Tag Archive for: wild waters

New Release from Bethany Maines

by Bethany Maines
Today is the release date for my new novella – Wild Waters!!  This is my first time doing true romance (sex
scenes – eep!) and I’m very excited for everyone to get a chance to read it!
Purchase Wild Waters at:

Or enter to win a free copy on my website:
WILD WATERS (with Sienna Lance)
His duty. Her secrets. The mission that brings
them together will tear them apart.
In the steamy jungle of 1960’s era Vietnam,
when a team of Navy SEALs are brought together with a pair of reporters, no one
is prepared for the explosive secrets their encounter will reveal. Lt. Ben
Kolley, former WWII frogman, leads one of the first teams of Navy SEALs in 1968
Vietnam. His wild pack of soldiers  have earned their reputations as
“green ghosts” on the Mekong River and none is more elusive than Catch,
the point-man with an uncanny sense of the water. The reporters, a bumbling
drunken writer, and Kahele, a female photographer with a sharp
mind, dark eyes, and an even darker secret are the first allowed to
interview a SEAL team and both are intent on nailing their assignment. But
neither Kahele or Catch are prepared to discover an attraction for each other
that’s like nothing they’ve ever experienced. Soon, Catch is breaking all
the rules to be with her, and Kahele finds herself entangled by a passion
she’s never felt before.  But for Ben, Kahele dredges up horrifying
memories of an old mission – one where not all of his team returned. Can Kahele
be trusted or is she the monster Ben fears? The clock is ticking, and soon all
their lives may depend on Ben’s decisions.  SEALs believe
they can survive anything, but can they survive the truth?

***
Bethany Maines is the author of the Carrie
Mae Mysteries
, Tales from the City of
Destiny
and An Unseen Current.
 
You can also view the Carrie Mae youtube video
or catch up with her on Twitter and Facebook.

My Toddler Works for James Patterson

by Bethany Maines
My dad says he invented the skateboard.
He says that he had never before seen or heard of a
skateboard when he put a plank on skate wheels. Of course, his invention went
no further than a backyard of summer fun, but he still likes to claim his
invention when some youth sails by on a long board. 
Well, now I feel his pain. 
James Patterson, Mr. Prolific himself, is in the process of releasing
what he’s calling “Book Shots” — novella length works, penned with co-authors, that
cost less than five dollars. 
You have no idea how annoyed this makes me.
Because it was MY idea. 
This month I’m releasing Wild Waters, a novella length paranormal romance
(sex scenes!) story.  The genre is
outside of my usual brand, but I thought the structure and topic were
interesting (reporters, SEALs, Vietnam!). I also thought my readers might enjoy
something at a lower price point, but in my style of writing.  I examined the options.  I had the thoughts.  I came up with the plan. 

And then James Patterson stole it out of my brain!  How dare he use his larger amounts of money,
time and fame to launch my idea!  It
makes me want to march right over to his house and give him a toddler.  Let’s see how fast he can type then.  Toddlers should be like weights for
jockeys.  If Vegas gambled on writer’s
turning in manuscripts on time, I’m sure that they would have developed some
sort of toddler distribution system by now.  Fortunately, for Mr. Patterson and for me,
there’s plenty of room in this world for novella’s and writers of all kinds,
with or without toddlers. Good luck to
both of us with our tiny books.
***

PRE-ORDER TODAY

WILD WATERS (with Sienna Lance)
His duty. Her secrets. The mission that brings them together will tear them apart.

In the steamy jungle of 1960’s era Vietnam, when a team of Navy SEALs are brought together with a pair of reporters, no one is prepared for the explosive secrets their encounter will reveal. Lt. Ben Kolley, former WWII frogman, leads one of the first teams of Navy SEALs in 1968 Vietnam. His wild pack of soldiers have earned their reputations as “green ghosts” on the Mekong River and none is more elusive than Catch, the point-man with an uncanny sense of the water. The reporters, a bumbling drunken writer, and Kahele, a female photographer with a sharp mind, dark eyes, and an even darker secret are the first allowed to interview a SEAL team and both are intent on nailing their assignment. But neither Kahele or Catch are prepared to discover an attraction for each other that’s like nothing they’ve ever experienced. Soon, Catch is breaking all the rules to be with her, and Kahele finds herself entangled by a passion she’s never felt before. But for Ben, Kahele dredges up horrifying memories of an old mission – one where not all of his team returned. Can Kahele be trusted or is she the monster Ben fears? The clock is ticking, and soon all their lives may depend on Ben’s decisions. SEALs believe they can survive anything, but can they survive the truth?

Organizing My World(s)

by Bethany Maines

An author’s job is not just to tell a story, but to decide how a story should be told. Is it better
in first or third person? Is it told in one long march of words or are their
chapters? We have to decide genre, tone and feeling. And once those decisions
have been made an author must create and track the main plot of the story – the
one that we struggle to capture in the blurb text on the back cover – as well as
the sub-plots, underlying themes, and finally, the characters themselves.  All of those pieces require not just the ability
to write, but also the ability to track information. Because, as any serious
reader will tell you (sometimes at great length), consistency and details
matter greatly to a well written book, and while we can rely on an editor for
some items, they are only human and can only catch so much.  It is in an author’s best interest to provide
the cleanest manuscript possible.
I’m currently working on two vastly different stories: the
fourth Carrie Mae Mystery Glossed Cause and a Romance Horror
novella Wild Waters.  Each story comes
with an array of characters, research and plot twists that to be perfectly
honest I can’t hold in my brain. 
Possibly pre-production of a toddler I could have kept hold of all the
details, but no longer. Now, to keep all my worlds organized, I must rely on a system of notes, plot outlines and
spreadsheets.

For the Carrie Mae books I track characters with a spread sheet
that notes who they are (name, basic role, job or company) and also what book
they have appeared in or if they have been deleted or omitted from a book.  I also have a rather extensive style sheet
that helps me keep track of how certain things, such as chapter headings are
formatted and whether or not I’m consistently formatting things like “AK-47”
and “INTERPOL” the same way over multiple books.
For Wild Waters I’m writing in two
different time periods – WWII and Vietnam ­– and they each use distinctive
slang that I organize in a couple of basic lists.  There are
also multiple character points of view and it is important to keep track of
what characters know and when they know it, so that each plot point is revealed
at the correct time. Tracking character
arcs are more difficult and sometimes require multiple ways of
visualizing.  I will frequently write out
the plot from each characters point of view or I will graph it out on a virtual
whiteboard, utilizing the main plot points.

There is no perfect system of course, and each author must
work the way that works for them. But when examining a well-written book, I am
frequently in awe, not just of the beautifully constructed words or strong turn
of phrase, but the underlying construction of a book.  Sometimes, I find it amazing that any books
get written at all.

***
Bethany Maines is the author of the Carrie
Mae Mysteries
, Tales from the City of
Destiny
and An Unseen Current.
 
You can also view the Carrie Mae youtube video
or catch up with her on Twitter and Facebook.