Monday, September 16, 2013

Author Interview with C.A. Szarek


 C.A. Szarek
  Texas


Welcome to Vision and Verse this morning, C.A, Szarek. What have you written?
Tons of books! J  I have two out, a fantasy romance Sword’s Call (King’s Riders Book One) and a romantic suspense, Collision Force (Crossing Forces Book One) both are in a series. Love’s Call (King’s Riders Book Two) will be out in the fall, just a little while longer! Chance Collision (Crossing Forces Book Two) releases Jan 31, 2014. I also have a Christmas short associated with my Crossing Forces world coming out as a FREE download in November. So excited!

Okay, we're going to focus on your romantic suspense, "Collison Force" today.  What is your favorite genre to write?
I could never pick just one! I love Romantic Suspense and Fantasy equally, and I also write Paranormal and the occasional YA.

Favorite food.
Chocolate.

Where would you like to visit?
Japan and Scotland.

Favorite musical artist.  Do you listen to music when you write?  What?
Linkin Park. Yes, always. I love alternative and rock. Lately, I have been really
into Mumford and Sons, the Lumineers, Imagine Dragons and AWOL Nation. 
And I adore Maroon 5. I usually listen to my fave station or CDs.

What makes you laugh?
Romantic Comedies, and my husband!

How old were you when you started writing?
Seven or eight. I started off with poetry and had a few poems published in the newspaper, I moved to short stories and my first novel (never finished it) when I was in my early teens.

What do you do when you get a writer's block?
Usually go to another project. If I read something else I can usually get unstuck on the one I’m *supposed* to be working on.

Who is your favorite author?
Too many to name. I love J.R. Ward and Anne McCaffrey equally. But there are so many books and so many AWESOME authors out there, I know many of them personally. Monica McCarty, Pamela Palmer are a few of my other faves.

What advice would you give someone who aspired to be a writer?
Never give up. Ever. If you want this, go for it. Writing is hard. It often takes a third, fourth, fifth try. Rejection happens. Move on. Like I said, if you want this, you will make it happen.



Blurb:  Book one in the Crossing Forces series 

Bad boy FBI agent and feisty widowed police detective collide pursuing a human trafficker in small town Texas on their way to true love. 
Bad boy, married to his job FBI agent Cole Lucas always gets his man. So when the unthinkable happens and one gets away, Cole grits his teeth and hunts human trafficker Carlo Maldonado all the way to Antioch, Texas, where he collides with Detective Andi MacLaren. 
Cole doesn’t do small towns and doesn’t get involved with women he works with, but Andi tempts him in ways he doesn’t want to acknowledge. 
Two murders, her partner shot and leading the investigation on her own, the last thing Andi needs is a cocky FBI agent who sees her as no more than a tagalong. 
Widow and single mother Andi is used to being on her own. When Cole gets stuck without a place to stay, crashing on her couch puts them in dangerous territory. 
Attraction and passion bring Andi to a place she’d left behind when her husband died. Her three-year-old son quickly wiggles his way into Cole’s heart, and he starts contemplating things—family, love—that he’d never planned for himself. 
Can being forced to work together make them stronger or will their differences jeopardise their case and their hearts?

