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Nobody's Damsel (Someone Else's Fairytale Book 2) Kindle Edition
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E.M. Tippetts
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LanguageEnglish
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Publication dateDecember 14, 2013
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File size3113 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
From the Author
Someone Else's Fairytale and Nobody's Damsel are two verydifferent books. Both fab and intriguing in their own way and offering a bit ofsomething for everyone. What made you decide to write both of these storie? Whoor what was your inspiration?
Given Someone Else's Fairytale is a romance novel, itdoesn't lend itself to sequels very well. You'll notice that most romanceseries use an ensemble cast with different people stepping up to fall in lovefor each book. The other option is to have a couple so fraught with romanticproblems that they threaten each other with divorce once a book or somesuch.And I guess there's a third option, to just fill books full of sappy sweetnessand no plot, but my readers are too smart to put up with that.
Nobody's Damsel is a transition book. It sets up a repeatable plotstructure that enables me to keep telling stories about Chloe and Jason. Theplot framework isn't romance though. In Damsel it's a police procedural andlater books can use Jason's job for the plots too, so the result is somethingthat lends itself naturally to an ongoing series because films and criminalinvestigations are the kinds of thing that repeat over and over again. Severalpeople wanted more Jason in this book, so I'll make sure to put more of him inthe next one.
As for my inspiration, I just thought the idea of a down to earthwoman catching the eye of a superstar was too funny to pass up. Then I createdsome characters and I love them, so they're my inspiration now.
When you begun SEF, did you know what the story of ND wasgoing to be? Or did that come at a later date?
No, not at all. I wrote SEF while pregnant and off mymedication (I'm an insomniac). It was after I'd parted ways with my publisherand while the chick lit market was melting down spectacularly, so I just wroteit for me, to entertain myself, really. I didn't ever see it getting publishedor having sequels or anything like that. Then when I did publish it and itfound its audience, I decided a sequel would be a good idea.
The reason I took a year to write Damsel, though, was because Iknew I had to plan carefully. I wanted a structure that lent itself to aseries. Later volumes won't take a full year to write, thank to the time I putinto engineering the framework of Damsel.
I looooved Jason, as you may have gathered from myreviews. Do you have a dream cast for Chloe and Jason? And any of the othercharacters?
Not really, though someone suggested Jake Gyllenhaal for Jason andthat made me think of Maggie for Jen - who would be PERFECT. If a movie dealwere ever on the table, though, I'd approach it as a chance to see what otherpeople could bring to the story. Given it's about the film industry, I dare sayany actors would have opinions worth listening to. And I've seen enough filmdeals to know that going this route means letting go of creative control (andgetting your money up front!
Did you write in order? What was your writing process? Ifnot, what were the first and last scenes you wrote?
I do write in order. Then when I redraft, I do thatpiecemeal. I pick a scene I don't like and get to work, no particular orderthere. I edit with a very heavy hand, deleting tens of thousands of words in aday sometimes. By the end of the process, I'll have written two or three timesthe number of words in the final novel, sometimes more. Most of them get cut.
There were some dark elements to Chloe's story.Especially in ND. Were these difficult to write?
Not really, though I guess that sounds a little mental. Idon't put in nasty scenes for the sake of being shocking; I do it becausereally bad things do happen, and there's no point pretending otherwise. Ibelieve happy endings are earned and fought for and require a lot of emotionalresilience and creativity. Anyone can have one, and they are never easy, evenif some people make them look that way.
Also, fairytales tend to be very dark if you think about them.Living happily ever after always required passing a major test and winningagainst the odds.
Were the endings always going to be that way? Or did youhave a few different ideas?
For the most part, yes. Damsel lays out the theme of the series, that our dreams are noless important than our reality. Chloe deals in reality, in hard evidence andmatters of life and death. Jason deals in dreams, in humanity's ongoing projectof processing life experiences and making sense of why we live our lives theway we do. Their relationship is basically a metaphor for how all of us live,with one foot in reality and the other in imagination, speculation, andcontemplation.
