Please welcome Bevererley Eikli author of A Little Deception.
Beverley will be awarding an e-copy of her backlist - Lady Sarah's Redemption or Lady Farquhar's Butterfly at each stop plus one randomly drawn commenter during the tour will be awarded a $25 Amazon Gift card.
A Little Deception
By Beverley Eikli
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1.What or who inspired you to
start writing?
Hi Christine,
Thank you for having me here today. Inspiration
has never been a problem for meJ Intrigue
and dastardly doings inspired me as a seven-year-old to write my Witch School
series. As an adult, I’ve just added a hefty dose of romance to the mix.
I guess I was lucky to have two younger sisters
who loved having me make up stories for them. Growing up, first in Lesotho in
Africa, and then Adelaide, South Australia, I was always brimming with
sometimes fairly outrageous ideas. Now I write them all down and they take on a
life of their own in my books.
As I’ve had such an unexpected variety of life
experiences, I love varying the types of books I write, so I use the pseudonym Beverley
Oakley for my erotic historicals. That only denotes the heat level, however, as
the books under both names vary from sweet erotic with an underlying mystery
(eg Lady Lovett’s Little Dilemma) to the most dastardly villainess (the vengeful
sister-in-law in A Little Deception) written
under my Beverley Eikli name.
2.How did you come up with ideas
for your books?
As I mentioned, I write historical romantic
intrigue as Beverley Eikli and erotic romantic intrigue as Beverley Oakley, but
the source of my ideas for both is the same.
I find posing the “What if…?” question really
useful. For example, what if the prevailing laws stripped a woman of her child
because her philandering late husband lied and broadcast to society that she
was a harlot? This is from my book, Lady
Farquhar’s Butterfly (under my Beverley Eikli name). Of course my poor
heroine has to fall in love with the most inconvenient man possible when she
assumes a different identity in order to reclaim her child. Yep… she falls in
love with the little boy’s guardian who truly believes she is a harlot. It doesn’t help that her unwitting actions have also
denied the hero his birthright.
Another ‘What if…?’ that I loved was: ‘What if
desperation propels a well brought up young lady to entice into her bed (and
consequently force into marriage) the rake who believed she was a woman of the
night? This is from my erotic Regency Romance, Rake’s Honour, which features two feisty characters and a hero who
has to do a lot of groveling to reclaim the woman he loves.
For me, the ‘What if?’ is the precipitating factor
for a heroine to be forced into the most extreme action or danger possible in
order to gain what she most wants. I don’t generally write sweet, gentle
romances, although sometimes they start off that way. I write romances that
gather pace until they reach a climactic ending.
3.What components are necessary
for the genre of this novel?
Romance and lashings of intrigue. A Little Deception was originally
published in hardcover by UK publisher Robert Hale but I had to cut 15,000
words for it to fit the prescribed page number. When I got the rights back a
few months ago I rewrote the book extensively and uploaded it to Amazon. In the
last week I’ve done a further overhaul and published it in all formats,
including to B&N and Apple iBooks. A
Little Deception features my most villainous villainess and a plot with
multiple twists and turns that incorporates an elaborate diamond heist in which
my heroine, Rose, is framed. Since she’s already tricked her delectable rake
into marriage, he seriously doubts her honesty. The hardest part of this story
was making sure each character got their just desserts and actually, in the
rewrite, I changed the ending from the hardcover version.
4.What expertise did you bring to
your writing?
Apart from being a misfit in the 20th
and 21st century? I was a journalist for many years which no doubt
helped with the word-smithing, however my love of adventure was fed by the
exciting life my husband has treated me to over the past 18 years. He was a
handsome Norwegian bush pilot I met in Botswana and we’ve worked in the safari
industry and the airborne geophysical survey industry in many countries. We’ve
also done stints in the Solomon Islands and Japan, so I’ve pick up incredible
stories all over the place. Sometimes what might seem improbable is in fact
based on a true-life story of how someone I’ve met has actually got together
with his or her life partner.
5.What would you want your
readers to know about you that might not be in your bio?
