Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Publication update: UNVEILING THE SORCERESS

The publication date for my second fantasy romance novel, UNVEILING THE SORCERESS, has just passed, so I thought I’d better post a quick update, especially as the online sites are stating shipping soon. The book has been delayed, but will hopefully be shipping within a few weeks. I’ll also have the final cover design to post soon, yum.

The book is starting to go out to reviewers, and I’m biting my fingers nervously. I love this story, and it was a dream of mine to write it for many years – it had a much longer lead in and research period than any of my others, because of the ancient and exotic fantasy world setting, and the fact I hope to develop the story into a series. The characters and the world have that potential, but I’m waiting to see how it’s received before getting too excited about that possibility.

Anyway, more news and a preview of the final cover as and when I get it. Right now, I’ve left my current WiP hero hanging on a loose railing on a balcony while the bad guy brandishes a gun at the heroine, so I better go haul him in ;) Thanks for visiting!

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Surfacing briefly

Surfacing briefly to say hello and share my news. I've been kept super busy with the WiP since I last posted, and the book is going very well. I’ve got heaps to get through this week, but I'm really excited about the story and I'm enjoying the final stages of the writing.

It’s been good for me being off-line a lot more than usual. I unsubscribed from many of the lists I am on, and because I haven’t been blogging I've generally not felt as connected to the online life. It enabled me to immerse myself in the novel in the way I needed to. I have to confess that it’s done me the world of good! Hmm... A lesson learned there I think...

So, onto some super good news. Had a wonderful boost yesterday when I heard that my short story, WATCHING LOIS PERFORM, has been selected to appear in the next MAMMOTH BEST EROTICA collection. It's such an honour to have a story selected. I'm thrilled to be included!

WATCHING LOIS PERFORM appeared in the SLAVE TO LOVE anthology, edited by Alison Tyler. I loved the story, and I'm so glad it’s getting another outing in such a prestigous anthology. I believe the collection is scheduled for early in 2008, and fellow writers Jeremy Edwards and Shanna Germain have also had work selected to appear in the edition.

A couple of quick reminders. If you've read THE STRANGELING, please enter my cover art contest. The contest deadline was extended, but we'll be drawing winners at the end of this week. Details HERE.

Also, if you haven't read my ebook ALONG FOR THE RIDE, and want to, it's only going to be available online until the 31st. Click HERE to check it out.

Right now, back to the WiP. Hope you all are doing well out there! Thanks for visiting.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Writer at work

Ten days until my big deadline, it may be even quieter here than usual ;)

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Out of here...

Back Friday. Be naughty, but be safe. :)

If you have time to click through, be sure to watch right through to the end ;)

Mrs Giggles!

Mrs Giggles reviewed KINK. I'm so pleased with what she had to say! What's especially cool is that she enjoyed both our stories.

These two stories are very different but I adore both. It's hard for me to say which one I like more because apart from the sensuality level of these stories, they are as similar as apples are to oranges. But who says I have to pick only one story?

Rating: 88

Click HERE to read full review.


Interesting what she said about the coming out story. Maybe it's a British thing. I was thinking more George Michael :)

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Touching base

Apologies to those lovely people who visit to see how I am and have found nothing new here over the past few days. I’m deeply entrenched in RECKLESS, the current novel in progress, and I’m closing fast on the deadline. It’s going really well, but the timing is tight and I’m not getting much of a chance to do anything outside of work on the book. I had a couple of short story calls I wanted to try for this month, but I’ve even had to let them go. Not easy for me! :(

The first part of the book is now with my wonderful critique partner, and I’m pushing ahead while I await her expert opinion. I’m really liking how this one is unfolding, and I’ve also fallen in love with this hotel in Catalunya that I’m using as the model for the house in the story. You can see pictures of it here and here and here.

As often happens with me when I write about a place I’ve been to, or use a building as a model like I am here, it makes me long to go there. I haven’t been to this hotel, but it’s now on my must-do list. Here's another good reason to go. LOL

I’ve also been enjoying a feast of Pedro Almodovar movies. Almodovar is one of my favourite filmmakers. I love his take on life, love and sex, his wonderful characters, and his ability to give us such a vivid insight to Spanish life and culture. Writing a story set in Spain has allowed me to be completely self-indulgent in the name of work, and watch lots of his films over again!

We also got to see VOLVER, his most recent film, one we hadn’t yet seen. As ever, a wonderfully entrancing story. It was particularly relevant, because one of the themes in the story is the secrets that people can hide within their homes, which is a big underlying theme in RECKLESS. Highly recommend the movie, and Penelope Cruz (who I’d taken a dislike to after Vanilla Sky, go figure,) completely won me back with her performance in this one. I’ve named the housekeeper in my story after her character, Raimunda, as my teeny tribute to her and Almodovar.

