Romance Writers Weekly – Singing Along

Hello and welcome to the blog hop! I hope everyone had a great weekend. If you missed what the lovely Elizabeth Schechter had to say just click and pop back.

Today the amazing Elizabeth asks us:

 

Playlists – what’s in your Spotify? Lyrics or instrumental? What’s your favorite writing jam?

Before writing I listened to a lot of different things. When I started writing I had a hard time finding a playlist that really helped. Then I found an old CD my sister had burned for me. It was called Classical/Foreign Mix. It has some lyrical music and some instrumental, Bach, Chopin, Beethoven, and Madeleine Peyroux among some others.

Now when I write I usually listen to some type of classical music. I find it helps me to concentrate the most. Sometimes I’ll listen to Mumford and Sons, then other times it’s Great Big Sea.

I don’t usually write in silence, but sometimes that’s what I need. I think it all depends on my mood and what type of scene I’m writing.

Well that’s it for me today, now continue on the hop to see what the incredible A.S. Fenichel listens to. Until next time!


Take a look at A.S. Fenichel’s new release coming out November 19th, A Lady’s Past!

The greatest risk—for the sweetest reward…

His fiancée’s betrayal nearly cost Jacques Laurent everything. Despite his resolve not to trust anyone again, he can’t abandon the young woman he finds alone on the road to London. In the brief hours they spend together, the enigmatic Diana touches his heart in a way he can’t explain. Even after bringing her to the Everton Domestic Society for safekeeping, he can’t get her out of his thoughts. And when he next encounters her, working as assistant to a renowned scientist, he becomes even more intrigued…

The Society’s kindness is especially welcome after everything Diana endured in a French prison, but she fears for the safety of those who get close to her. French spies are on her trail, convinced that her scientific knowledge can help them win the war. As peril draws them irrevocably together, Diana and Jacques succumb to mutual desire. But love may be the most dangerous pursuit of all, when a lady guards her heart even more carefully than she guards her life . . .


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