I guess that I didn’t walk properly until the age
of seven. My hips became famous when x-rays of them went on teaching tours
through the world after my undiagnosed hip dysplasia was finally corrected. I’d
grown up in the remote mountain highlands of Lesotho in Africa, and no one
picked up the problem until long after I should have been walking. My parents
took me to see surgeons in South Africa and the UK but it was my South
Australian surgeon, Sir Dennis Paterson, who performed the ground-breaking
operation, having worked out why previous corrective operations had broken
down. He was knighted and he was the first man I proposed marriage to. Sadly,
he was already married with four children and I guess I was too young, being
only seven. However, as the result of dragging myself around for many years in
hip-to-toe frog plasters I still have extremely good upper body strength. Also,
having a disability as a child makes one very accepting of life, I think.
6.As far as your writing goes,
what are your future plans?
Now this is very exciting. Just before Christmas my
writing career went in a totally different and wonderfully exciting direction
after I was announced the winner of Choc-Lit’s ‘Search for an Australian Star’
competition. My winning Regency Romantic Intrigue, The Reluctant Bride, will be released in September 2013. This will
be followed six months later by my 1960s diamond smuggling romantic suspense
set in the African mountain kingdom of Lesotho where I was born and where my
father prosecuted many illegal diamond smuggling and medicine murder cases.
Under my Beverely Oakley name, Ellora’s Cave is
also about to publish my erotic romance, Her
Gilded Prison which is about a viscount and his lovely, unloved wife and their
two daughters. This is the first in the series which is really ‘Downton Abbey’
with sex, featuring, initially, an older woman and younger man, and then,
later, the viscount’s two very different daughters and their stories.
7.Do you belong to a critique
group? If so how does this help or hinder your writing?
I’ve been part of a critique group of four for
nearly eight years and their practical help and support have been invaluable.
Jess Dee and I were the first to be published, the other two are regular
competition winners, so I think the results speak for themselves. I’m very
proud of our Ozcritters.
8.When did you first decide to
submit your work? Please tell us what or who encouraged you to take this big
step?
I made the big mistake of not joining a professional
writing organization for decades. I was travelling the world, doing my romance
writer’s apprenticeship while sharing the cockpit of a Cessna 404 or CASA 212
during eight-hour sorties over the Greenland Ice Cap or French Guianese jungle
with a lonely pilot, but I never learned the proper protocol of submitting, or
properly researched the editor to whom I was sending my books in an ad hoc
fashion to at various publishing houses. Only when I joined Romance Writers of Australia did I learn
that knowing the market and how to pitch my work properly was the only way to
succeed. RWA and my critique group were the two stand-out factors I credit for
getting published.
9.Do you outline your books or
just start writing?
I always start with a setup and go from there.
When the book is about half finished I’ve got a few good threads and subplots
happening. I then brainstorm the end so I know how to get there. Then in
subsequent drafts I heighten my character’s particular traits and up the ante
wherever I can throughout the whole book.
Mmmm. Lemon
Meringue Pie. Our family version is a good old South African recipe using
condensed milk, lemon juice and egg yolks as the creamy filling, rather than thickening
the filling with cornflour.
Here’s the recipe from my ‘Bible’ of cookery,
Magdaleen van Wyk’s The Complete South
African Cook Book. The one difference is that whereas she uses a baked pie
crust I’ve always used a crushed biscuit crumb base using a packet of plain
biscuits (or ginger nuts) pulsed in the blender to which 150g of melted butter
is added. This then is pressed into the bottom of a pie dish and placed in the
fridge while the rest is made.
Ingredients
3 eggs, separated
250g sweetened condensed milk
Grated rind and juice of 3 small lemons (don’t use
too much juice or it won’t thicken properly.)
5 tablespoons caster sugar
Beat egg yolks, lemon rind and juice together
until thick and creamy.
Beat in the condensed milk and pour onto the biscuit
base. (Usually I don’t even use a mixer but just beat it with a spoon until
it’s combined.)
In a separate bowl, beat together the egg whites
and castor sugar until stiff but not too dry. Spoon the mixture over the lemon
filling.
