Just a quick update to let anyone I haven’t already told know that I’ll be chatting live tonight from 9 to 10 p.m. on Coffee Time Romance. Here’s a link: My First Author Chat. Yep, you read that right. It’s my first live chat as an author. I’m a little nervous, but I know it’s really going to be fun. There’ll be lots of other Lyrical Press authors there, too, so come join us!
Author Archives: Michelle Garren-Flye
Giving blood in an interview: Type AJ Negative
My good friend AJ Brown interviewed me for his blog Type AJ Negative, and it was really painless! No collapsed veins or anything but fun. Check it out here: Michelle Garren Flye Pricks a Finger and Kills Commas. While you’re over there, check out AJ’s other, much more entertaining, interview with author Steve Lowe. I’ve never read any of Lowe’s work, but I’m likely to look him up now. That just goes to show what a skillful interview can do.
Here’s hoping AJ’s interview with me has that same effect on others!
Take a moment to BREATHE and read Kathy Fish’s “Watermelon”
The amazing Kathy Fish, who is taking over the literary world one flash at a time, has done it again! She’s written a novel in a paragraph and the smart folks at Quick Fiction have snagged it. It’s up right now. Check it out: WATERMELON. I bet you can’t read it just once!
Help me out if you’ve read my book!
Writing is lonely work, maybe the loneliest of all arts. First, you spend months laboring over a novel, then you search frantically for a publishing outlet, then you sit and wait. After all that hard work, you wait and wonder if anybody’s even reading what you’ve written, or if they ever will.
Already, I’ve been fortunate to receive two very thoughtful and kind reviews. (My thanks to Single Titles and Happily Ever After Reviews for those!) I’ve also had a couple of people drop me an email to let me know they read and enjoyed the book. (A special thanks to those readers, too!) I am very grateful for all the feedback I’ve received, and it’s probably more than an author should expect for her debut ebook.
If you’ve read my book and would like to offer feedback without writing a full email or review, however, the internet and most retailers make it very simple. You can easily rate Secrets of the Lotus on the following ebook retailers:
Amazon
Books on Board
Mobipocket
Fictionwise
All Romance eBooks
You can also rate Secrets on Goodreads. If the spirit really moves you, write a two or three line review on my page at Lyrical Press. Every rating may help somebody else find my book, so if you’ve got a second to click a few stars, please do!
New Review of Secrets: Happily Ever After
Just a quick note to let everyone know I’ve gotten a new review of Secrets of the Lotus by Happily Ever After. Secrets gets three tea cups and a heat rating of one. I’m pretty much okay with that heat rating. If you’re wondering why, check out my blog post from about a month ago: 28 days and the dreaded subject.
Anyway, check out the review for yourself: Happily Ever After Review.
My thanks to the folks at Happily Ever After for reading and reviewing! I’m thrilled to know it when people read and enjoy anything I’ve written, so please, don’t hesitate to send me an email if that happens to you. You can reach me at michellegflye@gmail.com. Hope to hear from you!
Update post publication
Hi all! Well, I’m one week post publication and staying as busy as possible to keep from obsessing about my book. After all, it’s in your hands now. I wrote it and edited it and subbed it over and over again until it found a home. Now you have to do the work!
As a side note, I did enjoy my first ever “book release” party, which basically just means I went down my Christmas card list and invited everybody and we had a great time eating and drinking and toasting my book. It went by too fast, though! Here’s a picture of one of the decorations I created for the occasion (I’m kind of proud of it!):

So what am I up to? In no particular order:
—Finishing up the first draft of my work-in-progress, hopefully this week. Then the long, arduous rewriting process begins!
—Pulling out an old draft of a novel to see if it has any possibilities.
—Editing for Dark Recesses. I have two really chilling stories waiting for my tender attentions. If horror is your thing, keep an eye on darkrecesses.com over the next few weeks. There are some really good fiction pieces coming your way!
—Figuring out what to do with my promotional postcards and bookmarks. Any ideas? Drop me a line at michellegflye@gmail.com.
—Playing with my kids! We’ve only got a little over a month left of summer!
The “Secret” is Out!
Ha! Sorry, I couldn’t resist the pun. Yes, Lyrical Press has released my book a day early, so if you need something new to read for the fourth of July, check it out. I also found a new review, and though the title is wrong, the reviewer was very complimentary. You can find the review here: Single Titles review. If that review so impresses you that you simply must have the book, go to this site: Secrets of the Lotus. And when you’ve read the book, drop me a line and let me know what you think. If you don’t have my email, you can get in touch with me at michellegflye@gmail.com. Or leave me a comment here. I’m looking forward to hearing what you think. I’ve waited a long time for this!
