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Author Archive for Jennifer Apodaca

What’s Your Tradition?

Monday, December 17th, 2007
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I’m deep in Holiday Frenzy.

The shopping is nearly finished. I haven’t wrapped a thing, but the house is all decorated.

So time to think about the baking…well I was considering trying some new cookies, and not doing the usual candies and cookies that I bake.

Right, you’d think I set fire to the kitchen with the reaction I’m getting from the Santa and the Elves (played by my husband and three sons).

What? No peanut butter balls?

No.

No English Toffee?

No.

What about the caramel turtles? Russian Tea Cakes? Peanut brittle?

No, no and no! I was thinking, Mint cookies, black and white cookies and miniature cheesecakes. Only one of you elves lives at home now, and Santa and I are trying to cut back, so I thought I’d just have enough goodies for Christmas day.

All at once, Santa and the elves cried, NO SUGAR COOKIES? WITH FROSTING, SUGAR CRYSTALS AND CHOCOLATE CHIPS?

Sigh. Want to guess what I’ll be making? Barely a week left, with more shopping to do, nothing is wrapped and yet…

It makes me grin that I set this tradition when the kids were small (they always baked with me, and still will if they are home) and they are very attached to the tradition.

So Mrs. Clause will have to get her oversized butt in gear and make at least some of the goodies. Apparently sugar cookies are non-negotiable.

Your turn! What are your non-negotiable holiday traditions? And just to stay in the holiday spirit, I’ll pick one commenter to win a $15.00 Barnes and Noble gift card. I’ll announce the winner in the comments Tuesday Morning, December 18th. You have all day Monday to comment.

Happy Holidays!

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Categories : Jennifer Apodaca

Do You Believe?

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007
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Since today is Halloween, it’s the perfect time to ask: Do you believe in legends? Do you believe that something that has existed for centuries might hold some kind of magical powers?

Like say…two jade statues?

In my book, EXTERMELY HOT— released this week!—there are two statues: The Jade Goddesses of Fertility and Virility. They are centuries old, dated back to the Aztec times and rumored to be very powerful. Their powers are the ability to unleash people’s deepest desires.

Some think they are aphrodisiacs. Some think they are priceless artifacts. And some people will kill to own them.

In EXTREMELY HOT ultimate bad boy Luke Sterling is hot on the trail of the stolen statues—and the trail leads straight to good girl Ivy York. Naturally sparks fly until things get…well…extremely hot.

In the end, both Ivy and Luke end up believing in themselves and trusting their love, than they believe in the statues. When you think about it, that’s actually a powerful kind of magic. And as the author, I can tell you that the statues helped them along!

Writing this book made me think a great deal about legends and their power. Do I believe in them? I believe that sometimes the power really is more within us than any statue or artifact. But still, anything that has “lived” for centuries is pretty awesome.

What about you? Do you all believe in legends?

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The other day

Monday, October 15th, 2007
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The other day I was hanging out with Robert Crais… Okay I am totally lying.

Seriously people, I write fiction for a living, you really shouldn’t trust me, LOL!

Truthfully (no really, you can trust me) Robert Crais was the guest speaker at the Orange County Chapter of Romance Writers of America. I did meet him, and much to my surprise, he remembered me from a previous meeting. He has that “Aw shucks, I’m just a regular guy,” charm, and he’s cute.

He’s also a very successful author.

So as I listened to him talk about his career, I was also watching how the women in the audience responded to him. They loved him, but it wasn’t just his looks. While they didn’t hurt, it was something else.

Robert Crais made himself real to all of us. He showed us his vulnerablity by telling us a little bit about his background and how his family really wasn’t supportive of his career choice. He described his mother crying on the phone, and his father refusing to come to the phone and talk to him. He told us about some of his mistakes along the way. And occassionally, he made fun of himself and laughed along with us.

By the time he finished, everyone in the room felt like they KNEW Robert Crais and they all rushed to the bookseller to buy his books.

That’s what I like to see in my heroes. I want them to be successful at some point in the book, but what really connects the heroes to the reader is giving the reader a glimpse of their struggles and vulnerablities.

So now when I think of someone who looks like hero material to me, I think of Robert Crais.

What about you all? Who do you think of as hero material?

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A Chance to Win!

Monday, September 17th, 2007
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Play along for the chance to win an advance copy (uncorrected proof) of my November Brava EXTREMELY HOT! I’ll pick two winners from the comments, and post the winners in the comments section on Tuesday.

Read this quote:

The door to the office kitchen was closed.

Ivy York stared at the dingy beige door, a knot of anxiety ballooning in her stomach. She’d never seen the door closed before. She’d been working at KCEX radio station in Claremont, California, for over two years now. Not once had she seen the door closed.

Nor had she ever heard those particular sounds coming from inside the office kitchen.

