Posted in Chasing Prince Charming, Melva Michaelian, Updates, writing

Changing Prince Charming?

One of the big questions about republishing Chasing Prince Charming, our first novel together, and the start of the Love By The Book universe, is, “are you going to change the original story?” Originally, our answer would have been, “no,’ and, essentially, it still is…with a small “yes.”

digitally designed cover concept. NOT the actual cover.

The first difference between the original version from The Wild Rose Press, and the reissue from Melva and myself, is the cover. Both of us love the original version by Rae Monet, and agree that all books in a series need to have the same feel when it comes to cover art. Part of independent publishing is doing all of the jobs, in this case also coming up with cover art concepts and series branding. We also agree that people on the cover should reflect the characters in the book. We’ve both been thrown by the “who’s that person cozying up to one of the leads?” type of covers. More conceptual covers can avoid that issue. Please note, we are not saying, “never again” to people covers, so stay tuned.

The other change is more structural. When Melva and I were first writing Chasing Prince Charming, we didn’t know the bigger picture and made a choice for a supporting character’s backstory before we knew they would eventually be a lead in another book. During out chat last week, we discussed our plans for the CPC re-release, and I mentioned that this was our chance to make a retcon. I made the suggestion, and Melva immediately agreed. It doesn’t affect the main plot, and it does fit the character in question better.

Getting to know a character better after three books than in a discovery draft makes a lot of sense. We are excited about it. Now for the next question: do you need to read both versions? The answer is no. While a supporting character in CPC has a few different details going forward, it doesn’t change anything about Meg and Dominic’s romance. Can you read both versions? Sure. We certainly hope so. If you are a completionist, you’ll want the covers to agree, and if you are fond of this character, you’ll want to meet them as their truest self. Call it a director’s cut.

At any rate, we will be focusing on Drama King, the story of Meg’s cunning agent, Kelly, and Jack, the grumpy British actor who never saw her coming. That is the second book in Love By The Book. Three books in, both Melva and I are looking forward to bringing you the whole Love By The Book experience, so stay tuned for the latest updates. Since I (Anna) write on my desktop that doesn’t have Facebook on it (a conscious decision) the best way to make sure you get all updates for this blog and Typing With Wet Nails (and Paws) is to click the subscription link, and new entries will come right to you.

as always, Anna
Posted in Chasing Prince Charming, Updates

August News and FAQ’s

Hello, lovelies. Anna here. Can you believe it’s August already? Things are hopping around here, as Melva and I are both getting ever-nearer our first respective solo indie releases, and are in the very very very earl stages of working on our first collection of contemporary holiday romance novellas.

For the as yet unnamed collection, Melva will write one, I will write one, and then we will write one together. For that one, we are having the best time throwing as many tropes as possible at the wall and seeing what sticks. For Melva’s story, she is learning about chandlery and the modern art of scented candles. For my story, I am researching luxury vehicles and winter survival. Also, there are Italian Christmas cookies.

That’s the news. Now for the FAQ’s. If you have a question that isn’t here, please feel free to ask in the comments, or email me at anna@melvaandanna.com. Please note, the images below are cover concepts, not the actual covers of any books real or imagined.

Love by the Book overview/FAQ:

What is Love By the Book?

Love By the Book is a contemporary romance novel series written by Melva Michaelian and Anna Carrasco Bowling. It is set in the world of romance publishing. Here, you’ll find not only readers and writers, but agents, publishers, and more. You’ll never know who you’re going to meet next but you will get a Happily Ever After in every book.

How Many Books Are Written Already?

So far, three. Here are the first three, in recommended reading order: 

  1. Chasing Prince Charming
  2. Drama King
  3. Queen of Hearts

How Many Books Will There Be in Total?

Hopefully, lots! I (Anna) am working on a comprehensive resource so Melva and I can get down to business ASAP.

How Spicy are these books?

“Spicy” is a big umbrella. There’s cinnamon and there’s ghost pepper. While the emphasis is on the romantic relationship between the two leads, there are adult activities on the page, so we recommend these books for adult readers. 

