Diana Murdock's Blog, page 5

March 28, 2012

Do You Judge A Book By Its Cover?

Image: Secretsof7scribes.wordpress.com


I don’t know about you, but I DO judge a book by its cover – literally.  When at a bookstore or library, I look at the books displayed predominantly and I’ll always pick up a book because I like the look of its cover.  Whether or not I walk out the door with it, is a different story, but I will spend some time admiring the cover.  I often wonder about the thought process behind each one.  Whose vision was it?  Was it true to the story line?  Was it true to the author’s vision?  How much time was put into it?  What was truly vested in its creation?


When I began writing my upcoming novel, Souled, I knew what I wanted on the cover, but I’m art-challenged and what happens in my head short circuits on its way to my hands.  I did make an attempt, though, albeit pathetic, and I just wasn’t happy with it.


One day, after I had gotten my quill tattoo, I really started thinking about it (well, not really because there was never a question in my mind after the seed was planted) and decided who I would ask to design the book cover.  I had walked into Crystalyn Abercrombie’s tattoo studio and asked if she would be interested in taking on the project.  I don’t think I actually got the words out before she said yes.  The connection was made.  We both knew the Universe ignited.  Yeah, it was that awesome.


The result?  Perfection.  Exactly what I had envisioned.  She nailed it.  In fact, it’s my next tattoo.


So what did she do to make me her #1 fan?  I put some questions to her and now I share them with you…..


Crystalyn Abercrombie – Damn! This girl knows her stuff!


1.         Tell us a little bit about your background in art. 


I’ve enjoyed drawing for as long as I can remember. My Uncle Nick is an artist as well and would always send me drawing materials for birthdays or holidays. In 5th grade a local artist came into class and taught us how to duplicate photographs with graphite pencils. My mom signed me up for lessons with that artist, and that’s when I started to take art seriously. I fell in love with drawing the human body and portraits of people and animals. Since then I entered every art contest I could. I would always place in the top three and have my art picked by the class to be featured in projects like yearbooks or choir t-shirts. I took various art classes that were offered in high school and some in Spokane, and worked with different mediums like acrylic paints, wire, clay, found objects, stained glass and tile for mosaics, photography, calligraphy & graphic art.


2.         What is your preferred medium and why?


That’s a tough question! I really enjoy making mixed media art, using a little of this and a little of that, usually involving some sort of natural element and acrylic paint. I like to create art with dimension. Currently in my spare time I like  to string and paint native American style hand-held drums with pagan inspired goddess images.


3.         When did you begin to draw?  What was one of the first things you drew?  What makes it memorable?

I’ve pretty much had a crayon in my hand since day one! We never had a lot of money growing up, but we could afford paper and crayons, so art was always my favorite form of entertainment. In first grade my dad was a construction worker, and addicted to yard sales, so he would pick up oil paints from garage sales for me, and I would paint flowers with butterflies and big yellow suns on his scrap pieces of 2 x 4′s I’d find around the yard. I can also remember doing a pencil and crayon drawing of a family portrait. Memorable because I had put a heart polka-dot pattern on my mom’s shirt, and my parents smirked at the two hearts that were drawn right where nipples should go.  I have been censored on my human figure drawings several times in middle and high school, and it makes me laugh to remember it started way back in first grade!


4.         What is the process you went through to create the cover for Souled?


Step 1:  Consulting with the author, Diana Murdock.  She told me she wanted a symbol to represent the Egyptian clan that some of the book’s characters were involved with.


Step 2:  Reading the novel to completely understand where she was coming from, and get the artwork to really resonate with it.


Step 3:  Hitting my symbol books to learn more about what symbols Egyptians typically used and what meanings they associated with them.  From there I gathered symbols I felt appropriately represented aspects of the novel from the Egyptian and old world cultures.



Step 4:  Putting together a rough draft of my idea along with pages of symbol explanations for Diana to look at.  This way she was able to see why I chose to draw the symbol as I had.  I gave her time to think it over and decide on any changes she wanted me to make.  This step went back and forth only twice with the actual symbol before we nailed it down, and then once more for the style of the novel’s cover as a whole. We seemed to be on the same page at every step of the way.



