Your Value is in Your Individuality.

Welcome

Welcome to my "Writing" blog. If you're interested in my comments about "My Favorite Things," my articles for yourLDSneighborhood.com, and Life in general, click here for a direct link to RondaGibbHinrichsen.com. My latest entry is "Becoming His." Enjoy!

Monday, October 24, 2011

Spooktacular Blog Hop

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Christmas is Coming! Wahoo! I know, I know, it's really almost Halloween, but if you're anything like me, you're already thinking about what you want to give your loved ones for Christmas or even purchasing them. So, for this Spooktacular Blog Hop, hosted by I Am a Reader Not a Writer and The Diary of a Bookworm, I am offering a great gift for the early reader in your life. Actually, for this blog hop only, I'm offering TWO of them. That's right. Two lucky winners will win a free Kindle versions of my latest release, "The Hidden Kingdom (A Chapter Book)." It is book #1 of my series Heroes of the Highest Order.

From the backcover (print version will be available soon):
The dark enemy never rests, but neither do the Heroes of the Highest Order.
A magical playground whisks Dan and Page into the Hidden Kingdom where a skinny giant quickly registers them for hero training camp. There, they learn they must gain skills and earn treasures by travelling back in time and walking in the footsteps of a real historical hero.

If you'd like to read Chapter 1, click here.

To enter my drawing:
+1 Mandatory entry:  You must follow this blog and leave a comment telling me so. Also include any of the following entries in your comment.
+1 Tweet what I am offering on this blog hop.
+1 Facebook what I am offering on this blog hop.
+1 (Honor system--grin) Share the blurb for my book with someone else and tell me who you told (i.e., child, friend, mother, etc.).
+1 Subscribe to this blog by email.
Total: 5 possible entries!

And that's it! Merry Christmas--er--Happy Halloween. :)

Saturday, October 22, 2011

12 Books in 12 Months--Author Michelle Erickson


That's right! This amazing author has accomplished what to me seems like an impossible goal. And guess what? She's here to tell us about her journey and her latest book, Pic Jump. Welcome, Michelle. Please tell us a little about yourself.  


I was born and raised in Utah, transplanted to Idaho after I married the best man in the world for me - he's exactly what I needed. 


How long have you been writing?


I've been writing since 7th grade, but didn't really make the decision to write professionally until a few years ago.   

And yet, when you did decide to write professionally, you went all out. In fact, you are a writing dynamo! You've just completed your goal of writing and publishing 12 books in 12 months. 


I didn't really make up my mind to write 12 in 12 until I already had 2 books out there and I thought:  go for it! I had no idea what I was getting into or I wouldn't have made such a rash announcement! I will not be doing it again anytime in the foreseeable future. It involved a lot of re-writing while writing new books. 

Please tell us a little about your writing process, including how you're able to write so much so quickly.

Here is my writing process pared down to bare bones: Dream, Desire, Discipline, Determination, Destination
1) Dream: you need a fantastic idea that really rings the dinner bell on your salivating creative side
2) Desire: write like your life depends on it (I take Sundays to 'cool' off and de-stress)
3) Discipline:  treat writing like a business
4) Determination: rewrite as needed
5) Destination:  to reach where you want to be as a writer, repeat above steps for 10 -16 hours a day, six days a week for a year (this is how I did it so 'quickly')

Whew! I've had quite a few weeks of day and night writing, but an entire year? It makes my head spin just to think about it. But with all that writing, I can't help but wonder, are you a plotter/outliner, or do you write by the "seat of your pants?"

I'm a little of both, but more 'seat of the pants' because my characters seem to take me for a ride regardless of where I tell them they need to be.  I had one particular character that never seemed to be where I wanted her to be (I wanted to kill her off).  That character had so much chutzpah to her, she had me rewriting entire chapters!  P.S.  She STILL isn't dead!  She will be featured in other books.

Where do you get your ideas?

5 Blanks was based on a dream, Klaus was just my love of Christmas exploding out of my head and onto the computer nearly as fast as I could type, Pic Jump was a branch off the plausible/impossible ideas I had while writing 5 Blanks, and the 9-book epic Chest of Souls came from a story I told my oldest daughter when she was a little girl (it was originally sci-fi and bears NO resemblance to the story I wrote).   

What genre do you write in? Are all your books in that genre?

I've written at least five genre's. Historical fiction (short story) Post-apocalyptic science fiction, Epic Fantasy, Romance-Fantasy, and Speculative 

What is your favorite genre to read in? Any favorite authors?

Whatever catches my fancy. I've read over 50 books in the first month after I was finished with my 12. 
Favorites? I like so many authors, I can't choose just one. I've literally read thousands of books over my lifetime. 

Holy cow! When you go for a goal, you really go for it! What's on your horizon now? Any new goals?


My new goal is to catch up on all the things that took a back seat while I was driving down the creative writing highway at 200 mph. While I play catch-up, I'm working on a paranormal romance (Hallows Gate), a fantasy trilogy (Sky Signs), and a ten-book series that I've been considering for years (Heart and Soul).  

Please tell us about your latest book. 


The final of the 12 is titled Pic Jump. It won a Readers Favorite award in the Romantic Suspense category and is now nominated for the Whitney.  Pic is about a woman that falls in love, marries the man shortly after they meet, and on their wedding day, they are in an accident that leaves her in a coma. 


She is granted the ability to transfer from one set of printed eyes to another and has to save a little girl named Emma armed with nothing more than her wits and a Barbie head.


The first third of the book is the romance (I had to give Pic what she wanted before I mercilessly ripped it away from her).  The last two-thirds are the suspense which has children in peril and Pic unable to physically help while they are chased by a mercenary hired by terrorists. 

