About Alison DeLuca

Alison DeLuca

Alison DeLuca grew up on an organic farm in Chester County, Pennsylvania. Her parents were British, so in the summers she went to stay with her grandparents near Dublin. They had no television, and as a result Alison spent the summers reading and inventing stories and plays for her sister and cousins. “This gave me the ability to entertain myself with my own imagination in any situation,” she says. “We used to be taken to tea with great-aunts, and we were expected to sit on an uncomfortable couch and not move or say a word. It was possible to endure it because I was watching my own little stories play out in my mind.” After graduating from West Chester University, Alison became a teacher of English and Spanish, teaching students from kindergarten up to college level. She loved teaching, and it was with reluctance that she left the classroom to be a fulltime mom when her daughter was born. While she was teaching and raising her daughter, Alison took every free minute she had to write. The Crown Phoenix Series was the result. She is currently working on the final book in the series, as well as several other projects.

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Here are my most recent posts:

Books vs Movies Review

book vs movie

Let's review some books vs movies The Hunger Games isn’t one of my favorite books, but I got sucked in by the action and worldbuilding. The characters were compelling, and I loved the … [Read more...]

My 12 Step Program for Edits

Pencils in the stand

The final book of my Crown Phoenix series is in the hands of my wonderful editor, “Eagle Eye” Carlie Cullen as I write this post. I call her Eagle Eye because she is extremely thorough, and if you … [Read more...]

The Forced Vacation

vacation

  For three weeks now, I’ve been unable to sit down and work on my manuscript. Things were going really well before several unforeseen events forced me to take a break from my … [Read more...]

In The Corner – Writing Exercise

writing

At times, writers practice a fine balancing act: they devise more and more difficult situations for their characters and find ways to eventually rescue them from the dangers, unless the work is a … [Read more...]

Wattpad, Part Deux

Checklist

Last month Shaun Allan and I wrote about Wattpad. I’m continuing this month with some tips for those writers who have decided to join the site, which is an amalgam of social media and writing … [Read more...]

Wattpad – Yes or No?

Sharing

The number of writers using Wattpad, the site that posts free uploads of essays, poems, novels, and short stories, has grown tremendously. Furthermore, Wattpad has attracted the sponsorship of authors … [Read more...]

Guts and Mullets

Teacher with children

I used to be an English teacher, back in the day. (You can tell it was a long time ago, since it wasn’t called "Language Arts" yet.) One of my favorite portions of my curriculum was writing short … [Read more...]

Experiences and Ideas

Bright idea

An interviewer asked me if I based my books on my own experiences. I had to think about that one. Books are a “sneeze of the soul” – we write and edit and sweat, and the result is a tangible … [Read more...]

Curtains

Valerie

And here it is, that date. Nine Eleven. It’s a date I have dreaded for a while. A year ago, my mother passed away, on the eleventh of September. She had suffered with Alzheimer’s for years. … [Read more...]

Strange Objects: Typewriters

bigstock_Old_Typewriter_5127835 (2)

When I wrote The Nightwatchman Express, the plot centered around a strange device called the Crown Phoenix. It was an antique typewriter that an offstage character had turned into a mechanical version … [Read more...]

Why Steampunk is Still Cool

Opinion

For some reason, I get a very visceral reaction when I tell people that my books are steampunk. Either the person says, “Eh? or “Ooh!” The genre has been typecast by its own recurring themes. … [Read more...]