Can I Read In Any Order?

We are not the reading police. We hope you’ll want to read all three, and beyond, but reading in publishing order will probably provide the best experience. 

cover depicts The Wild Rose Press original edition

Chasing Prince Charming sets the stage and introduces readers to the world of Stewart House publishing. Dominic Stewart is the publisher and CEO, determined to woo author and romance skeptic Meg Crawford both professionally and personally. We’re not disclosing anybody’s portfolio, but if you like a CEO hero and a heroine who will do anything to care for those she loves, here you go.

This title will soon be out of print in this edition, but will be reissued independently.

Love by the Book #2
Coming Soon!

Drama King follows Meg’s cunning agent, Kelly Nolan, (whom you’ll meet in Chasing Prince Charming) who can find a solution to any client’s publishing woes, but when it comes to her personal life, that’s a different story. Jack Barnes is an actor who is not taking his fallen star status at all well, but Kelly, of course, has a plan. Fans of grumpy/sunshine and fake dating tropes, this one’s for you. 

Love by the Book #3
coming soon

Queen of Hearts features Dominic’s sister, Heather, newly divorced and coming into her own as an editor. Her male best friend, Rob, has been in love with Heather since nursing school. Will Dominic and Meg’s wedding provide the stage for a full-blown romance? Friends to lovers fans, and those looking for anxiety representation, you’re welcome. 

Will Secondary Characters Become Future Leads?

Of course! That’s part of the fun.

Are There Diverse Characters?

Yes! We believe contemporary romance should reflect the world in which we live. 

Can I Ask a Question That Isn’t Covered Here?

Go for it. Comment below or message me (Anna)  at anna@melvaandanna.com

as always, Anna
Posted in Chasing Prince Charming, Updates

Finally, Some News

Hello, lovelies. Anna here. Melva and I have some news.

While Melva and I have nothing but love for The Wild Rose Press, the rights for our debut contemporary romance, Chasing Prince Charming, the first in the Love by the Book series, have reverted to us.

What does this mean for you, the readers? A few things.

  1. If you would like to snag a copy of the current editions of Chasing Prince Charming from The Wild Rose Press, you can still do that for about sixty more days. After that, sales will cease from that publisher, and the e-book will be removed from electronic platforms.
  2. All is not lost. Melva and I will be reissuing Chasing Prince Charming in both e-book and print on demand paperback, independently. Think new cover, new bonus content, and most exciting of all…
  3. New books! Melva and I have the second book, Drama King, the story of Meg’s cunning editor, Kelly, and a grouchy British actor-in-hiding. Think grumpy/sunshine, fake dating, family drama, and the sort of found family that only New York can provide.
  4. For those asking whether Dominic’s sister, Heather, has a book of her own, the answer is yes! Queen of Hearts sees Heather dealing with divorce, co-parenting, publishing, anxiety, and romance. Think friends to lovers, a hero who is exactly what the doctor ordered, and did we mention surprise puppies? Also three, count them, three, holidays.
  5. Yes, these new books will be available on Amazon, as well as directly through us. More details as we have them. We appreciate your patience as we learn these new skills.

While Melva and I had originally planned to stick to a trilogy, that was before we met a gentleman character I will refer to only as “Hot Vet” for now. Oh, and his ex and her next, love stories for characters of all ages, and maybe a little trip up to the north of Maine, to a little town, where, well, you’ll see. This new season will also see a new nonfiction book from Melva, and from me, the first in a new historical romance series.

Our journey with traditional publishing has been wonderful, and we are absolutely looking forward to doing it again in the future. Right now, we are excited to be not only the writers on this project but the publishers as well. We would love to have you on this next leg of the adventure with us. Hit that subscribe button to make sure you are among the first to get the latest, because there will be surprises.

as always, Anna
Posted in Bloggity blab, Short story, Uncategorized, Updates

We’re Baaaaack

Dear Readers, do not adjust your screens. We, Melva and Anna, two writers with a single mind, are indeed back. Where have we been? It’s a long story, filled with life changes of pretty much every sort, but we are at last Back At It, as one might say.