While writing the book I had to take frequent breaks and continue to remind myself to not kill the antagonist (but I REALLY wanted to).

Any writing advice?


One thing that has really helped me:  Buy a small digital recorder for those times when genius burns and record the flavor of your thoughts. 


Thank you very much for taking the time to visit with me today, Michelle. If you'd like to learn more about Michelle, you can find her at www.12n12.blogspot.com. Right now, she is also giving away a copy of each of the books that won awards this year to three lucky winners who can choose Ebook or soft cover on www.iamareadernotawriter.blogspot

Monday, October 10, 2011

The Hidden Kingdom (A Chapter Book) on sale now!


My early reader ebook is just now becoming available on amazon, b&n, and smashwords for the great price of $2.99. I've also started a new website for Heroes of the Highest Order and an easy, one-page website for R.K. Hinrichsen. Also, did you know you can read ebooks on your computer without an e-reader? Both Amazon and Barnes and Noble offer that option, and I really appreciate it. :)

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Free Sample: The Hidden Kingdom, Chapters 1 and 2

Speedy Dan glared out the car window. The playground Mom had parked next to was nothing like the one he used to play in before his family moved. This one had only two tree swings, one merry-go-round, and a slide with four steps.
Worse than that? It was way too small. Dan would never be able to run faster than the wind, faster than lightning, even faster than a superhero before he reached the back fence.
Mom took her hands off the steering wheel and looked over her shoulder at Dan. “Your sister’s almost at the slide. Don’t you want to go with her?”
Dan squirmed within his seat belt. “Not really.”
“Are you sure? Your dad and I used to love to play here when we were kids,” Mom said.
Dan slipped his hand into his pants pocket and squeezed the hard, gold medal.  “Fastest Boy in Mrs. Peabody’s Class,” it said. He’d won it last month before school ended.
“I’m sure,” he said.
Mom sighed, opened her car door, and stepped outside.
Dan watched her through the window. Any minute now, she would call Page back, and the three of them would return to the house where Grandpa lived before he disappeared. It was the same house he and his family now lived in.
Mom glanced down at Dan. “You’ll like it here,” she said.
“No I won’t,” Dan said.
Mom cocked her head to one side. She smiled the way she did when she hid a Christmas or birthday present behind her back. “Try the swings first, Page,” she called to Dan’s sister. “They’re amazing.”
Page turned and waved.
Dan undid his seatbelt. He opened his door. “What’s so amazing about the swings?”
Mom smiled her secret smile again. “You’ll have to find that out for yourself.”
“Oh, all right.” Dan climbed out of the car.
“Race ya, Dan!” Page called. She started running.
Dan ran too. Within seconds, he zipped past Page and jumped onto the first tree swing.
“Take care of your little sister,” Mom called.
Why? They weren’t going anywhere. “All right,” Dan called back. He then pushed his air-light sneakers into the sky.
Page jumped onto the tree swing next to his. She kicked off her sandals.
“Look! I’m higher than the other trees!” Dan said.
“So am I,” Page said.
“Now I’m higher than the Rocky Mountains.” Dan pumped his swing higher, but when it also went faster, he gritted his teeth. He clenched the swing chains.
“What’s happening?” Page yelled.
“We’ve got to jump off these swings!” Dan said. Then he jumped.
Clouds whisked past him. Wind whooshed like the inside of a hollow tunnel. The playground . . . then Mom . . .  disappeared.


Dan landed on his stomach with his face pressed flat against the ground.
“Are you all right?” Page whispered.
Dan moaned. He wanted to say, “I don’t know. Are you?” But his mouth was full of dirt.
“I think so,” Page said. “Nothing hurts.”
That’s weird! Dan thought.
“What is?”
Dan spit out the dirt. “Page?” he thought again. “Are you moving your mouth when you talk?”
“No,” Page answered. “Are you?”
“No. All I do is think the words and you hear them.”
“Same with me. Cool, huh?”
“Cool. And strange. Have you opened your eyes yet?”
“Nope. I’m afraid to look. When we jumped, I couldn’t see the playground anymore.”
“Me neither,” Dan said. “Let’s both open our eyes at the same time. Okay?”
“Okay. On the count of three. One . . .”
“Two. . .”
“Three,” they said together. Both opened their eyes.
“Where are we?” Page said.
Right in front of them, Dan saw a tall, rocky mountain. It went straight toward the sky.
“I don’t know,” he answered. “Mom said we would be surprised. Do you think this is what she was talking about?”
“Maybe.” Page frowned.
“Your voice is wobbling,” Dan said. “Are you all right?”
“I feel like I did the first day I went to Kindergarten.”
That’s how Dan felt too—all scared inside—but he didn’t want his sister to know. He wanted her to think he was brave. So he looked over his shoulder away from her.
“AAAAAAAH!” Page screamed. “We’re on the edge of a mountain!”
“Don’t look down!” Dan grabbed her hand. “We’ll be all right. Let’s climb away from here.”
Inch after inch, Dan and Page climbed up the face of the rocky mountain until it flattened into a large, green field. The grass was sprinkled with tiny gold and purple flowers.
They crawled a few more feet into the field then stood. Safe again.
Page squeezed Dan’s hand tighter. “Are we still in the Rocky Mountains?”
Dan looked around him. He saw a circle of sharp, jagged mountains with a valley in the middle. The mountains were covered in thick, moss-like grass and lots of tall, bushy trees.
Some of the trees were dark green. Some were deep red. And some were bright gold. A shimmering castle stood on top of the tallest mountain on the other side of the valley.
“I don’t know where we are,” Dan said.
“You are in the Hidden Kingdom,” said a gravelly voice.