There are plenty of new authors out there and lots ofimpending 2013 releases and works in progress. If you could give a new authorone piece of advice, from your experience, what would it be?
1) Know what it is you want and 2) go get it. I thinkpeople often focus too much on #2 without taking the time to figure out #1. Forexample, some writers will say that the write for creative fulfillment and thenbe devastated when they don't make sales. This means they don't actually writefor creative fulfillment; that might be part of it, but they also write to makemoney, or to reach fans, or to become famous. Knowing which of these matters isessential to putting together your career plan, or else you'll never findcareer fulfillment.
Me, I always wanted to be a writer for my job. My goal isto reach a point when my income from writing supports me. I don't have to berich, I don't have to be famous, I just want to have that job, so that's whatI'm working on.
You have quite a few other books out too. Can you tell usabout some of those? Are they all the same genre as the Fairytale series, orare they all completely different?
They are all romance, but in order to explain how variedthey are, I should give a little background:
I began writing as E.M. Tippetts when I decided to branch outfrom my usual science fiction and fantasy (which I write as Emily Mah) and trymy hand at romance. I also wanted to try out novel publishing, so I wrote LDS(Mormon) romance so that I could sell it to an LDS publisher. That's whereE.M.Tippetts got her start. Her first novel was Time & Eternity, about a 26year old convert to the church who has a revelation from God, which in turnkicks off a whole lot of strife and mayhem in her life. (I was tired ofreligious books were God solves all the problems. I mean, really, no one's made my lifemore complicated than He has, not that I would trade it for anything.) The nextbook, Paint Me True is a coming of age story for a thirty year old woman whostill yearns for a perfect romance, only to learn the hard way that love iswhat you make it.
Then comes Someone Else's Fairytale, the first non-LDS book byE.M. Tippetts. I then delved back into LDS fiction to write Castles on theSand, which is a YA novel about a girl who thinks she's nobody special, and herdeeply religious older brother who knows her true worth. Then I wrote Nobody'sDamsel, and next will be the sequel to Castles on the Sand.
Aside from that, I still write science fiction and fantasy short storiesas Emily Mah and sell them to magazines and anthologies, then publish thereprints in electronic format for Kindle, Nook, etc.
Thanks so much, Emily. I have to say, I hadn'trealised you'd planned a whole series for Fairytale, which makes me veryhappy! I can't wait to read more about Jason and Chloe (okay, Iadmit, mainly Jason)and it also explains a lot about the way ND pans out. I really like that. Theother books in the series will definitely be going on my TBR list.
Thanks so much for the opportunity! Re: more Jason,what I LOVE about indie writing is that I get to work directly for fans. Noeditor telling me I have to hit x target demographic or whatever. If people saythey want more Jason being romantic, I can go right ahead and write it.
Product details
- ASIN : B00AWYHX22
- Publication date : December 14, 2013
- Language : English
- File size : 3113 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 215 pages
- Lending : Enabled
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Best Sellers Rank:
#525,211 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #2,053 in Kidnapping Crime Fiction
- #3,382 in Kidnapping Thrillers
- #15,054 in Women Sleuths (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Emily Mah Tippetts writes romance as E.M. Tippetts and science fiction and fantasy as Emily Mah. She is a former attorney with degrees in philosophy, politics and economics from Oxford University and business law from UCLA.
A lifelong New Mexican, she now lives in Santa Fe with her family. She is a devoted member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and thus often includes LDS (Mormon) characters in her work. When she isn't chasing her small children or writing, she designs jewelry, sculpts with polymer clay, and runs her formatting company, E.M. Tippetts Book Designs.
For more information or to sign up for updates on future book releases, visit her websites at www.emtippetts.com and www.emilymah.com.
