Today, I’m welcoming fellow Harlequin American author and Wet Noodle Posse member Lee McKenzie, who has a new book out this month.

Congratulations on your new Harlequin American release, With This Ring. It’s a sequel to your debut novel, The Man for Maggie. As you were writing The Man for Maggie, did you have in mind that you were starting a series, which now continues in With This Ring?

Thanks, Trish! Yesterday was the official release of With This Ring, so I’m pretty excited!

I didn’t know this would be a series until the first book was well under way. I’m not a plotter, so I never know much about a story except what unfolds as I write. I realized there could be a second book when I discovered, in The Man for Maggie, the hero’s best friend had been in love with the hero’s sister, basically forever. After that, the first chapter of With This Ring practically wrote itself. Don’t you love it when that happens?

Tell us a little about your journey to writing for Harlequin American. What drew you to the line?

For a few years, I tried writing romantic suspense—a couple of them even finaled in RWA’s Golden Heart Contest—but those manuscripts are still languishing under the bed. It was when I returned to writing more traditional romance that I made my first sale.

Writing for Harlequin American Romance is great. These books focus on the developing relationship between the hero and heroine, but the stories are interconnected with their families, friends and community.

My writing tends to be light and somewhat humorous, and I love creating quirky secondary characters—like the heroine’s Aunt Margaret in The Man for Maggie and Max, the hero’s Old English Sheepdog in With This Ring. There’s lots of room for that in American Romances. Having said that, the authors who write for this line cover the full spectrum of writing styles, from dramatic to comedic, and with varying levels of sensuality. It’s great when you get to write the kinds of stories you love to read, and this line really has something for everyone, readers and writers alike.

What’s next in the Collingwood Station series? Or will your next books be outside of Collingwood Station?

The Man for Maggie and With This Ring are the only books in the Collingwood Station series. And I should mention that Collingwood Station is a fictional town in Connecticut.

I’m currently working on another two-book series, and I’m so excited about it. The heroines are two young career women, best friends, who live and work and meet the men of their dreams in the beautiful city of San Francisco.

I love the look of your Web site. How did you decide on the fun, hip look?

That’s an easy question. I felt the Web site should reflect my writing rather than me! So I hired someone who had the skill to make that happen. He’s actually a marketing specialist who happens to know how to design really great websites. He also created business cards and bookmarks that coordinate with the colors and the polka dots on the Web site.

At our first meeting, he asked me a lot questions about my books and about the kinds of things I wanted, and didn’t want, on the Web site. He came up with three different concepts and they were all stunning, but I went with the polka dot theme because it was fun and colorful.

Like me, you’re a fan of some great TV programs. What are your top three favorites and why? Do you think writers can actually benefit from watching good TV programming?

Currently, my top three favorites are Men in Trees, Gossip Girl and The Office. My hands-down favorite is Men in Trees because it has so many great characters and the storylines are funny and unabashedly over the top. Gossip Girl surprised me. I’ve read a lot of YA fiction and although I had not read that particular series, I decided to give the show a try. After two episodes, I was hooked. The TV series is incredibly well done, and now the first book in the Gossip Girl series is in my TBR pile. The Office doesn’t have a lot to do with romance, but has some of the most entertaining comic characters on television these days.

I definitely believe novelists can learn a lot from good TV shows and feature-length films. Scriptwriters are masters when it comes to creating strong character archetypes, and strong characters make great books, too.

Last summer at the Romance Writers of America National Conference in Dallas, Michael Hague gave several outstanding workshops. Anyone who wasn’t able to attend should definitely listen to his workshop, titled “Uniting Plot Structure and Character Arc,” on the conference CD. It was an excellent workshop!

Thanks for stopping by today, Lee, and I hope With This Ring sells like hotcakes. I know it’s on the top of my TBR pile.

Check out more about Lee and her books at her Web site and blog:

http://www.leemckenzie.com
http://thewritersideoflife.blogspot.com

18 Responses to “Welcome Lee McKenzie”
  1. Esri Rose says:

    So glad you’re doing a follow up with Brent. What a fun character!

    You really do have a great website, Lee. Maybe I should get hold of that guy.

