New almost 300 word author bio …

On July 18, 2009 by Admin

So we didn’t actually make it to 300 … just 257. To add any more would do the bio a disservice, so we’ve stopped and will let it sit as is. Sure, it’ll be tweaked as her progress with writing grows.

A shout out to Kathleen Y’Barbo, Publicist with Books & Such Literary Agency who penned four amazing articles on writing a bio.

Short Bio
A romantic at heart, southern transplant Aimee Laine, writes of challenges, choices and introspection – inspired by her work as a parent, photographer, writer and dreamer.

Long Bio
A romantic at heart, southern transplant Aimee Laine, writes of challenges, choices and introspection – inspired by her work as a parent, photographer, writer and dreamer.

Madly in love with her husband since she was fourteen, they married six years after surviving a prolonged, long-distance relationship. Since then, she’s produced three native North Carolinians and one photography studio. Each has necessitated a significant amount of writing, some more pleasurable than others.

Her true interest in writing began, years before, at age twelve, when she wrote, illustrated and bound six hand-made books for a school assignment — and its extra credit. At least one still exists — carefully archived by the story’s main characters.

Today, Aimee writes all her studio’s content and creative flash fiction pieces which have been described more like viewing within the mind’s eye than simply reading. Her storytelling articles, The Making of the Vagina Monologues and It’s All in the Details, were published respectively by Wake Living Magazine and her town’s newspaper, The Apex Herald, in early 2009.

Aimee delights in her admirers, family, friends and clients, on which she bounces her ideas and from which she draws inspiration. MIRAGE, her debut novel, and LITTLE WHITE LIES, a work in progress, are the direct result of these influences.

To Aimee writing is like a couple’s first kiss. It’s desired, sometimes unbearably. Anticipation and excitement rule the moment. Once the memory is created, it can’t be duplicated rather opens one’s eye to new adventures.

Read more about Aimee Laine on her website at www.aimeelaine.com.

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