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September Author: Rebecca Forster

September 1, 2018 by in category Featured Author, Featured Author of the Month tagged as , , ,

 

Featuring Rebecca Forster | A Slice of Orange

 

Featuring Rebecca Forster. September Author of the Month

Rebecca Forster started writing novels on a crazy dare.

Now she is a USA Today and Amazon bestselling author of 29 books which the CBS Legal Correspondent calls, “Perfect. . .impossible to put down.”

After earning her MBA, Forster spent 14 years as a marketing executive before taking the leap from a corporate to a creative career. A fulltime author, speaker and teacher, Rebecca focuses on legal and political thrillers, but is known for bringing an uncommon sense of character and compassion to her work. Her Witness Series, featuring attorney Josie Bates, has resided on the Amazon bestseller lists for over three years in both the U.S. and U.K. and is a featured series at Audible.com. Before Her Eyes, a cross genre thriller, captured the winning votes for Reviewers Choice for Best Mystery.

Rebecca teaches the craft of writing and the cultivation of creativity at programs that have included the acclaimed UCLA Writers Program and as a guest speaker at legal associations, writer’s conferences, women’s symposiums and philanthropic groups across the U.S. She has made repeat appearances at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books and volunteers at Southern California middle schools to bring the excitement of writing into the classroom. Appointed to the Patient/Family Advisory Board at Torrance Memorial Hospital, Rebecca advocates for closer relations between patients, families and medical staff to improve care.

Rebecca lives in Southern California. She is married to a prominent Los Angeles Superior Court judge and is the mother of two grown sons. Travel is a passion and when she is not writing you can find her on a tennis court, in front of a sewing machine or on the couch with a book in her hand.

I don’t think the adventure is over yet – and I know that there are still a zillion books to be written –  so I hope you’ll check back for updates. Better yet, drop me note. I would love to hear from you. 

Below are just some of her books in print.

 

DISTANT RELATIONS

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DISTANT RELATIONS
INTIMATE RELATIONS

CHARACTER WITNESS

Buy now!
CHARACTER WITNESS

BEYOND MALICE

Buy now!
BEYOND MALICE

BEFORE HER EYES

Buy now!
BEFORE HER EYES

THE MENTOR

Buy now!
THE MENTOR

KEEPING COUNSEL

Buy now!
KEEPING COUNSEL

VOWS: The 90s Collection

Buy now!
VOWS: The 90s Collection

VANITIES: The 90s Collection

Buy now!
VANITIES: The 90s Collection
THE RECKLESS ONES: The 90s Collection

SEASONS: The 90s Collection

Buy now!
SEASONS: The 90s Collection

DREAMS: The 90s Collection

Buy now!
DREAMS: The 90s Collection
THE BAILEY DEVLIN TRILOGY: BOOK 1-3 (The Bailey Devlin Series)
LOST WITNESS: A Josie Bates Thriller

SECRET RELATIONS

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SECRET RELATIONS
THE DAY BAILEY DEVLIN’S SHIP CAME IN
THE DAY BAILEY DEVLIN PICKED UP A PENNY
THE DAY BAILEY DEVLIN’S HOROSCOPE CAME TRUE

SEVERED RELATIONS

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SEVERED RELATIONS

DARK WITNESS

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DARK WITNESS

FORGOTTEN WITNESS

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FORGOTTEN WITNESS

EYEWITNESS

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EYEWITNESS

EXPERT WITNESS

Buy now!
EXPERT WITNESS

PRIVILEGED WITNESS

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PRIVILEGED WITNESS

SILENT WITNESS

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SILENT WITNESS

HOSTILE WITNESS

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HOSTILE WITNESS

FOREIGN RELATIONS

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FOREIGN RELATIONS
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The Extra Squeeze Team is Taking Questions

June 30, 2018 by in category The Extra Squeeze by The Extra Squeeze Team tagged as , , , , , ,
We're Taking Questions | A Slice of Orange

Taking Questions!

Ever wonder what industry professionals think about the issues that can really impact our careers? Each month The Extra Squeeze features a fresh topic related to books and publishing. Here are some of the questions they have answered in 2017 and 2018.  Sensitivity Editors, How Much Reality and Is the F-word a Bomb.

But now they need YOUR questions. Is there a publishing or writing question that you want the answer to, but don’t know who to ask?

