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Author Interview with Mary Kennedy – part two

April 2, 2007 by in category Archives tagged as

by Marianne Donley

Mary Kennedy is a multi-published author, and a clinical psychologist in private practice on the east coast. She specializes in forensic work, and her clients have included murderers, psychopaths and convicted felons. When not traveling to exotic locales, she lives with her husband and five neurotic cats. The cats have resisted all her efforts to psychoanalyze them, but she remains optimistic.

She writes young adult novels, middle grade fiction and mysteries. She has sold 37 novels, and has made both the Waldenbooks, BookScan and Publishers Weekly best-seller lists. Mary’s latest book, Secrets of a South Beach Princess, is available now from Berkley Trade.

Q – Do you ever run out of ideas? If so, how did you get past that?

Mary Kennedy – I’ve always had “day jobs” and I find that my experiences usually show up in my books. I was Public Relations Director for a major travel company and that inspired me to write SECRETS and set it in South Beach. I’ve done some celeb interviews and visited lots of Hollywood sets and that’s how I got the idea for TALES. As they say, “everything is material.”

Q – What is the craziest thing you’ve ever done?

Mary Kennedy – Do you mean besides becoming a writer? Just kidding! I once showed up on a movie set with a bad case of the flu and 104 temperature. They were shooting all night, 10 hours in the freezing cold. I had a four line role in the film and I was determined not to miss my chance. In hindsight, it seems pretty crazy but at the time it made perfect sense to me.

Q – What’s the best thing about being a writer?

Mary Kennedy – Well, I wish I could say the money, but I’m afraid that’s not the case. A lot of writers say it’s the flexibility and being able to set your own hours, but I’ve always done that anyway. I’m a licensed psychologist, which allows me to have a very flexible schedule.

Q – What is your favorite word?

Mary Kennedy – Courage.

Q – What is your least favorite word?

Mary Kennedy – No.

Q – What turns you on creatively, spiritually or emotionally?

Mary Kennedy – Working with animals is enormously inspiring–I can’t imagine not having pets in my life. Volunteering with rescue organizations is also very important to me.

Q – What turns you off?

Mary Kennedy – People who hunt, wear fur coats and eat shark-fin soup. I think they’re missing an “empathy gene.”

Q – What is your favorite curse word?

Mary Kennedy – You don’t really expect me to say that, do you? .

Q – What sound or noise do you love?

Mary Kennedy – Purring cats, of course.

Q – What sound or noise do you hate?

Mary Kennedy – Gunshots.

Q – What profession other than your own would you like to attempt?

Mary Kennedy – Writing for movies or television. I would do it for free, but that’s not the way it works.

Q – What profession would you not like to do?

Mary Kennedy – Working at a chicken processing plant.

Q – If Heaven exists, what would you like to hear God say when you arrive?

Mary Kennedy – “Just give your name to the cat at the door, and you’re in.”

Mary will be using her psychology experience to teach OCC/RWA’s April Online Class is INSIDE THE CRIMINAL MIND: CREATING THE PERFECT PSYCHOPATH.

Her class will run from April 16 to May 13 (four weeks). COST: $20 for OCC members and $30 for non-member. Enrollment deadline is April 14, 2007.

For more information about the class including how to enroll, please see our website http://occrwa.com/classes_April.htm

Part one of Mary’s interview was posted yesterday.

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Author Interview with Mary Kennedy -part one

March 31, 2007 by in category Archives tagged as


by Marianne Donley

Mary Kennedy is a multi-published author, and a clinical psychologist in private practice on the east coast. She specializes in forensic work, and her clients have included murderers, psychopaths and convicted felons. When not traveling to exotic locales, she lives with her husband and five neurotic cats. The cats have resisted all her efforts to psychoanalyze them, but she remains optimistic.

She writes young adult novels, middle grade fiction and mysteries. She has sold 37 novels, and has made both the Waldenbooks, BookScan and Publishers Weekly best-seller lists. Mary’s latest book, Secrets of a South Beach Princess, is available now from Berkley Trade.

