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Farah Oomerbhoy

Author of The Avalonia Chronicles

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Wattpad

May 14 2017

Author Sarah Benson on the New Anthology SNOW

Author Sarah Benson on the New Anthology SNOW - FarahOomerbhoy.com

Hello!

I want to thank Farah for allowing me to guest post on her website today! Farah and I first met on Wattpad a couple of years ago and bonded over each other’s stories. We have become dear friends and are both part of a writer’s group called the Wattpadres.

Recently I have been part of a really fun project with 15 other amazing authors in compiling a collection of short stories entitled SNOW. The book was released May 9th – and I get to tell you all about it!

When my friend Kelly Anne Blount invited me to be part of the anthology, I immediately jumped on board. The challenge was this: create a story set in a snowy cabin in the woods that includes an Asian character named Claudia and a forbidden romance.

I was pleasantly surprised how differently the stories turned out considering we were given the same prompt. It was a privilege working with the other talented writers in this anthology.

SNOW Anthology
One cabin. Sixteen stories of forbidden love.

The SNOW ANTHOLOGY features sixteen original novellas and novelettes in multiple genres, including Young Adult, New Adult, Contemporary Romance, Historical Romance, Urban Fantasy, Supernatural and Paranormal. SNOW will be sold by all major e-book retailers and features several Amazon and USA Today bestsellers.

With an online audience of over ONE MILLION combined followers, and hundreds of millions of reads on their stories, the SNOW ANTHOLOGY showcases talented Wattpad authors from around the globe.

Journey into the woods where you will discover a cabin surrounded by snow, filled with secrets…

Here’s a list of authors participating:

Back to Us by M. C. Roman – MCRomances on Wattpad

Whiteout by Sarah Benson – SarahBensonBooks on Wattpad

Tobacco & Pine by Lucy Rhodes – LucyFace on Wattpad

Red Snow by Debra Goelz – BrittanieCharmintine on Wattpad

Fawn by Gavin Hetherington – GavinHetherington on Wattpad

Seeing Him Again by Delilah Mae –  _HakunaMatata_ on Wattpad

Of A Feather by Lindsey E. Lippincott – Red_Assassin on Wattpad

Through the Paintings Dimly by J. M. Butler – JessicaBFry on Wattpad

Chasing Jupiter by Rachel Meinke – knightsrachel on Wattpad

Limbo by Noelle N. – hepburnettes on Wattpad

Crash by Megan DeVos – styleslegend on Wattpad

Snowed In by Kelly Anne Blount – KellyAnneBlount on Wattpad

Unexpected Love by Gabriela Cabezut – GabyCabezut on Wattpad

Wings by Shaun Allan – ShaunAllan on Wattpad

Sober by R. Diamond – rdiamond89 on Wattpad

True Love’s Kiss by Neilani Alejandrino – sweetdreamer33 on Wattpad

 

My Novella, Whiteout, is a romantic mystery.  Let me tell you a little about it:

Whiteout by Sarah Benson

Alicia Larson wakes up in a remote cabin in northern Idaho, unable to remember who she is or why she is there. She stumbles into a gas station and is shocked to discover from a missing persons poster that she has been gone for eight months! A handsome doctor helps her try to escape her mental prison and regain her lost memories.

When the police can’t find Alicia’s kidnappers, she realizes her terrifying ordeal is far from over unless she can piece together the clues that will reveal what happened to her. Soon, even the closest people in her life are under suspicion, and time is running out to prevent something terrible from happening, again.

For a limited time, you can pick up a copy of the SNOW Anthology for only 99 cents here:

Amazon | Apple iBooks | Barnes & Noble Nook | Kobo

Happy Reading!

About the Author: 

Sarah BensonSarah Benson has well over a million combined reads on her stories on Wattpad. They are read in over 150 countries and have hit Top 5 on the Adventure, Fantasy and Paranormal hotlists, including #1 in Adventure. Sarah has worked as a journalist and freelance graphic designer. She lives in beautiful northern Idaho with her family. Check out her author website at www.sarahbensonbooks.com

Written by Farah Oomerbhoy · Categorized: Author Guest Posts · Tagged: author, Sarah Benson, Snow, Wattpad, Wattpadres, writing

Aug 21 2016

7 Tips for Writing Your First Novel

7 Tips for Writing Your First Novel - farahoomerbhoy.com

Today I’m pleased to welcome fellow Wattpadres author Josh Townley to the blog. I hope you enjoy his tips for writing your first novel and don’t forget to check out his book!

