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Author Archives: lillygayle

The Significance of First Lines

02 Wednesday Feb 2011

Posted by lillygayle in contest, Kat Duncan, prizes, romance novel, romantic suspense, The Wild Rose Press

≈ 12 Comments

Welcome to week one of the Wild Roses Valentine’s Month Blog Tour! Commentors on all eleven Wild Roses Blogs are automatically entered to win one of four weekly prizes and a grand prize worth $50. So stay tuned all month, visit as many blogs as possible and leave a comment for your chance to win!

Blog participants are:
Linda Kage- http://lindakage.blogspot.com/, Amie Louellen- http://amielouellen.wordpress.com/ ,Caroline Clemmons- http://carolineclemmons.blogspot.com/, Jennifer Jakes- http://authorjenniferjakes.blogspot.com/AJ Nuest- http://www.ajbooks.blogspot.com/ , Lynne Roberts- http://lynneroberts.blogspot.com/, Maeve Greyson-http://maevegreyson.blogspot.com/ ,Amy Corwin- http://amycorwin.blogspot.com/, Jill James- http://www.jilljameswrites.com/, Kat Duncan- http://www.katduncan.net/writeabout

My guest today, who’ll be talking about the significance of first lines, is Kat Duncan.

As a young child, Kat once tried to confess the telling of her stories to her parish priest because she thought they fit the definition the nuns gave for ‘telling a lie’. The wise priest asked her if her stories were told to hurt other people. “Oh, no!” she replied, “I only tell them to make people happy.” The priest asked her if she had any other sins to confess and when she didn?t, he advised her to continue telling her stories and then he assigned her a few prayers to say for those who could not hear them. Kat has been telling her ‘lies’ ever since and writing stories to entertain and enlighten. After a successful career as a software engineer, Kat decided she needed something different to do. She’s now a tutor of adolescents with special needs. With one teenager in high school (home school) and another in college, every moment of her meager spare time is spent creating romances.

So, Kat, tell us what you think about the Significance of First Lines~

You want to be seduced when you read a book. You want to be drawn in, to forget your troubles and just enjoy yourself. That’s why first lines in a book should be like pickup lines. They could be the kind you might expect to hear in a bar, “Hi gorgeous, can I buy you a drink?” or in a nightclub, “Hey, I’m Joe, wanna dance with me sexy lady?” These kinds of first lines are a sexy come-on. They promise an enjoyable, sensual experience. How’s this for a first line:

“Strip off his shirt,” she said.

That’s the first line of the book I’m working on now, Ransom’s Captive. It’s an historical romance and I wanted the first line to be a bit scandalous-sounding. The next few paragraphs show why the man’s shirt has to be stripped off.

First lines could also be the kind you might hear from the cell phone salesman at the mall “We’ve got a 1-day special on iPhones.” These can feel a bit off-putting, making you feel as if you have to pay attention to something you don’t want to miss out on. The first line of my romantic suspense, Fifty-eight Faces, is:

“We’re gonna win this one, Caroline.”

Win? What are they gonna win? I have to find out. Within a few paragraphs it’s clear they need to win a big court case over the Blue Diamond or they’ll have to close their financially-challenged children’s hospital.

Still other first lines are the kind you might hear walking around a huge warehouse store “Were you able to find everything you’re looking for?” The solicitation lets you know you are in good hands, or maybe it irritates the heck out of you because you don’t like to be interrupted while you shop. The first line of Six Days to Midnight, another romantic suspense I wrote, goes:

“With an explosion of dirt and hooves, Mirza whipped her mount toward the starting line.”

The words are harsh and the character, Mirza, sounds merciless. She hurts my feelings just whipping her horse. She doesn’t even think of it as a horse. To her it’s just a “mount”. An evil woman. I don’t like her already.

And then there are the kinds of first lines that are sort of slow-witted. The kind you don’t always understand right away, but yet can’t stop listening to. The kind you might hear sitting next to an old man at a bus stop. “You know, back when the bus stop was on Main Street, folks used to wait inside the newspaper office. Good stories weren’t so hard to find back then.” You scratch your head and read on, hoping everything will become clear if you keep reading. Another of my historicals, Without a Lord, starts like this:

“It isn’t possible to capture a faerie.”