Q – Do you find yourself returning to certain themes in your stories? What? Why?

Mary Kennedy – I do return to fish-out-water themes because I find it adds ready-made conflict to the plot. In Secrets of a South Beach Princess, my latest Berkley book, the heroine is blonde, rich and famous. She’s the “It” girl of South Beach, the daughter of a wealthy hotel owner. Yet even though her life is all “glitz and glamour” she never feels quite at home in this environment and strives for a new identity.

Jessie, in Tales of a Hollywood Gossip Queen, is another example. She’s a small town girl who finds herself working for an A-List magazine in Hollywood, interviewing stars on the red carpet and mingling with celebs. Yet she never quite fits in, and sometimes her small town values put her at odds with the Hollywood “players.”

The interesting part about fish-out-of-water stories is that you have to decide whether the main character blends in with her new environment, assimilating new values, or whether she stays true to her roots. And sometimes it’s a combination of both!

Q – You’ve written so much…how do you keep your ideas and writing fresh? (How do you keep finding new ways to say similar things?)

Mary Kennedy – I think that’s part of the challenge of writing–to explore familiar themes with a new twist. And sometimes even a very simple idea can develop into a complex plot if you remember to “up the ante” for the main character. In Confessions of an Almost-Movie Star, Jessie is thrust into the limelight when she lands a movie role opposite a Hollywood hunk –but there’s a price to pay when she realizes her best friend wanted the same part. Instant conflict!

Q – Do you have any writing rituals? Schedule?

Mary Kennedy – I don’t have a writing schedule but I make sure every minute I spend at the computer counts! I started out as a copywriter at a rock radio station, and I learned to write an enormous amount of material every day in spite of constant noise and distractions. I moved on to become a television newswriter and that was great training,too. A high-pressure environment, killer deadlines, no second-guessing. You learn to write fast, to be focused and productive, and to not make mistakes.”

Q – What kind of writer are you? A page a day or a burst writer?

Mary Kennedy – I try to write a scene every time I sit down at the computer. And I try to never leave the computer unless I feel good about what I’ve written and unless I know what the next couple of scenes will be like. It’s hard to go to bed if you know you have a “problem” waiting for you when you get back to the computer the next day. It’s much better to know you’ll be able to tackle a new scene–and a new problem–in the morning.”

Q – Are there any words of inspiration on your computer, in your office or in your mind when you write?

Mary Kennedy – “Never give up and never let them get you down.” Also, “Never accept a ‘no’ answer from someone who doesn’t have the authority to say yes.” Both these phrases have been helpful to me in business, in writing and in life.

Q – What’s the best advice you ever received?

Mary Kennedy – The never let them get you down quote. It came from my father who believed in the power of persistence.

Q – What’s the worst?

Mary Kennedy – My fifth grade teacher who told me she didn’t think comedy was my forte.

Q – Have you ever suffered writer’s block? If so, how did/do you get past it?

Mary Kennedy – No, honestly, I haven’t. Taping the Visa bill to the fridge is amazingly energizing.

Q – How do you stay motivated? What drives you to keep writing?

Mary Kennedy – Like all writers, I have dozens of characters and plots running in my head at any given time. Every once in a while I decide that one of them deserves to be in a book. To date, that has only happened thirty-seven times but who knows?

Q – What are you dying to try next?

Mary Kennedy – I’d love to write for television, but since Hollywood isn’t calling, I guess I’ll have to put that at the bottom of my wish list. More realistically, I’d like to put my forensic psychology experience into a book.

Mary will be using her psychology experience to teach OCC/RWA’s April Online Class is INSIDE THE CRIMINAL MIND: CREATING THE PERFECT PSYCHOPATH.

Her class will run from April 16 to May 13 (four weeks). COST: $20 for OCC members and $30 for non-member. Enrollment deadline is April 14, 2007.

For more information about the class including how to enroll, please see our website http://occrwa.com/classes_April.htm

Part two of Mary’s interview will be posted tomorrow.

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Maureen Child – Too Many Stories, Not Enough Time!