Step 5:  Sketching a rough layout, deciding on what medium would be best, and gather what supplies were needed.  Of course I chose to do a mixed medium piece, and photograph it when finished so it would look as realistic as possible.  I purchased a brown piece of scrapbooking paper as a base to give it the old bound leather book feeling, some antiquing silver stuff to give the look of old metal embellishments, and a red rhinestone for the snake’s eye because drawing or painting it on wouldn’t have achieved the effect I wanted.



Step 6:  Printing my layout onto my scrapbook paper.



Step 7:  Using graphite pencils to draw in the snake completely


Step 8:  Metal embellishments with the silver antiquing liquid.


Step 9:  Using graphite pencils to draw details onto the metallic areas, and around the cover to give it some depth and shadows for a more realistic sort of feel.


Step 10:  Another consultation to make sure Diana was happy with the results.


Step 11:  Photographing the final piece with the rhinestone eye in place.


Step 12:  Computer graphics stuff which involves uploading the photograph into my graphic design program, having a consultation with Diana to choose font type and where she wanted to see the title and her name, saving that project as a high resolution JPEG file, and voila! Diana received it in her email’s inbox.



5.         Did you read the novel before creating the artwork? 


Of course. It was really the only way for me to feel like I could understand what my art needed to represent. I’ve always loved anything paranormal and magical so I was all over it! Being from the same town as in the book and having gone to high school here really made it fun to read as well, I felt like I was right there with the characters at every turn. I really loved it, and I can’t wait for the sequel!


6.         Where did the inspiration come from? 


The passages from the sorceress and the element manipulation magic.  There’s a line early on about flames twisting together like snakes in the hands of one character, that is what sparked inspiration initially.


7.         The symbol is very Egyptian.  Do you typically lean in this style in your artistic work or was this a special direction for this book?


This is actually my first ever Egyptian style piece. I knew we wanted to represent an old world magic clan and I initially thought Celtic or Pagan because that is what I lean toward heavily in my personal symbolic art, but Diana mentioned Egyptian so I had to hit my symbols books in order to pick out the right symbols to resonate with the novel.


8.         Where else has your work been published?


Down There, The Wise Woman’s Way by Susan Weed in 2011


9.         Have you ever designed any artwork for an author?


This cover is the first author I have worked with during the design process. My other published illustrations were submitted into an open illustration call, so I designed them completely and sent them off to New York to compete against whoever else had submitted illustrations as well.  As a tattoo artist I’m constantly designing various things for clients.  Sometimes it’s fitting multiple images into one design or creating something from scratch.


10.       Would you be interested in designing more book covers?  If so, do you have a favorite genre you’d like to design for?

I would absolutely love to do this again! Fantasy and Paranormal are probably my favorite to read, but as far as what I like designing for best, I have yet to find out.  I’d love to try everything and see if I can eventually answer that, so bring on your ideas!


11.       Besides this book cover, where do you gather most of the inspiration for your tattoo designs and artwork?

My personal inspiration comes from the beauty of nature and my spirituality.  I resonate with aspects of Paganism, Wiccanism, and some Native American cultures.  I love to involve symbolism, balance and simplicity in my personal designs, but when designing for clients I really try to understand where their inspirations are coming from, so my art will vary greatly from piece to piece.


12.       Where can others reach you if they are interested in commissioning you for their projects?

ouchiemamatattooandpiercing@gmail.com, 208-610-6527.


