Caught on Camera

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Caught on Camera Page 36

by Kim Law


  I’d like to thank Chuck Henry and Robert Dillingham first of all, for the speed plotting session at Calypso Café. Many changes happened from the initial plot to the final one, but without you, this book would not have happened at all. You guys are the best. Thank you.

  To David Lynn for spending a wonderful lunch with me answering all my questions about dyslexia, and even the ones I didn’t think to ask. Thanks to you I was able to figure out just who JP is.

  And of course, to my wonderful brainstorming group: Trish Milburn, Lara Hansen, and Gretchen Stull. Not only did you help steer me in the right path along the way, but you gave me the press-conference scene. For that alone, I bow down to your excellence. This book could not have ended any other way, and I simply couldn’t have gotten there without you.

  Additional people who helped are all the writers who joined us during the first annual Ruby Slippered Sisterhood’s Winter Writing Festival. Not only were you guys excellent when I needed a quick idea or just pure motivation to keep going, but I finished this book with you. It is my greatest pleasure that this is my debut novel, as I had so many friends writing with me along the way.

  To Susan Carlisle. I absolutely could not have gotten the edits turned around so fast without you and your family’s cabin. Thank you so much for bringing me into the group!

  And last, to my wonderful agent and editor. To Jill Marsal for taking a chance on me and finding the perfect home for this book. And to Kelli Martin for loving JP and Vega as much as I do and helping me make this book the best it can be. You made the publishing experience a true pleasure. I could not have seen this dream realized without either of you and am so glad to have you both in my corner.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  KIM LAW WROTE her first story, “The Gigantic Talking Raisin,” in elementary school. Although it was never published, it was enough to whet her appetite for a career in writing. First, however, she would try her hand at a few other passions: baton twirling, softball, and music, to name a few. Voted Bookworm and Most Likely to Succeed in high school, she went on to earn a college degree in mathematics. Law spent years working as a computer programmer and raising her son, and she now devotes her time and energy to writing romance novels (none of which feature talking raisins). She is a past winner of the Romance Writers of America’s Golden Heart Award and currently serves as president for her local RWA chapter. A native of Kentucky, she lives with her husband in Middle Tennessee.

 

 

 


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