Maybe you’ve always dreamed of writing but never thought you had the talent. Maybe you’ve started a few stories already only to find yourself three chapters in with no idea what to do next. You’re not alone. Until a few years ago I didn’t think I could ever write a book. I certainly didn’t think I’d write something that would be read by hundreds of thousands of people on Wattpad, and reach the #1 spot in its category.

I may be only at the beginning of my writing life, but I’ve picked up a few things that might help you if you’re thinking of setting out on your own literary journey.

A lot of these types of blog posts boil down to the same few tips that are repeated in every corner of the internet, but hopefully, you’ll find one or two things a bit different on this list.

1. Embrace schizophrenia

To write convincing characters, the heart of any good story, you need to know them inside-out, to the point that you can carry on unscripted conversations between them in your head. Don’t concern yourself too much with what they look like, aside from any key traits that might affect their personality, but get to know their voice.

Write letters or journal entries from their point of view. Know their dreams; their insecurities; their phobias and especially their flaws. Know what they want at the beginning of the story and how they plan on going about getting it. Do this not only for your main character but secondary characters, too. If you know them well enough, they’ll react naturally (but often surprisingly) to any situation you throw at them.

2. Read Widely

Maybe you’re set on writing YA Fantasy, but that shouldn’t mean you limit yourself to only reading YA Fantasy. Yes, it’s important to keep up with what’s happening in your genre, but if you close your ears to new voices and experiences, you’ll never develop an original voice of your own.

As a new writer, think of yourself as a farmer tending a field. At first it’s new and exciting. You plant the seed of an idea and rejoice as it begins to sprout. But you quickly realize your field is surrounded by fences. You want to expand, but the fences hold you back in every direction, and soon the crop begins to wither. Reading is how you move those fences and give yourself room to grow. My advice is to read the classics above all else – to stand on the shoulders of giants, as they say. Hemingway, Austen, and Dickens will each give you acres of fertile land to sow. Tolstoy and Melville will clear a path to the horizon and beyond. Faulkner and Joyce will teach you how to cultivate ground that to most would seem impassable, while the likes of Tolkien and Asimov will take you to new lands entirely.

Reading the classics as well as contemporary fiction will show you what’s been done, what’s possible, and will give you the space and the confidence to try something new.

3. Write poetry

I’m sure I’ll meet some argument on this one, but it’s my firm belief that nobody can write great prose without an appreciation of poetry. Poetry challenges your brain to rearrange each line again and again to achieve its greatest clarity and effect. It teaches you to listen to the rhythm of the words as one sentence flows into the next, how a simple pause can heighten tension, how the choice between two words that have the same meaning can dramatically change the outcome.

Writing poetry is a great way to warm up and stretch your vocabulary before a writing session. It doesn’t have to be something publishable, or even especially meaningful. Maybe you delete it immediately afterward and it’s never seen by another human being, but in my opinion there’s no better way to bring your writing to life than to read and write a little poetry.

4. To plot or not to plot

That is one of the biggest questions among new writers. Do you plan out the story in advance, and if you do, how much detail should you go into? For me, the answer is very minimal plotting, but it really depends on your genre and the sort of story you’re telling. Something like a murder mystery, with multiple suspects, alibis to keep track of, and red herrings swimming around, may need to be plotted extremely carefully so that all the clues come together in just the right way. However, I find that if I put all my energy into planning the story, and I know exactly what’s going to happen and when there’s no enjoyment left in writing it. I need to be surprised as I go. I need to write my characters into a corner, with no clear way out, and then puzzle over it for hours or days as I try to think of a way to pull them through it. I find this produces the most exciting and unexpected twists and turns in a story.

If you’re writing speculative fiction, you will need to do some planning before you begin writing, but I think the most effective way to spend your time is to concentrate on world building and character development, and let the plot take care of itself for the most part. If you’ve created a rich, living, breathing world, and well-rounded characters with a purpose, turn them loose on that world and see what happens.

5. Start with a bang

Please, I beg you, don’t begin with your main character waking up and going about a typical day at school before you get to the interesting stuff. Readers these days have a lot of other things competing for their attention so if you don’t hook them within the first few pages (if not the first few lines!) you will have lost them forever.

Another danger among new writers, especially those of fantasy and science fiction, is the urge to dump all their meticulously planned world building on the reader in the first chapter. Don’t underestimate your audience. They don’t need to understand everything in the beginning. Let them see the world through the eyes of your character in a realistic way. If you’ve created an interesting character and world, they’ll stick with you to uncover the secrets and mysteries little by little.

