Showing posts with label Tristi Pinkston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tristi Pinkston. Show all posts

Monday, May 14, 2012

Book Review and Contest Results

  Great cover, huh? Don't you just want to be this woman--skinny and shopping in Paris? Okay, so the book doesn't tell you how to be skinny but it does give you take-charge-of-your-own-spending/saving skills and tools. Million Dollar Diva - The Smart Woman's Guide to Getting Rich Safely by Tristi Pinkston, Brett Kitchen , and Ethan Kap, is a wonderful guide with current, real life information for women (and I dare say men) of any age. I liked that the book followed the information for a true example (Tristi's own financial situation) that you can track by going to the website www.milliondollardiva.com.
  Using caution and safe practices, the book discusses our mental or emotional attitudes about money, ways to reduce debt, plan for spending, getting more out of our earning power, and risk-free investing. I found something useful from each section but especially found the reasoning behind our emotions attached to money issues fascinating. Ideas about amplifying your income and investing surprised me. There is much to glean here and it is done in such a way as to keep it from being dry and unpalatable, the best I've seen. I highly recommend this book for anyone who seeks advice in money matters.
  From now through June 15, you can order this book free for just the cost of shipping at $5.95 USD. You can also download blueprints and plans to get you started on your own money improvement journey at the above website.
  I also wanted to give an update on the results of the "My Hometown" essay contest I entered. I was one of the three winners who will receive an Apple Ipad! Hooray! If you would like to read the essay, I posted it here or go to www.yourhometowngrocer.com to read any of the winning or finalist essays. Thank you again if you voted for me. It's always fun to see one's writing win something.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Cool Stuff Happenin'

And some day it will be my turn! Meanwhile, I'm pleased to let someone who has been a help to me and is a great person, announce upcoming events and information on my blog. If you've never read one of Tristi's books, you should definately give them a look. She has quite a variety.
Author Tristi Pinkston is excited to announce the release of the third novel in her Secret Sisters Mysteries series.

Titled Hang ‘em High, this novel takes place on a dude ranch in Montana. When Ida Mae’s son invites her to come for a visit, of course she brings Arlette and Tansy along with her. They are expecting to spend the week looking at horses, avoiding the cows, and making amends in Ida Mae’s relationship with her son. What they don’t expect is to be stuck on the ranch in the middle of a blizzard and to be thrust headlong into the middle of a mystery.
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Help Tristi celebrate her new novel in two ways. First, come participate in the two-week-long blog contest, where you can win a book nearly every single day! All the details are up on Tristi’s blog.


Second, come to the book launch!
You are invited to an
August Authorama!
Saturday, August 13th
Pioneer Book, 858 S. State, Orem
12 – 4 pm
Games, prizes, balloons, face painting,
and Dutch oven cobbler
prepared by world champion cook
will all be there to sign books.
This is one book launch event
you will not want to miss!

Monday, January 10, 2011

Big Week Ahead for Author Tristi Pinkston

View TristiPic...JPG in slide showI first met Tristi Pinkston at the 2010 LDStorymakers Conference. She was my Boot Camp Sergeant, offering kind advice to a table full author wannabes. Because of this, I increased my awareness of her writings and have read two of her books. With the launch of Dearly Departed this Friday, I thought it was a good time to interview Tristi.
Let's talk about Character, Plot, and Conflict as we get to know her better.

1.  Your RS presidency characters are delightful. Did you pattern them after anyone in particular? 
Tristi: Thank you!  I’m glad you’re enjoying getting to know them.  
I didn’t have a lot to do with their creation – they just popped into my head fully formed.  They each have different aspects that remind me of someone—mostly me—but no, they’re pretty much individuals.

View SSsmall.JPG in slide show 2.  Ida Mae, the MC, is my favorite. How do you get a reader to connect with a character like Ida Mae from the get-go? 
Tristi: She took over in that department.  She just started talking, and I wrote down everything she said.  She has so much personality that she made my job easy.  
I would have to say, though, that when it comes to writing a character, to be sure to include a lot of emotion and internal thought so the reader can really “get” where the character is coming from.  Someone like Ida Mae could come across wrong if it weren’t for those moments of internal thought and peeks into her motivation.

3. The plot stems from real life in the LDS world and takes it to a humorous, entertaining level. Did you find this to be easier to write than your earlier historical novels? 
Tristi: It was so much easier, I can’t even tell you.  When you’re writing historical novels, there’s so much research that goes into it, and you have to watch your timeline to make sure that everything is happening right when it’s supposed to.  You can’t throw in a war where you want one – you have to work with the war that already happened.  With Secret Sisters, I just gave the characters their head and ran along after them, taking notes. 

4. What did you do to add plausibility to the silly choices these ladies make? 
Tristi: I’m not sure I did add plausibility.  The whole book is one comedy of errors and you’ve got to prepare to go along for the ride.  But I did try to leaven it with a little bit of seriousness from time to time, again dictated by the characters.  For instance, I didn’t know that Ida Mae’s own family situation was so troubled until she told me.

