Eight Questions: New Authors

Last week, I did a blog post that answered these eight questions about my current wip. You can find the post here. It’s all about Peril which will follow Poison— releasing here in Feb.

1. What is the working title of your book?

2. Where did the idea come from for the book?

3. What genre does your book fall under?

4. What’s the synopsis of your book?

5.  Will you book be self-published or represented by an agency?

6. How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?

7. What other books would you compare this sotry to within your genre?

8. What else about your book might pique a reader’s interest?

So check out the following authors and their eight questions!

Anita Brooks: http://brooksanita.com/eight-questions-why-did-i-write-this-book

Dena Ratliff Dyerhttp://denadyer.typepad.com/my_weblog/2013/01/a-resource-for-wounded-women.html

Sheila Hollingheadhttp://www.sheilahollinghead.com/2012/12/the-next-big-thing.html

Laura McClellan: http://bellewoodfarm.blogspot.com/

Carol Moncadohttp://carolmoncado.wordpress.com/2013/12/03/questions-about-my-wip/

Enjoy!

Medical Question: Bleeding after Delivery

Don’t forget, just a few days left to be eligible to win Brandilyn’s book. Leave a comment this month for your chance to win Over the Edge.

Carol Asks: A woman has a baby in a major US city. Right now I’ve got her basically bleeding to death when they can’t stop post partum hemorrage. I don’t know why she’s hemorraging [and in the text I’ve left it at ‘we can’t stop the bleeding’] and the doc takes her to have a hysterectomy [which her hubby is told will take a couple hours?]. She then dies in surgery. I’ve left it pretty vague because I can’t find any stats or anything. I’m glad in one sense because that means it doesn’t happen very often, but doesn’t help me with research.

Do you have any suggestions? Or if I leave it vague [it’s his memory – it’s gonna be blurry at best] is that good enough?



Add caption

Jordyn Says: Carol, thanks so much for your question. I did some searching on Google under “causes of post-partum hemorrhage” because, medically this is what is happening to your character. Here are some of the causes:
1. Uterine atony: After a child is delivered, the uterus should contract down to “clamp off” all the blood vessels that are bleeding. This is what the OB nurse is checking for after delivery. The uterus should feel “hard as a rock”. If it doesn’t, it may feel boggy (mushy), and the OB nurse will massage it to get it to firm up. If the uterus won’t firm up, clamp down on those blood vessels, the patient will continue to bleed.

http://www.uptodate.com/contents/overview-of-postpartum-hemorrhage

2. Other causes: Retained placental tissue (where parts of the placenta stay inside the uterus), laceration of tissues or blood vessels in the pelvis and genital tract (a laceration would be a cut), and maternal coagulopathies (some sort of bleeding disorder in the mother where the blood is unable to clot). An additional, though uncommon, cause is inversion of the uterus during placental delivery (this is where the uterus would be turned inside out).

This is a good overview:

http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/796785-overview

Photo from: http://blog.timesunion.com/parenting/1626/the-line-on-your-pregnant-belly-will-go-away-%E2%80%94-eventually/

Hope this is helpful. What suggestions do you have for Carol? We’ll have to see if Heidi is able to weigh in!

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Carol Moncado lives with her husband in Southwest Missouri. When she isn’t writing Inspirational Romance or Romantic Suspense, she’s teaching American Government at a community college, hanging out with her four kids, reading, or watching NCIS. You can find her at: http://www.carolmoncado.com/, http://www.carolmoncado.wordpress.com/ , and her newest blog, Pentalk Community Blog, where she serves as editor-in-chief: http://www.pentalkcommunity.blogspot.com/ .