First of all, many thanks to all who have read and loved our first co-written contemporary romance, Chasing Prince Charming. Many of you have asked about future entries in the Love By the Book series, and we are happy to announce that yes, there will be more. We have completed two more books in this series, with plans for more to follow. Drama King, the story of how clever and optimistic Kelly from CPC finds her perfect match in a grumpy British actor, will be next, and then Queen of Hearts, where Dominic’s sister, Heather, discovers that life, as well as publishing, has a happily ever after that is hers for the taking.

These books will be published independently, which is a new venture for us, so please be patient. Our followers will absolutely be the first to know. Since I (Anna) learn best by doing, we are jumping in feet first by independently publishing my medieval romance novella, A Heart Most Errant, the first entry in my Ravenwood series, set in fourteenth century England.

In the meantime, we are instituting a regular blog on this site, and a new section, the Reading Room, currently under construction, where you can read exclusive free short stories not available anywhere else. First up are “The Icing on the Cake,” by Melva, and “Perfect English,” by Anna.

read Perfect English

Both covers are made with the help of technology. In this case, Canva, for “The Icing on the Cake,” and NightCafe plus Canva for “Perfect English.” No profit is made, and there is a learning curve, but we’re having fun. Comments on short stories are always appreciated, and if you have a question or suggestion, well, we won’t turn that away, either.

Anna

Posted in Short story, Updates

Perfect English

by Anna Carrasco Bowling

Bradley Ballantine was something a woman had to experience for herself.  Tall.  Black.  Given to lounging about the living rooms of casual acquaintances on rainy afternoons in bare feet, pristine khaki trousers and spanking white sleeveless undershirts. Always white.  Always new.  None of us ever saw him do laundry, and nobody ever asked him what he did with the old ones.

He was English.  That always came as a surprise.  Not because Bradley was Black, but because he liked to listen to a woman for a good long time before he said anything.  Only then would we remember he was straight from London’s East End.  He was planning on going back there someday, too, he would say over the third serving of whatever beverage his impromptu hostess – usually me— happened to have on hand. 

He was going back as soon as the company would let him, as soon as he’d consulted with every computer Consolidated Mutual had,made sure all of their electronic ducks were in neat electronic rows and quacking in perfect sequence.  Back to the flat above his mother’s tea shop, back to a neighborhood he knew as well as the back of his hand, back to his sister and his niece. Margaret and Virginia, and no, there was no brother in law around. Was once, wasn’t now. None of them knew where the bloke was at this particular moment, but he’d better hope to never meet Bradley in a dark alley. 

Bradley had ten more munfs, as he pronounced it, left on his assignment.  Nine more munfs, eight more munfs

Long, lean Bradley, who liked to eat Chinese food directly from the cartons, watched Spanish soap operas in the original Spanish, no subtitles, and read historical romance novels when nobody was looking, then opined on internet forums on the accuracy of the authors’ research. He used to sit right there in the window seat of my apartment on East Thirty-Fifth street seven munfs ago, six munfs ago, drip Mongolian beef on the pink corduroy cushions and drop rice noodles down to the carpet.  I spilled my guts while the cat batted noodles, the dog ate them, and Bradley set the world to rights.

It was, “Yeah, yeah, call your mother,” when she and I hadn’t spoken in two weeks.

“But she’s wrong,” I told him, because she was. “She treats me like I’m a little girl.”

“You’re her little girl.”  Bradley shucked off loafers and Oxford shirt and settled into my window seat.  He took up the whole thing when he wanted to, which was  most of the time.

“I’m twenty-seven, for crying out loud.  I have to moisturize.  The kid at the market calls me Ma’am.”

