Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Look Ma.....


I’m a real live writer. With my very own book cover to show for it and everything.

I couldn’t be happier. Not knowing what to expect as a first time writer, I anticipated horrors when it came to the cover, but was pleasantly surprised.

Thanks so much for all the support!

2010 is shaping up to be a great year so far. I’ve been outlining my butt off and finishing drafts. Keep up with my progress meters and keep the good vibes coming. All I need now is my release date.

How are your 2010 goals shaping up?

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Trench Coat Seduction

“I’m a sucker for a nail biting suspense with a love story woven in. Good think I’m lucky enough to know some talented writers who can help me feed my helpless addiction. *Grin* Please help me give a warm welcome to Romantic Suspense Author Misty Evans as she as she blogs today. Don’t forget to stop by and ask her all about the latest in her Super Agent Series : Proof of Life”. - Nana


Trench Coat Seduction

Any spy worth her secret decoder ring must have a fabulous trench coat in her closet. I personally have several and love them all, but in writing my Super Agent Series, I had yet to put one of my lady spies in a trench.

Until now. Brigit Kent, the no nonsense psychologist who moonlights for Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service in my latest novel, Proof of Life (Super Agent Series, Book 3), is perfect in a trench. She isn’t a fashionista by any means, but she has deep, dark family secrets and is playing with fire when it comes to blackmailing the deputy director of the CIA, Michael Stone. While I didn’t want her hung up on clothing labels, she was part 007 and part traditional ingénue, and I wanted her to have a signature piece.

Enter the trench. With Brigit’s dark looks, I imagined her as a modern day Audrey Hepburn, using her trench to its fullest. It was sexy and classic, just like Brigit’s character, and both the coat and the woman held the perfect combination to attract Michael.

Moving to the window next to Brigit, Michael tried not to stare at her peaches-and-cream skin, or her thick, dark hair, free of its ponytail and brushing her shoulders. He tried not to examine the way her trench coat molded to her waist and flared out at her hips, emphasizing both. Her body hummed with energy and his happily tightened in response.

The trench worked as a symbol of Brigit’s growth in the story as well as a handy accessory. In the opening, she uses the trench to hide her gun and her generous curves. Internally, she’s also hiding her insecurities and family secrets. As the story goes on, the trench and Brigit take a beating when Brigit is shot at and nearly blown up in an airplane. The coat gets mended and cleaned, and so does Brigit when she divulges her secrets to Michael and saves her sister from a terrorist group. After all that, she was ready to take more chances, and at one point, I had fun letting her pull a classic Marilyn Monroe when she attends a meeting with the President of the United States.

The trench coat still had the plastic bag over it from the cleaners. She ripped it off and shrugged the coat over her shoulders. The silk lining brushed against her skin, and she wondered if she really had the courage to go to the White House in such a Marilyn Monroe style.

Hell, what did she care? No one would know unless the Secret Service felt her up.

Through the whole story, the trench helped me keep Brigit mysterious and desirable. She needed to be a puzzle Michael had to figure out, or if not completely figure out, at least enjoy trying.

Without a knock, she burst through the door with Helena on her heels and a set look on her face. A look Michael had seen repeatedly from Ruth’s house to Ireland. The soldier was ready to take on the world.

His heart stuttered and then stopped in wonder for a split-second as he took her in from head to toe. The wavy dark curls, the baby doll eyes, the bright lipstick. The gaudy earrings, the expensive trench, the moderate heels. She was still a conundrum. Still beautiful.

The trench coat seduction works and Michael finally understands Brigit and what a future with her holds.

The future stretched out in front of him with endless possibilities. Brigit understood who he was, what he did for a living, what he had survived. She could relate and love him for all his faults, for all his regrets. She gave him hope, and most of all, she gave him back his desire to live again. He couldn’t, wouldn’t, let her go. “Call me as soon as you can get away.”

“Is that an order?”

“Yes,” he said, grinning again so hard his cheeks hurt. “And wear the trench. I like it.”

She squeezed his hand before pulling her own away and saluting him. “Yes, sir.”

I was thrilled when the cover artist for Proof of Life found a dark-haired model wearing a trench for the cover. What makes it even better is the way the woman is lifting the collar to partially hide her face. While trench coats are often associated with spies, Brigit’s trench coat showcases her personality and symbolizes her internal struggles rather than turning her into a clichéd stock character, and that made her all the more fun to write!

Thanks to Nana for inviting me to guest blog today. In celebration of Proof of Life releasing this week, I’m giving away an ecopy of the story to one lucky reader. Just post a comment or a question and I’ll add your name to the hat.

Misty Evans is an award-winning, multi-published author of CIA thrillers and paranormal comedy. Visit her at www.readMistyEvans.com or join her Yahoo! Group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

In Search of My Sixteen Year Old Booty…..

Have you seen it? I sure as hell haven’t.

There are some things I love about getting older. That’s right, I said love. Okay make that one thing. Wisdom. Wisdom to know not to take some things so seriously. Wisdom to not be in debt. Wisdom to know that some dumb guy not reciprocating feelings is a matter of taste and not because he thinks I look like a purple Snuffleupagus.

Other than that, you can take the rest. The suddenly sagging parts. The five extra pounds you can’t ever seem to get rid of, no matter how many miles you put on the treadmill. The gray hairs you either pluck out with a vengeance or dye as if each strand is a symbol of your dwindling youth. The weird dimple in your ass you can’t seem to get rid of no matter how many squats you do.