Huh? If it’s not possible, then why are we talking about it? In the short conversation that follows, we learn that dozens of knights, desperate to end a local war, insist that they’ve seen a faerie.

Depending on what kind of mood you’re in, you may be turned off by the first line or you may be interested in hearing more. Personally, I’d rather have a reader put my book down if they’re turned off. I’d rather they read it when they’re in a mood to enjoy it. The first lines of a book set the mood and tone and should be an honest indication of what is to come. If I keep reading it’s because I’ve been seduced by the first line.

So, which first line of mine would seduce you?

Kat Duncan’s most recent release, Fifty-eight Faces is part of the Jewel of the Night series. You can purchase this book at: http://thewildrosepress.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=137&products_id=4366

Blurb:

Chief of surgery at a small children’s hospital, Caroline’s last hope to save it from financial ruin evaporates when she loses the Blue Diamond case to greedy Evan Quinn. When Evan buys the hospital property for high profit condo conversion, Caroline’s hatred shifts into full red-alert.

But Evan is not her real enemy. Rolf, the hospital’s chief administrator, has had his eye on the blue diamond since he learned of it from his Nazi grandfather. To be the 58th face to possess the Blue Diamond, one for each of its facets, grants the owner unlimited power. Rolf plans to kill the current owners and use the diamond to build his Neo-Nazi regime. Can Caroline give up her hatred and Evan his greed before Rolf kills them both?

 
Excerpt from Fifty-eight Faces:

“If I wasn’t sworn as a doctor, I’d pull this trigger.”

A flash lit the darkness. An ear-shattering echo reverberated in the concrete vault. Evan staggered. Caroline dropped the gun, and its over-sensitized trigger fired again. It spun like a top on the concrete. She rushed forward.

“Evan. Evan. Are you hurt? Where? I didn’t pull the trigger. It just went off in my hand.” She grabbed his shoulders, bracing him, scanning him for a wound.

He steadied himself and pushed her aside. “You missed.” He stared at the gun lying on the floor. He picked it up and hefted it, his brows pinched in thought. Pointing it away from her, he firmly grasped the weapon and gently tapped its side. It fired.

He turned on her, his mouth thinned into a grimace, his eyes squinting.

She put up her hands. “Evan, don’t…”

He tipped the gun toward the ceiling and, with a snap, removed the clip. He tossed the pieces in opposite directions. They spun and clattered on the concrete floor. In a few quick steps, he closed the distance between them. His broad hands engulfed her shoulders, infusing her shivering body with a surge of solid warmth.

“That gun was rigged by an expert. An expert who arranged for us to meet here. Then disappeared.”

Kat Duncan writes romantic suspense. Visit her at http://www.katduncan.net/ or http://www.katduncan.net/writeabout and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/WriteAbout/150069588366130
She’s also on Twitter: Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/write_about

Not Another Blog Tour!

28 Friday Jan 2011

Posted by lillygayle in Amy Corwin, Blog Tour, Caroline Clemmons, February, historical romance, Lilly Gayle, love stories, paranromal romance, prizes, romances, The Wild Rose Press

≈ 1 Comment

Yes! I’m participating in another blog tour and this one is all about the romance. After all, next week is February, the month of love. So, join me and ten other TWRP authors for a blog tour of themes about romance and writing. Meet some TWRP authors and learn about their books and their personalities. There’s also eleven chances each week to win a prize, so visit all the blogs to increase your chances of winning. And all you have to do for a chance to win is post a comment on the blogs. The more you post, the greater your chances of winning the weekly prize.

There will also be a grand prize at the end of the tour worth over $50! So come on and check us out starting next Wednesday, February 2 as we talk about the significance of first lines.

One February 9, we’ll discuss where creative ideas come from. February 16, it gets personal as we talk about how we met our significant other. And lastly, on February,23, we’re talking aout how to develop unique characters. Hmm. I’m going to have to think about this one myself. lol~

For a list of blog hosts and participating authors as well as a list of prizes, please visit http://thewildrosepress.blogspot.com/2011/01/valentines-month-blog-tour_28.html

Looking forward to a month of fun and romance! So, come on. Join us!