I have another word count mini hurdle to get over in the next few days, which will result in another treat. Yay! Yes, live music and a couple of nights away. I bet you can see the pattern regarding what constitutes a treat for me ;) I really need to get another 8-10,000 words in by the end of Tuesday. Wish me luck! Ooh, latest via my lovely agent, RECKLESS is scheduled for May 2008.

In other news, Angela Knight has a great blog post up about dealing with reviews. If you are a writer and you haven’t already checked it out, click HERE.

I hope everyone out there is having a good week!

Sunday, May 06, 2007

Ashley Lister blogs

Anyone who has read Ashley lister's columns on the Erotica Readers and Writers Association will be delighted to hear he now has a blog. Ashley is researching the follow up to his succesful non-fiction book SWINGERS. ClICK HERE to hop over and check out his posts.

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Get it while it's hot!

ALONG FOR THE RIDE will only be available as an ebook download from Loose Id until the end of this month.

When Georgina Montgomery gets involved with the Austrian artist Calvin Rolf and his Fleet Street photographer sidekick, Jason Sutherland, she signs herself up for more escapades than she ever could have imagined. Georgie soon discovers that being involved with two gorgeous men is a heady intoxicant and she quickly casts all her inhibitions aside. She's in her element, but their idyll of sexual adventuring in London is interrupted when a paparazzi scandal threatens to be unleashed around them.

They hit the road and when Georgie comes along for the ride she finds herself going further than she ever has before. None of them thought they'd go as far as falling in love, but they do, and who are they each falling for? When the paparazzi hunt results in Georgie's kidnap, danger ups the emotional stakes for everybody involved and territorial claims of the heart are about to be made!


Click HERE to read an excerpt
Click HERE to download for USD $5.99

Along for the Ride by Saskia Walker is a delectable exercise in sensual and romantic discovery...Their ménage is terribly hot (in that amazingly awesome way) and beautifully sweet as they each struggle along their separate paths to discovering and accepting love. Ms. Walker has done an outstanding job of creating a sizzling story, with lots of bone-meltingly scorching sex, that still grabs one by the heart and causes one to go all soft inside with romantic notions. The best part is that Ms. Walker has that rare talent of sucking the reader completely into her world and keeping her bound to the pages. I found myself trying to rush for the end and at the same time savor every moment. This is one of those unique books that has me shoving my friends to the store to buy it; because there is not any chance I am letting even my most trusted friends any where near my copy . . . and they just must read this one! 5 stars. -- Keely Skillman, EcataRomance Reviews

Good things

Okay, so I've been down in the dumps about various things, hiding in the bolthole licking my wounds, but I'm slowly creeping out and almost ready to face the world. As luck would have it, when I poked my nose out a couple of good things sauntered by and helped lift my spirits. First up, Carol Queen wants to publish a short story of mine. Carol Queen!!! I'm so honoured, dizzy with pleasure. Yes, I'm even smiling again, grinning like an idiot, in fact! ;)

And in review news, I really really liked what this reviewer had to say about THE STRANGELING... :)

THE STRANGELING is a story that interweaves pagan lore with the unlikely romance of two individuals brought together by an unwavering destiny. Behind the poetic descriptions of budding love and lust lies an exploration of duty versus desire which at times - but not always - coincide. Ms. Walker succeeds in showing the two sides of the coin of faith - selfless and self serving - as she showcases the paths of Veldor and Bron. This is a short novel that packs a big punch, but because of the graphic love scenes it is best enjoyed by adults only. Sylvia Cochrane for Roundtable Reviews...READ MORE

Grab a taster from a forthcoming story...

Click here

New interview on line

I was recently interviewed by Terry at Quality Book Reviews. Terry enjoyed THE STRANGELING and had some great questions! You can read the interview HERE. If you have any comments or questions about anything I said, do ask! You can either leave them in the comments section here or at the end of the interview.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Commenting on a review?

Commenting on reviews of our work is seen as bad form, not to mention wading into a potential quagmire and risking being labelled as an author behaving badly. :) Fair enough. I post reviews here as bits of news and when I want to discuss a particular aspect of my writing that the review has mentioned. I generally don’t comment on opinion. Reviewers are entitled to their opinions of our work, we put it out there so we have to be prepared for it to be taken apart in a way we’d never envisaged. Sometimes that’s very hard, but we have to take the good with the bad.

