2010
04.07

Today is Rogue Wolf’s release day! Here’s the official blurb:

Captain Trent Rolston knows his space pirate crew isn’t the biggest or the best, but that doesn’t keep him from diligently finding new targets to pillage. He also has a more personal mission: to discover what’s been haunting his mechanic, Vince, and convince him they could be more than friends.

But Vince is harboring deep secrets. He’s living his life on the run as a human, hiding his alien heritage, hunted by his own tribe for daring to love an enemy. Despite his fidelity to his deceased partner, Vince realizes he’s still affected by the mating cycle, and the drive to claim Trent is too powerful to avoid for long… and Trent isn’t helping, despite the danger as Vince’s tribe tracks him down and marks the lovers for death.

It’s available in eBook format over at Dreamspinner Press!

2010
04.02

Rogue Wolf will be available next Wednesday, April 7th! I’m so excited to have my very first release day :D

2010
03.12

After a long hiatus from participating in #fridayflash, here’s a meager fantasy/horror offering. :)

On Ginkgo Wings Banner

On Ginkgo Wings
by Violet Hilton

Jinny looked up from the hard packed dirt of the garden path. She glimpsed dark twisted branches, yellow swaying leaves and triangles of cloudy gray beyond. Ginkgo leaves twirled gracefully on their way down. The inconstant breeze sent them over her, around her, so that the golden leaves fell on her hair.

A crash sounded in the house. A scream.

Jinny reached up with one hand. Her eyes refused to focus on her dirty skin and blood caked nails. All she could see were the leaves. Happy yellow fan-shaped wings fluttered down to her, slipped past her fingers and landed on her sweater vest. She wanted to fly away on those wings. If she could collect them all she could fly up over the treetops and escape her headache.

Another crash and the sound of broken glass. Fast footsteps, both heavy and light.

A beam of sunlight filtered down through the clouds and leaves. Jinny squinted one eye and pushed herself up to her feet. She danced in a circle, freckled face turned up to the sun’s stray ray, arms outstretched, ginkgo leaves swirling around and catching in her long hair. She closed her eyes and smiled.

“Jinny?” a voice whispered. “What are you doing?”

Jinny imagined she could hear the leaves falling. She could feel them fall on her hands, wrists, cheeks, and each one made a different sound as it lighted against her skin. A note from her mother’s piano. A kitten’s mewl. A bird’s trill.

“We have to run. We have to run before they find us again!”

Jinny wanted the leaves to smell like summer flowers or strawberries. She didn’t like the scent of dirt and blood.

“They already got Mom…”

A hand grabbed Jinny’s arm and pulled hard. She shrieked and stumbled, eyes opened wide again, her heart racing.

“Bea?” Jinny frowned. She said her sister’s name louder, but it caught in her throat.

“Not so loud!” Bea looked frantic and sweaty. Her dark hair was sticking to her forehead as she tugged Jinny towards the gate. “What’s wrong with your ears?”

Bea’s lips moved so fast, but there were no words. Jinny understood well enough. There was no sound in the afterlife. Just golden leaves dancing down around them as they jogged, then ran hand in hand down the ginkgo lined path. Beams of sunlight filtered down like tiny spotlights and made Jinny smile again. She’d gather enough leaves to make golden ginkgo wings for both of them, then they could fly up to heaven and pretend to be angels.

Jinny let go of her sister’s hand and stopped to catch her breath. She bent over, hands on her skirted legs, and was glad the scrapes on her knees had stopped bleeding, even if she wasn’t surprised. Bea tugged at her arm, but Jinny waved her off. She hadn’t yet caught her second wind.

Bea pointed frantically at the house while backing away towards the gate. They still had yards to go before they would meet the old fence.

The ground shuddered and Jinny finally looked over her shoulder. The two monsters who’d killed her and Bea hurried down the path, their wide feet striking the ground heavily. The ginkgo leaves pelted them. A warning from the trees. Jinny didn’t understand how the monsters had followed them into the afterlife. She doubted their mother could have taken both of them down. They were taller, wider and stronger than any man she’d ever met. Little red eyes and bulbous noses were their most prominent features if she ignored their huge, clawed fists.

