Thursday, February 05, 2009

Rene Ryan is here! Win a free copy of her latest book.


Renee Halverson w/a Renee Ryan Bio:

Renee grew up in a small Florida beach town. To entertain herself during countless hours of "laying-out" she read all the classics. It wasn’t until the summer between her sophomore and junior years at Florida State University that she read her first romance novel. Hooked from page one, she spent hours consuming one book after another while working on the best (and last!) tan of her life.

Two years later, armed with a degree in Economics and Religion, she explored various career opportunities, including stints at a Florida theme park, a modeling agency, and a cosmetic conglomerate. She moved on to teach high school Economics, American Government and Latin while coaching award-winning cheerleading teams. Several years later, with an eclectic cast of characters swimming around in her head, she began seriously pursuing a writing career.

Renee sold her first book, EXTREME MEASURES, to Dorchester Publishing by winning the inaugural New Historical Voice Contest in 2002. She eventually reconciled her writing with her faith and began writing Inspirational Romances in 2006. She sold her first Inspirational manuscript to Love Inspired Historical in December 2006 and has since sold three more. Her first book in the Charity House series, The Marshall Takes a Bride was a February 2009 release. Her next book in the series, Hannah’s Beau, hit the shelves July 2009.

For further information check out www.ReneeRyan.com


Plug time! Please tell us a little about your latest release and why readers should run out and buy it as soon as it hits the shelves.

The Marshal Takes a Bride is a Love Inspired Historical February 2009 release. Why buy it? Well, for one, it’s a Western. Who doesn’t love Western’s? Add into the mix a wounded hero, a determined heroine, and her lively 5-year-old sister and now you have a story of hope, redemption and the healing love of family.



How many full manuscripts did you write before you sold? Or if you’re pre-pubbed, how many have you written to date?

I completed five manuscripts before selling. The first three were total shots in the dark. I was utterly clueless. But I proved to myself that I could start and finish a novel, so I consider the time well spent. Then I joined my local RWA chapter and my real education began. Three years after joining, I sold my first book.

In your opinion, what’s the most fascinating thing about writing?

I am consistently amazed at the process of discovering new characters that previously didn’t exist. I fall in love with them every time, and I mean every time. So I set out to make sure they get their happy ending. If only real life could have such closure.

What’s something you can tell us about yourself that most people don’t know?

I’ve been skydiving several times. That’s right. I have jumped out of a perfectly good airplane on more than one occasion!

When did you start writing for publication and what did people say when they found out?

I started writing seriously in 1997. From day one, I received the same question I still get today. Are you published? I hated that question before I sold. I’m not crazy about it now. The assumption that we’re only “real” writers if we’ve published a novel is absurd. It’s about the journey, not the destination! Chasing the sale never works in the long run. Sadly, I know this from experience.

What is your favorite food?

Steak! Medium-rare. I love, love, love steak. LOVE IT. The best I’ve ever had was at Ruth’s Crist. Unbelievable seasoning. I could gush all day about this particular food item. Suffice it to say, I’m a bona fide carnivore.

Tell us a little about your family.

We’re a blended family. I married my husband when my daughter was three and his son was nine. The four of us lived happily together in the same house for thirteen years. However, now that our son has graduated college (sniff, sniff) it’s just the three of us left in the home. My daughter is a junior in high school (and all that that implies). My husband is in radio, and has the magnificent voice to prove it. We also have a large, fluffy cat that my husband is convinced is part bear. He will not believe me when I say I saw BOTH her mother and father at the pound where I found her. And they were, indeed, cats. It’s our only on-going argument to date.

Who are your favorite authors?

I love Francine Rivers, Liz Curtis Higgs, Beth Moore, Susan Elizabeth Phillips and all the Love Inspired Historical (LIH) authors. Honestly, I’ve enjoyed every one of the LIH releases this past year. Steeple Hill has done an excellent job with the launch of this new line.

What are you reading now and what’s in your “to be read” pile?

Right now, I’m reading WWII research books—mostly ones about Nazi Germany (where my current WIP is set). I’m fascinated with tales of the German Resistance. It took great courage to fight the Nazi Regime from the inside. Such heroism is inspiring.

Do you set out to write each story with a particular theme or does the theme develop as the story does?

I find I have recurring themes that show up no matter what story I set out to write, themes such as the condition of our hearts, first impressions, courage in the face of fear, shame and, a big favorite, forgiveness coupled with grace.

Do you have a particular method for tracking the details in your story? Can you tell us a little about this?

I’m a plotter, but not in the traditional sense. I plot my characters before I worry about the “events” of the story. Once I know who the hero and heroine are, what they’ll struggle to overcome, why they need the other person in their life and why that other person is also their worst nightmare, I start thinking about the actual events that will mess with their status quo. By then I have a good idea of the story’s theme, which is simply what the characters need to learn. I pick a Scripture that reflects that theme and sit down to write a detailed synopsis. If I know where I’m starting and where I’m going, the getting there becomes the easy part. In other words, if I know how my h/h will meet, what will lead them to their black moment and what will be the resolution then all the other scenes grow organically out of these three major plot points.

Who has had the most influence on your life in general? In your writing life?