Let Amazon mover and shaker Rebecca Forster and her handpicked team of book professionals offer frank responses to your questions from the POV of each of their specialties — Writing, Editing, PR/Biz Development, and Cover Design.

Ask the Extra Squeeze Team a Question

    Rebecca Forster | Extra Squeeze

    Rebecca Forster 

     

    USA Today Bestselling author of 35 books, including the Witness series and the new Finn O’Brien series.

    Jenny Jensen | A Slice of Orange

    Jenny Jensen

    Developmental editor who has worked for twenty plus years with new and established authors of both fiction and non-fiction, traditional and indie.

    Robin Blakely | The Extra Squeeze Team | A Slice of Orange

    Robin Blakely

    PR/Business Development coach for writers and artists; CEO, Creative Center of America; member, Forbes Coaches Council.

    H. O. Charles | A Slice of Orange

    H.O. Charles

     

    Cover designer and author of the fantasy series, The Fireblade Array


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    Stuck at Home While My Friends are at RT

    May 10, 2018 by in category Charmed Writer by Tari Lynn Jewett, Events, Writing tagged as , , , , , , , , , , ,

    There’s a very special group on Facebook, if I do say so myself. The #CharmedWriters group. You may or may not have heard of it. It’s a semisecret group but it has a lot of power, at least within its members and special guests.

    It started a couple of years ago at this very time. Many of our local writer friends were getting ready to attend the annual Romantic Times Convention. For those of you not familiar with it, Romantic Times is a magazine for romance readers. Every year they put together an amazing convention that connects romance readers with the authors that they love.

    Anyway, many of us were “stuck at home, while our friends were at RT 2016”. And thus, a Facebook event titled Stuck at Home While My Friends are at RT was born. I invited all of my writer friends, at the time mostly romance writers. And they invited some of their friends. About 25 authors participated. It was basically a Butt in Chair event, where our goal was to keep our butts in our desk chairs, and see how many words we could write while our friends were partying at Romantic Times. We had word count challenges, we talked about promo, we had online happy hours for networking. All in all, I think those who attended had a great time, I know I did.

    Many of the writers broke their highest daily and weekly word counts that week, individually writing 10, 20 and more than 30,000 words. We got a lot of work done, learned from each other, made new friends, and motivated and inspired each other.

    And I gave out charms. Lots and lots of charms. When the week ended, we didn’t want this special week to just fizzle and go away, and the #CharmedWriters group was formed, named for the charms we earned while writing. We continued writing together regularly in what we call Office Hours, and had a few more Butt in Chair events in 2016.

    Last year I added speakers to the Stuck at Home event, making it more of an online conference, and the most amazing people stepped up and hosted online Ask an Authors and Workshops, and the event has continued to evolve including not just authors, but industry experts. Members get access to some highly successful and incredibly brilliant people.

    Next week we have a special line up of speakers including the wildly talented romance author Megan Hart (I’m a huge fan!). Author, and book coach the inspiring Ara Grigorian. The multi-talented romance author, editor and cover designer Judi Fennell. Award winning YA author, marketing wiz, and my former playgroup friend, Elena Dillon. Romance author and historical fashion designer/seamstress Victoria Vane, I’ve seen her gowns in person and they are amazing! And publicist and career coach Robin Blakely, who works with my friend, author of my favorite legal thrillers, Rebecca Forster…who has previously been a presenter for #CharmedWriters, and if you haven’t read her books you should! Not that she needs me to promo for her, she’s a brilliant writer…and she has Robin Blakely! And you probably know both Rebecca and Robin from right here on Slice of Orange.

    Do you wish you were a member now? Keep reading!

    A couple of weeks ago we hit 100 members when a friend of mine from middle school, author Christine Simolke, joined the group.

    Our membership is made up of authors at various stages in their writing journey, but all are seriously pursuing a writing career. We share our work, give and receive help, share experience and knowledge, help each other promote, and even more. Many of us have become friends, we share a passion that even if our friends and family support us, they don’t always understand.  It’s truly a #CharmedPlace.

    To be included you need to be invited by a member of the group, and you need to be actively writing. So, if you’re actively writing, and you’d like to be a #CharmedWriter, consider this an invitation! Friend me on Facebook and if we’re already friends just send me a message!

    So, being Stuck at Home While My Friends are at RT is no longer such a bad thing! And now you know why I titled my column Charmed Writer. Because I am!!