Jinny stared up at the monsters. They grinned at her; a display of jagged teeth. She knew they couldn’t hurt her anymore. Not here.

The nearest monster swung its club of a fist at her head again.

Scrawny arms wrapped around Jinny’s waist and pulled her forcefully. She tumbled backwards, taking Bea with her to the ground, and watched the monster swing its arm into a new beam of sunlight. The hulking limb turned from green to gray.

A smile brightened Jinny’s face as she watched the monster lurch into the sunbeam. The weight of its arm was too heavy to hold up, and the monster turned gray wherever the ray of light touched it. The other monster ran off through the ginkgo trees.

Jinny crouched down and picked up every golden leaf she could reach. Soon Bea wouldn’t have a reason to cry. There were no trolls in heaven.

2010
03.09

I’m proud to present the cover for Rogue Wolf:

The cover for my first book! It’s still hard to believe. :D

Rogue Wolf will be available in ebook format from Dreamspinner Press this Spring. Oh! And my name and official author bio now appear on the Dreamspinner author list as well. Awesome!

2010
03.09

I have seen the final version of the cover and it is gorgeous! I’m so happy with it. It’s so much what I wanted and damn, I think it’s sexy! I’ll share it here as soon as I can.

Now, I can’t just spend my week fawning over Rogue Wolf’s cover. I have a galley to review! :D

I’ll update my blog with the release date once the fine folks at Dreamspinner let me know a finalized date. I feel like it’s getting so close now! Nobody pinch me, I don’t want to wake up. ;)

2010
03.06

A lot of exciting things have been happening in the last couple of months relating to Rogue Wolf!

So far, it still looks like my very first novella will be a spring release. I got the sketch for my cover, which is being done by the same artist that did the cover for one of my favorite m/m romance novels. I’m so excited to see the finished look, as the sketch alone is amazing! It’s so close to what I’d pictured in my mind for my dream cover for this book, but honestly I think the layout of elements is even better than what I’d envisioned. The title font alone is perfection, and that’s not even speaking for the rest of it!

I’m still working through a round of edits this week, which is rather interesting. Apparently I have a lot of leaps of logic, but nothing so crazy that I can’t work through it now that it’s been pointed out to me. Reading through the edits for the first time was kind of uncomfortable, but I’m glad they’re not asking me to change any major plot or character elements. I didn’t know what to expect at all when going into this outside of experiences I’ve read about from other authors, but the editing process so far isn’t really painful at all.

I think I’d been in a little bit of shock and denial about Rogue Wolf’s eventual publication even after signing the contract and getting things under way. Even after writing up my official author bio and approving the story’s blurb… it didn’t really start to hit home that this is one-hundred-percent happening until I got the edits.

WOW I still can’t believe this is happening, but I’m so excited that it is! I can’t wait for Trent and Vince’s story to be available to anyone who wants to read it! :D

2010
02.01

My husband and mother often point out that one of my biggest flaws is my inability to finish most projects. Now, while I think half the time they do this out of some brand of frustration, I do know that they also want to use those little nudges to push me onward. They want to see me succeed. A little reverse psychology never hurt anyone, right? ;)

The older I get, the more frustrated I get with myself when I see that I’m not finishing my works in progress. It could be writing or knitting or crochet. Sometimes it’s not even “craft” related exactly. Regardless, I have a problem with putting too many irons in the fire at a time and not seeing everything through to completion. But, what I’m happy to see, is that I’ve been getting better about this little problem over the past year or so. The fact that I now have a few publishing credits is a case in point!

What works for me is the back burner. It’s okay to put stuff on the back burner so long as you are prepared to revisit said stuff and make a decision about whether or not it’s a dish worth spicing up or something that needs to be tossed. And now it’s time for me to put a couple of projects on the back burner and bring an old pot to the front of the figurative stove. This year I’m gearing up, as I said in a previous post, to finish my fantasy pirate m/m romance novel A Prince’s Ransom. I started writing this story back in 2007 and I finally figured out how to get my main characters through a bad situation so they can get their happily ever after!

