Tuesday, 29 March 2022

#TeaserTuesday

Tara is looking forward to some time alone in the house, even with her dad setting down the groundrules...

BUY NOW: http://www.books2read.comDTSD

[ID: A bright blue background with the title DYING THOUGHTS - SEVENTH DEATH at the top and Out now in ebook and paperback below the title. The except reads:

“I’m sure I’ll survive six weeks without you!” I said, laughing a little. “I’ll have Kaolin over and we can have a few raves…kidding about that last part!” Though, I did plan to throw a party or two, Dad didn’t need to know about that.
“The list also has the ground rules. No boys after eleven. You don’t miss college unless you are actually sick and no parties. At all,” he replied, looking serious.
I raised my eyebrow. “Dad, I’m seventeen, I should be able to have ‘boys’ over if I want, besides you’ll be living it up with hot groupies, won’t you?!”

At the bottom is Joey Paul and just below that the website www.joeypaulonline.com, in the bottom left corner is the Readers' Favorite Review seal, and in the bottom right corner is the logo for Bug Books. END ID]

 

Monday, 28 March 2022

5 Facts About Joey As An Author

5 FACTS ABOUT JOEY AS AN AUTHOR

Last week I talked about five facts about my ideas process (found here) and this week will be the last of these for a bit where I'm gonna talk about five facts about me as an author. A few things to get out of the way if you're new to the blog, I'm Joey Paul, and I'm an indie author of almost twenty books, and I've been writing since I was nineteen, over twenty years now! I write young adult, across a variety of genres from paranormal/mystery to crime to urban fantasy to dystopian and some others I'm missing along the way. Now that's done, let's jump into the facts.

FACT #1: I DON'T HANDWRITE MUCH OF ANYTHING
I used to be someone who would handwrite their chapters and then type them up, editing as I went. This was the case all the way up to my fifth book, Lynne & Hope, and I think it was during that, when the writing got too painful that I stopped doing it. I still edit as I go, but I don't handwrite pretty much anything to do with writing, except my autograph and such in signed books. I have Fibromyalgia and it's made it way too painful to handwrite and grip a pen for any length of time, so I find it easier to get the writing done on a keyboard and go from there.

FACT #2: I'M VERY MUCH A PLANNER OF MY TIME, AND NOT MUCH ELSE

People will talk about how organised I am, and while I will agree with that, it generally only applies to time management things. I don't plan my writing much, and I don't plan pretty much anything else in my life. I use a planner because it works for me, and allows me to stay on target and productive. When you have deadlines, it's a good idea to work out how you're going to get those done, and planning has been a long process to get to the point where I am now.

Outside of planning my time, I'm pretty much someone who takes things as they come. Because of my health, I know that schedules and such get knocked out all the time. Like I know that sometimes I'll plan to do this and that on a certain day, but poor health will stop me from managing it, and because of that, I've learned to be pretty flexible, even when it comes to plans for writing and the like.

FACT #3: I DIDN'T GROW UP WANTING TO BE AN AUTHOR
Or at least it wasn't a concious thing. I did write stories and books through my teen years, and I did ponder the plans to maybe one day be published, but my dream growing up was to be a doctor, and I planned my classes at school and college to reflect that. Of course my health got in the way and that was blown out of the water, and so I turned to writing. It was something, as I said, that I'd played around with, and here was the chance to actually do something with it. I wrote with the plan to get published, but that didn't happen until 2005 and even then it wasn't a good publisher, so I turned to self-pub/indie in 2011 and haven't looked back since.

FACT #4: I FEEL LIKE I COULD WRITE ANYWHERE
I know that it was a thing pre-pandemic, that writers would go to coffee shops and the like, and write there. For a long time I didn't do that because of access issues, but now, even with the pandemic still going on, I do feel like I could set up and write pretty much anywhere. I've always got a lot of hospital visits and appointments, and while I don't always write at these because of space and ill health, I have found that I can write, and do pretty well, while in hospital. It's something to pass the time with, and I'm usually quite able to shut out the noise around me and just focus on getting the words on the page.

FACT #5: WRITING IS MY IDENTITY
I know that for some people, making their job a part of their core personality, is a bad idea, but for me, writing is, and I think always will be, a big part of who I am. I tell stories because otherwise I don't know how to deal with things. I will work things out in small pieces of fiction. I will have themes of my own life going through the plot. I don't write self-inserts and such, but I do have a lot of me in my characters, depending on what they're going through and where I was during that period of my life. Writing is very much a way I cope, and how I process things, and I think that's okay.

So there we go, five facts about me as an author! I do plan to do more of these five facts, but for the time being, this is the last one. I hope you've enjoyed learning more about my process and how I deal with writing and editing and all that goes with that.