6. Come to your senses

A lot of writers imagine their story playing out as a movie in their heads (or perhaps these days it’s an HBO or Netflix series), and so they’re very in touch with how a scene might look and sound. But don’t forget that books are a very different medium. If your writing is good enough you can get inside a reader’s head in a way that makes movies jealous, and you can tap into all of their senses. Smell, taste, and touch are all open to you to help immerse your reader in the story. Let us feel the weight of iron shackles around our wrists, and the heat on our downturned faces as we pass each torch that lights the corridor. Let us hear the echo of screams and the rattle of chains through the stone walls, and breathe the stale air that’s so thick with ancient rust and the stench of rats that it seeps down our throats and spreads over the roofs of our mouths until we taste it…

You get the idea.

Just remember that, like all things, you can overdo it. Keep it relevant to your character and their frame of mind.

7. Write bravely

My last and most important piece of advice is to write without fear. Understand that all rules are merely conventions, and they can and should be bent, broken and twisted to serve your story. Be unexpected. I mean this not just in terms of the plot, but with your writing style, too. Take a chance. Experiment. Stand out. Think a scene would be better without any punctuation? Go for it. Deliberate spelling or grammatical errors in a scene from the point of view of someone mentally handicapped? Why not? Repetition of a word, sentence or idea? Who’s going to stop you?

Readers will forgive almost anything as long as you keep them entertained, so don’t be afraid of making ‘mistakes’.

About the Author:
Josh TownleyJosh Townley is a writer of horror (and occasionally other genres) from Melbourne, Australia. You’ll find him on Wattpad at wattpad.com/joshtownley where you can also read his acclaimed novella ‘ZOEY’, a unique telling of the zombie apocalypse through the eyes of a three-year-old girl.

Written by Farah Oomerbhoy · Categorized: Author Guest Posts · Tagged: author, Wattpad, Wattpadres, writing

Jul 24 2016

How Wattpad Changed One Writer’s Life

How Wattpad Changed One Writer's Life

Today I’m pleased to welcome fellow Wattpadre author (Wattpadres is a group of 12 Wattpad authors) Darly Jamison to the blog. I hope you enjoy learning about Wattpad from Darly and don’t forget to check out her book! 

My journey on Wattpad began in the early morning hours of February 20, 2014 after reading an author’s bio that mentioned the site. The idea of millions of stories available to read for free completely intrigued me, and when I discovered anyone could upload content I quickly opened my account.

I lurked around for quite a while, reading and just trying to figure out what made the place tick. Then one day, I decided to dive into a story of my own. I’d had a couple of ideas rolling around inside my head and now I finally had a place to put them. Growing up, I’d always dreamed of writing but figured something like that would never be possible. My college education consisted mainly of journalism and medical courses, how would someone like me ever be able to write a story?

But I did! The first novella I added to Wattpad, Chasing Neverland, is complete at about 26,000 words, and my second, Strawberry Wine, came in around 38,000 words. I had actually done it. I’d completed two short stories and low and behold, I even had a few readers! That’s when things became interesting.

My third story, The Secret, inspired by the movie Sleeping with the Enemy, finished at nearly 60,000 words and today has over three and a half million views.  It also won a 2014 HQ Love Watty Award which came as a huge surprise! Readers became so involved in that story they asked for a sequel, which is now complete as well. It’s called Secrets and Lies. The feedback I receive from readers and writing friends is invaluable, and every story I add feels stronger than the last. And right now that’s my goal: to improve my craft.

My biggest accomplishment to date came when I added my story Strawberry Wine into a contest sponsored by Wattpad and Kensington Publishing. I didn’t think anything would come of it. In fact, I felt silly after submitting. After all, I was a novice writer! But several weeks later, after Wattpad readers voted on their favorite submission, I found out Strawberry Wine had made it into the finals. I couldn’t believe it! Yet still … I didn’t think I stood a chance at winning the grand prize, a publishing contract with Kensington, so I forced the entire competition out of my mind.

When I received the congratulatory message in my inbox from Kensington on April 13, 2015, I thought I was dreaming. I walked away from my computer and then came back only to find the message still there. Then I logged out of Wattpad and logged back in and the message was still there! All I could do was stare. How in the world had they chosen me as the winner?  I had read some of the submissions … they were amazing. I figured it had to be a mistake, or worse — someone’s idea of a cruel joke. I remember calling my husband at work and the first thing he asked was, “Did you hear about the contest?” He actually remembered the date the winner was to be announced even though I’d made it a point to forget. I told him about the message I received and he yelled out to the guys at work, “She won”! On one hand I was horrified he had told people my secret (no one in my real life, other than him, knew I’d started writing) but on the other hand, I was touched that he cared about it as much as he did.