Inspiration Inspires Imagination

21 Friday Jan 2011

Posted by lillygayle in historical romance, Lilly Gayle, OUT OF THE DARKNESS, paranormal romance, science fiction, The Wild Rose Press

≈ 11 Comments

I often find the most mundane of facts fascinating, and it often inspires my imagination. Others read some obscure fact or witness a seemingly normal occurrence and are inspired to invent.

Karl Friedrich Benz of Germany invented the first gas-powered automobile powered by an internal combustion engine. But it was America’s own Henry Ford who made the automobile affordable by utilizing assembly lines in his factories.

The idea of utilizing a production assembly line came to Mr. Ford after he saw a dis-assembly line the Armour and Swift meat packing plants used to process meat.

And nature inspired Swiss inventor George de Mestral to create Velcro. When he and his dog returned from a walk in the woods, they were both covered in burs. He looked at the burs under a microscope and got the idea for a new type of fastener. He named his invention Velcro from the words velour and crochet.

 And Martin Cooper became inspired to invent the cell phone from watching Captain Kirk speak into his communicator. Much of the futuristic technology in the science fiction series Star Trek is based on real science.


Makes me wonder if teleportation might one day be possible. It’s not something I’d want to try. I saw the movie, The Fly!

But fiction and fantasy are often based on real science. Or inspire real science. In Robert Heinlein’s Glory Road, he has a character reading from an electronic tablet in his future world as books are no longer made from bound pages. Since Glory Road was first published in 1963, it makes me wonder if the inventor of e-readers might not have been a science fiction fan.

I’m more of a romance fan but I also enjoy science fiction and the paranormal, especially when there are romantic elements. My favorite paranormal/horror writer is Dean Koontz. I enjoy Stephen King’s work, but Mr. Koontz has a unique way of combining science fiction, horror, and/or the paranormal with a dash of romance. In Dark Rivers of the Heart, Mr. Koontz combines suspense and science fiction with romance in a tale of a man, a woman and a dog on the run from a high-tech rogue government agency.

I like the concept of rogue government agencies. The idea stayed with me after reading this book and played a big part in my own paranormal romance. Later, I read Fear Nothing, the first book in Dean Koontz’ Moonlight Bay trilogy. The main character, Chris Snow, has XP–exeroderma pigmentosum. I was fascinated by the idea of a “real” disease that prevented the sufferer from venturing out in daylight without risking severe burns and skin cancers. I read all three books in the series and began researching the disease while contemplating ideas for a vampire book. Around the same time, I saw a re-run of the old Jean-Claude Van Dam movie, Universal Soldier. And by 2005, I had completed my first draft of Out of the Darkness.

Books, movies, life, and the most mundane of events can trigger the imagination. And inspiration can come from any direction. As a writer, I’m always reading or listening, hoping to get an idea for that next book. And when I’m reading, I often wonder what inspired the writer.

So, if you’re a writer, what inspired your latest release? And if you’re a reader, what inspires your decision to choose a paranormal over a historical? Or suspense over horror?

Inquiring minds want to know!


Slightly Tarnished has a release date!

15 Saturday Jan 2011

Posted by lillygayle in historical romance, Lilly Gayle, London, NC, Portsmouth Island, Slightly Tarnished, The Wild Rose Press

≈ 2 Comments

I’m so excited. I have a release date for my historical: Slightly Tarnished. Just in time for my 31st anniversary!
Here’s the info:
Title: Slightly Tarnished
Imprint: English Tea
Rating: Spicy GLV? no
Keywords: North Carolina, Victorian Era, marriage of convenience, suspense, disabled
Page Count: 308
Print ISBN: 1-60154-923-7 or Print ISBN 13: 9781601549235

Digital Release Date: 2011-06-03 Digital Price: 6.75
TENTATIVE Print Release Date: 2011-06-03 Print Price: 14.99

 Blurb:
Victorian romance laced with danger.

When a brooding English earl with a SLIGHTLY TARNISHED reputation marries his dead wife’s American cousin to save her from her uncle’s vengeful schemes, the sea captain’s daughter with a taste for adventure sparks desires he thought long dead.

Nicole Keller has always been headstrong and independent, but after a failed business venture and a sinking ship take her father, her home, and her childhood sweetheart, Nikki must support herself and her mother. But moving to England and marrying Chadwick Masters, Earl of Gilchrest isn’t what she has in mind. And falling in love with the mysterious earl could endanger both their lives.

