Friday, August 21, 2009

Welcome to Laura Baumbach's guest blog


Welcome Ms. Laura Baumbach to Love Romances and More, thank you for joining us.


Did you always want to become a writer?

Actually, no. It never occurred to me to even try until about 9-10 years ago. I did a short story on a whim. It received some encouraging feedback so I wrote another. And another and another. Now it’s a decade later and I’m still writing them as more encourages me to continue. If the feedback stops, I will probably stop writing. I write for others’ enjoyment not for myself.

What is the most, and the least interesting fact about writing?

Most interesting…seeing creations from inside my daydreams become real on paper. SO real other people see them and love them. That’s sheer magic. Least interesting…the mechanics of writing. I’m a storyteller at heart not an author. I leave the mechanics for the editors to sort out. I’m probably a nightmare to edit, but I haven’t asked.

How did you celebrate your first release? What was it like to see your book in a bookstore? Do you have a special ritual for celebrating a book release?

With a trip to LA to receive an award for it. It was very cool. It was all an very minor event but I thought it was awesome to the max at the time. I still have fond memories of the trip.

How did your family react to fact that you also write M/M romance novels? Have your family read your books?

They were more startled by the fact that I write period than by what I write. My husband who is very supportive, runs my websites and our bookstore. I’ve recently retired from nursing to stay home and write more and run my small press so he’s happy about my new career. He’s always wanted me to quit nursing with its bad hours, holiday shifts and weekends requirements. After 34 years I finally agreed. My boys couldn’t care less what I write about. They are proud of my achievements. My youngest is an author as well. At age 10, last year, he wrote a children’s book titled Duck Adventures. They both attend some conferences with me.

Most authors are also avid readers. Is this the case with you? If so, who are some of your favorites? Have any influenced your writing?

I honestly try not to read much in my genre outside of submissions to the press, but I do love to read mysteries. I can’t write them well, but I love to read them. At the moment JoAnne Soper-Cook is heading the list of my favorites.

Your release date is really full, which I love as a fan of your books, do you have a problem with deadlines and have you ever suffered a writers block?

I do have a problem with deadlines. This last year has been so busy with the unexpected grow of the press, the addition of the bookstore and the demands of running and promoting them. When you agree to represent other authors, their work and best interests have to come first and I find my own writing being pushed aside. That was one of the motivating factors in my retiring this year. My own work needed attention and it was only going to get it unless something else in my world gave up time. House, husband, kids, nurse, publisher, promoter and author. There wasn’t enough time to do them all well. The job as an emergency nurse lost the coin toss after the husband said he and the kids weren’t going.

Do you prefer stand-alone books or series?

Series. I love series. Once I find a couple of heroes I love I want more!


Your characters come to life in your books. Do you feel each of your characters live with you as you write? Do their lives sometimes take over a part of your life? Can you name an example? Do you have living role models for your characters?

Well, thank you! What lovely compliment! I’m sincerely flattered. It’s what I strive for in my stories. They don’t become a part of my life, no. But I do go to visit them. Lol. I have a set kind of ritual I do when I write. My office is a large room isolated at one end of the house. I close the doors, pull the curtains closed tight, turn off all the lights except for a small LED light over my keyboard and write. The quiet and darkness all around me lets me slip off into the world I’m creating. When I pick my characters I cast each one with a real actor that I think could play the role perfectly. So they play out the story as I write. It’s silly I suppose but it makes the story flow like a rushing river when the mood is just right.

Where do you get the inspirations for your books?

Oddly, I’m most influenced by phrases or quirky habits. I heard one a few months back and it was the basis for my latest ghost story Coins in a Dead Man’s Boot. I know it’s far fetched but that phrase gave birth to an entire pirate ghost adventure story. It’s for the historical ghost anthology I’m doing with Alex Beecroft and Josh Lanyon for October titles The Mysterious.


Do you find it difficult at times to write love scenes?

I never find love scenes hard to write but they do take me longer than other scenes. I like creating the exact mood and including all the sensations and senses that they are intricate scenes. I love writing them.

