Mayo Lucas
Personal Information
Description
I invented fan fiction. Yes, I did. At age 12, I wrote my first book based on the characters and premise of the old TV western, Wagon Train. Soon I was writing “episodes” for other shows I liked, and reading them aloud to my best friend and bus mate on the way to school each morning. The stories were all a bit smarmy—perfect for two teenaged girls. I was already a voracious reader of all things Victorian--Austen, the Bronte sisters, Dickens, plus Twain and Alcott for this side of the Atlantic; and, in an odd juxtaposition, I read every last one of the Hardy Boys mysteries. About that same age, I read Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind. I was enthralled…and decidedly pissed off when Rhett left Scarlett. Then and there I decided to become a writer so I could make things turn out the way I wanted. It was my eccentric Great Aunt Evelyn who played a pivotal role in furthering that ambition. We didn’t meet until I was a hostile, anti-social 13-year old writing stories of a girl spy for the WWII TV show, Combat. I refused to come out of my room during her visit, so she came knocking on my door. Deep in my method-muse, I opened the door a crack and eyed her with silent suspicion. Finally, ungraciously, I let her in and returned to my writing. Unperturbed, she perched on the side of my bed beneath her haphazard pile of hair, and won me over by waiting a bit before asking what I was doing. I grudgingly told her, all the while shielding my paper from view (you know, in case she tried to copy me). Her face lit up as she confessed, “Oh! I write stories, too!” That was it. Instant pals. When she died years later, my cousins received all sorts of lovely things from her estate—jewelry, candlesticks, silver. I received none of that. Instead, without any advance word, a truck pulled up in the street outside my house. Two men unloaded crates, boxes and a thick manilla envelope, all addressed to me. They contained her desk and chair, her portable Royal typewriter…and the originals of all her short stories. She’d remembered! And she believed in me! A few weeks later, I started writing Matters of the Heart on that clackety, old typewriter. I’d already been struggling to understand some scenes that were flashing through my head and keeping me up at night. Incipient schizophrenia? I wondered. Or just a story waiting to be told? Since the first would require extensive therapy, a life of heavy meds and doubtful access to fashion, I decided on “story.” When Matters of the Heart was finished, I was already a member of Romance Writers of America (RWA), so I entered the manuscript in their national Golden Heart Contest. While I didn’t win, making it to 4th place helped my agent, Oscar, sell the book to Avon. Right behind that, he sold Camelot Jones on proposal. By the time I was proofing the galleys for that, Oscar was retiring, and my life had already swooped around a corner and taken off in a completely different direction. I worked on my third book, Dealer’s Choice, in dribs and drabs, sold some pieces to a local girls’ magazine, and kept my head in the game by giving lectures and teaching night classes on writing. I even judged in the Golden Heart Contest one year. Eventually though, my day job starved enough oxygen from the writing life that I put it aside. Now, after years of running a Human Resources Dept. for an engineering firm, I've returned to my first love—writing! Dealer’s Choice is finally finished—and it’s a great read you can sink your teeth into! I’m currently shopping it around as I look for a new agent. At the same time, I’m writing my next several books (perhaps I’m a professional schizophrenic after all) and also building my online presence.
Books
Matters of the Heart
In a spellbinding blend of suspense and human drama, Danielle Steel tells a powerful and unusual story of one woman's journey from darkness into light, as she fights to escape a mesmerizing sociopath who holds her in his thrall....Hope Dunne has carved out a name for herself as a top photographer, known the joys of marriage and motherhood, and the heartbreak of loss. In her chic SoHo loft, Hope is content with her life, finding serenity and beauty through the lens of her camera. She isn't looking for a man or excitement. But these things find her when she accepts a last- minute assignment to fly to London at Christmas and photograph one of the world's most celebrated writers--an Irish-American author known for novels of thrilling literary darkness. To Hope's surprise, Finn O'Neill exudes warmth and a boyish charm. Enormously successful, he is a perfect counterpoint to Hope's quiet, steady grace--and he's taken instantly by her. He courts her as no one ever has before, whisking her away to his palatial, isolated Irish estate.Hope finds it all, and him, irresistible. Finn's magnetism and brilliance are undeniable. But soon cracks begin to appear in his stories: gaps in his history, a few innocent lies, and bouts of jealousy unnerve her. Suddenly Hope is both in love and suspicious, caring and deeply in doubt, and ultimately frightened of the man she loves. Alone, thousands of miles from home, her mind is reeling. Is she just being paranoid? How many lies has he told? Are there more secrets to come? Is it possible that this adoring, attentive man--like the characters in his novels--is hiding something even worse? The spell cast by a brilliant sociopath has her trapped in his web, too confused and dazzled to escape as he continues to tighten his grip on her. With razor-sharp insight, Danielle Steel delivers an unforgettable tale of danger and obsessive love. Fearlessly telling the truth, refusing to look away, Steel proves once again that as an American storyteller she has no peer when she explores the dark secrets that sometimes lurk just below the surface of ordinary lives, writing about men and women and their courage to prevail, in this case, even in the face of evil.From the Hardcover edition.
Camelot Jones
Camelot Jones lived in a simple country life with modest dreams until she met Elliott Hamilton, a wealthy and handsome city man. Cammie hadn't seen much of the world, but she knew enough not to trust adventure-seekers like Mr. Hamilton. And Elliott - wasn't aiming to gain a bride when he knocked Cammie unconscious with a stray bullet, but in her neck of the woods, it was as good as saying "I do." They made an unlikely pair as they headed across the Arkansas Ozarks to St. Louis and then to New York City's glittering world of high society. Yet, under starlit skies, passions soared, lifting their hearts to new heights of ecstasy, sweeping them high on the winds of love.