Excerpt:

“This will be your room.” He opened the door and stood to one side so she could enter. “I’m afraid you will have to continue to make do without a lady’s maid. The only household staff I employ are Mrs. Lomax, Dickens, Cook, and my groom. My driver lives in the village as do the few maids I hire on occasion to help Mrs. Lomax with the laundry and heavier cleaning.”

Nikki smiled. “That’s quite all right, Lord Masters. I’m used to doing for myself, and it’s only for a week.”

He returned her smile and leaned forward, his warm breath fanning her cheek. “What happened to Chad? Surely we’ve gone beyond such formalities now, Nicole.”

Gooseflesh rippled over her skin. Her body quivered. “I don’t think it would be proper for me to call you by your given name.” She risked a glance at his face and wished she hadn’t. His eyes no longer looked worried. They were hot—almost feverish. Her skin heated.

“It didn’t stop you before,” he said, his deep voice a husky rumble. Despite the heat, Nikki shivered.

Oh my!

“I don’t think this is proper either,” she stammered when he brushed his lips against her temple. A delicious tingle skittered down her spine.

“No, probably not,” he said, nibbling her neck.

A strange tension rippled through her muscles, tightening them with pleasure. She arched her neck, granting him access as he slid his lips along the column of her throat. Her hands bunched the skirt of her plain, serviceable dress. Her stomach quivered.

“What are you doing?” she asked, breathless and giddy.

He pulled his hands from his pockets and pulled her closer. “I’m seducing you, I think.”

“Seducing me?” Her heart hammered against her ribs.

“Hmm. You’re doing it again.” Then he lowered his mouth and kissed her.

Resesarching the Story

14 Friday Jan 2011

Posted by lillygayle in historical romance, Into the Light, Lilly Gayle, OUT OF THE DARKNESS, paranormal romance, Slightly Tarnished, The Wild Rose Press

≈ Comments Off on Resesarching the Story

I’ve always loved trivia and researching useless and little known facts. I often spend days searching the itnernet for that one tidbit of information that grabs my interest and gives me the next story idea. The only bad thing is that I sometimes forget to write and spend hours on the computer researching.

Searching the internet for historical information on England is how I came up with the idea for my soon-to-be released historical, Slightly Tarnished. While scrolling through articles on London, I came across information on a period of time in London known as “The Great Stink.”http://www.martinfrost.ws/htmlfiles/great_stink.html

Just the title of the article intrigued me. And in 1997, I spent weeks researching and plotting a rough draft.

Before  “The Great Stink,” sewage emptied into cesspits under homes or poured directly into open drainage ditches. Run-off washed into the Thames and cesspits backed up into houses.  Sir Marc Isambard Brunel came up with the idea of tunneling beneath the Thames. 

He submitted a plan to drain London’s sewer to the lower side of the river by building a tunnel under the Thames. Work began on the original tunnel in 1825 but after several accidents and severe flooding, the tunnel was sealed in 1828.

In 1834 Parliment loaned The Thames Tunnel Company the funds to complete the project and Brunel’s son Isambard Kingdom Brunel acted as chief engineer. The senior Brunel redesigned a tunnel shielding to prevent flooding and work on the tunnel began again in 1840. It was completed in 1841 and in March of that year, Queen Victoria knighted Sir Brunel.The tunnel officially opened in 1843 but the stinch continued to plague London.

After completion of the tunnel, the Metropolitan Commission of Sewers ordered all cesspits closed. House drains were then connectted to the sewer system and drained directly into the Thames. As a result, there was a cholera epidemic in 1848-1849 and by 1858 the stinch from the river became unbearable.

“The Great Stink” created new interest in Sir Brunel’s sewer tunnel. Many cried, “Dilution is the solution to polution!” But adding more water to the tunnel systems didn’t stop the stink. It reached its peak the summer of 1858 when thousands were forced to flee the city. But Parliament remained in session, trying to find a soultion to the problem.

Government officials and citizens who either refused to leave the city or had no country estate to go to, draped their windows with curtains soaked in chloride of lime to keep out the odors and “dangerous miasmas.”

A new sewer design was needed and civil engineer Joseph Bazlgette was put in charge of the project. By combining the old with the new, he helped create a separate system for human waste and storm drains.