I contacted the editor assigned to me and wrote everything she said down … and it’s a good thing I did because that conversation is a blur! She told me I would need to add 40,000 words to the original manuscript because it was not long enough to be considered a romance novel, and she advised me to start a Facebook page and Twitter account, along with a website and blog. To be honest, I walked around in a daze for the first couple of weeks. I was so overwhelmed! But Kensington has been so helpful and supportive. They’ve welcomed me into their family and I feel so lucky to be working with them.

Strawberry Wine is set to be released on January 31st, 2017. I recently had the opportunity to view the new cover and it’s beautiful — the art department did an amazing job! I can’t wait to share it with the world.

I still have to pinch myself when I think about everything! To know that my book will soon be sitting on the shelves of stores like Barnes & Noble and Books-A-Million never fails to bring a tear to my eye. And the kindness and encouragement I have received from Wattpad and readers and writers alike is humbling. None of this would be happening without their support.

Recently, my editor asked me to pitch another story idea, perhaps even a series based in the town where Strawberry Wine takes place. Nothing is set in stone but it sounds promising! 

I still can’t believe this is happening, but it is. And my publication story is only one of many. Finding Wattpad has changed my life. It can change yours, too.

About the Author:
Darly Jamison
Darly Jamison is a Midwestern girl who lived as a Southern Belle in a previous life. She has an incurable addiction to John Hughes movies and is possibly the only person in the history of the world to be fired from the library for reading on the job.

When not writing, Darly can be found hanging out with her husband and children or trying to perfect her chocolate cheesecake recipe. Her debut novel Strawberry Wine will be released through Kensington Publishing January 31st, 2017.

Connect with her on her website, Twitter, Facebook, and Wattpad.

Pre-order on Amazon

Written by Farah Oomerbhoy · Categorized: Author Guest Posts · Tagged: author, launching a book, Wattpad, Wattpadres, writing

Jul 17 2016

Creating Your Very Own Story Bible

Creating Your Very Own Story Bible - farahoomerbhoy.com

Today I’m pleased to welcome fellow Wattpadre author (Wattpadres is a group of 12 Wattpad authors) J. M. Butler to the blog. I hope you enjoy learning about book bibles from J. M. and don’t forget to check out her book! 

Without a doubt, the story bible is one of the biggest aids for keeping track of information and maintaining continuity in a large story or a shared universe. It has made all the difference for me as I juggle various series with interconnected worlds and characters.

Though it’s my favorite organizational tool, it’s one that I’ve found many of my tutees and students haven’t implemented yet. So here are some of the most common questions I get about story bibles and how you can get started with your very own story bible.

Creating Your Very Own Story Bible - farahoomerbhoy.com

What Is It?

A story bible is essentially a custom made reference for your story. It includes all of the information of your story, including

  • Worldbuilding
    • Religions
    • Magic
    • Trades
    • Races
    • Cultures
    • Traditions
    • Legends
  • Timelines
  • Locations and descriptions
  • Maps and pictures (if you have them)
  • Character bios
  • Character descriptions
  • Items used in story (such as what sort of horse your MC rides or a ring she always wears)
  • Snippets to include later (just in case you have a brilliant idea but it isn’t time to include it yet)

As a general rule, I find it best to err on the side of adding too much detail rather than too little. There are few things more exasperating than having over 300,000 words and realizing you can’t remember what color a character’s eyes are or whether another character takes his tea with lemon or blueberries.

Creating Your Very Own Story Bible - farahoomerbhoy.com

What Do You Need?

You can make a story bible out of a notebook, journal, a three-ring binder, a whiteboard, index cards, or a standard word processor. Or maybe a combination of all of these.

As much as I love paper and physical books, I have to admit that the electronic story bible has an edge because there’s always room for expanding information and the keyword search. But if you prefer a physical one, make sure you leave plenty of room for additional ideas. Binders often make a good compromise since you can add pages as needed.

For the electronic version, you can use Microsoft Word, Open Office, Google Docs, Scrivener, or any other word processor. My personal favorite is Scrivener. Don’t try to keep the story bible in the same Scrivener file as your novel or series, though. That will just cause problems later on.

If you use a whiteboard or something similar, take pictures as you go just in case it gets erased. The same goes for setting out index cards to outline your story.

