Sunday, March 1, 2026
BWL Publishing New Releases March, 2026
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Do Your Hobbies Find a Place in Your Stories? (Author Confessions) By Connie Vines #BWL #Author Hobbies #RoseGardens
FACT: Authors often engage in unique, active, or intellectual hobbies that enrich their storytelling.
Ernest Hemingway’s big-game hunting and Agatha Christie’s archaeology, to mention a few.
Do you, as an author, include your hobbies or your personal culinary choices, etc., in your stories? Or, as a reader, are you drawn into the story because of the sensory details and "realistic'' tone?
I know my choice of location/setting is from personal experience. While the name of my city may be fictitious, it is based on a 'real-life' place.
What about your hobbies?
As a writer, do you find your heroine/hero likes to cook, play chess, or tend to a garden?
I like to include my pursuits. I find it enriches the characters of my stories. The reader will gain insite to a character. One pursuit will highlight a character's patience; another will highlight a skill, creativity, or impatience.
From a reader's perspective?
Care must be given not to "over tell" or to convert my readers.
I dislike green peas. It doesn't matter how the peas are seasoned, hidden, or blended. I will 'gage' when I try to swallow them.
There are certain 'troups' that will not follow; certain 'historical periods" I have no interest in reading.
I recognize this to be a universal truth.
Do not be discouraged. I know a "great teaser", book cover, or promo can/will entice a new reader to purchase a book.
However, dedicated fans are really purchasing "your voice". The 'author's' voice.
The way you weave your story, the tone, the humor/emotional intensity.
It is the unique way you add bits of reality into your 'fictitious world.' Making your story a reality for your reader.
This post focuses on my rose gardens.
The vivid colors, the scents, and, yes-- the thorns!
Authors, what bits of yourself do you add to your stories?
Readers, what draws you into the stories by your favorite authors?
What plot would you like to see? What hero do you adore?
Your favorite novel?
What story heroine is most like "you"?
Hobbies?
I have many.
Today, I'll share my rose garden(s).
While many of you are shoveling snow to melt, I'm dealing with a heat wave of 91 degrees / 32 Celsius.
Happy Reading and Listening, (Lynx is now an audiobook!!)
Connie
Links:
books2read.com
https://www.overdrive.com/search?q=connie+vines
Amazon.com Search: Connie Vines ebook or audio
https://books.apple.com/us/author/connie-vines/id624802082 (audio and ebooks)
Also available at your favorite online book seller!
Where's Connie?
Instagram/Twitter (X), Facebook, Pinterest, YouTube, and my website: connievines-author.com
Friday, February 27, 2026
Valentine’s Day weekend signing books for the Glendale Chocolate Affaire - by Vijaya Schartz
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| The shirt says: I write books, what's your superpower? Glendale, February 14-15 2026 - Chocolate Affaire find BWL Books here amazon - B&N - Smashwords back list - Smashwords new titles - Kobo |
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| 2013 - old covers tell the story. Chocolate on the table, of course. amazon - B&N - Smashwords back list - Smashwords new titles - Kobo |
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| 2014 Chocolate Affaire Glendale, AZ amazon - B&N - Smashwords back list - Smashwords new titles - Kobo |
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| 2018 Chocolate Affaire, Glendale AZ amazon - B&N - Smashwords back list - Smashwords new titles - Kobo |
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| 2017 Chocolate Affaire - Glendale AZ amazon - B&N - Smashwords back list - Smashwords new titles - Kobo |
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| Saturday, February 14, 2026, ready to go, with chocolate on the table. The puppies have not arrived yet. amazon - B&N - Smashwords back list - Smashwords new titles - Kobo |
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| My latest book, CHI WARRIOR, was available there. amazon - B&N - Smashwords back list - Smashwords new titles - Kobo |
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| amazon - B&N - Smashwords back list - Smashwords new titles - Kobo |
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Newbie shout out to Jane Austen, romance writing ‘OG’ by Jeff Tribe
Newbie shout out to Jane Austen, romance writing ‘OG’
‘There’s
nothing special about Shakespeare,’ the joke goes, ‘all he did was take a bunch
of famous sayings and string them together.’