13.       Where we can view your work?


My biggest portfolio is on my Ouchie Mama Tattoo & Piercing page on Facebook.  Unfortunately it’s all tattoo work at the moment, but a lot of it is my own design work.  Now that I know people might be interested in seeing more of my work, I will start adding some different stuff to it.


~~~


Thank you so much, Crystalyn, for taking the time to share this process.  I’m thrilled we connected and I look forward to having you on board for other projects!


Please be on the lookout for the release of Souled this spring!



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Published on March 28, 2012 08:27

March 21, 2012

I’m Lucky I Came Up For Air When I Did!


So there I was, keeping my head under the social media radar for the last few weeks, focusing solely on my manuscript, Souled, when what do I find waiting for me when I come up for air?  My WANA sista, Angela Orlowski-Peart, awarded me the Lucky 7 Meme!  Just the thing I needed to lighten up the mood around here.


I’ve always loved Angela’s blog because her topics are diverse, light-hearted, and always fascinating.  I’m positive you’ll love the way her personality shines through each word she puts to page.


So here are the rules to the Lucky 7 Meme:


1.  Go to page 77 of your current MS/WIP

2.  Go to line 7.

3.  Copy down the next 7 lines, sentences, or paragraphs, and post them

as they’re written.

4.  Tag 7 authors.

5.  Let them know.


Simple enough.  I decided to go with the seven-ish paragraphs.   So, here is a look at part of my soon-to-be-released manuscript, Souled:


~ ~ ~


Silence yourself.  Feel, rather than think.


I tried for a couple minutes.  I really did.  In fact, my focus was so intense that I think I’d developed a permanent crease between my brows.  The battering kept up, pelting me with shots of emotion, but finally walls began building up around my mind, blocking out one emotion after another, until there was only one feeling left – elation.  I dropped my hands to my sides and my eyes slowly opened, expectant.  Then my gaze tore through the crowd like a predator sensing its prey.  The source was close.  Very close.


Ah, there it was behind me.  At a cash register stood a boy, 12 years old maybe, his face dominated by a toothy smile.  On the other side of the counter, a clerk slapped a receipt onto a brand new Xbox.


The boy’s scrawny arms wrapped around the box and pulled it off the counter.  He sprinted, the box crowding his arms, and headed straight towards me, his mother trailing behind.  I ignored the woman and instead focused on the boy.


My energy tapped into his and sucked it in like a vacuum.  To me, it felt wondrous and exciting; he didn’t feel the same way.  He looked as though he’d smacked into a wall.  He froze, his eyes latched onto mine, his mouth dropped open, and for a moment his head cocked to one side as if he were reading something he didn’t quite understand.


I smiled.


The boy forced his eyes shut, for a minute covering them with his arm as if the darkness alone wasn’t enoughThen grabbing his mother’s sleeve, still struggling with the box, he ran in the opposite direction.


Ha!  That was freakin’ awesome.


~ ~ ~


There you have it.  Look for the release of Souled this spring!


Who’s next on the list to give us a sneak peak at their upcoming work of art?  I hope you take a moment to check out their blogs as well!


1.  Krystal Wade


2.  Dorothy F. Shaw


3.  Karen McFarland


4.  Johanna Pitcairn


5.  Marion Spicher


6.  Naomi Bulger


7.  Barbara McDowell  



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Published on March 21, 2012 06:04

March 2, 2012

Naomi Bulger – The Author From Down Under

The beautiful Naomi Bulger


“Naomi Bulger is an Australian journalist who moved to New York City for adventure, and found love instead.  She now lives in Melbourne, Australia, with her new family.”    


So starts her official author biography, but it’s not that cut and dry.  There is so much more to this talented writer than meets the eye.   I’ve  known Naomi for the last nine months (another one of my WANA sisters) and have gotten to know her through her incredibly colorful and feel-good blogs, but I never knew how much about her I didn’t know.  Here’s what I found out about this special woman.


Naomi grew up in the Blue Mountains, north-west of Sydney.  She and her family lived in the countryside, deep in the Australian bush, in a home without electricity, running water, or a telephone.  She was fortunate to be able to spend her teen years exploring the rain forest and bracken fields that made up her homeland.


At the age of 19 she moved to Sydney, and later lived in New York, where she worked as a foreign correspondent.  After graduating from college, she began her professional writing career.  She has been a professional journalist and copywriter for more than 15 years, specializing in magazine feature writing and online publishing.  She was the editor of one national and one international print magazine, and wrote feature stories for several others.  Naomi has been published in several magazines in Australia and the US.  She was editor of two magazines, and broadcast to more than 100 radio stations while senior journalist at Le Gras News.