     

     

     

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    Writers in their Natural Habitat

    November 10, 2017 by in category Charmed Writer by Tari Lynn Jewett, Writing, Writing Conferences tagged as , , , , , , , ,

    When I think of my favorite authors at work, I think of them toiling away in a darkened room banging out pages on an antique typewriter in total isolation. There may or may not be a cigarette  on a long and a bottle of scotch involved, or a fine bottle of wine… It depends on the author. And, the truth is that writing is often a solitary process. But that is changing.

    The internet and projects like NaNoWriMo, organizations like Romance Writer’s of America, and changes in the publishing industry itself are bringing writers together in new ways. Writers are reaching out to each other having write ins, offering support, sharing their experiences with traditional and indie publishing, even sharing financial information, things that were unheard of less than ten years ago.

    Authors Jenna Barwin and Caitlyn O’Leary

    In October, I was part of a panel of women writers at the InD’Scribe Conference in Burbank California. First of all, it was incredible to get to sit on this panel with legal thriller author, Rebecca Forster, Navy Seal Romance author, Caitlyn O’Leary, and paranormal author, Jenna Barwin, after all, my debut novella will not be released until February. But the panel was about mentoring, and both Rebecca Forster and Caitlyn O’Leary have been mentors on my fiction writing journey. And this is what I’m talking about, writers no longer hide in their writing caves darkened and solitary penning pages. They reach out to other authors and offer support, and share their experience. They come together in coffee shops to have write ins and bounce ideas off of each other. Writing has become a social event as well as an individual creative process.

    As the Pro Liaison for the Orange County Chapter of Romance Writers of America I had the ability to reach out to successful published authors, editors and agents to ask them to talk to our group online, and almost every one of them said yes, volunteering to share their experience and let us pick their brains.

    Charmed Writers live write in, clockwise from left, author Chris Lentz, author Alana Hrabal, my son and chauffeur, Gerrod Garcia, author Caraway Carter, author Jeri Bronson, and author Jenna Barwin

    When I stepped down from that position I took the idea to another level and started a little online group called #Charmed Writers where we write together and have mini conferences with authors and industry experts as well as other experts who volunteer to join the group and share their knowledge.

    So, the image of a writer has changed. We no longer hide in the dark like vampires, we come out to write in coffee shops and restaurants. We form groups, friendships and working relationships. Some of the mystery may have gone out of the life of a writer, but the magic is still there and maybe stronger than before. If you’re a writer, find your tribe, seek out support, share your journey with other writers and readers.

    Where do I write? Usually in my brightly lit family room at my desk, with the curtains open and a view of my orange tree, but sometimes friends join me at my dining room table, or I meet them at a local coffee shop, usually no whiskey, but occasionally there is wine involved. Where do you write? And how do you imagine your favorite authors at work?

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    Is the F-word a bomb?

    August 31, 2017 by in category The Extra Squeeze by The Extra Squeeze Team, Writing tagged as , , , , ,
    Is the F-Word a bomb? | The Extra Squeeze | A Slice of Orange

    What does the Extra Squeeze Team think about the F-word?

    Is the F word a bomb?

    We’ve read books with it all over the place and yet notice that readers object to it.

    Does anyone really like using it?

    Would another word do?

    When was it necessary?

    Rebecca Forster | Extra Squeeze

    Rebecca Forster 

    USA Today Bestselling author of 35 books, including the Witness series and the new Finn O’Brien series.

    Is the F word a bomb?

    What kind of fucking question is that?


    What kind of friggin’ question is that?


    What kind of question is that?

    Actually, this is a great question and one I am happy to weigh in on because the use of the F-word had an impact it had on my career.

    I began my career as a romance writer (I was fired from this gig because I kept killing characters before they fell in love. My editor suggested a genre change.) I never used the F-word when I wrote romance. When I moved to contemporary women’s fiction I used it sparingly in these longer, more intricately plotted books (the word was only uttered by bad guys).

     

    When I upped the ante and moved into a male dominated genre – legal thrillers – everything changed. Writing became tighter, characters multi-faceted, plots ‘torn from the headlines’ were much grittier. In my writing the F-bomb was spoken by hard charging attorneys and socially marginalized criminals alike to underscore their tenacity for fighting for justice in the former instance or illustrate disdain for the system in the latter.

     

    Hostile Witness* was the first book where I really let loose. Lots of male thriller writers used the word, why not me? My editor at Penguin/Putnam had no problem with it and approved the book. When the Hostile Witness was traditionally published, I received no letters of complaint.