When Should You Do It?

Every writer has a different point at which composing the story bible is most effective. While some prefer to do it at the beginning, others simply want to dive into the story. The good news is that, so long as you do it at some point, it doesn’t matter.

Personally, I fill out some of my story bible before I start writing. Generally I take notes while brainstorming and put them in later. Then, at the end of a writing session, I update the story bible with relevant additions as I discover them.

Another alternative is to put it together after the story is done. To do this, you read through the story and fill out the information as you encounter it. While you may run into more errors this way, it can help get all the information fresh in your mind and take on the larger picture.

How Do You Find Information When You Need It?

Now as excellent as a story bible is, it won’t do you much good if you can’t find that information later. This is one of the reasons I prefer an electronic story bible. Scrivener’s word search function, at least on Windows, is spectacular. (Not to mention the Collections tool which can be quite helpful.)

Creating Your Very Own Story Bible - farahoomerbhoy.com

If you are doing this on paper though, I’d recommend using dividers between the major sections. You can paste them into journals or cut them down to size for index cards. Then for the actual writing, you might consider using colors to indicate certain types for information. Blue ink for information that will be true throughout the whole series, green ink for book one, purple for book two, and so on.

One other tip if you’re doing this on paper is to create a good table of contents. You won’t be able to include everything, but it will help you get in the right general area.

In both cases, you’ll have to decide whether you want to present information alphabetically or by frequency or by appearance in the story. Alphabetical can be easier to find while frequency will put what you most use at your fingertips. Bear in mind that frequency organization will make other details trickier to find. And appearance in story (organized in the order that they appear) requires that you have a general idea about when the information appears.

Alphabetical is my preferred option most of the time. Occasionally I have some files in order of frequency because I use them so often. The fact that they are out of order bugs me though, and I may have to change it back to pure alphabetical. (Yeah…going to have to go change it. Can’t take it.)

Should You Include an Outline?

Outlines and story bibles are two separate things. But I’ll admit that I actually combine them in mine, and I’m not the only one. I add in the general outline (if I have one), but then I create a separate document in the story bible for the reverse outline.

The reverse outline is one I update after each writing session. It includes

  • What happened in the chapter
  • Scenes
  • Characters present in each scene (don’t forget to include ones who are hiding)

This reverse outline is so helpful when it comes to drafting a query letter and refreshing my memory. It’s also useful to read back over before I start writing for the day.

A Parting Word of Advice

Remember that the story bible is just a tool. It’s for you. So feel free to change all of this as you need and according to your circumstances. The story bible doesn’t have to be perfect. Sometimes you might have to choose between fleshing out your story bible and writing. Remember that the story bible is intended to help you write so writing should still take the priority. It doesn’t have to be perfect. It can just be serviceable.

Creating Your Very Own Story Bible - farahoomerbhoy.com

So adapt your story bible to include whatever you need. Update it when you can, and have fun writing. All the best with your stories. What organizational tips do you have for keeping your stories on track?

About the Author:
J. M. Butler is an attorney and a freelance writer as well as an author. Despite her love of organizational tools, she often gets behind in updating her own story bibles and is left playing a game she likes to call “tie up all the loose strings before anyone notices.” She fills her days with writing, tutoring, cooking, baltering, and occasionally knife throwing. From time to time, she also teaches creative writing with an emphasis on speculative fiction and fantasy most of all.

You can find out more about her and her stories on her website, Facebook, and Twitter.

Written by Farah Oomerbhoy · Categorized: Author Guest Posts · Tagged: author, Jessica Fry, story bible, Wattpad, Wattpadres, writing

May 22 2016

Interview with Author Lindsey Lippincott

Interview with Author Lindsey Lippincott

Today I’m pleased to welcome fellow Wattpadre author (Wattpadres is a group of 12 Wattpad authors) Lindsey Lippincott to the blog. I hope you enjoy getting to meet Lindsey and don’t forget to check out her book! 

1. How did you find Wattpad?

I found Wattpad through my roommate. She had been writing on the site for a couple years, and she said I should try it. From that day forward, I haven’t looked back!

2. What made you decide to start writing and sharing your stories on Wattpad?

I had tried writing a couple times before starting on Wattpad, but it just never worked out for me. I would get maybe a chapter in, but then would convince myself that what I was doing was crap and that I had absolutely no idea what I was doing, so I would just stop. It wasn’t until I posted on Wattpad and people read and commented on my work that I actually wrote and completed works. Shadow’s Edge was the first work I wrote and completed. 

