A collection of essays on the inception and writing of every single book in the Kiss Across Time series, along with pithy comments on a writer’s life and the peculiarities of the publishing industry, all written in Tracy’s personal and unique style.
This unique collection provides insights into the strange world of publishing, and a writer’s work processes that go into the building of stories. Find out why books are written the way they are, and why covers sometimes suck. The differences between short stories and novels, and why both are great to read. Learn why the viewpoint a story is written in makes a technical difference to the writer and an even bigger difference to the reader.
Then there are the stories about Tracy’s childhood in Australia and how she was drawn to write fiction from a very early age…and why. More tales about her life in Canada and how everything she has lived through has contributed to the stories readers enjoy.
Tracy’s Kiss Across Time Notebook collects together the introductory essays found in each book in the Tenth Anniversary Limited Editions series, which was only available for a very short time and never made available for retail sale.
0.1 Kiss Across Time Notebook
1.0: Kiss Across Time
2.0: Kiss Across Swords
2.5: Time Kissed Moments*
3.0: Kiss Across Chains
4.0: Kiss Across Deserts
5.0: Kiss Across Kingdoms
6.0: Kiss Across Seas
7.0: Kiss Across Worlds
7.1: Time And Two Stories*
8.0: Kiss Across Tomorrow
8.1: More Time Kissed Moments*
9.0: Kiss Across Blades
10.0: Kiss Across Chaos
11.0: Kiss Across the Universe
[*Time Kissed Moments are short stories, novellas and collections featuring the characters and situations featured in the Kiss Across Time series.]
The series has ongoing storylines and characters. Reading the books in order is recommended.
Nonfiction, Memoir
When I tell people I’ve been writing since I was 14 they tend to look at me a little oddly, but it’s quite true. I fell in love with Harrison Ford and Star Wars at the exact same moment, and wrote the unofficial sequel in the following year. Of course, I had Han Solo and Leia falling in love long before the sequel came along, and in much more satisfying fashion than George Lucas ever managed.
What I didn’t realize at the time, and not for another twenty years or so, was that I had been writing fanfic, possibly the first of its kind.
On a completely off-topic side-note, I used to lie awake at night, listening to the Star Wars soundtrack on my record player, and re-playing the movie in my head, fantasizing about how wonderful it would be to somehow be able to play the movie at home, whenever I wanted. Eight years later I saw my first Beta cassette player. It was the size of a small suitcase and weighed 45 pounds. A few years after that I got to buy my first VHS movie – Star Wars. That was a reflective moment in my life.
However, while things have clearly changed over the years since my first bad attempt at getting a hero and heroine together on paper, two things have not. I’m still writing romances, and I’m still throwing my hero and heroine through a fair imitation of hell while they’re sorting their feelings for each other out — the essence of romantic suspense.
But hey, here’s the boring stuff: I’m Australian, although I live in Canada. I still have the accent, although I’ve been here almost two decades now. And I still have trouble remembering it’s a hood, not a bonnet and stuff like that — you’d be amazed how hard-wired culture really is. It calcifies internally, I think. But the mountains here are stupendous, so I think I’ll stick around. Besides, my husband is kinda cute. Oh yeah, did I forget to mention? I met him on the Internet back when it was a few HTML pages and a couple of bulletin boards or two, and me and the kids (three of us) packed up and moved here.
The kids are no longer really kids any more. They’re both taller than me now, but I didn’t say that aloud, okay? I’d still like them to think I’m the boss for a while longer, at least.