The punch
line being of course, it was ‘The Bard’ who made those sayings famous.
William and
I have a respectful relationship, meeting in high school through The Merchant
of Venice, Hamlet and King Lear. My sister Lahring would be far closer to his
writings however. A masters degree in English and History from Western
University, career selling books, and at least one well-thumbed version of his
complete works, the Riverside Shakespeare in her possession, will do that.
Unlike her, I have not taken in a performance at Shakespeare’s Globe theatre in
London, England. However we do trundle off to the Stratford (Ontario) Festival
together annually to share the enjoyment from one of his plays.
‘Old, dead
white dude,’ say some critics, others pointing out he may not have been above
re-writing contemporary playwrights’ works.
‘Old dead
white dude whose timeless truths resonate today as they did in the late 1500s’
at least two of his supporters might respond. That’s not to say we’re married
to the past. We equally enjoyed Andrea Scott’s world premiere of Get That Hope,
the study of a dysfunctional Jamaican-Canadian family based loosely on Eugene
O’Neill’s Long Day’s Journey Into Night, and Hiro Kanagawa’s ‘Forgiveness’, a
remarkable story of reconciliation.
In that
spirit of trying new things, my wife agreed to vary a steady diet of Christmas
romance movies. We settled on Pride and Prejudice based on the Jane Austen
novel of the same name, figuring anything with Keira Knightley, Judi Dench and
Donald Sutherland in it couldn’t be that bad.
Not only did
we confirm it was better than ‘quite good,’ it wasn’t the departure we had
expected. Lahring has embraced my foray into romance writing with an
appreciated sense of humour, encouragement and advice while continuing to be a
font of knowledge on things literary. You don’t know what you don’t know it
turns out, including her confirmation Ms. Austen was a romance writing OG
(original gangster), featuring the kind of brilliant dialogue which makes her
books ideal candidates for movie adaptation.
And like
Shakespeare - who she was also a great admirer of - the quality of Austen’s
work continues to resonate today.
Staying
truer to original form than Shakespearean adaptations West Side Story (Romeo
and Juliet) or 10 Things I Hate About You (The Taming of the Shrew), the Pride
and Prejudice movie nevertheless underwent change. Austen’s brilliance shines
through, as do principles both foundational to and echoed within modern
romance: characters, one at least often wealthy or powerful who begin as
enemies undergoing personal and character transformation, plot twists and turns
featuring apparently insurmountable obstacles, gradual progression toward
friends and then lovers surviving a late crisis to emerge with the happiest of
endings. Add an interesting setting, sprinkle in a strong supporting cast - and
some quality dialogue - and you’re halfway to a romance novel template.
The best
part is, while Jane was arguably an early ‘be all’, she certainly wasn’t the
‘end all.’ Her work has led or inspired others through subsequent
centuries. Across that time, romance readers may have a reasonable idea where a
story is going, but individual author’s interpretations on how it gets there
means the genre continues to evolve. Respecting the past, but moving forward
into a dynamic future.
Take a look
through BWL’s list of romantic offerings, and I’m confident you’ll find a
writer, characters, setting and plot to your liking. Each will be original and
each will have an author’s unique stamp, an attraction which continues to draw
both new readers - and writers.
The list
includes one ‘newbie’ bearing zero illusion his work will rival Jane Austen’s,
but who has thoroughly enjoyed a journey leading to a first publication.
Sincere thanks are in order to ‘OG Jane’, Jude, Jay and Nancy at BWL and of
course, to anyone considering giving it a read.
I hope you
enjoy it half as much as I have getting it here.
