Eilis Flynn :: The Reality Beyond

Latest News

8*2011

What is The Riddle of Ryu? The e-novella is on sale now, so find out at Smashwords.com, Amazon.com, or BN.com!

3*2011

Futuristic romance Static Shock sold to Crescent Moon Press! Stay tuned for details!

11*2010

The Sleeper Awakes is available in trade paperback! Check out the Ellora’s Cave website for details, or order it at your local bookstore!

10*2009

Dragons everywhere! Jacquie Rogers and I presented a workshop on dragons around the world at the Emerald City Writers’ Conference. Stay tuned for the handout, available as a pdf soon!

7*2009

Echoes of Passion is here! It’s part of the Hunters for Hire series at Ellora’s Cave/Cerridwen Press. Check out the excerpt over at the fiction section of my site here!

4*2009

I’ll be conducting a workshop on Eastern- and Western-culture dragons with my friend Jacquie Rogers at the Emerald City Writers Conference in October 2009!

2*2009

Echoes of Passion has a release date! It’s July 2, 2009—more details soon!

12*2008

“Two Worlds, United by Anime,” contribution in Japanification of Children’s Popular Culture, a compilation of essays just published!

10*2008

New book signed with Cerridwen Press! Echoes of Passion, a sci-fi romance set in the Hunters for Hire universe, will be coming out next year. Details to follow soon!

About Eilis

Eilis Flynn has spent a large chunk of her life working on Wall Street or in a Wall Street-related firm, so why should she write fiction that’s any more based in reality? She spends her days aware that there is a reality beyond what we can see and tells stories about it for Cerridwen Press. Published in other genres, she lives in Seattle with her husband and spoiled rotten cats.

Eilis recently took part in an article by reporter Brian Miller about the changing face of romance fiction for the Seattle Weekly.

Here’s a bit of the article:

“The demographics of romance authorship could reasonably be expected to look like those of the city: about 69 percent white, 14 percent Asian, and 8 percent black. But when asked to cite some nonwhite representatives from its 145-writer membership, the GSRWA finds two.

“Notwithstanding the Irish surname (by marriage), Eilis Flynn is Japanese-American and has puzzled over the lack of Asian faces both at RWA conferences and GSRWA meetings for the past dozen years. “It’s still, I think, overwhelmingly white,” she says. “You see more people of color” at national conferences, she adds, but the workshops there on multiculturalism have focused on African-American and Latina concerns.

“So where are the daughters, so to speak, of Amy Tan? Flynn doesn’t see many, and would like to see more. The broader problem, she speculates, is that Asian readers tend to get lumped together with Caucasians. And if the heroine of a romance is Asian (as in her Festival of Stars), it’s shelved with the general (white) contemporary category. What if the Asian-American heroine were more prominent on the cover of the book? “I think that would possibly limit the readership,” concludes Flynn.

© 2007 The Seattle Weekly

The full article can be read here