Any questions? Lemme know in the comments!

Follow Joey here on her blog, or on Facebook or Tumblr to be kept up to date with the latest news regarding Joey and her books

Friday, 25 March 2022

Review of Making Eden by KRS McEntire

In post-apocalyptic Chicago, only the Cleansed survive.

Seventeen-year-old Ivy would do anything to save her mother—giving up her mutant abilities in a Cleansing ceremony is a price she’s willing to pay. It’s the only way to get her hands on the medicine her mother needs. 

Asher hopes the Cleansing will secure a safer life for his girlfriend, Ivy—one where she’s less likely to get slaughtered for simply walking down the street. A life where she can get legally married, ideally, to him. 

But Ivy’s Cleansing goes horribly wrong. When mutants disappear, Asher must discover where the missing mutants have gone. Will Asher and Ivy find each other and discover the truth about the treatment before more mutants vanish?

Amazon 

My Review: 5 STARS

I read the first two books in this series one after the other, and had to pre-order this one to find out what happened next. I loved the way each book in the series has focused on two different people. The story was engaging from the first page and took you along for a ride. You find yourself on the edge of your seat, trying to guess where the twists and turns are going to take you. I adored the ending, adored the way the series came together and the world building along the way. This is a must read for anyone who loves dystopian or post-apocalyptic stories. Very very well written and highly engaging and recommended!

Join Joey here on the blog on Fridays for interviews, reviews and guest bloggers. If you'd be interested in doing any of those, you can contact Joey here.

Tuesday, 22 March 2022

#TeaserTuesday

Hetti has a lot to get used to, including her new partner's driving skills...

BUY NOW: http://www.books2read.com/WAM

[ID: A green background with the title WALK A MILE at the top and Out now in ebook and paperback just above the title. The except reads:

I’d thought that the reason Sabrina drove so fast on the way to the scene was because of the urgency needed with a suspected murder, but it turned out that she drove like that normally. I was glad that my stomach was empty because the number of close calls made me feel like I was on a rollercoaster and about to puke. Sabrina had two lead feet since she accelerated as hard and as fast as she braked.

At the bottom is Joey Paul and just below that the website www.joeypaulonline.com, in the bottom left corner is the New Apple award seal, and in the bottom right corner is the logo for Bug Books. END ID]

 

Monday, 21 March 2022

5 Facts About My Ideas Process

5 FACTS ABOUT MY IDEAS PROCESS

Last week I talked about five facts about my editing process (found here) and this week I plan to go into my ideas process. Every writer is different when it comes to dealing with ideas, to planning and plotting, or pantsing through the drafting process. You all know that I'm more of a plantser, leaning towards more pantsing, but that I do outline through the revision process. I thought that I would focus on ideas, because that's basically where it all starts and even as I write this, I'm brewing up some new ideas!

FACT #1: IDEAS HIT ME ALL THE TIME... SOMETIMES
I know that for a lot of writers, they have more ideas than they know what to do with, and I used to be like that. Ideas would hit me, and I'd scurry off to write them down somewhere before I forgot them entirely. Nowadays, while I do have ideas floating around in my head, they don't come to a proper form unless I really focus on them. I find that while in the midst of drafting, I won't have the time or energy to devote to any fledgling ideas and will instead be focusing on getting the story I'm writing done. When it comes time to try and think up ideas, something I find myself panicking a little because what happens if I can't think of something? As I've said before, it's never happened yet, but the panic is still there, because thanks anxiety!

I do however find that when an idea hits me now, it's usually one that will take root and grow despite me trying to focus on my current projects, and when that happens, I may have to spend some time thinking it through, writing notes on it, and basically getting it out of my head so that I can go back to work. This only really works though when I have more of a fleshed out idea, so like right now I have an idea, but it's characters, a setting, and a genre, and no plot to be found, so that one is sitting in the back of my head and thinking itself up into something.

FACT #2: I TEND TO MOVE AROUND GENRES IN PATTERNS

Right now I'm more on the paranormal/mystery and contemporary genres. Sometimes I go through stages of writing just urban fantasy and early in my career I stuck to mystery and paranormal and even some straight up crime. That said, that new idea? It'd be sci-fi/crime, I just have to think of a plot to go with it. I have written across so many different genres that it can be hard for me to know ahead of time whether this new idea is going to fit in the right genre. I've always been someone who reads widely, so it doesn't surprise me that my ideas are along the same lines. I've never said I won't write any genre, and I doubt I could stick to one if I had to, it would feel too stifling and the like.

