to EQ! Tell us a little bit about yourself!

Lois: Hello, everyone! I’m Lois Winston. I’ve been traditionally published since 2006, first with Talk Gertie to Me, a humorous women’s fiction book about a mother, a daughter, and an acerbic imaginary friend. That was followed a year later with Love, Lies and a Double Shot of Deception, a romantic suspense novel. I then segued into writing humorous amateur sleuth mysteries. I’m currently a hybrid author, having branched out into indie publishing under both my own name and my Emma Carlyle pen name.

In addition, I’m a craft and needlework designer, working for kit manufacturers, craft book publishers, and craft, needlework, and women’s magazines. If you’ve ever created a needlework project from a kit or one featured in a magazine, chances are you probably stitched one of my designs.

EQ: Tell us a little bit about your most recent release.

Lois: I actually have two most recent releases. After receiving the rights back to Assault with a Deadly Glue Gun and Death by Killer Mop Doll, the first two books in my Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mystery series, I’ve re-issued them as both print and ebooks.

Anastasia is the crafts editor at a women’s magazine. She’s living a typical middleclass life with a husband and two kids until the day her husband drops dead at a roulette table in Las Vegas. She thought he was at a sales meeting in Harrisburg, PA. That’s when she learns her perfect life has been built on a series of lies. She’s left with huge debt, her communist mother-in-law, and a loan shark demanding fifty thousand dollars. Returning to work after the funeral, she discovers the body of the magazine’s fashion editor glued to her desk chair. When evidence surfaces that Anastasia’s husband was having an affair with the editor, she becomes the prime suspect and must find the real killer to prove her innocence. Subsequent books in the series (Revenge of the Crafty Corpse, Decoupage Can Be Deadly, and the mini-mysteries, Crewel Intentions and Mosaic Mayhem) follow Anastasia as she moonlights at various jobs to dig her way out of debt. Unfortunately, she keeps stumbling over dead bodies.

EQ: What was your defining moment as a writer?

Lois: Receiving a starred review from Publishers Weekly for Assault with a Deadly Glue Gun. About the only thing that could top that would be landing on the New York Times bestseller list. Or hitting the lottery. Maybe someday…

EQ: Which of your characters do you connect with the most and why?

Lois: I connect mostly with Anastasia. She and I have had similar careers. Although I never worked as a crafts editor for a women’s magazine, I have freelanced for women’s magazines, and I worked as a craft book editor for a few years. I also wound up living with my communist mother-in-law for six very stressful, unpleasant years. Lucille, Anastasia’s mother-in-law, is drawn almost entirely from my own mother-in-law. It’s probably why so few of my husband’s relatives speak to me. In my defense, though, my sister-in-law loves my books, so who cares about the rest of the relatives, right? They obviously have no sense of humor.

Luckily, my husband is still very much alive, and he’s not a closet gambler. Really! I also don’t own a Shakespeare-quoting parrot, and don’t make a habit of tripping over dead bodies.

EQ: What is the biggest risk you’ve taken in your writing?

Lois: By far, the biggest risk I’ve taken was walking away from traditional publishing by turning down two contracts a little over a year ago. I worked a long time to get published by a traditional publishing house. It took ten years from the day I first sat down at my computer until I received my first contract. Not all that long ago I had a very negative opinion of self-publishing, but both times and my attitudes have changed. Did I make the right decision? I hope so. Time will tell.

Find Lois Winston at these places:




Read these titles by Lois Winston:

Talk Gertie to Me
Elementary, My Dear Gertie (novella)
Love, Lies and a Double Shot of Deception
Assault with a Deadly Glue Gun
Death by Killer Mop Doll
Revenge of the Crafty Corpse
Decoupage Can be Deadly
Crewel Intentions (novelette)
Mosaic Mayhem (novelette)
Once Upon a Romance (short story anthology)
Four Uncles and a Wedding (writing as Emma Carlyle)
Finding Hope (writing as Emma Carlyle)
Hooking Mr. Right (writing as Emma Carlyle)
Finding Mr. Right (part of the Love, Valentine Style boxed set)
Lost in Manhattan (writing as Emma Carlyle)
Someone to Watch Over Me (writing as Emma Carlyle)



Thursday, November 14, 2013

The Genesis of a Book - Finding Hope by Emma Carlyle


The Genesis

I’m a news junkie. Most of my plot ideas have arisen in part from newspaper article I’ve read. I start playing the “what if” game, adding elements from my own personal experiences or those of others I know. Such was the case with Finding Hope, a Romance Writers of America Golden Heart finalist that’s now available as an ebook.

The idea for Finding Hope came to me after reading about a fertility doctor in Virginia who had used his own sperm to impregnate the eggs of his in vitro patients. My cousin had gone through many years of unsuccessful fertility treatments at that point. When her insurance refused to pay for another treatment, she and her husband adopted a baby from China. But what if my cousin had become pregnant and years later she and her husband discovered he wasn’t the biological father? That “what if” led to other “what if’s” which I won’t give away here because I don’t want to include any plot spoilers. Let’s just say, I gave the factual story a few very unique fictional twists.

I’ve also been deeply touched by our troops overseas, especially those who have given their lives to keep us safe. I’ve often wondered about how their young widows have coped with the loss. So I sent Hope’s husband off to war where he’s killed in action.

In addition, I put some of my own experiences into the book. I have a degree in graphic design and illustration. My husband is an architect. I made Hope an artist and Ben, my hero, an architect. Write what you know, right?

For me, Finding Hope was an extremely emotional book to write. Even though I’ve infused it with touches of humor (how can you not have humor when you’ve got three-year-old triplets in a book?) there were many places in the book where I cried as I wrote the scenes. I still get teary-eyed when I reread parts of the book. If you like romance that tugs at your heartstrings, I hope you’ll give Finding Hope a read. If you do, I’d love to hear from you to find out how you liked it.
 
Blurb
Hope Morgan was always the good girl, doing what her conservative parents expected: she gave up her dream of going to college, became a secretary right out of high school, and married the boy next door. When Hope is suddenly widowed, she finds the courage to pursue her own dreams. Twelve years later, after working full-time and going to school at night, she obtains her degree and is offered a position at a prestigious architectural firm.

That’s when her long-exiled libido decides to resurface, and Hope finds herself falling head-over-heels for Ben Schaffer, her married boss. What Hope doesn’t realize is that Ben’s marriage is less than ideal. Within days of Hope starting her new job, Ben’s wife walks out on him and their three-year-old triplets–the same day the nanny lands in the hospital. When Ben can’t find a last-minute replacement, Hope agrees to step in as a temporary nanny, not the best decision she’s ever made, given her raging hormones.

Ben is fighting a battle with his own hormones, but an office romance is the last thing he needs or wants. However, neither he nor Hope are a match for three very determined three-year-olds on a mission to find a happy ending.
 
Bio
Emma Carlyle is the pen name of award-winning author Lois Winston. As Emma, she writes romance, romantic suspense, and chick lit. As Lois, she writes mystery, women’s fiction, romantic suspense, and non-fiction. Kirkus Reviews dubbed her critically acclaimed Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mystery series, “North Jersey’s more mature answer to Stephanie Plum.”
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