Hands down, the most influential person in my life is my husband. I have never met anyone with his level of integrity. He once lost a job because he refused to sacrifice his employees and their welfare for his own sake. He is a true spiritual leader, both in the home and out. Best of all, he makes me feel beautiful, loved and forgiven on a daily basis. Every woman deserves a man like him in her life. My heroes tend to be a lot like the man I married. Go figure. In terms of my writing, I would have to say my critique partners, Cindy Kirk and Teryl Oswald. They are the hardest working writers I know. Both have a commitment to the craft that inspires me. Their insights and comments always help me take my stories to the next level. I value them both dearly.

Do you have an agent? If yes, did you have the agent before you sold your first book or after?

I have an agent now, but I didn’t have one when I sold my first book. I sold my second book with the help of my agent at the time. I appreciate having an agent to negotiate the business end of my career. I focus on the writing; my agent focuses on the business aspects. It’s really that simple for me.

What advice do you have for a beginning author?

Finish manuscripts! I can’t stress this enough. If you aren’t finishing manuscripts you aren’t learning how to work through the tough spots (and there are ALWAYS tough spots). You won’t know what your strengths are as a writer, or your weaknesses. Finishing manuscripts also provides the perfect avenue for developing your own unique style and command of the language, or what some call “voice”.

Any parting comments?

One of the best pieces of advice I can give is this: Choose your words carefully, whether you’re speaking, writing, blogging or emailing. You will always have editors, agents, readers, marketing departments, family, friends, co-workers and many others making requests on your time and talent. Either give them what they want or give them a kind, courteous reason why you can’t do what they ask at that time. You will never go wrong in this business by being nice.

Rene, thank you so much for taking the time out of your busy schedule to join us today. We appreciate it and it's been so much fun learning more about you. I'm so impressed with the skydiving!

15 comments:

Renee Ryan said...

Hi Lynette,

Thanks for having me here today. You're a sweetheart!

Blessings,
~Renee~

Jo said...

I enjoyed reading the interview and would love being added in for the drawing.

Blessings,
Jo
ladijo40(at)aol(dot)com

Donna said...

This was a great interview. I loved her advise to finish a manuscript. I am one of the worst about starting getting 100 pages in or so and then I loose steam and it never gets finished. I haven't had that since of accomplishment she talked about just finishing manuscripts even though she did not sell them.

Donna
runninmama at sbcglobal dot net

Renee Ryan said...

Hi Jo,

Glad to see you here.

Donna,

You can do it! There's really nothing like writing THE END. Even if you know you're going to have to go back and fix that mess, you actually have pages to fix. You can't fix a blank page. Like the Nike slogan says, JUST DO IT! ;-)

~Renee~

Jessica Nelson said...

Cool. I'm seeing your posts everywhere. Guess I'll follow you around, trying to win your book! LOL
I've been skydiving too, and LOVED it. So awesome.
Congrats on the sale. :-)

Renee Ryan said...

Jessica,

LOL Keep trying. Keep trying. And, yeah, skydiving is cool. Not that I'd want to do it often, but I can't say I regret trying it. ;-)

~Renee~

tetewa said...

I'd like to be included, count me in!

Merry said...

I enjoy westerns with romance, include me in the drawing. Thanks!
worthy2bpraised{at}gmail{dot}com

Stormi said...

I have come to like historicals and westerns are so bad and this one sounds great so I would love to be entered in the drawing.

Thanks
Stormi
ladystorm282001[at]yahoo[dot]com

Renee Ryan said...

Hi to all the ladies who just joined us. I'm excited to see you all here. ;-)

~Renee~

Anonymous said...

I truly enjoyed this interview. Loved the advice to finish manuscripts - there's truly no sense in starting if you're not going to finish, is there? I was also interested in the question regarding agents, as I'm actively seeking on at this point. I would love to have someone else to handle the business end of things! :P Love words, hate numbers...
Thanks for a great interview!

Sherrinda Ketchersid said...

Great interview and great advice for a writer wannabe. I absolutely LOVE the cover of your book! Did you have any input on it? I know you are not supposed to judge a book by its cover, but yours certainly makes me want to read it!

Put me in the drawing for a chance to win!

Renee Ryan said...

Delia, Good luck with the agent search. I honestly think finding a good agent -- one that works well with YOU -- is harder than finding an editor.

Sherrinda, I loooove my cover as well. The folks at Steeple Hill have really done a great job with all the covers for the new LIH line. I just got a sneak peek at my July cover and am just as happy with that one. I'll be able to put it up on my website in a little while -- so keep stopping by and then let me know what you think!

Gail said...

Thanks so much for the interview. I love the LIH series and would love to win your book!

Gail
bookwurm70 at gmail dot com

Renee Ryan said...

And the winner is...

JESSICA!

Please send me your snail mail address to my email:

renee@reneeryan.com

For those of you who didn't win a copy of THE MARSHAL TAKES A BRIDE, there will be lots more chances throughout the month. Check out the rest of my blogging dates on my website (under news on the Bookshelf page).

Thank you, Lynette, for inviting me here. It's been a blast.

God Bless!!!
~Renee~