The Queen was so pleased with the results of the larger tunnel system, she ordered engineers to construct a rail system inside the tunnels. The sewer tunnel was quickly transformed into a promenade and tourist attraction. The tunnel still exists today and is part of London’s famous underground.

Currently, I’m researching ideas for the sequel to Out of the Darkness, my paranormal vampire romance. For a creepy peak into one of the websites that inpsired part of Into the Light, see the video at:http://anc.funkybuu.net/davisvideo.html

A Writer’s Pain

07 Friday Jan 2011

Posted by lillygayle in Amy Corwin, Lilly Gayle, OUT OF THE DARKNESS, romance, Slightly Tarnished, The Wild Rose Press, writing

≈ 17 Comments

When I first started writing, I thought it would just be for fun. And maybe one day, I’d get published. It soon became an obsession.

My first attempts at writing were poetry and children’s books. But in 1996, I decided to write what I loved reading. Novels. Specifically, romance novels. My first book was a medical thriller and my first heroine had the same job I had. She was a radiologic technologist. (RT, x-ray technologist, or radiographer. Take your pic but don’t call us techicians.) My fingers flew across the keyboard, typing story ideas and plot lines as they came to me. I didn’t plan the story out. I didn’t even have a rough draft. Just a basic plot in my head. It took less than six months to write what turned out to be the most God-awful book ever written.

It read like a boring radiology text book with a few characters thrown into the mix. I made every mistake new writers ever make. There were tense changes, no true POV, no uniformity of writing, and too much technical detail and backstory dump. I don’t think I even submitted it. Anywhere.

The book no longer exists. It was written in Lotus Works and the floppies aren’t compatible with today’s technology. No great loss. The plot was dated so it would no longer work anyway. My radiographer still used film screen technology and developed films in the darkroom. Most every hospital and urgent care now uses computed radiography or digital radiography. No film. No darkroom.

My next attempt at writing was a time-travel. Again, the words flew from my fingers and I thought it was brilliant. Until I went back and tried reading it from beginning to end. Ug! That was a painful experience. But at least that story still has potential. So, maybe someday…

Until then, I have other stories both written and yet to be written. I love starting a story. The excitement is still there and the ideas are still flowing. I know how the story starts and I know how I want to end. But getting to the end? Now, that’s when the fear sets in.

Once I reach the dreaded sagging middle, I freeze. What if I can’t do it? What if I finish and it sucks as badly as that medical romance I wrote in 1996?

When I’m in the editing phase, the hard part is over. The book is finished. And it’s just a matter of fine-tuning and adding emotion to the story. But sometimes, it takes a while to get to that point.

I’m really more of a pantster than a plotter. I always plot a general outline of characters and the basic story premise, but once that’s done, I just sit down and write. There’s an excitment about getting to The meet. The kiss. The black moment. But that’s where the excitement ends for me. I can’t seem to move forward. And I have to make myself finish the book. I sit down at the computer and think of all the loose ends I have to tie up in the story before I can reach my happily ever after. Then I think of how long it took to get those first books published, and my mind starts to wander.

Invariably, I start web-surfing. I look for ideas for new stories or read blogs or just waste time on Facebook.
The good news is I’ll never run out of story ideas. The bad news is I may never finish the damn book!

I know Out of the Darkness was good. And I know Slightly Tarnished is even better. Reading the final galley on those two books infused me with such pride. I couldn’t believe I’d actually written such good books. Seeing the covers for those books and knowing I wrote them should make it easier to write the next book. That’s what I always thought would happen anyway. Instead, I see those books and I’m afraid.

From first word put to paper until publication, Out of the Darkness was five years in the making. And Slightly Tarnished? Twelve! It was the third book I ever wrote. It only took a year to write but eleven years to edit to the point where it was publishable. And I think that’s the key to my fear.

What if every book I ever write takes that long to publish? I don’t think I can be that patient a second time.

Fortuantely, it’s nice to know I’m not the only author who feels this way.

Amy Corwin is one of my critique parners. She’s a multi-published author who’s published Regency romances and paranormal. And she’s soon to publish a mystery but that’s not my story to tell. You can follow her publishing success at: http://amycorwin.blogspot.com/

Amy says, “I can edit with joy. It’s this painful midway-to-the-end that is horrendous re: initial writing. The first few chapters are a breeze. The rest is blood pouring out of my veins.”