He scooped the cat into his lap, long fingers stroking orange stripes. “And the partners call you Ms. Ruskin.  Your mum calls you Jennifer Anne…”

I bit off both the end of my chicken finger and his answer.  “Which I hate.”

“What do you like better, then?  Love?” He arched one brow at me and he waited for my response.

“Tess. Tess is nice. I’m going to name my daughter Tess.  If I ever have one.” But that would require a man, and I was done with men. Should be done with men.

The cat butted Bradley’s chin and dribbled sweet and sour sauce down the front of his undershirt.  Hah.  He’d have to do laundry now.  “But first you have to find a man who calls and don’t smell like fish.” His professional voice slipped away in moments like this, a glimpse of the man that those in the office rarely got to see. 

It was, “You don’t need him,” when I groused about Phil in accounting who never called when he said he would.  Especially on a Sunday afternoon when the call was supposed to be Friday. 

“If he doesn’t want you, why do you want him?  You want a man who is there for you.  Someone who puts you first.  Ahead of himself. Somebody who will be a safe place to land.”

I groaned.  “Landing on Phil would be like landing on a trampoline.  One good thump and I’d bounce right back up, shift in the air and hit the springs.  Which is,” I added around a mouthful of lo mein, “basically what happened.”  It was.  I knew it, but saying it still felt strange.

“So then you know what to do.”  Bradley dropped a noodle onto the cat’s head and leveled me with wide brown eyes. He had lashes that would put any mascara company out of business. “Tell him to shove off.  You deserve better.”

“Better?  I thought Phil was better.  He’s straight, he’s employed, he actually has assets.”  I stabbed the takeout container with my chopstick and stared at the chipped polish on my right big toe. The chewy feeling in my gut had nothing to do with Chinese food and everything to do with reality.  “I’m not going to the partners’ dinner alone.”

Bradley rolled one brown shoulder. Muscle rippled beneath his skin. “You don’t have to.  Go with me.”

Go with Bradley.  Outside.  Around people.  People who might think it was a date.  All I could come up with was “Okay.”  I had to admit it was the perfect solution.

“Never have dinner with a man who smells like fish before you eat,” Bradley said after I went out with Kevin.  Kevin was after Phil, who never did call.  Kevin called, but only when I was in the shower, or sleeping or juggling three bags of groceries and my keys. Bradley was usually right about these things.

“We met at the fish market.  Everyone smells like fish at the fish market.”

Bradley pointed a chopstick directly at me and batted the baby browns. “Not if he really is a stockbroker. My stockbroker smells like posh cologne. Too much of it,if you ask me.”

I rolled my eyes and batted the dog away from my container of Kung Pao pork.  “You don’t have a stockbroker.”

“Do so.  Lives three doors down in my building. Think he’s called James.”

“And you routinely smell him, I take it?” I couldn’t picture Bradley sniffing his neighbors.

Bradley popped the top on a can of store brand cola. “Course not.  I’m making a point.  If the bloke can’t trust you with what he does for a living, how can you trust him with your heart?”

“Marisol said the same thing.”  Several times.  Usually at night, when I was trying to wash the fishy smell out of my hair. 

“Marisol’s right.”  The rain washed the windows in a steady sheet.  The cat twined around my ankles, and my bare feet were inches away from Bradley’s. “So how come it makes sense when you say it?”

He flashed a lightning grin.  “Because I’m righter.” 

These are the words I hear when it rains, the off-beat buttered-rum-warmth of Bradley’s voice.  Even though he never picked up the stray noodles.  Even though he could only sing off-key, and did it far too often.  Even though he developed a serious karaoke habit four munfs ago, three munfs ago.  Even though he drafted me to sing my grandmother’s favorite seventies ballads with him. Peaches and Herb, Donny and Marie, Captain and Tennille.  “Reunited” and “Deep Purple” and “Love Will Keep Us Together.”  Even though he was as likely to turn down the page of a borrowed book as to use a bookmark.  “Whatever’s easy, love.”  