What is your favorite book from the books that you have written so far? Who is your favorite hero and why?


My favorite book is A Bit of Rough and my favorite character is Bram from this book. He’s part my husband and part creation, ending up being the best fantasy man I could create. He’s rough and strong, hard bodies, decisive, all man but confident enough to speak his mind and his heart. He’s a god.

Which book was the hardest to write and which the easiest?

A Bit of Rough was the easiest because it was my first romance and I didn’t know what I was doing I just wrote. Lol. Mexican Heat was the hardest because it was my first collaboration. Collaborations are unique events.

If you could change places with one character from your books, who would it be and why?


It would have to be James from A Bit of Rough so I could have Bram. Second runner up would be Aidan from Details of the Hunt. Sex with Talos would have to be amazing.

If you could travel through time to visit a special time period or famous person, what or who would it be and why?

The thought of actually, really traveling through time makes me nervous. I don’t think I’d go anywhere. If I did it would be to visit Hercule Poirot, the famous Belgian detective who lives in England. But since he isn’t even a real person that probably won’t count.

Do you listen to music while you are writing and if so what music is it?

No. It distracts me. I start to create stories that fit the songs and lose track of the one I’m trying to write.

If you could choose of your books for a movie, which one would it be and who would you as the cast?

#1 Mexican Heat. Gabriel would be played by Johnny Depp and Antonio would be played by Antonio Banderas.
#2 Details of the Hunt. Aidan would be played by Johnny Depp and Talos would be The Rock.

Are you working on anything right now, and can you tell us a teaser about these projects?


Genetic Snare, the sequel to Details, is finishing up after going through 2 rewrites. It showcases some family intrigue with Talos’ family cashe, some very hot sex as the bonding between Aidan and Talos develops, and some danger and mystery when Aidan finds out not everyone is eager for him to become the human mate of an Oracan hunter. It’s late by about a year. I got very insecure about my writing last year and had to work that through. It should finally be out at Christmas time.

Tequila Sunrise, the sequel to Mexican Heat, will come out after that one. It follows the relationship between Gabriel and Antonio as they both adjust to Gabriel’s blindness and old enemies take advantage of the weak spot this creates. It’ll be part mystery and part romance like the last one.

But first around Halloween, the ghost anthology The Mysterious will debut. That’s the Coins in the Dead Man’s Boot story. I’m still writing this one but it about a cultured larcenous highwayman, a slightly crazy pirate, and a vengeful ghost who haunts the seas. Romance is the big element of this one.

Big congrats to your latest releases, can you please tell us something about them.

My two latest releases are Mexican Heat and Wet Skin.

Mexican Heat is the first in the Crimes and Cocktails Mystery series.

SFPD detective Gabriel Sandalini might as well have put a gun to his own head. One red-hot sexual encounter in a bar’s back room has put two years of deep undercover work in jeopardy—two years of danger and deception as he worked his way into crime boss Ricco Botelli’s inner circle. Gabriel can’t afford emotional entanglements. Hell, he can’t afford emotions. But that was before he had a name to pin on that anonymous one-off—Miguel Ortega.

Miguel Ortega doesn’t trust anyone, but tough, street-smart Gabriel brings out the conquistador in his Spanish blood. But distractions are nothing short of deadly right now, not with his boss’s impending marriage to Botelli’s sister, which will ensure peace—and massive drug profits—for both families.

On a trip to Mexico to set up drug supply lines, a violent confrontation proves they’ve got each other’s backs—to a degree.

Then one savage act changes everything, testing not only their fragile bond, but Gabriel’s will to live.

It’s a three book series I’m doing with Josh Lanyon about undercover cops, one SFPD and one FBI. I created the characters a couple of years ago in a short story but Josh joined me for collaboration on the full-length erotic romantic suspense novels. It was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Best Gay Romance awards this year, and it received an HONORABLE MENTION at the 2009 San Francisco Book Festival, plus several romance review site awards/nominations.