She put her hand out and touched touch cold doorknob. Open it, her brain insisted. You don’t want to know, the little girl in her replied. But she was a grown-up woman with responsibilities, not a child. She turned the knob and shoved open the door.

She swept her gaze around the room, barely taking in the left side of the kitchen with the beige Formica counter top, stainless steel sink, coffeemaker, and microwave shoved up against the old brown refrigerator that hummed like a DC-10. The brown table and chairs in the middle of the room didn’t catch her attention either.

But the sight that met her gaze on the right side of the room damn near seared her eyeballs. She got an eye full of…

For the chance to win, what do you think Ivy saw?

Don’t forget to check the comments on Tuesday to see who is the winner!

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Another Bug Story

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007
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Hey All!

I totally cracked up at Karen Kelly’s cricket story. It reminded me of when my youngest was around two years old. He used to get really mad when I put my long hair in any version of a pony tail. It took me a long time to figure out why—it usually meant he was going to babysitting at the gym.

Duh. I should have put that together faster. By the way, he liked babysitting okay, he just preferred not being rushed in the morning.

So one morning I bent down to put my blow dryer away just as my little son walked in. When I straightened up from the cupboard, he was staring at my long hair, but he didn’t say anything. Just stared.

I smiled and said, “Honey, we’re not going to the gym today.”

He stayed silent and kept staring. I started to get a weird feeling. And I noticed that he was staring specifically at the right side of my hair. I was just about to ask him why when I FELT SOMEHTNG MOVE IN MY HAIR!

I screamed like girl (I’m not normally a screamer), jumping around and trying to get the CRICKET OUT OF MY HAIR! Finally a big, black ugly thing fell to the ground. I looked at my son and saying, “Why didn’t you tell me!”

“I dunno.” He turned and went to play with his trucks.

Now I had a cricket jumping around my bedroom. But I was not going to let the invader get the best of me. I called out for my middle son. He was about four or five. He came running in, “What Mommy?”

“Cricket! Can you get it?” I pointed to the bug.

Middle son snapped into action. The neighbor across the street taught him how to catch a cricket in his hand. He snatched up the bug in his chubby little boy hands, took it outside and set it free. (I made him wash his hands which he considered a small price to pay for catching a bug.)

That’s my cricket story. We’ve heard Karen’s too. Do you have a bug story? Snake stories are fine too, but just so you know, I am AFRAID OF SNAKES!

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Who Brings Out Your Inner Fangirl?

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007
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I was just reading my RT (Romantic Times Magazine) and saw that Shannon McKenna has a new Brava coming out, EDGE OF MIDNIGHT, this month.

Color me a total fangirl! I love Shannon McKenna’s books!

Being an author has changed me some, it’s inevitable. I meet a lot of authors, and I sometimes forget how really fortunate I am.

Then I do things like get into an elevator with Karen Rose and gush like a fountain. That was a few years ago and I still turn red thinking about it. But I had just read her book and loved it! I couldn’t help myself! Karen was very gracious, impressing me even more.

A lot of Brava authors turn me into fangirls, but I think I’ve embarrassed myself enough since they probably read this blog. Other authors I’ve gushed to include Lisa Gardner who helped me get my synopsis in shape to make my first sale during a class I took from her, then graciously gave me some quotes and assistance for a workshop I gave. I chatted with her several times by email and gushed forth my total awe of her personally, respect for her work and profusive thanks for helping me get published. She was incredibly nice and even suggested that my book got my published not her help with the synopsis.

I saw Linda Howard in an elevator once while I was actually reading one of her books. I was struck silent for a change :grin: Actually the elevator was packed and I wasn’t sure she wanted to be recognized but I gushed profusely in my head!

What’s really odd is that when I get approached by a gushing fan, I am just as awestruck. I think I should be thanking them! Not the other way around.

My point is that every time I think I might be getting just a little jaded, I’m doing something like browsing my RT magazine, see a favorite author with a book out, and I’m back in fangirl mode!

Who brings out your inner fangirl?

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Just Wondering…

Thursday, June 28th, 2007
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Okay, I don’t get it. I really don’t. What is the deal with this Paris Hilton hype? Why do we care? Are we waiting to see if the rich girl to grows into heroine or suffers a tragic end? I can’t figure out the rabid interest.

Maybe I do know. Paris is bigger than life—she’s had it all, money, privilege, weird fame, but we’re looking to see what is under all of that. We’re looking to see if she has substance, the seeds of something real and powerful that will grow into valuable qualities. We’re looking to see what she’s really made of under all the makeup and glamour.

From a writer’s point of view, Paris has the potential to grow into a heroine. I’d tweak her back story a little and make her dramatic mom into a stage mom who pushed her daughter into the limelight. Then I’d get a few more people to take advantage of her, and just when she finally learns to fight back I’d throw her in the slammer.

