Sunday is December 1. This may mean several things to many of you. For my brother, it means two more days until his birthday (Happy early birthday, Adam!) For lots and lots of good little boys and girls it means 23 more days until Santa comes to visit late at night. For me, it means ONE MONTH until my debut novel is published.
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THE WEATHER GIRL Cover Reveal!
After months and months of waiting, the time is finally here. The official US cover for The Weather Girl has been released. I seriously cannot believe there will be a book out there with my name on it. A book with my words printed inside of it. This is absolutely an unreal moment!
Without further ado, here is the cover …
Line edits and Amazon
Surprisingly, I still feel this way even after I got my line edits back.
After perusing the document and all the slashes and comment boxes, I emailed my editor – Please tell me that everyone has this much red when they get their line edits back. She assured me I have just as much red as the next guy and not to be worried.
I do have to say it is amazing to have a real editor go over your work. Not that I don’t appreciate all the eyes that have looked over my work (Mom, I swear, you are so great) but the people who do this for a living, know what they’re doing.
That sentence that took me twenty words to get my point across? Knocked down to five.
That perfect word I just couldn’t think of? She nailed it.
Do you have any idea how many times I used the phrase “that much was clear” or had my characters nod? Too many. Their necks should thank Claire for cutting out lots and lots of nodding.
I also rhyme unintentionally. Literally a poet who didn’t know it.
Basically, Claire is awesome.
I was so curious about the editing process, having never gone through it before. And I’ll admit it wasn’t as bad as I thought it was going to be. The process for this book has gone something like this – review and revisions with the senior editor, line edits with the editor assistant, copy edit, author review, then off to the proofreaders. I am in the author review stage.
The line edits were fun. There were comments and questions and lots of commas added and deleted. (I hate commas, by the way!) My editor lives in Canada and I learned through this process that not everyone knows what a high school booster club is or that a flip flop is the same thing as a handspring. I did a little research on the pop vs. soda vs. Coke labels based on geographic location and had to make sure my characters called it the right thing. (Texans lean towards Coke, if you were wondering.)
I also learned how clean Heartwarming really is. Let’s just say that if you are looking for something that’s like that book I won’t name but rhymes with Nifty Braids of Hay, THE WEATHER GIRL is not going to be for you. This is definitely a book I will not be ashamed to let my children or my students or my student’s parents read. It’s good, wholesome fun. Although, I did fight for some more kissing – because, come on, there needs to be some kissing.
What I hope is that this story and these characters have enough heart that nobody misses the smut that seems so popular today. I know that I like them more and more with every reread I do. And I’m on read 105,394 (approximately, of course!)
Lastly, if you didn’t see my Facebook post, I’m now on Amazon and Barnes and Noble. Which is completely insane. The book publishing date also got moved up from February to January. Looks like I will become a published author 17 days before I turn 40! This will, no doubt, be the best birthday ever.
Even more exciting, I got an official back of the book blurb!
All that’s left is a cover and the book in my hand. I CANNOT wait. I hope to reveal the cover soon. They tell me maybe in October.
That’s all for now. I have to go back to my final edits!
xoxo,
Amy
The Next Step
So, things are moving along. The contract has been sent and once I find a few hours to sit down and decipher what all that legalese, I’ll sign it and everything will be official. I had to enter some information about the story and the characters into a database that will help the art department design the perfect cover. One of the sections said – Write a hook in 30 words or less that makes the reader want to read your book! No pressure, right?
You would think that since I wrote the book, I’d be able to knock out a 30 word summary quite easily. Ha ha. A few text messages to a friend at 1am (thank God for west coast friends) and a phone call to my mom in the morning, and I think I nailed it. We’ll see.
I also had to come up with alternative titles. This was perhaps worse than the summary. Anyone who writes knows how hard it is to come up with the first title. Coming up with something that’s original, relates to the story, and makes people want to read it isn’t easy. Any idea how many books out there have storm in the title? A quick search on amazon left me a little discouraged. I somehow managed to think of a couple, but I really hope they stick with The Weather Girl. I kinda like it.
After describing the characters and a couple scenes from the book, I was finished with my art fact sheet. I think that was all the say I have in what the cover will look like. The good news is I think the Heartwarming series has the prettiest covers of all the Harlequin books. I can’t wait to see what they come up with for this one!
My friend, Jo, made me some pretend covers before I got a deal and thought I might have to self-publish this puppy for it to see the light of day. I love them and they are hard to beat. I thought I would share them here since things worked out a little differently than I thought they would!
The first one is my favorite. But like I said, I can’t wait to see what the good people at Harlequin come up with!
This is all very exciting and still a little unbelievable. But there is much to do before there is a finished product for people to actually read and an official cover for me to reveal. First, I have to do some revisions.
I think I could revise my manuscript every day for the rest of my life. There are always little things I want to tweak or change. At the same time, there are parts I have fallen in love with and I can’t bear to let go of. I read somewhere that authors should not get too attached to certain scenes or sentences because that might be the part that needs to be trimmed. I can see how true that is.
After a chat with my editor, I have been tasked with raising the emotional stakes. This means taking some of the sweet, easy scenes and roughing them up a bit. Make it a little harder for the characters. You’d think after my first post where I bragged about my ability to torture my characters, I’d have no problem doing this. We’ll see. It’s a challenge when you gone in one direction and now have to change course.
It’s a challenge I’m ready to take, though. This whole thing is so fun, I’m ready to do whatever it takes and then maybe write another one. And another, and another, and another. LOL
xoxo,
Amy
Testing … testing …
Here we go!
