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I'm pleased to have a guest blog today by Patti O'Shea in honor of her latest paranormal romance, EDGE OF DAWN! Patti has won all kinds of awards, including the Booksellers Best, the Barclay Gold, the Laurel Leaf, the PEARL and the Golden Quill, among others. Some quotes for her Light Warriors series:

"Patti O'Shea is a voice and talent to be reckoned with. In the
Midnight Hour is gripping and wonderful, everything a paranormal should be."
—Sherrilyn Kenyon

"Non-stop action, magic-laced suspense and some sizzling sexual chemistry fuel "In Twilight's Shadow," Patti O'Shea's latest inventive paranormal romance." —Chicago Tribune

Comment below to win a copy of the first book in the series, IN THE MIDNIGHT HOUR! Also, tomorrow is the last day to enter to win the VAMPED prize pack by commenting here.

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EDGE OF DAWN COVER Before I get started, I wanted to announce that to celebrate the June 30th   release of EDGE OF DAWN, I'm giving away a copy of IN THE MIDNIGHT HOUR, the first book in my Light Warriors series. To be eligible, leave a comment and one random winner will be chosen.

Authors get ideas everywhere. In fact, most of us have more ideas than we'll ever be able to write in our lifetimes. At least that's my take on it from my own experience and from what I've heard other writers say. So what makes an author choose one story idea over another?

For me, I usually end up writing the characters who are talking the loudest and most insistently. Yep, I hear voices. But even with this, I usually have a chorus in my head and have options. I had a few reasons for choosing EDGE OF DAWN over the others.

First was the characters. Shona Blackwood and Logan Andrews. Shona is completely in the dark about the existence of magic and Logan is a troubleshooter for the Gineal, a people who have magical abilities. And when he's assigned to protect her, his council tells him Shona must remain ignorant that those with power exist. Talk about conflict!

Logan is sworn to obey the council, but once his feelings grow for Shona how can he keep this secret? I nearly rubbed my hands together in glee at the thought of torturing Logan. Hey, he deserved it! My characters always torment me. Always. Does he defy his leaders, committing treason? Does he betray Shona's trust in him? Either way, there's guilt. Insert evil author laugh here.

Another facet of the story that drew me was that Shona was dealing with an artistic block. I'd just come through my own case of writer's block and hadn't worked for several months because of it.

Shona's struggles allowed me to explore my own issues. Her numbness about the loss of her work was the same numbness I'd experienced. Her distantly wondering why she isn't feeling grief or terror or some strong emotion about losing something so important to her are the same questions and distance that I dealt with. It didn't give me any answers, and Shona's block was caused by something drastically different from my own, but I think it was cathartic anyway.

The most intriguing thing for me in EDGE OF DAWN, though, was all the secrets. I didn't realize at the beginning of the story just how many there were going to be, but the few I did know about drew me in. Logan being ordered to keep secrets from Shona. Shona having a secret of her own, but not realizing it's a key piece of information that Logan needs. Then there were all the other secrets I discovered as I went along. Sometimes it amazed me that I was able to remember who knew what and when.

There are probably other intangibles involved with why I decided to write this story over the others, but these are the reasons I was conscious of when I started the book. If you're interested in finding out more about me or my books, please visit my website at: www.pattioshea.com. There's information on all my books and excerpts.

If you're a writer, what makes you choose to write a particular story over another? And if you're a reader, what draws you to a particular book over another?

Comments

( 23 comments — Leave a comment )
[info]edgyauthor wrote:
Jun. 29th, 2009 05:30 pm (UTC)
I'm not really sure why I pick a certain story to write about over another; there are always so many clamoring for attention! I think that it depends, though, on how fleshed-out the characters are in my head and if I already know the overall theme of the book, because then I know I can more easily (and excitedly) reach the end, even if I don't know what that end IS yet. (Which happens a lot, heh.)
[info]patti_oshea wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 12:05 am (UTC)
I think knowing the characters well-enough to write them is critical. I can't write a story if I don't know my hero and heroine because their reactions drive the plot.

Patti
[info]varkat wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 11:53 pm (UTC)
Edgyauthor, you are the winner of the signed copy of IN THE MIDNIGHT HOUR! E-mail me at Lucienne(dot)Diver@knightagency.net with your address and we'll get it out to you!
[info]david_bridger wrote:
Jun. 29th, 2009 05:36 pm (UTC)
I write the stories that won't leave me alone. The ones that run a movie inside my head, and even invade my dreams with characters and situations. When things get to that stage, writing the story is the only way to get to the end of it.
[info]patti_oshea wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 12:05 am (UTC)
Absolutely! I love it when it reaches that point because words start rolling then.