Bradley was easy, and easy to love.  He didn’t seem that way at work, not in gray flannel and school tie with a battered old briefcase.  When he was in my apartment, and down to undershirt and advice, that was when it happened.

We were all halfway in love with him, me and Chelsea and Samantha and Marisol.  Chelsea wasn’t looking, Samantha was engaged, and Marisol was married.  I had just ended something with Kevin-who-smelled-like-fish, and I wasn’t looking, either.  I called Bradley my friend.  He called all of us “Love.”  He called everybody “love” for that matter. Everybody outside the office.  At work, it was all last names and titles.  Mr. Baumgartner, Mrs. Evans, Ms. Bukowski-Chang.  He always remembered the hyphens.

He had a dichotomy about him, some inner switch he flipped on or off when he needed it.  He was prone to inviting himself over on Saturday afternoons.  Never called ahead, only showed up, a smiling face through the peephole, a voice on the intercom three munfs ago, two munfs ago.

“It’s Bradley, love, can I come up?” He always asked the same way, always hit the buzzer instead of calling like a normal person, and I always buzzed him in.  He always had food.  He washed dishes.  He walked the dog.  He listened, he ate, he advised, and when it was all over and the sun went down, he shrugged into his shirt, shoved his feet into seasonally appropriate footwear and ambled off into the night.  Presumably to do laundry or go shopping for undershirts.

It hit us like a dash of cold water in the face one munf ago.  Was that an airline ticket on his desk?  

“Yeah, yeah, first class.”  Big white teeth flashed, swimmer’s shoulders rolled under navy blazer and French blue shirt.  “Been great, really, we should keep in touch.”

Bradley wasn’t there, then he was, and then he wasn’t again.  All in a matter of munfs.  

We all saw him off, loaded his carryon with salted pretzels and gummi bears and books he could read when nobody was looking.  We promised we really would keep in touch.  He didn’t do email for social reasons, he told us ahead of time. It was too much like work.  So, that left Chelsea out of the loop.  He wrote to Samantha first, since they were both lefties. Longhand, black ink on white paper, with smears where his hand brushed the still-wet ink. Sent a silver spoon from his mother’s tea shop when Marisol’s baby was born. 

What I got was a fossilized rice noodle under the nail of my big toe when I lunged for the answering machine in the middle of the night two days after my father died.

“It’s Bradley, love.  Want me to come over?”

I almost choked on a surge of hysterical laughter. “Come over?  Here?  Now?”  I heard voices in the background.  English voices. Margaret and Virginia, most likely.  God, how I hoped they were.  The thought of Bradley with someone else would have pushed me over the edge. “Where are you?”

“I’m home, love.” Like he wouldn’t be anywhere else.

“You live in England.”

“I know. It’s no trouble.”

“No trouble? Flying across the Atlantic Ocean on the spur of the moment is no trouble?”

There was only a heartbeat of silence before he answered, “Not for you it isn’t.”

Not for Bradley.  Not for Bradley Ballantine, who ate my Chinese food and hated all my boyfriends.  Not for Bradley whom I’d never kissed, but always wanted to. Not for Bradley, who I wanted to hold until I stopped shaking.  Not for Bradley who would keep holding me even if I never did. “Are you sure? You never met my dad.”

There was a pause. “I’m sure, love.  I’m not coming for your dad. I’m coming for you.”

I shook my head.  He wouldn’t see that, but I imagined elegant strong hands brushing the hair from my face, wiping the tears from my cheek with the tail of his shirt.  “It’s expensive.”

“It’s less expensive than listening to you on the phone all night.  Which I can do.”

I knew he would.  “Okay.”  I let the cat come into my lap and scribbled Bradley’s flight number and arrival time on a sticky note by the red blink of the message light. 

“How long can you stay?”

No pause this time, but Bradley’s voice, warm and smooth as a touch.  “How long do you want me to stay?”

I didn’t know how to answer that.  A month, a year, forever? “Pack a lot of shirts, okay?”

“Okay,” he said, and I knew I would be. Forever.