I know exactly how she feels!

So, what is your least favorite part about writing? Or, if you’re a reader, what do you most hate to see in a romance story?

Let me know. Maybe it will improve my writing skills and help lesson my pain. Lol!

Happy New Year!

31 Friday Dec 2010

Posted by lillygayle in beach, books, historical romance, Lilly Gayle, OUT OF THE DARKNESS, Slightly Tarnished, The Wild Rose Press, writing

≈ 2 Comments

I can’t believe another year has come and gone. I seem to measure my life not in days, weeks, or months, but in Summers and Christmases. And the older I get, the closer Summer and Christmas seem to get to one another.

Along about September, I start getting ready for Christmas. Though, truth be told, I sometimes start my Christmas shopping in July. I like to get a head start on gift buying because I like buying presents for the people I love and can’t afford to buy nice ones if I have to do all my Christmas shopping between Thanksgiving and Christmas. I know. I know. I could save money. But that’s never been my strong suit. And I use my Christmas club money not for gift buying but to pay the lot rent on my beach camper.

My husband and I actually started the holiday season off at the beach. The first weekend in December, we went to our camper so we could see the Christmas Flotilla in Beaufort. 

We had clams and beer at The Dock House Restaurant before the parade started.

After eating supper, we stood along the water front and watched the parade float by.

The boat parade runs along the water front from Morehead City, NC to Beaufort, NC. And it is truly a sight to behold.

This year there were even snow flurries on the waterfront. And it snowed on the beach last year and this year. I didn’t see it either time. And although I much prefer warm weather to cold, it is my life long dream is to see it snow (and accumulate) on the beach.

As of this year, I’ve only seen snow on the beach

in Virginia. While visiting relatives in Fredericksburg last February, we took a side trip to a beach along the Potomac River. It was freezing! But beautiful.

As 2010 comes to a close, I can’t really complain. My first book OUT OF THE DARKNESS was published.OUT OF THE DARKNESS is a paranormal vampire romance that’s gotten some fantastic reviews. Another good thing about 2010.

And on October 18, 2010, I signed a contract for my first published historical romance. SLIGHTLY TARNISHED is an British-set historical and is set for release from The Wild Rose Press’ English Tea line sometime next year.

I also received my first royalty check, making me a professional writer this year. There were book signings and blog appearances and I’ve genuinely had a good time with my new career.

If only I could finish the sequel to OUT OF THE DARKNESS before midnight tonight. Then, my year would be perfect. But that’s about as likely to happen as me winning the lottery. And so, for my New Year’s resolution, I resolve to complete the sequels to OUT OF THE DARKNESS and SLIGHTLY TARNISHED in 2011.

And hopefully, I’ll one day get to see it snow on the beach.

Merry Christmas!

24 Friday Dec 2010

Posted by lillygayle in Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Merry Christmas!

Christmas and the Paranormal–a re-post from my Black Rose Blog

Every Christian—even a few agnostics I know—understand the real meaning of Christmas. It’s written in John 3:16. For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.

But according to most biblical scholars, Christ wasn’t born in December. He was most likely born in September, about six months after Passover. But early Christians wanted to convert the Pagans and they were already celebrating in December.


The ancient Babylonians were partying it up in celebration of the feast of the Son of Isis. And way back in 46 BC, Julius Caesar marked his Julian calendar on December 25 as the date of the winter solstice. On that day, Romans celebrated rebirth, gathering and feasting in celebration of the shortest day of the year.
In other parts of  Europe, the pagans celebrated the birth of the Sun God, Mithras on the shortest day of the year and called it Yule. They’d toss a (Yule) log onto the fire and bring live evergreens into the house, decorating them as a reminder of the coming spring. 

The Druids also used evergreens as a religious symbol. They gathered around ceremonial trees and celebrated. There might even have been a sacrifice or two. 

But after Christ was born, the pagans didn’t want to give up their parties. So, Christmas became an annual celebration on December 25th with trees and Yule logs and that jolly fellow known as Santa Claus.

Santa, also known as Saint Nicholas, Father Christmas, and Kris Kringle originated in Holland. He’s a mythical character who delivers gifts to good children on December 24 or on his Feast Day, also known as Saint Nicholas Day on December 6.

