Today we meet Sydney Jane Baily!
Welcome to An Indie
Adventure, Sydney. Tell us, what inspired
you to write your book, An Intriguing
Proposition?
Thanks for having me on your blog, L.A.
I had already written Books One, Two, and Three of this
series, now dubbed the Defiant Hearts Series. I started Book Four, but couldn't
get it going. I was distracted. As it turned out, it was the eldest sister who
makes brief appearances in two of the books who was whispering in my ear; she
wanted to introduce the series and tell her story before I moved on to the next
book. Her story flowed very quickly. An
Intriguing Proposition is a novella, 25,000 words, and gives a good idea of
my storytelling style, and brings in some of the characters who populate the
rest of the series. Now I'm continuing Book Four, An Inconceivable Deception, which I hope to have completed in a
couple of months.
What were your
experiences as a child that contributed to you becoming a writer?
Easy question. I was rather shy. I stuttered until my K-1
teacher worked with me to understand how my brain was racing a little more
quickly than my tongue and showed me how to let my speech catch up. The shyness
combined with living in L.A., which is sprawling and meant that everyone seemed
to scatter after school, contributed to my spending time alone or with my big
sister. I really liked being on my own and creating my own world, so I wrote. A
lot. As a child and still, as an adult, I am an introvert. I enjoy the company
of my friends and family, but then I recharge by having alone time. And that's
the perfect personality for a writer, who needs to be content spending hours in
isolation to get her work done.
Do day-to-day life
experiences influence your stories?
Not so much since I write 1880s Americana romance. It's the
Victorian period but set in various parts of the U.S. Obviously, I can't help
but have my own emotions and experiences color my writing, but when I'm immersed
in writing a story, it's usually more of an escape from my daily life than something
influenced by it.
What is the
first thing you do when you begin a new book?
Make a cup of tea, strong Irish tea, with milk and honey.
Procrastinate. Make more tea. Walk the dog. Write a scene over and over in my
head. Eventually, I open a fresh Word doc and begin. The scene that I start
with may not end up being the opening of Chapter One, but it's often somewhere
near the beginning.
I also often write long hand on lined tablets of paper when
I take my son to a lesson. (I am not a laptop person.) I have a few pens that I
love. They write smoothly, and I can write more quickly than I can type because
I don't stop and reread and edit or need to worry about spellcheck. I just
write and scribble and cross out, and the story flows. Then I transcribe later,
but the majority of my book is created directly at my desk in Word.
I also do a great deal of research for my time period, but I
often don't know what I need to research until I am writing. I'll get to
something I don't know about, perhaps a street name or what position a
character might have in a shipbuilder's yard, and then I go off on a
researching binge. I have a great relationship with my city's librarians, and
have reached out to museums and libraries across the nation when I need an
answer, such as how much was the fare on a San Francisco streetcar in 1884.
(Answer: 5 cents.)
If you were a TV,
film or book character, apart from one you've created, who would you be? And why?
I'm sorry. I'm terrible at these types of questions. My mind
goes blank. But I wouldn't mind being Drew Barrymore's character opposite Hugh
Grant in "Music and Lyrics." Such a sweet film. But there are
probably a hundred other characters I would also choose if I could think of
them, such as Cinderella or Hermione Granger. Of real life people, I'd like to
be Queen Latifah. I think she's awesome. My kids think that's hilarious and
weird.
Give us a brief
summary of An Intriguing Proposition:
Following her father’s untimely death, eldest daughter Elise Malloy
discovers that the family home is collateral for a mysterious loan. With no
record of payments made from her father’s accounts, whoever was paying the bank
has now stopped, and foreclosure is imminent.Desperate to keep the news from her grieving, funds-starved family, Elise answers the bank summons and faces Michael Bradley, an old flame who still owns her heart. When Michael extends an unseemly dinner invitation, Elise invents a nameless suitor as an excuse. Now, to save face, she must produce him.
Jonathan Amory, Esquire, seems the perfect choice, until her long-desired relationship with Michael unexpectedly catches fire, and Jonathan makes it clear he will stop at nothing to destroy her family and lock her into a loveless marriage.
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Bio:
Sydney
Jane Baily completed her first novel at the tender age of 17. Thankfully, that
manuscript currently resides in an undisclosed, secure location. She went on to
get B.A. degrees in English literature and in history, and an M.A. in
literature with a concentration in Romanticism.
During her career while
continuing to write stories, she has been a copy editor, cat snuggler, proof
reader, production editor, mother of two, developmental editor, indexer, and
dog walker, among other things literary and not. Besides writing historical
romances, she also writes contemporary women's fiction, and believes in
happily-ever-after stories for an already challenging world.
Born
and raised in California, she now resides in New England with her family—human,
feline, and canine.
Social Media Links:
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