One week to go: The leap of faith.
According to Wikipedia (Respiratory rate), the average adult breathes 12 to 20 times per minute. With one week to go before publication of Secrets of the Lotus, I’m determined to count a few of those breaths and make even more of them count for me.
I’ve been thinking about the relationship between writing, reading and editing. I know a lot of writers want a “first reader”, someone who can read through a rough draft and give impressions of what parts of the storyline do and don’t work. I had several good first readers for Secrets. (Thanks, guys!). My work-in-progress, however, is a different story. I am my own first reader for this one.
I really can’t believe how well this one is progressing right now. I’m at 64,000 words and I know what happens, where the characters want to end up. I’m a little surprised by the turn it’s taken, too. I thought the story would be the romance, but at least as important in this story are the main character’s relationships with the other female characters. Unfortunately, I actually fought that until I was three-fourths of the way through, so I’m going to have to do some heavy re-writing when I make my first pass through the manuscript. I really, really love the female characters in this story, which I guess is no real surprise. I’m lucky enough to have a lot of great, strong female characters in my real life, a fact for which I am grateful.
It’s funny, but I’ve been writing this story for so long, I have almost forgotten some of what I’ve written. I scan through it and am a little startled when I read something I really like — but I don’t remember writing it. It’s almost like somebody’s written half the story for me. Somebody has, in fact. Me from six months ago. Me from three months ago. Me from today.
So, as my own first reader this time, I have an idea what it’ll be like for anyone brave enough to read my book. Readers know only what’s on the cover of the book, not really what’s inside. To invest time and energy in the creation of a writer in the hopes of getting some small satisfaction is truly what I have always called a “leap of faith”. It’s a little humbling for me to hope that in one short week, at least a few readers will be willing to take that leap for what I have written.
Breathe in, breathe out.
(11 days to go) Venturing into ereading
I’ll be the first to admit I didn’t anticipate my first book coming out in an electronic format. Pretty difficult to give away signed copies of that, you know? I didn’t even own an ereader until two weeks ago.
However, I like to think I’ve got an open mind. After researching not only the future of epublishing but also my other options, I made what I hope was an informed decision and let my book go to a (primarily) electronic publisher with the hope that someday I will see it in print.
Of course, this isn’t my first foray into electronic publishing. Before I began writing a lot of words and stringing them together, I wrote a few words and strung them together. I’ve written short stories and flash fiction and even microfiction. And trust me when I say, the print markets for short fiction of any length are really, really, REALLY competitive. Like, if you’re not awesomely good at stringing those words together, forget it. I read the short stories in print publications and get goosebumps because they’re so freaking good. Print short story writers are da bomb. No kidding.
That said, most of my short fiction was published online. I managed to get a few into print pubs that weren’t really paying much attention on a particular day, but for the most part, I’m an online writer. Not that there’s anything wrong with that (salute Seinfeld!). Online writing is pretty damn good, too. I’ve edited for online publications, and believe me, they get everything. While editing fiction for edifice WRECKED, which is sadly no more, I saw some stories that stunned me with their poetic beauty, stung me with their edginess or knocked me out flat because they were just so good! Same thing for my current gig at Dark Recesses. Believe me, you can find great writing online, too.
And so I’m now the proud owner of an iPad. The first book I’m reading on it? The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. I’ve actually got a nicely bound leather copy of it on my bookshelf, but it seldom comes down. I’m loving getting reacquainted with Mr. Holmes.
Want to see a really great example of online publishing? I can highly recommend the first issue of Stymie. If you flip through to page 30, you’ll find the one and only story I’ve ever written about golf: Her Only Rival. Plus, it’s just fun to flip the pages — almost as good as my iPad.
19 days to go: I believe
I write women’s fiction. Understand that I define women’s fiction as something a woman would read. If you want to check out some of my personal brand of women’s fiction, try: China, Family Table or Her Only Rival. (Okay, I threw in Her Only Rival just for fun. I think it’s important that we women not take ourselves too seriously.)
I’ve taken a couple of cuts about writing a romance. Hell, I was a horror writer for a while. I wrote about werewolves (I still LOVE my werewolf story), vampires and zombies. Where did the romance come from?
Answer: It was always there. I believe in happy endings. At least, I believe in writing about them. We need to believe in happy endings. We need our books and movies and songs to have them. If we don’t, what do we have to hope for? The news sure ain’t gonna fill that need.
I remember a pastor once asking me, why do we have faith? The answer: without faith, there is no hope.
Same thing with happy endings.