Santa’s original wardrobe was a bishop’s robes, but he somehow morphed into a jolly fat man wearing a red suite.

In America, Santa Claus lives in the North Pole, has eight tiny reindeer who can fly and a shiny nosed leader of the pack known as Rudolf.  He also has a crew of elves making toys and spying on children to make sure they make his “good” list. But what happens to the children who wind up on the Naughty list?

In Austria and Bavaria, Santa has a helper, an evil counterpart who switches naughty children. Krampus is also a prominent Christmas figure in Croatia, Slovakia, Slovenia and northern Italy.

Good little children get presents from Santa. Naughty children get a switching from his demon-like helper, Krampus. The American tradition of leaving naughty children switches and ashes comes from Krampus. But in America, no demon like figure follows Santa Claus around to dole out the punishment.




Krampus festivals are traditionally held during the first two weeks of December. Young men dress up in goat furs, horns and masks and roam the streets frightening children and women with rusty chains and bells.  They also use a birch branch to switch young girls. 

 Krampus sometimes carries a basket on his back to carry away bad children. Quite the contrast to Santa and his sack of toys!

In Austria, there’s a Krampus festival and it usually starts with a parade. Young men dress up as Krampus and race through town waving torches, rattling chains, ringing cow bells, and swatting young women and children with birch branches.
The Krampuses arrive in the center of town—usually pretty intoxicated—and gather around a roaring bonfire. Afterward, there’s more drinking and plenty of revelry. I’ve never witnessed one of these festivals myself, but my daughter has and it was definitely an experience she’ll never forget.
So, this year when you’re celebrating Christmas with something more traditional like attending Church or Mass or awaiting Santa’s arrival, remember that even holidays have a paranormal side.

New Fiction and Gossip Magazine

19 Sunday Dec 2010

Posted by lillygayle in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Check out the new fiction and gossip magazine for writers and readers.http://www.wix.com/cocktailsmagazine/fictionandgossip

My article is on page 11.

Reveiws and free stuff!

19 Sunday Dec 2010

Posted by lillygayle in free book give-away, OUT OF THE DARKNESS, reviews, The Wild Rose Press

≈ Comments Off on Reveiws and free stuff!

Got a wonderful review tonight from TwoLipsReviews:

“Out of the Darkness is the most original and thought provoking vampire novel I’ve run across in a long, long time. I adamantly recommend it.”

You can read the entire review at  http://www.twolipsreviews.com/content/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=5757&Itemid=36

I also have a recipe (handed down from my grandmother) in the Garden Gourmet, a free PDF cookbook available from The Wild Rose Press. You can download it for free from the link below.
http://www.thewildrosepress.com/2010-garden-gourmet-p-4360.html

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Blogs I Follow

  • Rosie Amber
  • davidjrogersftw
  • Wild Heart Reviews
  • LITERARY TITAN
  • Captain’s Log
  • Cari Barnhill
  • Romance Novels for the Beach
  • thebookbreeze.wordpress.com/
  • Lilly Gayle Romance
  • Jill James, romance writer
  • Emma Kaye
  • Charlotte Copper...
  • Barbara Edwards Comments
  • andrisbear.wordpress.com/

Blog at WordPress.com.

Rosie Amber

Book reviewer and garden enthusiast. Updates from my Hampshire garden. Usually talking about books and plants. People do not forget books or flowers that touch them or excite them—they recommend them.

davidjrogersftw

Starting life Fresh: Living to Win

Wild Heart Reviews

Love is the heartbeat of the soul

LITERARY TITAN

Connecting Authors and Readers

Captain’s Log

Life On A Different Plane

Cari Barnhill

Where words are magic

Romance Novels for the Beach

Find out which sexy books to bring with you, or leave behind, on your next beach vacation.

thebookbreeze.wordpress.com/

Where Writers and Readers Meet

Lilly Gayle Romance

Romance Author and Books

Jill James, romance writer

Contemporary - Paranormal - Zompoc - Romance

Emma Kaye

Romance Author

Charlotte Copper...

Writer, reader and crafter. There are never enough hours in the day

Barbara Edwards Comments

Riveting Romance With An Edge

andrisbear.wordpress.com/

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