As a former athlete, I always swore that as long as I kept working out, I would be one of the few to escape cellulite. In my twenties I figured as long as the gray hairs in my head were buried far in the midst of my think black hair, I needn’t worry about them. In my youthful naiveté, I thought as long as was armed with the right Vicki’s lingerie, I could counteract the effects of gravity.

But one day after my thirtieth birthday, I got out of the shower and looked in the mirror. My body looked the same as it always did….almost. There were some gray hairs at my temple. Nothing a trip to the salon wouldn’t fix. Was it me, or were the girls not as perky. Oh well, I could get another bra with better support. No need to be alarmed. And then I turned around and saw it. My booty. It wasn’t as I last remembered it. Sure, it was still firm…..ish. I ran and worked out and did squats. But it wasn’t as I remembered it. And to make matters worse, there was now a funny looking dimple in my left thigh that looked remarkably like cellulite. What? How could this be? Where had the bounce quarters off of it booty of 16 gone? Somewhere over the years it had been replaced by its ‘in shape but certainly not bounce worthy’ booty of my thirties. When the hell had that happened?

On my way up to Carmel this weekend, as I waited for my flights I came across two distinctly difference creatures. One, with her lined skin, kind voice and toddler bouncing on her lap was as familiar to me as chocolate chip cookies and old dusty books. The other with her Botox and Collagen injected face, perfectly smooth and surprise frozen skin, murmuring to the toddler in the seat next to her that he mustn’t call her grandma but instead call her Judy. Two very different women, they looked different, acted different, so far on the opposite sides of the spectrum. Which one would I be?

Now I never thought I’d be one to want to age gracefully. I figured I’d be kicking and screaming the whole way. Living in Southern California It’s easy to see the products of plastic surgery and not even blink twice. Adverts for the latest plastic surgery procedures are on television every day. I’ve always been a proponent of if you don’t’ like something, then fix it, but am I ready for the plastic parts the frozen smile and the forever surprised eyebrows? God only knows. One thing I’m certainly not ready for is the Brazilian butt implant. Yes, women are inserting something into their buts to now have the booties of Brazilian women. Do I want my sixteen year old ass back that badly? Maybe that’s a step over the line.

In Ghana there is a saying: “You too go grow.” Not surprisingly you always find some elder woman muttering this under her breath to some sassy young girl who has not a care in the world and inhales chocolate like it’s religion. I’ve always thought the saying was mutterings of bitter old women in search of their sixteen year old booties. But maybe I was wrong. There’s inevitability to age. You can greet it happily with open arms, but who wants to do that? Or you can line up for your Brazilian booty implants. Either way you’ll have some wisdom and like it or not a couple of wrinkles. Are you going to spend your life worrying about how to stave off crow’s feet or are you going to live every minute of it. Soak it up and enjoy it?

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Channeling My Inner Derby Girl….

Am I the only one who squealed when I saw the trailer for Ellen Page’s new movie Whip It? If you haven’t seen the trailer, the main gist of the movie centers around an alterna-teen beauty pageant contestant who shuns the pageant lifestyle for the Jammers and Blockers of the Roller Derby set. For anyone who’s ever felt hemmed in, Derby might just be the sport for you.

A few years ago, DH and I stumbled across a Roller Derby match while on a date night. Imagine our surprise when the tween at the counter asked us if we were at the roller rink to skate or for Derby. We stared at the tween, then at each other, then back at the tween and declared with gusto “Derby!” I felt like there should have been some music or fanfare to signal our initiation into a world so outside of our daily ho-hum lives but as it turns out, we didn’t need the fanfare, Derby itself was enough.

Most of my life, my conservative mother has tried to get me to be more meek, less talkative and all around more ladylike. With their short skirts, shredded tights, no fewer than six tattoos apiece, and t-shirts emblazoned with names like “Steely Jan,” “Slamurai,” and “Bonnie D. Stoir,” there’s nothing meek or ladylike about the Derby girls. I felt an immediate kinship with these hell’s angels on wheels. They weren’t your typical female athletes. They were somehow way fiercer. Zipping around the tracks on a mission to destroy their opponents, often sending unsuspecting or inexperienced Jammers skidding to the crowds, they came to play.

The objectives are simple…ish. Get your Jammer around the opposing team’s blockers on the track twice to score. For more detailed rules, check out: http://www.derbydolls.com/sd/aboutus/index.html. As a Jammer it’ll help if you’re quick, sneaky and completely fearless.

It’s not your mother’s Derby where 70’s chicks zoomed around the tracks intent to search, destroy, and maim and torture, though there is a little search and destroy, after each of the matches both teams head out for drinks and food together. The idea and objective being chick camaraderie and education about the sport.

I immediately wanted to become one of them. Leave it to DH to point out that I could barely skate and my temper would probably keep me in the penalty box the whole match. *Blush*

In a world where society tells young girls if they’re not your typical pretty skinny cheerleader, that something is wrong with them, Derby provides a new home and way for all those who ever felt out of place, to fly…and maybe get out a little aggression.

DH came up with a Derby girl name for me if I ever learn how to skate properly: “Black & Deck Her.” Somehow he thinks it’s appropriate.

What would your derby girl name be?