She is the author of two nonfiction books, Talk Without Being Interrupted and Seventeen Summers (both out of print), and her poetry was included in the Australian Poetry Encouragement Award anthology in 2002.


Hmm…all of a sudden my cookie baking for the senior citizen home doesn’t seem so monumental.


Seriously, though, Naomi is awesome, isn’t she?  Now here are some more questions she was generous enough to answer for us.


Naomi, you are a journalist, using facts to create your stories.  Does some of that bleed into your fiction writing?


Hmm, I’m not sure if this is because of journalism, but I do use facts within my fiction.  Not just places and names and world events, but real-life happenings.  For example, there are a lot of ‘stories within stories’ in Airmail, and many of those stories are true.  They are my stories, or stories that belong to my friends.  Where the fiction comes in is that I gave those stories to my character, Anouk, and her reactions and responses to those experiences in her life were completely different to my or my friends’ reactions.   So those stories took on a life of their own, and you could no longer call them facts.



Who came first, the journalist or the writer?


Definitely the writer.  I was writing ‘books’ at the age of six: scribbling stories in stapled-together note-pads, illustrating them, and making cardboard book covers.  I never wanted to be a journalist, in fact I think I was quite a snob about it.  At university, I saw “journalism versus novel-writing” as akin to “graphic design versus fine art.”  I fell into journalism later, because all I seemed to do in any job I had was write, and I was lucky enough to have a wonderful editor who took me under his wing and mentored me throughout my early career.  Nowadays, I recognize how the one profession supports the other, and I believe (I hope) that the practice of straight-talking, authentic, plain English journalism has helped me improve my fiction writing.


What do you like best about being an indie writer?


I never intended to be an indie writer. Airmail was first accepted for publication by a small publisher here in Australia. It was a university publishing house, and when our federal government cut funding (almost all universities in Australia are public, not private), the publishers had to close down and all contracts including mine were cancelled. We were part of the way through editing at that stage. I let the book sit on the backburner for a while, because I knew it would never be a mainstream seller: a novella… in the magic realism genre… by an unknown author? Fat chance!


Eventually, when I returned to Australia from New York, I decided to think again. Exploring the indie route for this book was a direct response to my assessment of Airmail’s limited potential for mainstream sales. I chose iUniverse because they work with commercial editors and I was willing to pay a little more to have a truly professional product at the end. I am not vain enough to think I know everything about what it takes to have a good published book, just because I’m the author. I wanted this little story to get the well-rounded treatment and be the best I could make it. It was professionally edited, professionally sub-edited, professionally proofed and professionally designed. The ‘indie’ part meant I had power of veto against these recommendations if I wanted to use it, but I rarely did.


I do still struggle with being attached to the stigma of indie writing. And I don’t have the flexibility that some indie authors have of managing their own price-points or fully controlling their own edits or cover design.  I wish I could say “Airmail is only 0.99 on Amazon for Mother’s Day,” but I don’t get any say in that.  What has surprised me, most pleasantly, about taking this route is the community of other indie authors, editors and book bloggers I discovered online.  I’d never even heard of ‘indie publishing’ before Airmail was already on the shelves. Now, I am part of a groundswell movement.  That’s fun.


What do you do when you are not writing?


When I’m not writing fiction, I’m writing journalism, or copywriting, or writing my blog.  But when I do manage to tear myself away from the computer, I am much more of a homebody than I used to be.  I’ve been learning to cook recently, and discovered I love it.  I try to walk as much as I can, which is a great way to explore my new neighborhood (we have moved around a lot in the past few years).  I find a lot of pleasure digging in the garden, exploring unique markets, and of course losing myself in a book – I read every day.  When it’s possible to get out of Australia, I find energy in travel.  It renews me. But right now, I have a big new challenge on my hands:  I have a baby due in four months, so I think if you ask me the same question in a little while my answer will be “nappies, nappies and nappies.”


Do you have another project in the making?