November 6, 2006 by in category Interviews tagged as

With more than 90 novels (one of which was turned into a movie) and multiple RITA nominations, Maureen Child is a mega-talented author on her way to the top. If you ask her, she’ll tell you she owes it to stubborn determination. If you ask me, she owes it to her quick wit too.

To see why, see her complete OCC Interview in November’s Orange Blossom.

Q – You’ve written as Ann Carberry, Sarah Hart and Kathleen Kane. Will the real Maureen Child please stand up?

A – Standing now—oops, you can’t see me. Ah, pseudonyms are a lovely little thing about writing. You can recreate yourself in dozens of ways. Just take a new name and write something completely different!

Q – What led you to take on so many different pseudonums?

A – I write fast. Always have. When I started, I was writing six or seven western historicals a year. My publisher at the time was Berkley, and the decision was made to take a pseudonym so I could get more releases out a year. Two under each name worked well for me. Then I started writing different things. Historical paranormals under the name Kathleen Kane, western adventures under Ann Carberry and one terrific Angel book under Sarah Hart.

Q – Do you write under any pseudonyms now? If so, what? Why?

A – Not at the moment. Silhouette Desire feeds my fast writing habit and they’re willing to bring out lots of books every year under my own name, so it’s easier to be me these days and simply answer to one name.

Q – You write category as well as single title. What do you love about writing categories that you don’t get from writing single titles?

A – I love category. They’re fast paced and well-told stories condensed into half the page count of a single title. They’re fascinating to write and always a challenge, which I love.

Q – What do you love about writing single titles that you don’t get from writing categories?

A – There, I can do more POV’s, go deeper into emotional conflict, take the plot further. There’s more room to explore. So luckily, I get the best of both worlds.

Q – Do you ever run out of ideas? If so, how did you get past that?

A – I read. All the time. In all different genres. I’ve always got a book going. I watch movies, TV shows, listen to music—country music especially, there’s a story in every song, I swear. Go to the mall. People watch. Wonder about the guy in the plaid shorts with the dark socks. Is he undercover? Is he lost? Why?

Q – Which is the favorite of your books? Why?

A – I still love This Time For Keeps. The heroine was GREAT and the whole situation was fabulous. Contemporary woman dies and instead of being reincarnated forward, she’s sent back. To the old west. Where she has to face the man who’s been the cause of her death in her last eight lifetimes. I had a blast writing that book.

Q – What’s the best advice you ever received?

A – My father always told me, “You can be anything you want to be if you’re willing to work for it.”

Q – What do you know now that you wish you’d known then, as a first-time author and/or unpublished writer?

A – When I was brand new and knew nothing, my first agent called to tell me that an editor was interested in my book but she wanted me to add 10,000 words. This is something I did not understand and said, WHY? The story’s complete as is. And this agent said, Okey-dokey, I’ll tell her. So, if I knew then what I know now, I’d have sold my first book two years earlier than I did.

Q – What three words describe you?

A – Another hard one. How do you judge something like that about yourself? I just can’t do it. (laughing) Okay, I cheated. I asked some friends your question and they said talented, generous and funny. But I prefer cranky, neurotic and clueless!

Q – What is the one thing you’ve never been asked, but you wish someone would?

A – “Would you mind moving your limo? It’s in my way.”

And don’t miss her latest, Eternally, out now. When asked which is Maureen’s favorite of her heroes, she said:

“Kieran MacIntyre, the hero of Eternally, my first Silhouette Nocturne, out this November. He’s old world (died while serving Mary, Queen of Scots) and though his heroine makes him insane, he’s stalwart and honest and honorable and willing to risk all for his sense of honor. Loved him.” Find out more about Maureen Child at www.maureenchild.com

Dana Diamond is the OCC/RWA Secretary, a columnist for OCC’s award-winning newsletter Orange Blossom, a contributor to A Slice Of Orange, and hard at work on her next book.For past interviews visit the Orange Blossom section of OCC’s award-winning website.

