1. Do you write a single
genre or do your fingers flow over the keys creating tales in many forms? Does
your reading choices reflect your writing choices? Are there genres you
wouldn’t attempt?
Currently, I’m writing
only short contemporary romance – and am loving it! In a drawer (or on the computer), I’ve got
unpublished full or partial manuscripts in the romantic suspense, mystery, and
YA genres. I also have a drawer filled
with scribbled notes and notebooks for all those genres and more. You never know where the muse is going to
take you or when you’ll come up with an idea for one genre but put a spin on it
to fit another.
My reading choices do
reflect the writing choices, although I pick up books outside my writing genres,
too.
2. Heroes, Heroines,
Villains. Which are your favorite to write? Does one of these come easy and
why?
I don’t do too many
villains, except for antagonists, who aren’t true villains but can cause tons
of trouble for the heroes and heroines.
I love writing heroines
because most of my readers (and I) identify with them.
But I’d have to say my
favorite character to write is the hero.
I love almost all types, from the best friend/boy next door to the bad
boy. No matter who my hero is, though,
he’s got characteristics from the full spectrum. He can be tough when he has to be, gentle
with kids and animals, and tender with the heroine at all the right times.
3. Heroes. How do you
find them? Do pictures, real life or plain imagination create the man you want
every reader to love? Do they come before the plot or after you have the idea
for the story?
I find them everywhere
you mentioned. I never set out to create
whole characters from the world around me, and I never take a person from real
life and just plop him or her into the story.
Most often, my story people come from my imagination.
Usually the hero or
heroine shows up first, then the idea follows.
But sometimes it’s the other way around.
In the first Flagman’s Folly story, A
Rancher’s Pride, I wanted to write about a hero who discovers he’s the
daddy of a child he’s never known he had.
It’s a storyline I love. It’s
also a very popular one, so I’d hoped to make this book a little
different. And I started with the what-ifs. I thought, what if the hero had a child he
couldn’t communicate with…because she was deaf.
And then I put poor Sam into the story and let him sink or swim. ;)
In one of my earlier
books, Court Me, Cowboy, I envisioned
a man sitting on the edge of a bed, tossing a wedding ring in the air and
catching it. In two tosses of that ring,
I had his backstory and the main conflict with the heroine. The plot wasn’t completely fleshed out, of
course, but I knew the basics. And they
didn’t change when I wrote the book. The
opening of the story reads just as it had first come to me: One day
soon, he’d get rid of this wedding ring.
4. Heroines. How do you
find them? Do pictures, real life or imagination create the woman you want the
reader to root for? Do they appear before the plot or after you have the idea
for the story?
Same as above for the
hero. In the case of the new series, The
Hitching Post Hotel, the heroines all arrived after the initial plotting, since
a secondary character—Jed, their matchmaking grandfather—had come to me first. The plot of book two, A Rancher of Her Own, began because I wanted to write a country
boy/city girl book. It turned into a
real opposites-attract story when I discovered Jane is a photojournalist who
works all over the world and ranch manager Pete is a loner who has no desire
ever to leave Cowboy Creek.
In another Flagman’s
Folly story, Rancher at Risk, the heroine
is the aunt of Sam’s little girl, and she also happens to be deaf. After playing only walk-on roles in the
previous books in the series, she insisted I let her take center stage.
5. Villains or
villainesses or an antagonist, since they don’t always have to be the bad guy
or girl. They can be a person opposed to the hero’s or heroine’s obtaining
their goal. How do you choose one? How do you make them human?
When I’m plotting out
the hero and heroine’s story, I think about what they need. Someone to oppose them? To lend them an ear? To show them by example or experience why a
choice they’re about to make is right or wrong?
Once I know what the
main characters and story need, my intention is to make the villains or
protagonists human by fleshing them out with their own characteristics,
backstories, and goals. I try to be
careful about weaving that info in so that these characters don’t steal the
show.
6. What is your latest
release? Who is the hero, heroine and or the villain?
My latest release is The Cowboy’s Little Surprise and is book
one in the new series, The Hitching Post Hotel.
Cole left Cowboy Creek
after raising his younger sister almost singlehandedly. He’s a roving cowboy, a real player, and the
boy who once did the heroine wrong.
Because of his childhood, he plans never to have a family…and then he
finds out he’s already a daddy.
Tina is a granddaughter
of the rancher who owns the Hitching Post.
She gave her heart to Cole in grade school, and in senior high he cruelly
tossed her love away. Quiet and
reserved, she works as bookkeeper for the hotel, but when Cole’s return to town
threatens to turn her son’s life upside-down, she turns jumps into protective
mode to fight Cole every step of the way.
And the “villain,”
Tina’s matchmaking grandpa, is more of a protagonist - though he does create
lots of trouble!
7. What are you working
on now?
A Rancher of Her Own just went through final edits, and I’ve started working on the
third book in the series, which will be out in December. All three books revolved around the Hitching
Post, which Jed’s granddaughters have agreed to help their grandfather turn
into a destination wedding locale.
Book three is the story
of Jed’s middle granddaughter, who visits Cowboy Creek for Christmas and is
given charge of the hotel’s first wedding.
Andi is now a widow with two small children whose CIA-agent husband was
killed on the job. She’ll do anything to
save her children from more hurt.
Mitch is an injured L.A.
cop who comes back to Cowboy Creek to recuperate. On a visit to Jed, his former boss, at the Hitching
Post, he encounters his former teenaged sweetheart, who broke his heart and
walked away. She’s got something
troubling her, and he’s determined to find out what it is—and her grandpa’s
hearing wedding bells again!
8. How can people find
you?
I love to have readers
drop in to chat.
They can find me at any
of the following places:
Barbara
White Daille lives with her husband in the sunny U.S. Southwest. Though they love the warm winters and the
lizards in their front yard, they haven’t gotten used to the scorpions in the
bathroom.
Barbara’s thrilled to share news about
the debut of a brand-new series, The Hitching Post Hotel, about a matchmaking
grandpa determined to see his three granddaughters wed. The series has just kicked off this week with
The Cowboy’s Little Surprise,
followed by A Rancher of Her Own in
July and a third as-yet-untitled book in December.
3 comments:
Janet - thanks so much for inviting me to blog with you today and tomorrow!
Sorry I'm late in checking in. Am having some Internet issues.
I'll be touching base here later today and over the weekend, if anyone wants to chat.
Thanks for stopping by. There are alsays lots of reads and few comments Janet
I think that often happens, Janet. Some website forms aren't compatible with people's browsers or programs, so while they read the posts, they have trouble trying to leave a comment.
See you over at the next (Saturday) post. ;)
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