Hot & steamy? Maybe you’re reading novelist Kelli A. Wilkins
WOODBRIDGE, NJ — Kelli A. Wilkins lives in a neatly kept home with a garage near downtown Woodbridge — not some pleasure palace in a far-off land.

Novelist Kelli A. Wilkins lives in Woodbridge.
Wilkins, 41, has been writing steamy books and short stories since 2000, when she picked up a copy of the supermarket tabloid Sun and responded to an ad seeking submissions.
Visit her site: http://www.kelliwilkins.com
Her first romance novel came out in 2005, and she averages two stories a year. None of them bear much semblance to reality — not hers, not her readers’ — which might be why the stories are so popular.
“I have a very vivid imagination,” she said. “I can write anything.”
She’s not kidding. Some of her titles include “Beauty and the Bigfoot,” “Confessions of a Vampire’s Lover,” a wrestling romance out this year called “A Perfect Match,” and a novel released this month about two gay male lovers, “Four Days with Jack.”
She also has written an authoritative book on hermit crabs, “Hermit Crabs for Dummies.”
The romances and fantasies are what keeps her busy when she’s home after working for a test-preparation publisher.
Love scenes, nudity, “spicy language.” Some might call it pornography, but not Wilkins, a Stephen King fan.
“The characters don’t meet on page one and take off their clothes. They actually have relationships,” she said. “I don’t think anyone can draw a line. It’s all a matter of individual taste.”
Her readers are mostly women who are enticed, she said, by the escapism.
“Everything is perfect in most romance novels, but it’s not always like that in real life. The heroes are always beautiful and strong and have muscles and are appealing to women readers,” she said.
She doesn’t put herself into her novels, with the exception of giving some of her characters her sense of humor or stubbornness.
Her husband gets to read her work as soon as she’s done. Her relatives always wait for the next title.
“I was writing forever. I started writing in high school for myself but never let anyone read them,” she said.
Now, anyone can read them. “I have ideas for longer suspense-thriller books, but they are trapped in my head. I need time to write them.”