Patti
(Anonymous) wrote:
Jun. 29th, 2009 06:00 pm (UTC)
What draws me to a book? Reviews and recommendations are one. But I really look at the blurp on the back and the cover helps too.
elaing8(at)netscape(dot)net
[info]patti_oshea wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 12:06 am (UTC)
That's one of the things I really loved about finding an online community of readers--all the wonderful recommendations. Of course, these same women are responsible for my TBR pile being over a thousand books, but I guess I can forgive them since they turned me on to Linda Howard and a host of other Must-Buy authors. :-)

Patti
[info]brigidsblest wrote:
Jun. 29th, 2009 06:20 pm (UTC)
Sounds like an interesting read. Sign me up!
[info]patti_oshea wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 12:07 am (UTC)
Thank you!

Patti
[info]frances_writes wrote:
Jun. 29th, 2009 07:14 pm (UTC)
Patti O'Shea
Got IN THE MIDNIGHT HOUR last year as a free download from Patti's publisher. Wonderful book Patti. Then my computer fried its brains and I lost the the book. I cried. Everything else was either backed up or retrievable from some other source. But not this wonderful book. *sniff,sniff* See, I'm tearing up just thinking about it.
[info]patti_oshea wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 12:09 am (UTC)
Re: Patti O'Shea
Thank you, I'm glad you enjoyed the story! I loved working with Ryne and Deke. :-)

Patti
[info]deborahblakehps wrote:
Jun. 29th, 2009 07:24 pm (UTC)
I, too, tend to write the ones with the loudest characters. It's the only way I get any sleep. Of course, then I stay up late writing...

I also just got over a few months of block/burnout, and just started work on my newest WIP. Plenty of secrets there, too :-)

So congrats on the new book, and keep on listening to those voices (as long as they don't say anything TOO horrible).
[info]patti_oshea wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 12:10 am (UTC)
Thanks and good luck with your WIP! Glad you're on the other side of your burnout.

Patti
[info]tigtogtiffy wrote:
Jun. 29th, 2009 10:37 pm (UTC)
I would like to be a writer one day. Which is why I will answer both of your questions -- the what draws to be a story and to an author.

I am a fan of the evil torture of the characters. What evil angst ridden things will the story inflict upn them/ will they inflict upon themselves. It it had a plot, and some angst, I will read it. And attempt to write it.
[info]patti_oshea wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 12:12 am (UTC)
The characters seriously deserve all the torture they get. I hear some authors have nice characters who do whatever they tell them to do. I think this must be an urban legend. ;-)

Patti
[info]lostseraphin wrote:
Jun. 29th, 2009 11:35 pm (UTC)
I write whatever won't leave me alone. Then, when I sit down to write the story that I "think" I'm supposed to write, the characters turn it into something completely different. All I can do as the author, is let the characters tell the story and try my best to steer them in the right direction.
[info]patti_oshea wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 12:13 am (UTC)
Wow, your characters let you steer them? Mine pull me around by my nose. :-) More seriously, I think it's cool when they lead because they usually go places I didn't think of. Their way is often better.

Patti
[info]lostseraphin wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 03:13 pm (UTC)
They probably just humor me into letting me think that I steer them. I can just think of the commentary they whisper to one another when my hands are off the keyboard. ;)
[info]patti_oshea wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 04:49 pm (UTC)
It might be best that we don't know what they say when we're not around. I also think it's a probably a good thing that they don't hear what I say about them. ;-)

Patti
[info]the_maenad wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 04:16 am (UTC)
As a writer: when the character(s) start to have enough existence to hold conversations inside my head, and won't leave me alone.

As a reader: when I suspect the character(s) in the book would be doing that if they'd been birthed in my mind rather than the actual author's.
[info]patti_oshea wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 04:50 pm (UTC)
It's really amazing how real characters become. There was even one time I was paging through a catalog and saw something. I thought immediately that one of my heroes would love that and was checking the price before I remembered he wasn't real. Oops. ::blush::
[info]abennettstrong wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 06:40 pm (UTC)
As a reader, it depends what I'm in the mood for, and sometimes I'll pick up half a dozen books from my TBR pile before something clicks. This week, for example, I set aside an SF book I'd been looking forward to so I could reread a Pern book (Masterharper of Pern) -- I was in the mood for the reading equivalent of comfort food.

As a writer, it depends on everything from how many other calls I have on my time to how complete the idea is in my head. Unlike David, who already commented, I never have dreams about ideas that I already have. I don't usually have conversations with my characters (although I have on occasion heard them arguing about who should be next). But there's no one-size-fits-all answer. Sometimes it's an old idea that I really want to see completed; sometimes it's the freshest thing I have, something I want to get down before the shiny wears off.
[info]patti_oshea wrote:
Jun. 30th, 2009 11:28 pm (UTC)
I'm the same way when I read. Sometimes I need something I know will be funny or I'll reach for a book I've read before and loved.

Patti
( 23 comments — Leave a comment )

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