Bake in the oven at 180C for 25 minutes.
Tip: If I’m in a hurry, before I put on the
meringue topping I put the pie in the microwave for a couple of minutes until
it’s slightly set, then I add the meringue topping and put it in the oven until
the top is browned.
Thanks so much, Christine, for having me here
today. I’ve really enjoyed it.
BLURB:
A one-night charade to save the family sugar plantation wins loyal
and determined Rose Chesterfield more than she bargained for – marriage to the
deliciously notorious rake, Viscount Rampton.
"A love
match!" proclaims London's catch of the season who happily admits he has
been hoist on his own petard.
But when his new
wife is implicated in the theft of several diamond necklaces he wonders if her
deception goes beyond trapping him into marriage. Is she the innocent she
claims, or a scheming fortune hunter with a penchant for money, mischief and
men?
Excerpt:
(This
occurs when Rose chooses to be alone as she questions the rightness of her
charade. A surprise visit from Rampton shatters her resolve.)
His
eyes held hers and a smile curled the corners of his lips. This time Rose had
no response. Her heart thudded so painfully she wondered whether he could hear
it. She schooled herself to remain still, not to squirm with embarrassment or
appear too eager. Nor to turn him away with a lack of enthusiasm.
‘I
looked in at Almack’s briefly.’ He remained standing a few feet from her, his
hands clasped behind his back. ‘In case you had chosen to accompany your
family, after all. When I saw you had not I was concerned …’ His voice trailed
away and his intensely blue eyes bored into hers before he added softly, ‘that
you might be lonely.’
Still
Rose made no rejoinder. It was hard enough just forcing herself to breathe.
Every nerve ending was like a taut violin string, heat prickled the surface of
her skin and the most unbearable longing threatened to turn her into a fool.
No, she had no choice but to wait, then act accordingly.
‘Come
here,’ he said, softly, and Rose felt her body answer the summons before her
mind had time to fully comprehend. Without conscious thought she had closed the
distance between them and was abandoning good sense with the breath that left
her body in a whoosh as she raised her lips to meet his.
There
were no gentle preliminaries. Hot and demanding, his mouth covered hers as he
cupped her face, almost drinking her in and she, seemingly boneless, wilted in
his embrace.
His
lips burned hers as he growled against them, ‘I’ve looked forward to this
moment since I first laid eyes on you,’ before resuming his passionate assault,
his hands roaming over her body, cupping her bottom as he drew her against him.
Dear
Lord, it was terrifying, and it was wicked and oh, so exhilarating. She was an
innocent. Inexperienced. She knew she should be shocked by the liberties and
the jutting angles of his masculinity but her body answered with equal ardour
as her hands twined behind his neck and her tongue tangled with his in a dance
of seduction that could have no happy resolution – but she could take what he
offered, now, and she’d have that to sustain her for the rest of her days.
She
squirmed at the disconcerting feeling of molten liquid pooling in her lower
belly but she only pressed herself closer for in the drawing room she was still
mistress of her own destiny and her reputation was preserved. She could show
him how much she desired him but when he released her, here it would end.
‘You
are wicked, my lord,’ she told him, kissing his ear, running her palms over the
roughness of his angular cheekbones and revelling in his caresses, arching into
him as he contoured her body without shame, knowing that he would realise it
could go no further since she was, in his eyes, a married woman, and that she
was due to leave the country in a few short weeks.
‘And
you are a minx,’ he muttered against her throat, drawing back at the sound of
heavy footsteps in the passage, and adding, just before Edith made her presence
known, ‘but don’t you think you’ve got the better of me.’
Rose
widened her eyes and smiled into his face, still only inches from hers. ‘Time
will tell, my lord,’ she said, with emphasised coquetry. She sighed as she
stepped backwards and out of his embrace. ‘I am mindful of the fact I am deeply
in your debt.’
He
reached out one hand to stroke her jawline. ‘Yes, you’d do well to remember
that,’ he murmured.