     

    Then came the Internet. I republished the first three books of the Witness Series* and readers started posting reviews as easily as they clicked their Kindle. I remember the first bad review I received because of my use of the F word. It said, “The language in this book is vile. I will never read this author again.”

     

    That stopped me cold, so I went back to the files and searched how many times I had used the F-word. I was shocked and embarrassed by what I found. In my quest to establish myself as a hard-edged thriller writer, I had gone overboard. Using profanity to the degree I had took the reader out of the story at best and offended them at worst. I asked myself, was there a better way to write a scene? A better way to inform a character? Had I been a lazy author and fallen back on a word rather than my skill to get a point across?

     

    The answer to all these questions was yes. Now I use the word friggin’ or cut the word off at Fu­ — and let the reader’s mind fill in the blank. Bottom line, I took the review to heart, objectively looked at my work and made an informed decision before I re-edited the book. Did I lose anything by banning the F-word?

    (F-word deleted) no.

     

    *Hostile Witness is Free to readers.

    **Sign up for my mailing list and get Hostile Witness and the Spotlight Novella, Hannah’s Diary, Free.

    Jenny Jensen | A Slice of Orange

    Jenny Jensen

    Developmental editor who has worked for twenty plus years with new and established authors of both fiction and non-fiction, traditional and indie.

    The Urban Dictionary defines ‘F-bomb’ as “the strongest weapon in one’s verbal arsenal” (a bit extreme, but it makes the point). Is it necessary to use in fiction? No, not necessary, but sometimes appropriate. The plot, the scene, the character, the action, the tone can all come together to make the F-word the only adjective or expletive that works. In that case, it should be a shocker – a strong, realistic part of the narrative rhythm. The word should be chosen with consideration and, by all the writing gods, don’t overuse it. Repetition strips the word of any value; it just becomes distasteful, silly and embarrassingly adolescent.

    It wasn’t long ago a writer would never consider using the word, nor would a publisher let them, although the F word was understood to have the strength of a bomb.

    from The Maltese Falcon (Dashiell Hammett, 1930)

    The boy spoke two words, the first a short guttural verb, the second ”you”.

    “People lose teeth talking like that.” Spade’s voice was still amiable though his face had become wooden.

    Great, right!? There are so many options for word smithing around the F-word but that requires thought and skill. Too many authors take the easy way out and use it as verb, adjective and noun. That’s just lazy or the mark of a poor writer.

    I recently ran across this Amazon review:

    I gave it 5 stars, because the writing, the sense of humor the detective has, and the story! All great! In fact, you are such a good writer, you don’t need to use the “F” word as much as you do! Your characters are great without it!

    Such a good writer…you don’t need to use… the reviewer said. That’s exactly what I mean.

    H.O. Charles

    Cover designer and author of the fantasy series, The Fireblade Array


    Well, a bomb is something designed to explode on impact, so I guess if you want to f-bomb effectively, it needs to be unexpected! In that case, it’ll only detonate properly in the most delicate, sweetest and appeasing of godly novels! But, of course, readers don’t always like to be shocked so hard that they fall off their chairs, and using language that is not in-keeping with the story will only make it jar, in my opinion. As writers, we aim to torture and make our readers emotional from time to time, but there’s intent and then there’s intent.

     

    I don’t mind using swear words – their offensiveness changes over time, and the F-bomb (being polite for you all here), is hardly the most offensive word or phrase out there at the moment. In some novels it’s absolutely appropriate to include swearing, and the target readership will reflect that. I do think over-reliance on a single swear word is a negative thing though. There are so many varied ways of swearing, and it’s up to the author to come up with setting- or character-appropriate vocabulary. In my fantasy novels, I frequently use ‘follocks!‘ (an obvious portmanteau of f**k and boll**ks), because it conveys the emotion I want, but also carries humour and sets the imaginary world apart from this one.

    What do you think of using the F-word in fiction?

    Ever wonder what industry professionals think about the issues that can really impact our careers? Each month The Extra Squeeze features a fresh topic related to books and publishing.

    Amazon mover and shaker Rebecca Forster and her handpicked team of book professionals offer frank responses from the POV of each of their specialties — Writing, Editing, PR/Biz Development, and Cover Design.

    Do you have a question for The Extra Squeeze? Contact us here.

    We're Taking Questions | A Slice of Orange
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