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Rita Clay Estrada – On Publishing Industry And Favorites

October 23, 2006 by in category Archives tagged as ,


Author RITA CLAY ESTRADA is RWA’s first president and the co-founder of OCC whose contributions to the romance genre led the national organization to name its highest honor – the RITA Award – in her honor.

Today on A Slice of Orange, Rita talks about the Publishing Industry and some of her Favorite Things.

Q – What has changed for the good in the industry since you formed RWA?

A – American writers can sell to the romance industry in America. American writers can take their name with them from publishing house to house. No one else can write under their pseudonym. They can check on the reputations of editors, agents and publishing houses before submitting manuscripts. They have a base in which to share ideas and contract clauses. They have a variety of sources both in chapters and in published reviews in which to use to promote and embellish their works. They have a cadre of writers to find information, seal friendships and feel a camaraderie for which there is no equal.

Q – What is your favorite book of all time? Why?

A – The Wolf and the Dove. Yet I understand it sold the least of Kathleen E. Woodiwiss first six or seven books. It was the relationship between the hero/heroine that I enjoyed most. That characterization spoke to me.

Q – Which is the favorite of your books? Why?

A – The one I love and hate at the same time is the one I’ve got the idea for and haven’t written yet. It’s in a pristine state of mind and will stay that way until I put it to paper. That’s where it turns to a pile of manure and I have to mold it into something that will allow the growth of a garden of characters and strong plot. But until it’s on paper, it’s perfect and brilliant!

Q – What do you look for or love to see in a hero?

A – It’s evolved into a good heart, a sense of humor and the ability to talk as well as listen. Come to think of it, it’s the same thing I love to see in any man…

For more of the interview with Rita, see the October issue of Orange Blossom.

Dana Diamond is the OCC/RWA Secretary, a columnist for OCC’s award-winning newsletter Orange Blossom, a contributor to A Slice of Orange, and hard at work on her next book.

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Rita Clay Estrada – On The Rita

October 14, 2006 by in category Archives tagged as ,


Author RITA CLAY ESTRADA is RWA’s first president and the co-founder of OCC whose contributions to the romance genre led the national organization to name its highest honor – the RITA Award – in her honor.

Today on A Slice of Orange, Rita talks about The Rita.

Q – When we think of The Rita, we think of you, but when I told you how honored I was to watch this year’s ceremony with you, The Rita, you said, “It’s really my mom.”

When you see RITA, who do you see? Or, what is RITA to you?

A – My mother was a very strong and vibrant woman in her youth and at a time when travel wasn’t the norm, she had me from one coast to another several times. In later years, she became my best friend. I will always admire and miss her but I must give her credit for making me being who I am and doing what I do.

The Rita Award is the reward for best of writing for everyone – readers and writers alike. I see The Rita and recognize the honor bestowed upon me for it having my name. But that’s now the award’s name.

I see Ms. Clay’s thoughtful design (no relation) I see all the winners and I’m humbled by what five women accomplished and nine thousand plus women all over the world continue to embrace and sustain.

I’m no different than any other writer, I’m awed by “The Rita.”
Q – Which was your favorite RITA ceremony? Why?

A – I love all of them. The first conference awards – not yet the Rita but the Golden Medallion –was my own brainchild and so I walked through it with nerve endings singing.

I’m most thrilled with that one because it was our first and it went off without too many hitches considering we had no script to follow. That year everything was done on a wing and a prayer.

Q – What did you love about this year’s RITA ceremony?

A – Nora Roberts did an excellent job. Doesn’t she always? But I loved the acceptance speeches. Winner shared their glory with friends and families. They kin to dedications in books – they’re so telling!

And I love Susan Elizabeth Phillips as a person, a teacher and one of my favorite writers. She has given so much and deserved receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award years ago.

For more of the interview with Rita, see the October issue of Orange Blossom. And join us at our 25th Anniversary Party on Oct. 14 for a chance to thank this romance legend.

Dana Diamond is the OCC/RWA Secretary, a columnist for OCC’s award-winning newsletter Orange Blossom, a contributor to A Slice of Orange, and hard at work on her next book.

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