Welcome to my blog. I wish I could say I knew what I was doing, but that would be a lie. A week ago, I was planning a summer of entertaining my children. Now, I’m planning on entertaining the world! Okay, maybe that’s a little presumptuous. I’ll settle for entertaining my friends and family at this point. Anyone else who happens to buy my book will simply be a bonus.
I thought for my first post, I’d explain how I got here. Some people who know me might be wondering how this book came about since writing isn’t my day job. Others might think they know when it started but are probably wrong.
I have always been a daydreamer. Since as far back as I can remember, I made stories up in my head. Unlike my children, I didn’t need an electronic device in my hand to entertain me. My first inspiration?
Daytime television.


My mother and her mother before her loved soap operas. Days of Our Lives, The Young and the Restless, Another World, and General Hospital. I watched them all when I had the chance. There was something about the drama and the romance that hooked me immediately. Someone was always dying or coming back from the dead or falling in love with with their sister’s third husband. How those writers come up with all those storylines, I will never know!
So considering the source material, it’s not surprising that the stories in my head were a little … shall we say melodramatic? I also killed characters off, made the characters have unplanned pregnancies, and everyone was extremely beautiful and rich (of course). Most importantly, the hero and heroine always found their way back to one another. Soul mates. True love. That was always the underlying theme. Happily ever afters were a must.
It wasn’t until I was a wife and mother that I decided to put one of these stories down on paper. At first, I simply wrote out dialogue and a sketch of the scene in my head. More like a screenplay than a novel. It was supposed to be a way for me to remember all the horrible things I had done to my poor characters so I didn’t torture them too much more.
The story was terrible. No really. It was terrible. But I loved it. I decided to fill in more of the blanks and put it in story form. I used to drive my husband crazy. I’d sit in the office for hours after the kids went to bed, writing and revising. He couldn’t understand why I was wasting all this time on something like that, especially if I had no plans to let anyone see it.
I wanted to see it. I wanted to see it there in black and white, my characters brought to life by my words. It was a thrill. My husband was the only one who knew my secret until I told two of my sister-in-laws one summer during a vacation up at my family’s lake house back in 2007.
“I wrote a story,” I confessed.
It was like being back in high school and telling someone my secret crush. They indulged me and let me tell them all about it. They listened intently and told me it sounded interesting, bless their hearts. It was terrible, remember?
Still, telling someone made it even more exciting. What if I let people read it? What if they liked it? What if they hated it? There was always that inkling of doubt. Maybe that was why it took me so long to work up the courage to share what I wrote with others. I was a social worker not a writer! I didn’t go to school to learn how to write. What did I know?
I read somewhere that the best way to become a better writer was to read more. So, I did. I love to read. I was always that kid who could consume a book a day. I still have a hard time putting a good story down even if it means forgoing sleep or leaving the laundry unfolded. I read and I read. The more I read, the more I thought – I can do this.
I worked on that first story some more and decided to post it on an online story site. I think when I got feedback from three people I was sure I was going to be a rockstar. The fact that more than one person liked what I wrote was mind-blowing.

Don’t forget it was terrible, though. Let’s just say Grammar Girl would have had a field day marking that thing up with her red pen. I had no idea what a dialogue tag was or how to punctuate anything correctly. My verb tense changed every other sentence. It was a nightmare. And is no longer anywhere for people to read, by the way.
The feedback gave me the courage to keep writing. I wrote several more stories after that, each one a little better than the last. It’s amazing how much you can learn by doing. My writing circle of friends helped, too. Without them, I don’t know where I would be now.
One day, one of those friends tweeted about the Harlequin “So You Think You Can Write” contest. I thought I could write. It was time to really test that theory. Time for me to see what a real editor would say. So, I entered. I wrote The Weather Girl specifically for the contest. I wasn’t sure it was what Harlequin was looking for, but I thought it was original and had fun characters.
I made it through the first round and was told to submit my full manuscript to the editors. Thanks to Sue, Kathy, Nicole, Christine, and my mother for their undying support during that time. They checked and double checked that manuscript for me in a very short period of time. Very short.
I have amazing friends.
Unfortunately, I didn’t advance to the Top 3. I was disappointed, for sure, but I made it much further than I could have hoped for! It was promising. It made me want to see my name on a book.
Then the email came. The one from the editor at Harlequin Romance. The one who said my story had potential and if I reworked it, they would love for me to resubmit it. Then another email. This time from the Harlequin Heartwarming editor, saying the same thing.
I died.
Okay, I didn’t die. I thought I must have died because this was too much. I wrote and rewrote. I sent chapter after chapter to my sweet mother who kindly checked for errors. I should mention my mother is my biggest fan and the most wonderful person I know. She is. She really is. I finished the rewrite and, on my last day of school, my eldest son helped me push the button to send the manuscript off to Harlequin for good luck.
Fast forward to this Monday. I was standing outside of Panera Bread with my daughter, waiting on my mother for a girls only lunch date. We were actually FaceTiming with my youngest son, who was already wondering when we were coming home. That’s when I got the call. You know, THE call. The one where the editor says she wants to publish your book.
Needless to say, I did some jumping around outside Panera. My daughter was mortified. My mother showed up just in time to celebrate with me. It was a perfect moment.
The adventure now begins. I can’t wait to see what happens over the next few months. The Weather Girl is slated to be released in February 2014. I can only imagine all the things that will happen before then. I figured this blog will be the perfect place to document the journey.
Thanks go to Jo Richardson, my dear friend and fellow author, who helped me set up this blog and make it look pretty.
Here we go!
xoxo,
Amy
