For those
curious to learn more, following is a YouTube link to a 52-second video on my
romance novel, Accountant With Benefits, and also, a link to a guest appearance
on Dick Bourgeois-Doyle’s Dover Writes podcast.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9F80CS3nDcc
https://soundcloud.com/user-447729085/jeff-tribe-doverwrites
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
My Agenda for Writing Mystery Novels by Joan Donaldson-Yarmey
https://www.bookswelove.com/shop/p/illegally-dead
https://www.amazon.ca/Illegally-Dead-Joan-Yarmey/dp/1773626655
https://www.bookswelove.com/shop/p/the-only-shadow-in-the-house
https://www.amazon.ca/Only-Shadow-House-Travelling-Detective-ebook/dp/B075TFC2B1
https://www.bookswelove.com/shop/p/whistlers-murder
https://www.amazon.ca/Whistlers-Murder-Joan-Yarmey/dp/1773627554
Authors have different ways of writing their novels. Some outline each chapter. Others wing it just going where their characters take them. Some start with a plot and add characters and some have characters around whom they build a story. A few take an event or an idea and build on it putting in characters and settings that go with it.
I have never worked with a solid outline, or arc as it is sometimes called, for my novels, whether they are mystery, historical, or young adult. And this is mainly because I find that my characters seldom end up the way I first pictured them and the plot never takes the route I thought it would. I do start the story with a character in his/her everyday life so the reader can get to know them then I put in the trigger or problem that is out of the control of my main character or that starts the mystery. This puts the main character on his/her quest for a solution.
I do have scenes pictured where characters are going to have a certain conversation or be at a certain place but unexpected conversations or character twists surface as I am writing the story. Some of these are surprises or mishaps or glitches that get in the way of my character’s quest. I strive not to make these predictable, nor so far out that they don’t make sense to the story. They should leave the reader with the thought that they should have figured that would have happen. Personally, I find that it is no fun to read a book in which you can foresee where the story line is headed and what is going to happen.
If I get writer’s block or get to the end of an event and not really know what to write next, then I pick up one of the encounters that I know a character is going to have and I write that. Sometimes I will have two or three of them waiting to be put into the manuscript where they are needed.
For the climax my character goes through the action of resolving the problem or solving the mystery. This has to be fast paced and sometimes at risk to my character. By this time the reader should be rooting for the main character and wanting him/her to succeed without injury. Hopefully, too, this is where the surprise comes in, where the reader goes. “Wow, I didn’t see that coming." or "I never thought it would be that person.”
I have even been surprised or saddened or happy by the ending of my books. When I was nearing the end of writing one of 'The Only Shadow in the House', I still hadn’t figured out which of two characters had done the killing. Suddenly, a different character put up their hand and said, “I did it and this is why.” I was surprised but realized that it made total sense.
I believe that if my emotions are rocked by the ending so, too, should those of the readers. When the book was published I had readers tell me that they had also fluctuated between the same two characters as I had and they, too, had been surprised by who was actually guilty. Something a mystery writer is always happy to hear.
I was born in New Westminster B.C. and raised in Edmonton.I have worked as a bartender, cashier, bank teller, bookkkeeper, printing press operator, meat wrapper, gold prospector, house renovator, and nursing attendant. I have had numerous travel and historical articles published and wrote seven travel books on Alberta, B.C. and the Yukon and Alaska that were published through Lone Pine Publishing in Edmonton.
One of my favourite pasttimes is reading especially mystery novels and I have now turned my writing skills to fiction. However, I have not ventured far from my writing roots. The main character in my Travelling Detective Series is a travel writer who somehow manages to get drawn into solving mysteries while she is researching her articles for travel magazines. This way, the reader is able to take the book on holidays and solve a mystery at the same time.
Illegally Dead is the first novel of the series and The Only Shadow In The House is the second. The third Whistler's Murder came out in August 2011 as an e-book through Books We Love. It can be purchased as an e-book and a paperback through Amazon.
i live on a small acreage in the Alberni Valley on Vancouver Island.
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