Customer reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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Yeah, it was necessary to say why I liked SEF to explain why I didn't like ND as much. ND is much grittier and dark because suddenly Chloe is actually working for realsies as a crim. That was a bit of a jump from the original book's tone to begin with. Throw in the "are you or aren't you having a rocky marriage" angst and it was a bit over the top for me. See, I was expecting Chloe to be her usual sane, collected, not-crazy self, but instead in this book she gets crazy jealous, doesn't talk to her husband or at least doesn't manage to communicate with him (not sure which is worse, tbh), and it really did make me agree with the reader who said that she didn't understand how their marriage *wasn't* rocky.
I agree with that reader who said that a lot of what they are fighting about should definitely be something that should have been dealt with earlier on in their marriage. It really didn't do the series or the readers any favors that so much time was just glossed over. And considering that it never really was made super clear why Jason fell in love with Chloe when they really seemed to be very different people, this book felt a lot weaker as a result of all the marital angst. At the end of book one, it was okay, because even though we hadn't been shown them really talking to each other, really clicking, really getting into each other's life, I could buy the whole "intense emotional rollercoaster woo" thing and suspend disbelief. However, book two just made me feel like they didn't really truly know each other or really work for each other as spouses. Again, agreeing with the reader who said that Vicki did seem to be a better fit for him. Also much less sarcasm and funny banter in this book; in fact I don't remember anything that stood out as funny.
I honestly wished that I'd stopped with book one and didn't move on with two because I feel like it spoiled the fun buzz I had going on from book one.
Also, yeah, I didn't read any of the script part because I wasn't interested because I really wanted to see what was going on with Jas and Chloe. I also thought the excessive detail to crim procedures was ...well, excessive. I never really understood that sort of complaint when someone else complained about Nora Roberts' books having way too much detail about the heroine's jobs or home reno, but I do now. The issue lies in the fact that it didn't seem like there was enough plot or character development or relationship expansion in the story and all the crim stuff was taking up valuable time and book real estate.
Did I buy this book? Yeah. For $0.99 and I almost kind of regret it.
Will I buy the next book in this series? To be honest, I would read it for free or buy it for $0.99 because I kind of want to see if Jas and Chloe's relationship actually ever starts to make sense, but not for anything more than that.
Would I rec this book to a friend? Maybe. I mean, depends on your cuppa tea. I wouldn't go "DON'T BUY IT", but it's really hard to think of someone who the combination of high school-esque immature relationship stuff and gritty crime stuff would work for. Obviously there are people who this works for, note all the five stars, but no one I know personally.
Would I re-read? Nah. I don't think there's enough there in terms of what I like, ie plot/relationship/character dev for me to want to reread. If anything, I'd reread to learn more about crim procedure, but that's it.
I usually read books that I don't have to pay for, but after completing the first book of the series and the sampling the second, I had to finish. I'm glad I did. I can recommend it to a variety of readers with one caveat, the violence perpetrated against innocent children may upset some some people despite the author's sensitive handling, so buyer beware. Although it addressed child abuse, it was suggestive and nonspecific rather than descriptive. The language was inoffensive and there were no explicit sexual scenes, romantic or otherwise. It was well worth the investment of time and pinched pennies. I look forward to reading more about our famous actor, Jason, and his newlywed wife, Chloe, a "wet behind the ears" forensic scientist, as they draw closer as a couple and struggle through the ups and downs of their careers. Bravo! This is one I will read again.
As usual, Emily Tippetts' writing is polished and the characters well developed. Her romance novels are in the high upper percentile of Amazon romances.
It was a real joy to read books that were intelligent and thoughtful with only a couple of small editing errors. Thank you. I am so excited as I just discovered I had already download the third book. You can guess how I'm going to spend today. I'm a fan.
Top reviews from other countries
There also seems to be an error when Lilian meets them at the restaurant, Jason is outside but he disappears as there's no further mention of him!
The plot is interesting enough based on Chloe's background.
Hope book three is a better read.











