I’m so happy to start my Spotlight off this year with a wonderful author from our #RomanceBookBlast community, where authors support authors and have a “blast” cross-promoting.

Along those lines…

Let’s Meet the Author

When Alanna ran out of horse stories to read at the local library, her father gave her a box set of The Lord of the Rings.

After a couple of weeks, she declared the trilogy a suitable alternative and started working her way through all the fantasy books in the library (though the unicorns she kept sneaking into her own horse stories should have been a clue about where the whole writing thing was going).

Now, Alanna writes cozy and gaslamp fantasy with romance. And there’s usually a horse or two around that are not of the winged variety.

Let’s Get Started

First, thank you for having me! I’m excited to be here.

I actually have a hard time remembering a time I wasn’t writing stories. I have a strong memory of sitting in my second-grade class and writing a story about unicorns. It wasn’t a class assignment–I would sit in class and pretend I was taking notes, but it was actually a story.

So, early stories about unicorns aside, most of my stories were about girls and their horses  (horses being another early obsession). Looking back, I realize I was always drawn to media with some element of magic or the supernatural, but I didn’t know there was such a thing as the fantasy genre until my father gave me a boxset of the Lord of the Rings trilogy when I was twelve.

I read a lot and would read whatever I could get my hands on, which started including my mom’s romance novels and murder mysteries. The romance influenced me more than the murder mysteries, obviously.

As for cozy, I didn’t set out to write a cozy. Most of what I wrote in my teenage and college-age years was epic fantasy, which transitioned to urban fantasy. Then I stopped writing fiction, period. I had multiple jobs and just didn’t have the time. A few years ago, I made it a goal to publish a book. I picked up the manuscript that became Teaching Magic and finished it. As I was learning about self-publishing, I realized that book didn’t fit on the epic fantasy shelf, and it took me a while to realize it belonged in this growing category of cozy fantasy.

I pick up a little bit from everything, I think. My favorite tends to be whatever I’m binging right now. Other books certainly inspire me, but so do movies or song lyrics or even catching a scent that jogs a memory. 

Awesome. Do you write full-time? What is your writing schedule like?

I do not write full-time, though I’m hoping to work my way there. I tend to write at night. After I come home, I have to give myself a couple of hours to transition from work brain to writing brain, so I eat dinner, get some chores done, shower. And some nights I have to accept that the words just aren’t coming.

Fitting a writing routine into my life is a little bit easier for me because I don’t have children. The thing that helped me the most was adding a little bit of outside pressure. For me, that was posting Teaching Magic to Royal Road while I was working on edits. I knew I had to have a chapter ready by a certain day to post, because people were waiting to read it. 

The writing resource that probably made the biggest difference for me was discovering Becca Syme’s work on Clifton Strengths. That’s actually where I got the idea to utilize outside pressure to get myself writing. I used to struggle a lot to follow others’ guidance because it didn’t work for me, which made me feel terrible about myself and my writing. Becca’s work taught me how to find advice that actually works for my personality.

For romance writers, I like the book Romancing the Beat and Ines Johnson’s resources (she has something in almost every format, depending on how you like to learn).

I also like resources that aren’t necessarily writing-focused. There are a ton of world-building guides and things on YouTube that are geared toward tabletop role-playing games. I listen to so many history podcasts, which can spark ideas but also help me feel out what life is like for my characters.

Whoo, this is a big question. Probably the biggest thing is to not do all the things. Pick one type of marketing and get that established before you move on to something else. For example, I spent a lot of time this past fall working on my newsletter. I revamped the short story readers can get for free by joining my newsletter. I started doing more promotions to get people onto my newsletter list. I gathered together a bunch of emails from authors I follow, and I read each one, found bits I wanted to include, and built a template for my newsletter. My list still isn’t big, but it is growing steadily.

Selling on my website is very new for me, so I haven’t quite figured it out yet. I will be releasing a boxset of Teaching Magic and Trial by Magic next month, and I will offer it on my website first before I upload it to the retailers.

I just released a short novel about a side character from my secondary-world gaslamp fantasy series called An Inquest of Gryphons. All of my books can be found on most ebook retailers and are also available through Kobo Plus and Everand. I can also be found on Instagram at @alannacole.books.

I’m not quite sure what my next book will be, but it will most likely be in the same world as Teaching Magic. I’ve had several fun ideas about characters from that world that I’m exploring.

Thank you for having me! Aspiring writers, find a group. I have two: a local group where we do writing meetups and share ideas, and an online group that is more of a professional organization for my genre. It is so important to surround yourself with other writers.

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My blogs are me, coming up for air… When I have musings I want to share… When I think, hey! You might care about an idea you also might share.

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One response to “Sunday Spotlight with Cozy Romantasy Author Alanna Cole”

  1. March Life Update – By D. L. Lewellyn Avatar
    March Life Update – By D. L. Lewellyn

    […] interviewed a wonderful indie author who writes cozy romantasy. Check out our conversation on my Spotlight. Lots of medical follow-ups this month, and getting used to my five-year course of hormone […]

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D. L. Lewellyn’s passion for writing began in 2020, following a summer of voracious, lockdown-induced reading in her favorite genre, paranormal romance. Besides her self-published books, her stories have appeared in anthologies, and more novels are on the horizon. Not surprising. Anyone who knows her will tell you she’s a dedicated multi-crafter. A peek inside her colorful, cluttered studio also gives you an idea. She enjoys blogging, chatting with indie authors on her Spotlight, and watching classic movies with her husband—a bowl of popcorn on her lap and her rescued fur babies at her feet.

“I cried, I laughed, and I was angry. The ride was so worth it! This series was my introduction to reading this genre. I have found this to be some of the best writing, story telling and follow through on all character paths of any prior reading of any genre.”

Kindle customer review of The Starlight Chronicles, Tigris Vetus.