FACT #3: I DON'T FORCE IDEAS AND I DON'T FORCE CHARACTERS
I find that if I try and force myself to think of an idea, or to squish an existing one into a certain genre or with certain characters, then it just ends up flat. The characters have no personality and it takes me an entire book to try and get into their heads, which just doesn't bode well for a good revision experience. I'm more of the free range idea, let them float around in my head, and let them grow naturally. If that happens, and I can do something with it, great, if not, then I'll water that one a little more and move onto another idea. Since I'm not a hardcore planner, this can be sometimes done during the start of drafting, but mostly, I let my ideas grow and pluck them up when they're ready.

FACT #4: SOMETIMES I START WITH PLOT, SOMETIMES I START WITH CHARACTERS
I'm gonna use that idea that I keep mentioning because it feels like the best way to show you what I mean. Right now, I have two very strong characters in my head. I know their names, the way they look, what their goals are, and what they mean to each other. I don't know the plot really, in that I know that something needs to happen to one of them, but I don't know what that something is beyond a couple of brand new thoughts. I also know the setting, which is kinda unusual for me, but there we go.

Other times, I will have a solid plot, but it takes me ages to work out who the characters are and what that means for them. I will have everything down, but those characters can be pesky, and I'll end up with blank faces that I know will grow into something eventually. That said, I can, sometimes, manage to find the plot through drafting, but I have never been able to find the characters that way.

FACT #5: SOMETIMES MY IDEAS GROW WHILE I DRAFT
For those who've been here for a while, you'll know that I started Lights Out, my dystopian trilogy, thinking that it would be a standalone, when actually it turned into a trilogy. I had the plan, I had the story, but I didn't know the whole of it until I started to draft. When that happens, and it has done more than once, I will turn things over and over in my head. As a kid one of the things I hated was series that didn't know when to end. I never wanted to be that kind of writer, so when it came to series, I always liked to weigh up if the next book was needed, or have a planned ending in sight. The same happens when an idea grows. I weigh up whether it's really growing or if I just want to play with these characters some more. So far, it's not let me down.

So there we go, those are five facts about my ideas process, and next week I'll be giving you five facts about me as an author, so I hope to see you then! Ideas are the bread and butter of being a writer, but I do love that everyone has their own idea process and it's always different even if only in some small way.

Any questions? Lemme know in the comments!

Follow Joey here on her blog, or on Facebook or Tumblr to be kept up to date with the latest news regarding Joey and her books

Friday, 18 March 2022

Review of Chimera Skies by Sharlene Healy

Monsters aren't the only ones after me.

When my parents are kidnapped on our simple family vacation, my perfectly ordinary life turns upside down. A stranger rescues me and my siblings and takes us deep underground to Bunker 3. It's there we learn about chimeras, monsters that are secretly living among us. Our information comes at a price, though, and we now must remain at Bunker 3.

I know I need to find my parents, but Bunker 3 starts to feel like home. I find friends and even a little romance. If these strange nightmares would leave me alone, I know Bunker 3 is a place I could be happy in. Little by little, though, I uncover the truth: monsters aren't the only things lurking in the dark, and Bunker 3 has its fair share of darkness.

Amazon

My Review: 5 STARS

I picked this up because of the blurb and cover. It started off by pulling me into the story and making me want to know more. Sam and her family are on a road trip and then things start to go seriously wrong. I loved the characters, the closeness of the family and siblings, and adored the world building here. The romance woven through the words just made things all the more real and excitable. The story had me on the edge of my seat, and by the end I was desperate for the second book, which I plan to read ASAP! All in all an amazing first start to a series and one that leaves you hungry for more. Very much recommended for those who love a little mystery and intrigue!

Join Joey here on the blog on Fridays for interviews, reviews and guest bloggers. If you'd be interested in doing any of those, you can contact Joey here.

Tuesday, 15 March 2022

#TeaserTuesday

 

Tara isn't used to a boy's affection, and she's not sure what to do about it...

BUY NOW: http://www.books2read.com/DTSC

[ID: A close up of yellow lights background with the title DYING THOUGHTS - SIXTH CHANGE at the top and Out now in ebook and paperback just below the title. The except reads:

He asked me out about two weeks after we started at Sanford. I turned him down flat because I, let’s face it, have some issues. One being that a guy stalked me, kidnapped me, and almost killed me in May. I’m not really in the right frame of mind to start dating. Also, I’ve never dated a guy, I’ve never had a guy interested in me…well a *normal* guy that is.

At the bottom is Joey Paul and just below that the website www.joeypaulonline.com, in the top right corner is the Readers' Favorite Review seal, and in the bottom right corner is the logo for Bug Books. END ID]