I knew I’d have to chop out some of the story I’d already written, which always makes me cringe, but luckily it’s only about 1,300 words. It will be very worth it. Like pruning a plant so it can have a happier and healthier future.

Plotting is now my friend, and I wouldn’t start writing any long fiction without a plot anymore! Because, while the back burner method is great… I just can’t stand the idea of waiting three years for a plot epiphany every time I get stuck.

2010
01.18

Siren’s Charge, one of my short stories, is a good example of a piece that’s gone through a long, difficult journey into being the story it is today. It was plucked from a longer work and groomed, extended and shaped until it told the tale it needed to tell. And now it is proudly on display in the current issue of Drops of Crimson!

I’m so happy to see this story published as I’d had many mixed opinions of it from critique groups and beta readers. Some felt it needed to go back to being the start of a longer work. Others thought it was fine as is. Still others had suggestions for significant changes to the flow of the story. But I got to a point where I was happy with Siren’s Charge and figured I’d give it a shot at publication before retiring it for a few more years.

I’m glad I gave it a chance and I’m even more glad Drops of Crimson did too!

2009
12.09

A WIP Wednesday! Oh my!

This week’s baby steps back into a healthy writing habit have included getting Working Stiffs back out on submission, typing up handwritten plot notes for my current novel WIP (Miss Preston’s Masquerade) and working on a new flash story to hopefully appear as part of #fridayflash this week. Definitely a more organizational type of week, but I think getting everything together in some semblance of order is important. It’s like getting your utensils and pots and ingredients out before you cook.

I’ve also done some thinking on which projects I need to cull from the herd. After taking a look at notes from my critique group on In Your Dreams, I’ve decided to permanently shelve that story. That’s not to say I’ll never want to tell those characters’ stories, but I need to wait until I can/will do it well. A lot more world-building is involved than I thought for that project and it’s not something I’d like to work on right now. I also realized that without major plot revamping, a couple smaller project ideas will go nowhere, so they’ve been put on the very, very back burner for now.

As the year comes to a close I start to think about my writing goals for the next year. 2009 has been an insanely good year so far as my writing life goes, and I hope to improve upon that awesomeness in 2010! One goal I will be setting for the upcoming new year is to finish one of my unfinished novels. I had an epiphany about how to continue writing Demon Catharsis (m/m urban fantasy romance with angels and demons oh my!) and I’ve attempted to brainstorm on how to fix a horrid plot kink in A Prince’s Ransom (m/m romance with pirates arrr!). Both stories and casts of characters are near and dear to my heart.

P.S. I am aware of the fact that the tag search function is currently completely broken on my website. I’m still looking for a solution to the problem. Hopefully, however, commenting works again. :)

For more info about the wonderful WIP Wednesday phenomenon please check out Kate Karyus Quinn’s blog. Share your weekly progress!

2009
12.06

This is the first year I didn’t throw everything I had into writing my NaNoWriMo novel. I actually learned a lot about the kinds of stories that I really enjoy writing while avoiding writing The Lost Prince. I tapped out at about 12k words on this project and I doubt I’ll be picking it up again any time soon unless the plot is given a major overhaul. Why? At 12k words into the story… there was no more angst. Okay, sure, the characters had their little internal conflicts. But those conflicts were majorly watered down and… kinda boring. I know plenty of people love writing (and reading!) fluffy little romantic romps, but I’m apparently not one of them.

I love buckets of character angst and I’m not ashamed to admit it!

However, NaNo fail aside, I do have some big news to share! In the last four weeks I’ve received not one, but two acceptance letters! The first was from Library of the Living Dead Press saying they will be including Melissa’s Letter in their Letters from the Dead anthology. And today I received the news that has made my year: Dreamspinner Press will be publishing Rogue Wolf!!

Both publications are tentatively scheduled for a Spring 2010 release, but I’ll keep my blog and site updated with new info on both as it becomes available.

I’m so excited!! :D