  2. Susan Lyons says:

    I just got email this morning from eHarlequin that my copy of “Ring” has shipped. I can’t wait to read it. It will be the perfect thing to give me a lift on a gloomy winter day.

    Congratulations on the second 2-book deal, Lee.

  3. Nancy says:

    Lee and Trish, great interview! Lee, your books sound like so much fun. I love quirky characters. How did you develop a sense of where to draw the line on quirkiness, though?

    Congratulations on your great deal!

  4. Jo Robertson says:

    Hi, Trish and Lee, jumping over from Romance Bandits to enjoy the interview.

    Wow, I must confess to total ignorance about the Harlequin author line. I like the fact that it has a broad spectrum, something for everyone.

    I’m also fascinated by secondary characters — they can be so quirky and compelling — but I’d never thought of a sheepdog as a secondary character LOL. I must take exception with the name, however; Max is my grandson!

  5. Cassondra says:

    Jo, you’ll have to take exception to my cat as well. His name is Max.

    Hi Trish! Waving from the Bandit lair.

    Lee, thanks for this great interview, and your books sound like wonderful reads. This is the kind of thing I love to read over an afternoon when I need to relax and forget the world. I’m going to look for it this afternoon at Waldenbooks!

    And you’re yet another stamp of approval on that Michael Hague workshop. Everybody is talking about that! I want those CDs of his.

  6. Anna Campbell says:

    Lee, congratulations on all your success! Trish, great interview, as ever. Romance’s gain is CNN’s loss!

    I actually love reading traditional romances. I find that the emotional punch in those books is often really amazing and because the sensuality is subtle, it can really be powerful. Two of my favorite trad romance authors are Australia’s wonderful Marion Lennox and Liz Fielding from England. I’ll have to explore the American romance authors now. Oh, no, more for the TBR pile!

  7. Suzanne Welsh says:

    Hi Trish and Lee. Another Bandit stopping in. Loved the interview!

    Lee, I’ll be looking for your books as I love small town stories with quirky characters. Sometimes it’s fun to let the secondary characters bring the humor to the story against the straigt man or woman of the main character, isn’t it?

  8. bridget says:

    Lee, I’m heading to the bookstore right now–and you know what I’m looking for!

  9. Lee McKenzie says:

    Thanks, Esri! I’ll be sure to pass along your comments to my web guy.

  10. Trish Milburn says:

    Thanks for stopping by, everyone. Lee will be popping in to respond to the wonderful comments after she gets home from work.

  11. Lee McKenzie says:

    Thanks, Susan! I hope you enjoy With This Ring, although don’t feel you have to wait for a gloomy day ;)

  12. Lee McKenzie says:

    Nancy, that’s an interesting question about where to draw the line on quirkiness.

    I think quirkiness works better for secondary characters, and I agree with Suzanne’s comment about letting those characters add to a story’s humor without.

    Has anyone seen the film Notting Hill with Hugh Grant and Julia Roberts? Both characters were pretty “normal,” but the secondary characters - the wacky roommate, the zany sister, etc. - added a lot to that film’s entertainment value.

  13. Lee McKenzie says:

    Jo, I hope you will forgive me - and Cassondra! - for taking such liberties with the name Max!

  14. Lee McKenzie says:

    Cassondra and Anna, it sounds as though we have the same taste in books.

    Marion Lennox and Liz Fielding are wonderful writers. I didn’t know Marion was from England, though. Somehow I thought she was Australian.

  15. Lee McKenzie says:

    Bridget, you are such a sweetie! Hope you enjoy With This Ring.

  16. Lee McKenzie says:

    Trish, thank you so much for having me on your blog today, and thanks to everyone who stopped by. This has been a lot of fun!

  17. Trish Milburn says:

    Thanks to you, Lee, and to all our wonderful posters today.

  18. Anonymous says:

    Collingwood Station is in Connecticut? How exciting! I grew up in CT and almost NO romances are ever set there. Judith Arnold set some there - and Barbara Delinsky - but other than that, I can’t think of many. Where in CT is CC? I’ll have to look up this book.

    -Michelle Butler

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