I am however now going to comment on a review, (trumpets sound, or is that the death knell I hear? :) Wait up, I’m not commenting on the reviewer’s personal opinion of my work, but some speculation she’s done about why I wrote it the way I did, and my New York publisher. Let’s call it setting the record straight

KINK has been reviewed on ERWA, click HERE to read the review. In the review, Lisabet Sarai, the reviewer, speculates that KINK was written the way it was because our New York publisher told Sasha and I how and what to write.

For the record, this was not the case.

I usually don’t say much about what the new erotic lines in New York are doing in general, because I have only my experience to go by and I don’t believe that’s enough to make broad, definitive statements. That said, my experience leads me to believe they are putting stuff out there to see what floats and what doesn’t, because the majority of their sales are to different markets than labels such as Blue Moon and Cleis Press.

The truth of the matter is that I’ve had to do fewer changes, revisions and editing for New York than I have anywhere. My first sale to Penguin, DOUBLE DARE, was a complete book when it was bought. My editor asked for one small revision and it was to do with the title, that I have my protagonist discussing the fact that she dares herself to do things, when she explains to her lover why she lied at the outset of their relationship. That was it.

With the KINK anthology Sasha White came to me with this idea that we write a kinky themed anthology together. A fun idea, I was up for it! In the beginning we envisaged a third author being involved. As it turned out, our agent presented our joint proposal, Penguin made us an immediate offer and said can you deliver this in two months please. We planned, wrote and delivered our novellas exactly as we would have done, except that it was a two-person antho and we were given more space for our stories. Up front, my editor asked me about the interaction between the conflict and the kink in my story, because I hadn’t gone into enough detail in my synopsis. Once I had clarified what I intended to do, she was happy.

I have never been told how or what to write by my New York publisher. In fact they don’t have style sheets or guidelines. Often I wish I was given more guidance, but as I said I think they are testing the waters to find out what floats for their particular market.

My story in KINK involves several elements of kink and sexual role-playing in a cat-and-mouse game between the characters. That’s what I set out to do, not to write a hardcore BDSM story. On the other hand I’ve had reviewers for the same novella saying that this is BDSM and not for the faint hearted. This doesn’t surprise me, because reader’s boundaries are not all in the same place. Kink means unconventional sex. I include some elements of BDSM, but it is not a BDSM story, nor is it labelled as such. That’s the whole fuzzy thing about erotica. I recently saw a well know romance reviewer stating that spanking is not BDSM. Dodgy ground, because to some people it might be. There is no right and wrong, (or there shouldn't be) because everyone has different levels and expectations of sex and (therefore) writing about sex. The danger is in ascribing certain formula to erotica, the resulting stories all become very samey. IMO that’s why my publisher is NOT ascribing any formula, the most specific thing they say in the only guidelines out there (which are on ERWA) is to use Emma Holly's work as a guide.

As writers, we cannot please all of the people all the time. It takes all kinds of people to make a world and all levels of spice to flavour it. Personally I’m happy when I’m pleasing some of the people in the world, thankfully it seems I am :) Anyone who has read a lot of my work can see that I do not write hardcore BDSM. I am more about writing fun romps, naughty stories about people pushing a little bit beyond their boundaries, sometimes with elements of kink, sometimes not. I’ve always written what I wanted to write, and prayed to god it would sell. Luckily a good bit of it has. The review on ERWA seems to suggest that I sold out from the short story writer I was. Not the case at all. Maybe what it really means is that I’m only any good writing short stories..? That’s entirely possible.

So why did Penguin sign me for this new line? I think they signed me because I had a readership in erotica through my short story publications, but I also had a proven readership with erotic romance readers through my Red Sage novellas. Every time a publisher signs a new author it’s a gamble. The majority of the contracts for the new erotic lines have gone to writers from the proven romantica e-book business. Mine was a slightly different background, but I believe that the crossover between my erotic romance publications and my erotica short stories gave me a solid CV.

I’ve never been a hardcore erotica writer, I dabble with it sometimes, but I’m always surprised to myself described as a BDSM writer. I’m not. There are many great writers out there who do that already, the reviewer included. ;) I know there is a difference between what I do and a true BDSM novel, and I’m not trying to do that. I believe there is space for books with different levels of kink. There is no right and wrong about sex out there (well apart from the obvious ones! ;) there is as a huge variety of sexual taste in the world, and thank goodness for that.

I just hope aspiring authors in the ERWA community don't think the speculation was based on fact. The editors of the line have a call on ERWA. Is it the reviewer’s job to speculate on whether the publisher told the writer to write this way or not? Maybe, I don’t know. Then again, she could have just asked.