Sunday, 28 April 2024

Author in the Kitchen: Celebrate Mother's Day with Cookbook Author Sloane Taylor...


Mother's Day is Sunday May 12th this year.


Do something really nice today for the lady who does so much for you throughout the year. This brunch will show how much you love, care and appreciate her. A few fresh flowers on the table are a nice touch, along with a lace tablecloth, and generous glass of mimosa. Wink. Cheers to all you Moms out there!
 

MENU
Quiche
Fresh Fruit Salad
Croissants
Raspberry Jam
Butter
Zucchini Bread for Dessert
Mimosas
 
Quiche
1 frozen deep-dish pie shell
1 tsp. (5g) butter
6 bacon strips, cut into ¼ in. (.64cm) pieces*
¼ cup (30g) onions, chopped
2 eggs
2 egg yolks
1¼ cups (230ml) heavy cream
3 pinches white pepper**
¾ cup (85g) swiss cheese, grated
2 tbsp. (25g) butter, cut in small bites

Preheat oven to 375° F (190°C). 

Place pie shell on cookie sheet. Use a fork to poke several sets of holes in the bottom and around the sides of the shell. Bake for 10 minutes. Remove from oven and set aside. 

Melt butter in a heavy skillet. Add bacon, and ham if you’re including it, and onion when foam subsides. Cook until meat is lightly browned. Remove from skillet with a slotted spoon to paper towels. 

Beat or whisk eggs, yolks, cream, and seasonings in a large bowl. Stir in cheese. 

Scatter meat, into pie shell. Gently ladle in egg mixture. Sprinkle the top with butter bits. 

Bake for 25 minutes or until a sharp knife inserted in the middle of the quiche comes out clean. 

The dish may be served hot, warm, or room temperature. It also makes a wonderful appetizer. Leftovers reheat in the microwave beautifully. 

*Diced ham, ¼ lb. (125g), is also good in this recipe in place of the bacon or along with. All other ingredients and process remains the same. 

**No need to buy white pepper if you don’t have it. Use black pepper only a little more as it is not as strong as white pepper.

May you enjoy all the days of your life filled with good friends, laughter, and seated around a well-laden table!

Sloane

Sloane Taylor is an Award-Winning author with a second passion in her life. She is an avid cook and posts new recipes on her blog every Wednesday. The recipes are user friendly, meaning easy.

Taylor's cookbooks, Date Night Dinners, Summer Sizzle, and Recipes to Create Holidays Extraordinaire are released by Toque & Dagger Publishing and available at all book vendors.

Excerpts from her books and free reads can be found on her website, blog, and her Amazon Author Page. Connect with Taylor on Facebook and Twitter.

Sunday, 21 April 2024

Authors: Do We Really Need to Go All In With Our Book Marketing Strategy…

Book Marketing is a Gamble for Many Authors
Fed up with doing Facebook ads that at one time gave me great reach and amazing clicks, but no buys, I decided that these kinds of ads didn’t serve me anymore. So, in March (2024), I asked for feedback from my fellow authors on what they did that works for them in their book marketing and promotional world. I received quite a lot of responses—especially from my Facebook groups—and decided to put together a list of their responses. To give you the gist, here’s the original call to action I put out on my social media accounts:

I’m searching for other ways to market and promote my books, since Facebook ads don’t seem to be playing nice, and don’t serve my purposes anymore. So, I thought I’d ask my fellow authors what you do to get your books out there and into the hands of your readers, beyond the usual social media posts on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn I see throughout my feeds.

For example, do you pay for ads on Twitter or LinkedIn? If so, do they work for you? Have you ever hired a promotional specialist or company (which can get quite pricey) to do your book marketing? If so, what was the experience, and were they worth it? Or do you do your own marketing, scheduling your posts ahead of time? I’d really like some solid advice, and frankly I’m tired of being approached by these so-called ‘marketing specialists’ on all my social media accounts.

Thanks in advance for any advice or suggestions you can share. I appreciate it!

The response was immediate. My feeds filled up with helpful advice, and other authors waiting in the wings to know what magic-marketing-bullet would be best for them. Turns out this book biz is NOT a one-book-fits-all kind of marketing strategy. I knew all along that it wasn’t. I was just interested in seeing what other authors do out there, so I could make a conscious and rational decision on what’s best for ME. That said, below is most of the feedback I received. Much of these ideas I’ve done, but there are some that I haven’t, and may give them a go. In the long run, you must decide what’s best for YOU…

·         Start an email list and newsletter. If you have done so, continue to build it.

·         Don’t pay for subscribers—instead, engage with readers in genuine ways.

