Somewhere on Maui

Adam and Zoe happen to share a therapist who gives them the same advice: try Internet dating. And though their Crazy Blind Date match-up ignites sparks neither have felt since high school, finding love is complicated. Can Adam and Zoe find a way to live a deeper dream on Maui?

Why would a mystery writer who’s already successful decide to switch genres?

I’m so excited and pleased to get these luscious take-me-away stories out to you, but it’s been a bit of a journey. First of all, the question I keep getting:

Why would a mystery writer who’s already successful decide to switch genres?

Well, I’m not switching. I’m adding. But there’s no short answer to this, so here we go.

Writing is, first and foremost, a creative enterprise. Yes, for me it’s an “enterprise,” and if you want to be successful at it, choosing a genre and writing a series is a great first step. But, we grow and evolve as artist/writers, and I’ve found that if I don’t go where the creative juice is, I get bored, restless, constipated if you will. And over time, I worry that might lead to the dread writer’s block, which I believe comes from obligation, fear, boredom, and pressure to make money.

So, I’ve given myself permission to write whatever the heck I want to, one of the great privileges and freedoms of being an indie author. This decision does fly in the face of great advice from my friend/mentor Russell Blake, whose blog post How to Sell Loads of Books is a great summary of what it takes to succeed in this business, but I believe there’s more at stake for me personally than just having every book make money.

For that reason, I follow the creative urge and so far it’s led me into YA fiction, narrative nonfiction, memoir, police procedural mystery, spy suspense, romantic suspense, and now romance. Who knows, I might even write science fiction too!

Because I believe multiple explorations keep you fresh and creative, AND that there’s a reader for every well-written book, releasing these romances is just another expression of my creativity, and a fun one that many of my readers will enjoy.

There’s so much I love about writing romance, but mainly this: there’s no plotting. As a mystery writer, you have to plot.

***Formerly the Ruby Novellas*** Redheaded spelling champion and reluctant virgin Ruby Michaels meets the wrong man on the eve of her departure from St. Thomas for college—and fireworks ensue. “I wasn’t going to be derailed by anyone—no matter how handsome and interesting,” she vowed. But some promises are made to be broken.

***Formerly the Ruby Novellas***
Redheaded spelling champion and reluctant virgin Ruby Michaels meets the wrong man on the eve of her departure from St. Thomas for college—and fireworks ensue. “I wasn’t going to be derailed by anyone—no matter how handsome and interesting,” she vowed. But some promises are made to be broken.

There are clues, and subplots, and red herrings. It’s a lot of organizing. And then, there’s the research. Half the time I’m writing about something I’ve never heard of before, so there are experts to consult, and Google searches on things like bomb deactivation, arson, and the best blade to dismember a body with. I love it all, but sometimes I just want to show up at the page and ad-lib until a happy ending!

I’m a “plotter” going “pantsing” and the freedom and fun are dizzying. I start with the female character. I see her clearly, her wounds, hopes, and dreams. I develop her on the page. And then, dear reader, her love appears, and he’s just absolutely right for her, but like life, there are other guys, choices, and conflicting agendas. Complicated stuff begins happening that I never planned or imagined.

It’s kind of like being a magical bartender. I decide on a main liquor, and turn on the blender, and suddenly ingredients start hopping in. The drink takes on a life of its own as the story emerges. Organic. Emotional. Mystical, almost.

My romances are about the triumph of love, which is one of the themes that I feel put on the earth to explore. All of my mysteries have this theme too. We writers, no matter what genre we’re writing in, tend to explore the same themes over and over in different ways, and the ability of love to heal is one of my personal thematic lodestones.

But first, I crashed and burned in the learning curve. I was squeamish about how “sexy” these two new stories are, so I did them under a pen name as novellas. I used the word “vagina” in them, which I thought was a feminist issue, and which turns out my beta readers told me was a turnoff. (Heck, I never liked the word “vagina” either. It rivals “penis” in lameness.)  I spent thousands on a new website, multiple different attempts at covers, and promotion for the pen name.

I learned the hard way that the market is FLOODED with wannabe romance writers trying to get established, and the competition is fierce! Not only that, I needed shirtless man abs on the covers if I wanted to sell, and I found I just couldn't do that kind of branding. I needed to go back to my original truth: these romantic stories are creative expressions of Toby Neal writing. They will appeal to some, not all, and that is okay. I need to do writing (and marketing) that feels fresh and true to me even if my main audience is mystery readers, and not be overly concerned about how any one book sells.

Moving away and moving on are two different things. Upon her father’s unexpected death, Pearl Michaels leaves the tropical paradise of St. Thomas to live with her sister in Boston. She finds fame, fortune, and even more trouble than she left behind. Harley-riding, enigmatic Magnus Thorne offers Pearl all the excitement she could ever want, but his past holds even more secrets than hers. Danger stalks Pearl and Magnus from Paris to Dubai, where love's not the only thing at stake.

Moving away and moving on are two different things.
Upon her father’s unexpected death, Pearl Michaels leaves the tropical paradise of St. Thomas to live with her sister in Boston. She finds fame, fortune, and even more trouble than she left behind. Harley-riding, enigmatic Magnus Thorne offers Pearl all the excitement she could ever want, but his past holds even more secrets than hers. Danger stalks Pearl and Magnus from Paris to Dubai, where love's not the only thing at stake.

So I made the difficult decision to pull down the pen name, cut my losses, and rebrand and republish the books as a continuation of the Somewhere Series, begun in my first book, Somewhere on Maui, which has been beloved by a subset of my readers since it came out in 2013.

That said, these new ones are very different in tone and feel, written in an immersive first-person voice as the coming-of-age and finding first love stories of sisters from the little island paradise of St. Thomas. I absolutely loved writing them, and I hope you’ll enjoy them too.

So, dive into a Toby Neal romance. You’ll find it page turning in its own way, sensual, descriptive, emotional, and a total escape into another world. That’s what I love to read when I read romance, so that’s what I’m writing.

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