Once there, I’d force her to see what other people, more specifically the poor and disenfranchised go through, and then I’d have the ingredients for a heroine.

Of course, then I’d really make her life miserable and bring in a hero who doesn’t think she’s worth the time of day…until Paris proved to him, and the readers, that she has become a woman of value, and that she deserves real love.

That’s if I’m writing a romance. And I’d have a heck of a lot of fun finding her a hero for her.

But back in real life, I suspect the media doesn’t want a romance where Paris morphs into an amazing woman and finds soul-filling love. I suspect they are looking for her to spiral into tragedy. Like we don’t have enough tragedy everyday?

It’s the same thing with other young stars like Britney, Lindsay, etc. The crazy media following them endlessly, gleefully reporting on their bad behavior and bizarre antics reminds me in a way of Princess Diana—a woman who molded herself into a flawed but likable heroine. She was rich and privileged but we could identify with her desperation for her husband to love her, and later, her continuing quest to find love. We applauded her standing up against the establishment to raise her sons in the way she saw fit. She had good and bad qualities that we could identify with. In spite of her flaws, or maybe because of them, she made us care about more than just the way she looked, or what outrageous thing she did or said, she made us aware of people and their genuine suffering. She drew us in and made us care with her. We felt a part of her world.

Maybe Diana left a hole in the world that we are trying to fill: A beautiful princess with real substance.

With the young women today like Paris, we are not drawn into their worlds, but watching them from the outside with curiosity. They don’t seem to have substance, at least not yet.

Why do you think there’s so much interest in Paris? Do you think she can find her way into becoming a real life heroine?

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A Quickie Contest

Thursday, June 14th, 2007
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Hi Guys! I’m feeling a little bit worn out and under the weather today, so I’m going to cheat. Answer a question and I’ll pick five people to win one book each from my Brava Backlist which includes:

WICKED WOMEN WHODUNIT Anthology
THE SEX ON THE BEACH BOOK CLUB
SUN SAND SEX Anthology

The question: Who is the most romantic couple you know?

For me, it was my aunt and uncle. They traveled, the fought, they made up, they face tragedy, and they experienced joy. And right up until my aunt passed away, they had each other. When my aunt died, my uncle was by her bed, holding her hand. And a year later, when I look into my uncle’s eyes, the love he feels for her lives on.

So who is the most romantic couple you know?

I’ll randomly choose the winners and post their names on the comments tomorrow (Friday).

Good Luck!

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Book Moods

Friday, May 25th, 2007
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Right now, I’m reading Jodi Picoult’s MY SISTER’S KEEPER. My mood is poignant and sad and a little bit hopeful and a whole lot worried.

This morning I had to go get my blood drawn. It’s routine, I’m a regular pin cushion :-) I read the book while waiting for the vampires…uh, I mean the lab coat with the needle, and I realize that I am wondering how many people in the lab with me are sick. How many of them have families that are really worried? Maybe envisioning a future that doesn’t include them.

Grim stuff, I know.

But last time I was in the lab, I was readying Jill Shavis’s SMART AND SEXY. That day, I noticed the pregnant woman whose husband (I assume) loved her enough to go to her doctor appointments with her. I wasn’t grim at all. I was reading a fun love story, my mood was light and hopeful and so when I created stories in my head for the people around me, their stories reflect my mood.

My Book Mood. Today it dawned on me that whatever I’m reading can create a mood that spills over into my regular life.

Does that happen to you? Or is it just me?

P.S. If you’re looking for light fun reads, the SUN, SAND, SEX Anthology with Linda Lael Miller, myself and Shelley Laurenstong will be out in just a few days!

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Man Covers

Friday, May 11th, 2007
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This is my first Man Cover

Cover for EXTREMELY HOT November 2007

Look, my very own hunk for my November 2007 book! Pretty cool for a Man Cover Virgin, huh?

Well I did have a man on my first book DATING CAN BE MURDER:

Cover for Dating Can Be Murder 2002

The only problem there is the guy was DEAD. That works for a mystery, but not a sexy romantic mystery. Dead is so NOT sexy, right?

Men are really popular on covers. My sister and I were in a book store last week, and we were picking out men on covers that we thought were hot. We were just playing around (although both of us ended up buying a stack of books) but it got me thinking, would a MAN on a cover get me to buy a book?

No.

However it would get me to pick up the book off the shelf and take a look. But we all know, looks don’t last. What counts is what’s INSIDE the book.

Just an aside here: The most unusual title I’ve had on any of my books is NINJA SOCCER MOMS. The Extraordinary Editor, Kate Duffy, came up with that. I got quite a few emails from fans telling me they picked up the book because of the title.

But back to MEN. So what about you? Does a hot guy get you to pick up a book? Or am I just that shallow????

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