Yes, I’ve been working for a long time (longer than I care to admit) on a novel about a sommelier who is on a quest for an ancient and glorious wine.  It’s a little bit dark, because my hero is really an antihero who will do anything it takes to gain his prize, in the belief that he is the only one truly worthy.  I guess it’s a bit like Perfume: the Story of a Murderer by Patrick Suskind, although not that dark.  This book is a lot of fun to write, because it combines so many things I love: a mystery, a love story, wine, art, archaeology and travel.  I hope to have finished the first draft by the time the baby arrives, but who knows how that will go.



You live in Australia, a place that many people would love to visit.  Where would you love to visit (somewhere you have never been)?


How long have you got?  Greece has been on my bucket list since high school, I want to visit the Delphic Oracle.  The aurora borealis is something I have always wanted to see, and I’ve never been to Iceland, so a northern trip could be on the cards.  I want to travel through Cambodia, and one day when things calm down in Africa, I will visit Kenya, Zimbabwe, Ethiopia, and so many other countries.  Same goes for Egypt and Jordan. Basically, name the place I haven’t been, I want to go there!


Before I let you go, where can your readers find you?


My blog: www.naomibulger.com


Facebook page: www.facebook.com/airmailthebook


Twitter: @naomi_bulger


Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Airmail-Naomi-Bulger/dp/1450235492


One more bit of unfinished business…I put all of your names into a box and had my son, Jesse, draw a name.  And…the winner of a paperback of Airmail is….Angela Peart! Congratulations, Angela!  Thank you so much, everyone, for your support!  I’m sure we’ll do it again when Naomi’s next novel is released!



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Published on March 02, 2012 05:38

January 7, 2012

Ebook Giveaway Weekend!

I am offering the ebook version of my first novel, Again, for FREE this weekend on Amazon! If you don’t yet have a Kindle, you can download the Kindle reader application for your PC or other mobile device.

Here is the link:

http://amzn.to/xOnqHE

I hope you enjoy it!

Diana
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Published on January 07, 2012 06:32 Tags: again, diana-murdock, historical, reincarnation, romance

November 17, 2011

When Saving Them Is No Longer An Option

“You’ll be all right. I know you will,” I whispered, but even as the words slipped past my lips, I knew it was a lie. I didn’t know if she would be all right and the uncertainty plagued my thoughts, even as I slept.

Each time she called, her words would peel layers of my heart away, leaving it raw and exposed, and inviting a whole new intensity of pain. We sat on opposite ends of the phone, each of us suffering in our own way. She desperately reached out. I desperately pulled back. Yet overcome with guilt, I would offer CPR, breathing life into her and willing my heart to beat for two. Later, exhausted and torn, I would hang up, praying my efforts would sustain her life force for one more day.

The months passed, coated in stormy grayness, with the bullets of her despair pelting onto my shoulders, until it was too much effort to stand up straight. I would drag my feet underneath me, forcing my body to go through the motions, attempting without much success to allow myself the smallest bit of joy. Those days were long, and I went under more often than not.

I finally decided I had to let her go. After too many months of trying, saving her wasn’t an option anymore. I finally admitted things would not get better and she would slowly pull me under until I could no longer breathe for either of us.

What hurt me more? Hearing her desperate and pain-drenched words or fighting my determination to once again protect her from herself? She was being pushed to the very edge, possibly to slip over into darkness, but I wrapped my arms tightly around myself instead of reaching out.

My decision was a long time in coming, and it was not one made lightly, but no matter how painful letting go was, I knew her life was not mine to live. Her challenge now was to find her footing on the horribly rocky path before her, and whatever decisions she made, they had to be hers.

We met on the street some time after that. She told me that the sun had finally broken through the clouds. Not much, but enough for hope to take hold. And everyday that hope grew until she saw that the storm had passed and her path was clear.

Only then, after what seemed like forever, I could say that I knew that she was going to be all right after all.
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Published on November 17, 2011 10:35 Tags: diana-murdock, diana-murdock-s-blog, friendship, letting-go, suicide

November 8, 2011

When I Found Me, I Found My Muse

“What?” His eyebrows shot up as he leaned toward me just a little. “Twenty years?”

He blinked once. Then twice.

My jaw went slack, realizing what I had just revealed.

Then he sat back hard in his chair, shaking his head. “You need to be kissed. You need to be kissed."

I noticed he wasn’t offering his services to remedy the situation. He merely stared, digesting my confession.


Two decades is a long time to go without being kissed. I mean, really kissed. I was embarrassed, wondering if I was even capable of kissing that way again. I swiped at a tear that started to form, hoping he didn’t notice.