5. Several people spying on a family in the ward made for humorous situations, but was this also the best way to add tension to the story 
Tristi: This aspect of the story came with the package—it chose me, rather than me choosing it.  In fact, that’s how the series came to be.  I overheard someone make a comment that they felt as though their home teachers and visiting teachers were sometimes a little too nosy, almost like they were spying on their assigned families.  My brain being what it is, it took off from there—what if they really were spying on their assigned families?  And then Ida Mae, Tansy, and Arlette appeared in my head, and I’ve been having a ton of fun ever since. 

6. Can you share a tip on adding conflict to a light-hearted mystery? 
Tristi: In this story, it was a matter of finding the conflict that already existed and then just bringing it to the forefront.  You’ll always have conflict whenever you get a group of people together and ask them to work on the same project, and there’s always conflict within the boundaries of a ward.  Because Ida Mae was the Relief Society president, she knew about certain issues in the ward that wouldn’t be immediately obvious to the other members.
The main thing you want to do is make sure that the elements you emphasize are already present, or that they occur naturally. There are some genres in which you can throw in an elephant attack or a zombie apocalypse and no one bats an eye, but in this type of writing, you need to take the situations that already exist and then just build on them in order to make them believable. It is a lighthearted story, but every character has their trials, and that’s where you find the conflict.

     View DearlyDep...JPG in slide show      7.What do you want readers to get from this series? How many more are coming?  
      Tristi: There are a total of five books in the series.  Book #2, Dearly Departed, just barely came off the press over the holidays, and I’m so excited to get my author copies in my hot little hands.  I have nearly finished the final editing phase of book #5, and then I’m starting a whole new series, which promises to be just as much fun. 
As far as what I’d like readers to get … well, first, I want readers to have more options when it comes to clean fiction.  It seems it’s becoming harder to find.  I also want them to enjoy the little quirks of our Mormon culture.  We are a peculiar people—in a lot of ways, and not just in our religion.  We’re fascinated by potatoes.  We won’t shop on Sunday, but we’ll head out to the store at 12:01. It’s fun just to step back and say, “You know, we are quirky, but we’re so loveable.” I hope my series accomplishes that—a greater sense of contentment of who we are, while appreciating our quirks. 

8. You seem pretty organized. Care to explain the headless chicken thing? What else would like us to know about you? 
Tristi: I’m laughing right now. I am not organized.  Right now, my Christmas tree, which is still up, is jabbing into my left hand from its place next to my desk.  There are Legos all over the living room, I have no idea what’s for lunch, and I keep getting distracted by Facebook.  But I’m determined, and so I keep pressing on. 
We all know the expression, “running around like a chicken with its head chopped off.”  Well, that’s me—I am the headless chicken. I run over here and write a chapter, then I run over here and wash some dishes, then I run over here and tie a shoe.  And I lose a few feathers along the way.  I might even lay an egg.  You just never know with me.

It's good to keep us guessing! Thanks for sharing with us today. Please leave a comment.
The Amazon purchase link is: http://www.amazon.com/Dearly-Departed-Tristi-Pinkston/dp/1935217895/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1294239810&sr=8-1  Or check bookstores.
Join me next Monday for the first entry about my writing journey. Have a great week!

Monday, January 3, 2011

A Handful of Good Reads

I was excited to receive some of the titles on my Christmas wish list. Where to start? I selected Tristi Pinkston's Secret Sisters first because her follow-up novel is coming out this month. I'm half-way through and enjoying it. Tristi will answer some questions in another blog this month.
I hope to get more thoughts from authors and authors-in-the-making into my posts this year. I also want to share my writing journey and post book reviews. If there is something else you would like to see, please leave a comment. My goal is to post on Mondays. So, I hope you will come by and start your week with me. Most posts will be short and uplifting. What are you reading? Have a great week and see you next Monday!

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Doing For Others

The things we do for . . . You fill in the blank.
Love, friends, glory. How about giveaways!
So, here's to spreading the word that Tristi's monthlong giveaway is winding down to a grand finale and you can still get in on the goods. I've been a 90 something % participant all month long and haven't won a prize yet. But I'm hoping that means I have a good shot at one of the last and best two prizes. (I'm saving the best for last.) Afterall, I did win a Lazyboy recliner with just a $1 raffle ticket (to a good cause), so nothing is impossible.
At any rate, I'm building on that friend word above. Go to trisitpinkston.blogspot.com and get to know this wonderful person (and maybe win a prize).

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

More Contests

A prize a day! If you like contests, this is definately one to check out. It only takes a moment. Hey, and find it in your heart to follow me as well, if you haven't already, or lead someone else here. Thanks!
Tristi Pinkston is hosting an absolutely huge contest over on her blog to celebrate the release of her new book, "Dearly Departed." A new prize will be offered every twenty-four hours, and with multiple chances to win, you can't go wrong! Prizes include books, jewelry, perfume, movies - and the grand prize is a free night's stay at the Lion Gate Manor in Lava Hot Springs. Visit Tristi's blog for rules and more details.
 http://www.tristipinkston.blogspot.com