Today we sit
down for a chat with military romance author D. K. Taylor.
When did
you realize you wanted to write novels?
I always
knew, but didn’t actually start writing until after my husband died in 2005.
How long
did it take you to realize your dream of publication?
I self-published my first book in July of 2018.
Are you
traditionally published, indie published, or a hybrid author?
Indie
Is silence
golden, or do you need music to write by? What kind?
Silence is golden.
How much of
your plots and characters are drawn from real life? From your life in
particular?
Since I worked for the Air Force for seven years,
married an Air Force Staff Sergeant, and moved around with him for ten years
(until he retired), have a son who retired from the U. S. Army, and a
son-in-law who retired from the U. S. Navy—I do get a lot of ideas from my
life.
Describe
your process for naming your character?
I keep a running list of character names, by
nationality, etc., and just pick the one that fits.
Real
settings or fictional towns?
Both, but mostly real.
What’s the
quirkiest quirk one of your characters has?
Can’t think of one.
What’s your
quirkiest quirk?
I am a fanatical book lover; my house is crammed with
them, bookcases everywhere.
If you
could have written any book (one that someone else has already written,) which
one would it be? Why?
Any of Elizabeth Lowell’s early books. I LOVE her
romances.
Everyone at
some point wishes for a do-over. What’s yours?
So far, I don’t have one.
What’s your
biggest pet peeve?
People who don’t carefully proof their books, and the
book ends up full of errors.
You’re
stranded on a deserted island. What are your three must-haves?
Books, paper, and pen
What was
the worst job you’ve ever held?
I worked seven years for the Air Force, seven years
for the Farm Bureau, and seven years for a Southern Baptist Church, plus a few
short-term jobs. I never really disliked any of them; all were different, but
all were interesting.
What’s the
best book you’ve ever read?
Since I am an avid reader (can read a book a night),
I am hard put to name just one. Favorites are Gone with the Wind, Charles Todd mysteries, romances by Lindsay
McKenna and Diana Palmer (among many others), to name a few.
Ocean or
mountains?
Mountains
City girl/guy
or country girl/guy?
Country girl, raised on a farm
Loving
What’s Left
In the blink
of an eye, two lives are changed forever
Army Lieutenant Kit Vail has finally escaped the
loving protection of her older brother, although it has taken a tour in Iraq to
accomplish it. Meanwhile, at an AF
Base several hours away, lone-wolf Hawk Hawkins is yanked out of his perfect
lifestyle by a call from his long-time friend, Kit’s older brother. Capt. Mark
Vail calls in a marker and demands that Hawk drop everything and make a trip to
Camp Taji to check on his baby sister, a woman Hawk has never met. Despite
their initial animosity, there is an underlying attraction, but sparks fly when
neither is prepared to give up his or her independence. Then fate intervenes in
the form of an IED (Improvised Explosive Device).
Buy Links
2 comments:
I'm in Doris Taylor's editing group, I write and read sci-fi/fantasy books. I don't care for Romances. I feel they are too fantastic, but and I mean a big BUT, I really love Doris books her characters seemed so real and interesting. So I'm a fan of Doris's Romance novels and I have read 3 so far. So if you are looking for a great Romance novel with amazing plots and wonderfully believable characters you wont find better! Christy Shaffer illustrator/author Dover Publications, NY. NY.
Doris Taylor is an excellent writer. Her military romance novels are interesting, enjoyable and believable. I have purchased her first two and look forward to the next installment in the Vail Family series. Jim Ranieri fellow author.
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