·         Get out there in person. Meet other writers, go to events and conferences, especially events that include both authors and readers. Always bring a signup sheet or QR code for your newsletter signup.

·         Shop at Indie bookstores. Be a part of the literary conversation.

·        Consider doing Amazon ads. Apparently, Bryan Cohen offers free Amazon ad courses that usually happen quarterly. Check out when the next course is available here: https://www.facebook.com/bestpageforward/reviews

·         Other advertising ventures are BookBub Feature Deals (which can get quite pricey) and BookBub ads. Apparently, most authors said to stay away from Twitter or LinkedIn ads.

·        Promotional and review sites such as NetGalley, Fussy Librarian, Written Word Media, Bargain Booksy, FreeBooksy, BookFunnel, and Hello Books just to name a few. Price points vary, so do your research.

·         In-person events such as craft shows, fairs, markets, and special events like holidays.

·        Podcast interviews. An author friend pays $15 a month and gets two lists of ten podcasters weekly who are looking for guests. Here’s the link: https://podcastguests.com/

·        YouTube appearances or having your own show. Depending on your personality, helpful content, and author guests, this may be the way to go for you.

·         Guest blogging or working with book bloggers for reviews.

·        Speaking engagements based on your genre. So, if you write for children or teens, schools would be a good place to start.

·         Getting books into your local library network.

·        Book signings at your local bookstore, grocery stores, fundraisers, or anywhere else that’s connected with the setting, content, and genre of your books. Think outside the box for this. Does your book have a shelter animals slant? How about at a local pet supply store? Cozy mystery with a baker as the main character? Check out coffee shops or local bakery stores in your area. The possibilities are endless.

·         Garnishing paid book reviews through Booklist, BookPage, ForeWord, Kirkus, Library Journal, Publisher’s Weekly, and Shelf Awareness to name a few.

·         Promotional specialists or companies. A word of warning on this: if these people approach you, they’re most likely crossing a boundary or invading your virtual space. You’re the one who should be contacting them.

·         Paying a publicist. This one can get expensive, with prices ranging from $1250 to over— are you sitting down—$10,000 for a four to five-month campaign. Yikes! But, depending on the book, and if it’s worth your time and investment, then go for it!

·         Last, but not least, the tried and true method: Word of Mouth. Works. All. The. Time.    

Hmm. So many ideas, so little time to actually write those books to market. What a conundrum! With all this wealth of information listed above, I bet you’re wondering what marketing strategies I’ll be using moving forward. First, an admission – I don’t have an email list. I’ve resisted having one for so long because frankly, I didn’t want to do the extra work involved with sending out a newsletter with barely anything to say. Book marketing expert Sandra Beckwith advises to start and build an email list for the simple reason that if your pet social platform disappears or crashes, you lose everything. But not your email list. You own that sucker. Plus, it’s an excellent way to get to know your readers and have genuine conversations with them. Makes sense, but to be honest, I don’t feel this is the best use of my book marketing time.

However, If you’re interested in starting an email list or building your existing list, writing coach and speaker, Colleen M. Story has a couple of great articles to whet your book marketing appetite with HERE and HERE. Check them out when time permits.

So what am I going to do? Nothing. At least for now. I’ve decided to take a break, take a breather, and take myself out of the game of feeding all those book marketing ploys manipulating authors out of their hard-earned money. My former publisher used to say, Money flows to, not away, from the author. Wouldn’t that be nice if that was the norm? The best advice I received was from author Vonnie Hughes, a dear friend from New Zealand, who offered, What about just writing because you can't help it and not writing to be published but just writing for YOU?” In a perfect world, wouldn’t that be amazing? I may just heed her sage advice. As a life-long learner, I strive to do better when I can, and hope what I learn, I can pass along to others. At least, that is my wish.

Does the thought of marketing or promoting your books make you cringe? Do you have an email list? Are you tired and overwhelmed with all the marketing strategies out there, that you chose to do the bare minimum or nothing? Is the continual expense of doing book promotions sucking the joy out of being a writer for you? If so, I totally understand, and would love to read your comments. Cheers and thanks for taking the time to read my blog. I appreciate you! 

Sunday, 14 April 2024

Recipe and a Read: Cream Cheese Mini-Cakes and a Time Travel Romance by Author Stella May...

These little taste treats are my own creation. It is an easy and skinny version of individual cheesecakes, yet still packed with plenty of flavor. This recipe makes one dozen little cakes. Dress them up with a bit of fruit on top after baking and you're good to go. Sorry, there's no picture. Those two rascals I live with ate them too fast.