Wet Skin is an erotica anthology I did with writing icon William Maltese with water themed stories.

William Maltese again joins Laura Baumbach for several erotic tales that explore the first-time wonders of the flesh and water. From Maltese's intriguing The Cataracts, to Baumbach's playful Slippery When Wet, the amount of heat generated here will bring back the delicious pleasures of first-time experiences.

It’s several short stories from me and one novella from William. All erotica with the main focus on the sex. That makes it a bit different than the erotic romances I usually write but it was fun to do the stories. I’ll be doing another one with him next year with the theme of Roman slaves/soldiers. He adores that time period but I’ll have to do some research first!

Thank you so much for taking the time to talk with me, Danny.

14 comments:

Victor J. Banis said...

Oh, I do adore Laura, as a writer and as a publisher and, best of all, as a friend. Nice interview, both of you. I like the idea, Laura, of writing in a nearly dark room - I've got so much noise and commotion going on, I don't know how I ever manage to concentrate. Maybe I'll try your way.

Victor

Anonymous said...

Hi Laura,

I love Bram. Will we see him again in the future?

Thanks for coming by.

Dawn
Owner-LRC

Rick R. Reed said...

Fascinating peek into your life, Laura. I learned a lot about you. I'm now even more impressed with your energy, creativity, and drive.

Jeanne said...

Great interview, Laura And I heartily approve of your choice for Antonio Banderas for your hero from Mexican Heat.
And I see an obsession with Johnny Depp, too...good choices!

Pat Brown said...

Hmmm, Johnny Depp as Gabriel. Johnny Depp as Aidan... do I sense a theme here? Face it girl, you don't want Johnny Depp as one of your characters, you want Johnny Depp! LOL. Can't say I blame you. Sigh.

williammaltese said...

Ahhh, Laura! Great gal. Great friend. Great writer. Great publisher. Great promoter of m/m and its writers. It's always a delight to get one more bit of insight into what makes such an Alpha-female dynamo (makes me tired just thinking of all the hat she wears!)tick ... tick ... tick.

LauraB said...

You are all too kind! I do love Johnny Depp. But I think you noticed.*g* He's intelligent, talented and versatile and the kind of body type I like for my beta males. Oh, and gorgeous doesn't hurt either.lol.

I always write my best when the room is dark and the house quiet. I can be transported right into the world I'm writing. I like late night best because the phone doesn't ring and and no one comes to the door either. All alone with just my 'guys' and their relationship and problems. And I've even been known to turn on the ceiling fan for that little bit of white noise to block out anything else. Talk about working in a void! I didn't realized it sounded so odd until I wrote it all out here. lol!

LauraB said...

Yes, Dawn, there will be more Bram. Late next year I plan on writing the third in the series ROUGH ROADS. Can't leave my guys for too long.

Lauralyn said...

I'm a huge fan and a grateful author, and I'd love to see more from my Enthralled and Breathless couple, if you're taking requests, and I cannot wait for the next in the Crimes and Cocktails series.

~ZAM~

Unknown said...

I doubt if these catch phrases will kick-start any new Laura stories, but I thank my lucky stars I got my foot in the door at MLR PRESS. Having a writer as your publisher makes a world of difference, and with fingers crossed I'm locking the door and throwing away the key.

Anonymous said...

Great interview Laura! I loved Mexican Heat and cannot wait for the next one. After reading it, I checked out some of both yours and Josh's books and really loved them too.

LORETTA CANTON said...

I haven't read any of your books but the characters may me want to learn more about them.

lorettaC,

lbcanton@verizon.net

Unknown said...

I would just like to thank you for the great stories I've read by your authors - the addition of the bookstore has made it much easier to snaffle them ( and even when I clicked the wrong title, you helped me out *g*).
Thank you.
Cheers :)

p.s. Looking forward to reading more (more Bram and James? Excellent news!) from you.

V said...

Finished reading Mexican Heat and few days ago and the characters have stayed with me. Looking forward to the sequel.