So this was it. This is what I had become. A closed-off, passionless excuse of a woman. How could I have let it get to this point? For that matter, at exactly what point did it get to this point? Did my softer edges sharpen during those first years of raising my children when laundry, cleaning, and cooking, had to fit somewhere between the hours of my day job? Maybe it was during the years after that when I took on the additional roles of taxi driver, gardener, and all around super mom.

Sexy lingerie was shoved aside to make room for baggy t-shirts and sweat pants. Practical shoes took the place of fun, strappy sandals. No one knew how long my hair really was since it spent most days tucked up underneath a baseball cap, mainly to hide the fact that I hadn’t had a chance to touch up the roots.

Somewhere between the “I do” and the “I don’t want to do this anymore,” I had lost myself. I lost the ability to tilt my face to the sun and soak in all of its goodness. I lost my creativity and the ability to laugh. Not that I didn’t have the opportunities - I just didn’t have the energy for it.

Worst of all, I had forgotten to write, something I had done since I was a little girl. My dream journal was buried under stacks of paper and magazines, never experiencing the touch of a pen to its pages - because I had forgotten to dream.

And like anything in this world, if it is neglected, it will die.

And die I did. A thousand times.

On the outside I was Wonder Woman and Martha Stewart rolled into one. I wanted to be that person. I wanted to be the perfect wife and mother. I tried. I tried really hard. Books on how to knit and sew and quilt and make candles for Christmas lined the shelves. Cookbooks for pasta, vegetables, barbecuing, and even sushi were lined up neatly in the kitchen. Playing at the park or going to the beach were regular activities.

I deceived them, all of them. “How do you do it?” I was often asked. I would just shrug and smile. If I were to answer them, I would have said, “Miserably.” But I never said a word.

I may have fooled them, but I didn’t fool me. I knew that by not being who I really was, by not being filled with my own joy, I had nothing to offer. I might as well have been a bot.

When I finally hit the tipping point, I prioritized. I wanted me back. I threw out the how-to books, the knitting needles, and found a nice home for the upright piano that mocked me every time I would pass it.

And then I looked for me. I wasn’t hard to find, for as I was looking in, the woman I searched for was looking out, and when we met after so many years, it was magic.

After that, I wrote. And I wrote. And I tipped my face towards the sun and soaked up all the goodness that its warmth offered.

And still...I write...I have found my muse.

How about you? Is it easy for you to lose yourself to others? Is it difficult to put your needs first? How do you find that balance in your life? I’d love to hear your thoughts!
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Published on November 08, 2011 08:50 Tags: balance, diana-murdock, diana-murdock-s-blog, finding-yourself, self, writing

July 20, 2011

New website

Hey everyone! I have a new website:

www.dianamurdock.wordpress.com

Please stop by. I'd love to hear from you!
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Published on July 20, 2011 12:21 Tags: beliefs, diana-murdock, diana-murdock-s-blog, muse, paranormal, prisoner, too-late

January 7, 2011

First of many edits

Started on edit #2 of the YA paranormal. Still a lot of holes to fill in and smooth over, but going well. Looking forward to a writing pow wow with my good friend (and fellow goodreads author) Kathleen Mulroy. She is a genius with it comes to seeing what I can't.

Got the approval on reprint rights to a couple of songs by a major band that I will be including in my book. Can't wait to get that finalized.

Still on track with getting this done by summer. In the meantime, still reading lots, because "you can't write if you don't read!"
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Published on January 07, 2011 13:30

December 8, 2010

Beginning Stages

I'm thrilled to say that I am almost done with my first draft of my YA Paranormal. I asked around about first person versus third person and decided to go with first person. It changed the layout a bit by shifting over from third person, so that continues to be something that needs tweaking, but I think it will roll out well in the end. Still a lot of research and lots of editing to be done, but I'm having a lot of fun with this. The story is set here where I live, so it makes the story all that more real to me - kind of blurring "reality" with "imagination."

I'll keep you all posted on the progress...

Until next time.
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Published on December 08, 2010 17:23

September 27, 2010

Featured author on "Just One More Paragraph" this week

I had the great opportunity to be part of "Tweezle's" blog this week. She is wonderful to work with. If you get a chance, check out her blog. She has a lot going on there!

Here's the link to her blog...

http://tweezlereads.blogspot.com/2010...
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Published on September 27, 2010 06:13 Tags: blog, interview, reviews