Excerpt:
Cole cursed. He stared into the rear-view mirror in the busy parking lot, but saw nothing. He’d been so close this time. 
The damn local police were breathing down his neck, and that was the last thing he wanted…or needed. 
Cooperation, my ass. They needed to get the hell out of his case. He’d been too involved for too long, and he wasn’t about to let some Podunk police chief tell him what to do.
Not to mention that dumbass detective getting himself shot. Cole didn’t need the locals piecing it all together. He had to wrap up a few things before letting them in on his case. Full disclosure wasn’t on his list at all.
That bastard Maldonado had got away from him. Even two months later, that still chapped. But he’d tracked him here and been in town a few weeks with no clues. Until the shooting. Two goons dead and a police detective shot twice. And Maldonado had slipped back into the shadows. Cole’s gut told him the coward was still in town… He hadn’t—or couldn’t—move on. But where the hell was he?
Cole’s cell phone rang, yanking him from his thoughts.
“Lucas,” he said.
“Where the hell are you?” Olivia Barnes, his supervisor, barked at him. “Chief Martin called screaming at me. He said you told him to kiss your ass? What the hell, Cole? I told you to cooperate with them.” 
Cole snorted. Chief Martin had misquoted him, but not by much.
“I don’t need them, Olivia.”
“Oh, don’t Olivia me. This was an order from higher up. Get that through your thick skull, dammit. Get to that station and make nice. Now.” 
Cole sighed. His boss didn’t respond. Though her tone had brooked no argument, he’d been tempted to tell her to kiss his ass. It wasn’t like his record wasn’t tainted, and it wouldn’t have been the first time he’d told her off. But he held his tongue. He was damn good at his job, and Olivia knew it. Cole would play along, for now.
“All right,” he answered. Olivia was silent on the other end of the phone. Too silent.
“All right?”
“You’ve ordered me, correct?” Cole said dryly. He could almost hear her eyes narrow.
“Just like that?”
“Just like that. C’mon, Liv, I can be a good boy.”
She harrumphed. “Okay. Go kiss Chief Martin’s ass.”
“Can’t promise that, but I will go to the station.”
“Good. I can’t afford any more damage control, Agent Lucas.” 
Uh oh, Agent Lucas? “Sounds like a warning.”
“It is.” Olivia lowered her voice. “I don’t want to have to yank you off the case, Cole.” 
Like that would happen. “I’ll call you later.” 
She started to say something, but he ended the call imagining her outraged expression—one he was quite familiar with. He smirked. Yes, he would play along…for now.
The drive to the station was short, but didn’t alleviate his irritation with the whole damn situation. He slammed the car door and winced, berating himself. He loved this car. Cole patted the hood in apology, admiring the brand new, deep metallic blue Dodge Challenger. It looked mean as hell. Like it was made for him. He’d even contemplated keeping it when this was all over.
He groaned when he took in the smallish Antioch, Texas police station, but headed inside. The asshole desk sergeant practically growled when he introduced himself, as did Chief Martin over the intercom. He ran into the female, literally, right after Sergeant Asshole-of-the-year had finally acknowledged his existence and buzzed him into the back. And although his head smarted, seeing a beautiful woman was the highlight of his morning.
“Whoa, sorry,” she said, smiling. Her chestnut hair was pulled back into a ponytail and she had the bluest eyes he’d ever seen. She was tall and slender, and he liked what he saw. She was wearing a white button-down dress shirt and snug khaki pants, and the outfit was somehow incredibly sexy. 
Cole almost missed the paddle holster at her waist, but when he saw it, he couldn’t help but admire her subtly rounded hips. Her badge was on a chain around her neck, swaying gently with her movements. A detective.
“No, I’m sorry. You all right?” he answered, trying to tear his eyes away.
“Sure. You?” 
He nodded. Cole bent and helped her retrieve the scattered case file contents. He latched onto a crime scene photo. Not only was she a detective, she was working his case—the pictures were all-too-familiar evidence. No doubt the local case was tied to his. He bit back a cringe.
“Ah, I don’t think we’ve met.” 
They both straightened and she thanked him for his help. He tried not to stare at the items in her arms.
“Oh, I guess not. Detective Andi MacLaren. Nice to meet you.” She held out her right hand, but he couldn’t help but glance at her left before accepting her shake. No wedding ring. Good.
“Andi, huh?” He met her eyes.
“Well, it’s Andrea, but not even my mother calls me that.” She smiled. 
Instinct told him she was a no muss, no fuss, hard-working kind of girl. Not overly feminine, but extremely appealing. A smattering of freckles spread across her high cheekbones and trailed over her nose. She wore little or no makeup—that drew him as well. Not his normal type at all, but gorgeous.
“And you are?” she prompted. 
Cole jolted to attention. He’d been staring. And she looked as if she was oblivious. Should that bother him? Yes. Women always noticed him.
“Special Agent Cole Lucas, FBI.” 
Her eyes widened, then she flashed a grin that could have only been called impish. It rivalled one he was known to give from time to time. “You’re Agent Lucas? You’ve had Chief in a tizzy all morning.” Was that admiration in her tone? 
He smiled back. “Guilty,” he admitted, winking at her.
“Agent Lucas,” Chief Martin shouted from the doorway to his office. 
Cole caught Detective MacLaren’s eye and shrugged. “Guess I’m being summoned.” 
She chuckled. 
“Hope to catch you later…Andi.” He flashed a grin, then trotted towards the angry police chief before she could answer.

C.A. Szarek, would you come back on Wednesday, September 18 and tell us a little about your fantasy romance novel, "Sword's Call?"
     Sure, I'd love to!


My links:
Blog: http://caszarekwriter.blogspot.com/
Website: http://www.caszarek.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/caszarek
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/caszarek
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5815085.C_A_Szarek
Email: ca@caszarek.com  I LOVE to hear from readers!

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