3. What is your favorite part about being a member of the Wattpadres?

My favorite part of being a part of the Wattpadres is the sense of community we have. Vic has called it a cuddle puddle, and that truly is what the group is. We cheer one another on, celebrate successes, give pushes when someone gets down, help each other work through particularly tricky parts in our stories. It’s a writing group that supplies us with everything we need to keep going and be successful. 

4. What is the best advice you would give to writers looking to start on Wattpad?

The best piece of advice I would give to people looking to start on Wattpad is to take your time. I jumped right into the writing and posting. You’re not going to get many followers that way. It’s hard to get discovered on Wattpad, so you need to wait until you’ve built yourself up a bit. Read some stories that are like yours, leave some comments, get to know other authors and readers, join the clubs and introduce yourself there. 

You also want to wait until you have some of your story done. People like reading finished works rather than ones that are still ongoing. I find that many people put my incomplete stories in reading lists that say something like “To Read When Finished” or something along those lines. So write out a good portion of your story so you can update regularly to keep the interest, and so people know you’re not just going to stop on them. 

5. Your Wattpad bio tells me you are a major fangirl. What fandoms are you a part of? 

5. I am a huge fangirl! My top favorite fandoms are Doctor Who, Torchwood, and Sherlock. I’m really a fan of that British television. I sure love me some accents. Haha. 

6. Do you have any weird writing habits?

My writing habits change regularly, just like my interests. I just can’t make up my mind. Sometimes I have to listen to some super epic music in order to get into the writing mood, sometimes I have to listen to that indie music, and other times, I need complete silence. 

I’m also completely disorganized with where I write. The majority of my writing is on the computer, but I often put it down in notebooks…notebooks that are supposed to be for class notes. Haha. That being said, it’s often difficult to remember what is in what notebook. 

7. What are your favorite genres to write in? Are they the same you read in?

My favorite genres to write in are fantasy/paranormal. I really enjoy reading in these genres as well. I’ve recently been working on expanding my horizons both for reading and writing. I’m mainly a YA girl, but I’m trying to write some new adult (NA). I’m also working on writing some general fiction, I’ve dabbled in horror, and I’m looking to keep expanding. 

8. What stories can we look forward to from you next?

I have a ton of story ideas written down that I will hopefully be writing and posting. I have a YA Paranormal in the beginning stages called Bridge of Souls, which is a twist on the Grim Reaper. I also have a new adult (NA) fiction about a girl with a promising future who falls into some trouble with drugs, and her journey down that deep, dark path. 

9. What is the latest book or story you have read and loved? Please tell us a bit about the book and what you loved about it.

I’ve been reading the Throne of Glass series by Sarah J. Maas recently, and I absolutely LOVE it! It’s about a teenage girl who we first meet as she’s in the salt mines prison for hefty crimes. She’s Adarlan’s Assassin. It follows her story as she’s brought out by the Prince to compete in a contest to be the King’s Champion. 

It’s a YA fantasy that keeps you on the edge of your seat. It’s packed with action, romance, betrayal, danger, more romance, and massive discoveries. It’s a book I would recommend to anyone. 

10. If you could live anywhere in the world where would you live and why? 

If I could live anywhere, I would choose either Canada or London. I really loved London when I was over there. The people seemed nice, and the area was awesome, but it’s rather expensive to live anywhere near the city. Canada is pretty chill. I haven’t been there, but from what I’ve heard from people who have, it’s a nice place. It’s also home to Wattpad, so that’s a plus. Haha. 

About the Author:

Lindsey LippincottLindsey Lippincott is a journalism and public relations major creeping her way through college, and a lover of all things unnatural and inhuman. Surviving on caffeine and sugar, she’ll stay up to the wee hours of the morning alongside her roommate if it means finishing one more chapter.

When not in class, working, or writing, you can find her binge watching Lost Girl and Haven on Netflix.

Facebook | Twitter | Wattpad | Wattpad2

 

About the Book:

Shadow's Edge (Shadows Saga Book 1) by Lindsey LippincottMara, a young, new witch, must learn to control her powers while facing boys, Nightshades, and a secret organization that has been following her for years. 

With the help of a fae princess, a werewolf prince and his best friend, there’s nothing they can’t face. 

Or does something more sinister lurk within Mara’s own mind?

Read on Wattpad

Written by Farah Oomerbhoy · Categorized: Author Interviews · Tagged: author, Farah Oomerbhoy, interview, Lindsey Lippincott, Wattpad, Wattpadres

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