


Writing itself usually flows pretty well for me, if I get stuck its usually because I’m somewhere I don’t want to be in the story, in Binding at one point I stopped for two week because I just couldn’t bring myself to do something that I knew I had to do. My website is also in the works and should launch this month and that’s a lot of work, finding the right images, making sure you have all the right content. I launched four books at about the same time, so I’m doing all I can to promote them. Right now the hardest part is finding the time to write. What is the hardest part about writing for you? I decided to put the other historical novel on the backburner, I’ve never finished it, but I went back to it recently and am thinking I’ll rework it into a fantasy trilogy. Once I started writing the contemporary it flowed very smoothly, probably because I felt I knew the characters and settings so well. I started asking myself what would happen if they fell in love and he went to the big time and she was much more than a townie. I had just visited Indiana University for a baseball reunion weekend and an idea started to weave its way into my mind about a cutter, what they call townies on IU’s campus, and a big time jock. I was writing another novel, a historical fiction book, and I hit a wall where I didn’t know where to take the story next. Why did you want to write Binding Arbitration? Chick Lit Authors Interview with Elizabeth Marx