Cream Cheese Mini-Cakes

1 package farmer’s cheese
1 package Philadelphia cream cheese
2 eggs
½ cup sour cream
⅓ cup sugar
1 tsp. vanilla extract
½ cup almond flour
½ tsp. baking powder 

Remove cheeses from refrigerator 2 hours before making this recipe. They both need to be at room temperature to cream properly. 

Place cheeses in a large bowl. Mix on a low speed with an electric mixer until creamed. 

Add eggs, sour cream, sugar, and vanilla. Increase mixer speed to blend well. Pour in almond flour and baking powder. Combine well. 

Pour mixture into muffin tins lined with cupcake papers or do like me and use a silicone form for cupcakes. You’ll need to lightly oil it. 

Pre-heat oven to 350° F. 

Very important: put a medium-sized bowl filled with water on the bottom of your oven. 

Bake 35-40 min, or until golden brown.

Here is a peek at Stella’s time travel romance novel for your reading pleasure. 

One key unlocks the love of a lifetime…but could also break her heart. 

Nika Morris’s sixth sense has helped build a successful business, lovingly restoring and reselling historic homes on Florida’s Amelia Island. But there’s one forlorn, neglected relic that’s pulled at her from the moment she saw it. The century-old Coleman house.  

Quite unexpectedly, the house is handed to her on a silver platter—along with a mysterious letter, postmarked 1909, yet addressed personally to Nika. Its cryptic message: Find the key. You know where it is. Hurry, for goodness sake! 

The message triggers an irresistible drive to find that key. When she does, one twist in an old grandfather clock throws her back in time, straight into the arms of deliciously, devilishly handsome Elijah Coleman. 

Swept up in a journey of a lifetime, Nika finds herself falling in love with Eli—and with the family and friends that inhabit a time not even her vivid imagination could have conjured. But in one desperate moment of homesickness, she makes a decision that will not only alter the course of more than one life, but break her heart. 

’Til Time Do Us Part is available in Kindle and Paperback at AMAZON


Talented author Stella May is the penname for Marina Sardarova who has a fascinating history you should read on her website

Stella writes fantasy romance as well as time travel romance. She is the author of 'Till Time Do Us Part, Book 1 in her Upon a Time series, and the stand-alone book Rhapsody in Dreams. Love and family are two cornerstones of her stories and life. Stella’s books are available in e-book and paperback through all major vendors.

When not writing, Stella enjoys classical music, reading, and long walks along the ocean. She lives in Jacksonville, Florida with her husband Leo of 35 years and their son George. They are her two best friends and are all partners in their family business.

Follow Stella on her website and blog Stay connected on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest.

Sunday, 7 April 2024

Guest Post: A Writer's Imagination by Paranormal Romance Author C.D. Hersh...

 

People frequently ask how and where we got our ideas to write one story let alone a series. Honestly, sometimes it's not easy, almost like ramming your head into a huge cement abutment. Yet thankfully storylines and scenes magically appear in our minds. Sometimes more than we want.

Every book demands who, what, where, and why. The plotline. From time to time that necessity confuses those images into a gnarled mess. But we work through it. 

So how do we find ideas that allow our imaginations to run rampant? Magazines and old telephone books are marvelous for coming up with character names. Be sure to follow the mix and match theory. That means do not use the full name of any one person or you might find you have a lawsuit in the making.

We love to travel and often our imaginations are sparked by a billboard or other people on the road, even pit stops offer fodder for a new story. Those diners and rest stops are a wealth of fodder too an author.

The grocery store is another great place to gain ideas. For example – the next time you’re in the store take a good look at the lady scanning your purchases or maybe it’s the bagger who draws your attention. Maybe on this trip you notice something different about one or the other. Maybe something different in her dark brown eyes as if they’re hiding a secret. Of course, you can’t ask, so you allow your imagination to take over. What if she’s a crime stopper by night? After a hard day on her feet, she shrugs out of her sweat filled uniform then into black jeans, a black turtleneck, and low-heeled boots. She shakes out her chocolate brown hair from its topknot and it cascades to her shoulders…You get the idea.

As writing partners, we bounce ideas off each other with the C in C.D. Hersh writing explicit notes. After a few days or we revisit C's list and start the occasionally wonderful, but more often heart wrenching, practice of elimination. After all, what writer doesn’t love his/her words? We do our best not to judge or tick off each other too much since we're married. Besides, I love my wife. Seeing her happy makes me happy. 

Here is a little about our shapeshifter series on Amazon. We hope you enjoy reading about them as much as we did writing them.

