Press Release! I’ve been signed by a publisher for my debut novel!!

J. Taylor Publishing
1500 Town Side Drive
Suite 104
Apex, NC 27502

Attention: J. Taylor, Marketing
(919) 249-7318, marketing@jtaylorpublishing.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Debut novelist, Claire Gillian, set to debut The P.U.R.E. in April 2012

Claire Gillian has signed a publishing contract with J. Taylor Publishing for her debut novel The P.U.R.E, set in Dallas, Texas — a humorous, romantic suspense novel, featuring main characters Gayle Lindley and Jon Cripps.

Apex, NC – August 22, 2011 – Claire Gillian is a number-crunching executive by profession, an after hours writer by passion, and a darkly romantic curmudgeon. Published in short stories and anthologies, The P.U.R.E marks Claire’s official, and debut, transition to the publication of her work in novel form. While Claire’s writing spans all ages and subject matters, she’s happiest penning romance drenched in humor with a dash of intrigue.

The P.U.R.E., written for the adult romance reader, takes Claire’s humor, her knowledge of Corporate America and the illustrious accounting profession and mixes them into a humorous, contemporary, romantic suspense novel set in Dallas, Texas.

“Claire has a witty, comedic-infused style that keeps her characters real and allows a reader to connect with them. That her characters work in a profession that is counter-intuitive to humor (they are both CPAs) only adds to the irony and fun that Claire brings to her story,” says J. Taylor Publishing. “She’s taken corporate America and number crunching, as she calls it, and turned them both upside down, shaken out the pennies and dimes from the pockets and righted them again with a wonderful happily ever after.”

The P.U.R.E. will release in paperback and ebook simultaneously and will be available through bookstores and online print and ebook retailers on or about April 16, 2012. “What better day to release a romance feature two witty CPAs, than the day after tax day,” says J. Taylor Publishing.

Claire Gillian lives in the boggy Pacific NW with her husband and two teen-aged sons. For more information about the author, please visit her website: www.clairegillian.com.

About the Publisher
J. Taylor Publishing is an Independent Publisher who, thanks to the Internet, has a worldwide reach. Our debut authors are in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada. The company produces print and electronic books. For more information about J. Taylor Publishing, please visit www.jtaylorpublishing.com.

Birthing “Prometheus Unstitched”

Superhero

Image via Wikipedia

My paranormal romance novella, Prometheus Unstitched is getting closer and closer to submission time.  My deadline is 9-1-11 but I’m pushing for the sooner the better.

I’ve had three lovely beta readers go through it so far and I’m now busy, busy culling through their thoughts and running autocrit.

I’ve also finished two drafts of the query.  First draft I posted at Absolute Write’s query letter hell and Scribophile.  I’ve posted my second draft here on my blog.  Queries are always considered in-process until the story finds a home.  The synopsis is in process too.

Writing a novella against a deadline like carrying around a nearly full term baby.  You just want it to finish cooking as quickly as possible and get out of you.  ha-ha!  Me and my analogies.

I realize I haven’t posted any snippets from this puppy, other than a couple of sentences over at Absolute Write in the “Favorite Lines You’ve Written” thread.  Here’s the one and only snippet I’ll post.

Theo leaned forward on his elbows, forearms crossed.  “Ever heard of Cassandra?”

“Cassandra who?  Does she work in the costume business?”

“No, Cassandra from Greek legend, daughter of the King of Troy, lover of Apollo, priestess of Athena.  Ring a bell?”  Theo sported a cocky grin, the faintest of dimples asserting itself in his cheek.

“Keep going…” Cory whirled her hand to urge him on with what would have been a ludicrous story were he not super-powered.  She met far too many strange superheroes to dismiss any tales outright.

“Cassandra had the gift of foresight but Apollo cursed her with the inability to convince anyone of her predictions.  I am a descendant of Cassandra through my mother’s side.  I possess the same ability, and, alas, the same curse.  All I can do is all I can do.”  He tapped his chest.

Cory’s brow formed deep grooves.  “Okay, yes, I remember reading about Cassandra.  Why didn’t you call yourself Cassandra Man?”

Theo rolled his eyes and whispered, “No.”

She interpreted that to mean he thought taking a gender-bending name belittled his masculinity.  These guys were all so touchy about that sort of detail.  Recalling her mythology, Prometheus meant “forethought” in Greek.  As the champion of mankind, the Titan god Prometheus was a much more grandiose embodiment of Theo’s ability and purpose, typical of the superhero mindset.

“O-kay, but why do you say all you can do is all you can do.  What does that mean?”

“It means, I alone can take action to forestall or prevent bad stuff from happening.  For example, say I foresee you tipping over in your chair.  If I tell you, “Miss Blindbarrow, mind your chair or you will fall,’ you will ignore me and still fall thus proving my prophesy true.  I can, however, dash to your side and catch you before you hit the floor, if…” he held up a finger, “if I have shut off the prophecy prior to seeing you hit the ground.  Once I see an outcome, I can’t change it, but I can alter the circumstances to lessen the impact.”

Cory tapped her pen against her pad.  “That sounds like a paradox though.  If you change the outcome, you disprove your prophetic abilities.  With no prophecy, you eliminate the need for action.”

“True, which is why I can only alter the circumstances.  Prophecy is not an exact science; the edges are blurry.  Those edges are where I can effect changes and, if I may be so bold as to state, what I do not see, I can rewrite.”

“But if you don’t see it, how do you know you changed it?”

“I don’t, but there are certain laws of physics that cannot be ignored.”

“I dunno, I’ve seen ‘em broken a few times by the otherworldly types.”

“They don’t count.”

“Says who?”  Cory tapped her pen.