AUTHOR Bio and Links:
Beverley Oakley wrote her
first romance when she was seventeen. However, drowning the heroine on the last
page (p550!) was, she discovered, not in the spirit of the genre so her
romance-writing career ground to a halt and she became a journalist.
After throwing in her secure
job on South Australia’s metropolitan daily The Advertiser to manage a luxury
safari lodge in the Okavango Delta, in Botswana, Beverley discovered a new
world of romance and adventure in a thatched cottage in the middle of a mopane
forest with the handsome Norwegian bush pilot she met around a camp fire.
Eighteen years later, after
exploring the world in the back of Cessna 404s and CASA 212s as an airborne
geophysical survey operator during low-level sorties over the French Guyanese
jungle and Greenland's ice cap, Beverley is back in Australia living a more
conventional life with her husband and two daughters in a pretty country town
an hour north of Melbourne. She writes Regency Historical Intrigue as Beverley
Eikli and erotic historicals as Beverley Oakley.
Buy A Little Deception -
http://www.amazon.com/A-Little-Deception-ebook/dp/B009HKKCKM/ref=tmm_kin_title_0
Website:
http://www.beverleyoakley.com/Beverley_Oakley/Welcome.html
Amazon Profile:
http://www.amazon.com/Beverley-Eikli/e/B0034Q44E0/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/beverley.eikli
Twitter: @BeverleyOakley.com
15 comments:
Another discovery! Beverley, I'm sure going to read your work, as it sounds intriguing!
You wrote your first series at age seven? WOW!
jbandy8233 AT gmail DOT com
Thank you for hosting today.
Your journalistic background would be an immeasurable help with your writing I would think.
I do love lemon Meringue Pie.
marypres(AT)gmail(DOT)com
Thank you, Nickie, that's nice:)
Yes, MomJane. Seven. I'm sure there are many 7-year-olds who get similar passionate ideas. Mine has just decided she wants to be an artist/model. Oh but she is *so* seven!:) So different from our elder.
And yes, Mary, my journalist background was really helpful. However it was the exciting life my husband took me on that was most exciting. And many times I baked that lemon meringue pie for special occasions.
Time for bed here in Australia. Thank you so much, everyone, for dropping by. I hope 2013 is a great year for you.
I'm impressed you wrote a whole series at 7? It's impressive that you didn't give up at that age.
Was there something in particular that inspired you to write?
galaschick78 at gmail dot com
I love Lemon Meringue Pie.
The book sounds great.
Kit3247(at)aol(dot)com
Hi Christine, thank you so much for having me here.
Gala, I think that at the age of 7 one gets inspired by lots of things, just as writers do. Sometimes it's just the urge to create.
Yes, Ingeborg, the Lemon Meringue Pie is always a big hit in our household:)
Nickie, I'm glad you liked the book excerpt. I think it's just become available at B&N and iBooks.
Thanks so much, everyone, for dropping by. Have a wonderful weekend.
Wordsmith is such a great word to apply to journalists and writers.
BTW, that photo of you with your dog, the gown and champagne/wine is such a wonderful joie de vivre shot.
strive4bst(At) yahoo(Dot) com
Congratulations on your "Search for an Australian Star" win. What does that mean? Does it bring fame & fortune? A cash prize? A book contract? It sounds exciting.
catherinelee100 at gmail dot com
Tasty sounding recipe.
bn100candg(at)hotmail(dot)com
Wonderful interview!
Beverley, your background is very interesting! I'm definitely checking out your books. ^_^
Catherine, the Choc-Lit win was a great event for me and the details of my contract were published in Book Trade and Bookseller, etc. Choc-Lit won Publisher of the Year at last year's UK Festival of Romance.
Thanks Bn and Tin.
Right, back to edits for my upcoming erotic Regency historical, Her Gilded Prison for Ellora's Cave under my Beverley Oakley name. Just a few hours before my deadline...
I love Regency romances, now I'm looking forward to that one. When is it going to be published?
lennascloud(at)gmail(dot)com
Thank you for sharing the meringue recipe, I love backing and this one sounds delicious!Definetly will be trying out that one.
emiliana25(at)web(dot)de
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