TITLE: The Turning Stone Chronicles

GENRE: Urban fantasy, Paranormal, Romance

HEAT LEVEL: Sensual

Three ancient Celtic families. A magical Bloodstone that enables the wearers to shape shift. A charge to use the stone’s power to benefit mankind, and a battle, that is going on even today, to control the world. Can the Secret Society of shape shifters called the Turning Stone Society heal itself and bring peace to our world?

Find out in The Series The Turning Stone Chronicles

Book one of the chronicles titled “The Promised One” available on Amazon
In the wrong hands, the Turning Stone ring is a powerful weapon for evil. So, when homicide detective Alexi Jordan discovers her secret society mentor has been murdered and his magic ring stolen, she is forced to use her shape-shifting powers to catch the killer. By doing so, she risks the two most important things in her life—her badge and the man she loves.

Rhys Temple always knew his fiery cop partner and would-be-girlfriend, Alexi Jordan, had a few secrets. He considers that part of her charm. But when she changes into a man, he doesn’t find that as charming. He’ll keep her secret to keep her safe, but he’s not certain he can keep up a relationship—professional or personal.

Danny Shaw needs cash for the elaborate wedding his fiancée has planned, so he goes on a mugging spree. But when he kills a member of the secret society of Turning Stones and steals a magic ring that gives him the power to shape shift, Shaw gets more than he bargained for.

Book two of The Turning Stone Chronicles titled “Blood Brothers” available on Amazon.
When Delaney Ramsey is enlisted to help train two of the most powerful shape shifters the Turning Stone Society has seen in thousands of years, she suspects one of them is responsible for the disappearance of her daughter. To complicate matters, the man has a secret that could destroy them all. Bound by honor to protect the suspect, Delaney must prove his guilt without losing her life to his terrible powers or revealing to the police captain she’s falling for that she’s a shape shifter with more than one agenda.

The minute Captain Williams lays eyes on Delaney Ramsey, he knows she’s trouble. Uncooperative, secretive, and sexy, he can’t get her out of his mind. When he discovers she has a personal agenda for sifting through all the criminal records in his precinct, and secretly investigating his best detective, he can’t let her out of his sight. He must find out what she’s looking for before she does something illegal. If she steps over the line, he’s not certain he can look the other way for the sake of love.

Book three of The Turning Stone Chronicles titled “Son of the Moonless Night” currently available on Amazon.
Owen Todd Jordan Riley has a secret. He’s a shape shifter who has been hunting and killing his own kind. To him the only good shifter is a dead shifter. Revenge for the death of a friend motivates him, and nothing stands in his way . . . except Katrina Romanovski, the woman he is falling in love with.

Deputy coroner Katrina Romanovski has a secret, too. She hunts and kills paranormal beings like Owen. At least she did. When she rescues Owen from an attack by a werebear she is thrust back into the world she thought she’d left. Determined to find out what Owen knows about the bear, she begins a relationship meant to collect information. What she gets is something quite different love with a man she suspects of murder. Can she reconcile his deception and murderous revenge spree and find a way to redeem him? Or will she condemn him for the same things she has done and walk away from love?

Book four of The Turning Stone Chronicles titled “The Mercenary & the Shifters” available on Amazon.
A desperate call from an ex-military buddy lands a mercenary soldier in the middle of a double kidnapping, caught in an ancient shape shifter war, and ensnared between two female shape shifters after the same thing ... him.

The first four books of their paranormal romance series entitled The Turning Stone Chronicles Series page are available on Amazon. Their standalone novella, Can’t Stop The Music, is in the Soul Mate Tree collection with twelve other authors from various genres.

Putting words and stories on paper is second nature to the husband and wife co-authors whose pen name is C.D. Hersh. They’ve written separately since they were teenagers and discovered their unique, collaborative abilities in the mid-90s while co-authoring a number of dramas, six which have been produced in Ohio, where they live. Their interactive Christmas production had five seasonal runs in their hometown and has been sold in Virginia, California, and Ohio. As high school sweethearts, Catherine and Donald believe in true love and happily ever after. Which is why they write it!

When they aren’t collaborating on a book, they enjoy reading; singing; theatre and drama; traveling; remodeling houses (Donald has remodeled something in every home they’ve owned); and antiquing. Catherine, who loves gardening, has recently drawn Donald into her world as a day laborer. Catherine is an award-winning gardener — you can see some of her garden on their website.

They are looking forward to many years of co-authoring and book sales, and a lifetime of happily-ever-after endings on the page and in real life.

You can see excerpts of their books, connect with, and follow C.D. Hersh at:

Website

Facebook

Amazon Author Page

Twitter