Monthly Archive for February, 2009

Thanks, ya'll!

I just sent off my dedication, acknowledgements, and my short interview to Orbit.

Thanks to EVERYONE who contributed questions!  I could only answer eight, so it was tough to choose which ones.  But with the help of Jennifer Flax, from Orbit, we narrowed them down.

We tried to address a range of topics, from Tempest Rising, to me as a writer, and to the next book, Tracking the Tempest.  So not everything would fit, but they were all fabulous questions.

That said, I will be answering ALL of the questions in a FAQ that I will eventually attach to this site.  Eventually should be closer than not, as a lot of the questions come from an interview that I’m doing very soon.  

So keep your eyes peeled for the FAQ, and for the interview in the back of the book!  And thanks again, to all of you.  I’m so chuffed, as a debut writer, to have so much support from both friends and future readers!

Nikki Does Derrida

So I’m Albuquerque, at the SW/TX PCA/ACA conference, “Reeling in the Years.”  I’m giving a paper on the vexed connections between fiction, testimony, and truth-telling, as philosophized by Jacques Derrida using a text by Maurice Blanchot as his inspiration.  It’s way less wankerish than it sounds, and is actually really interesting and accessible.  Seriously.  I mean that.

I arrived late afternoon yesterday, so only made it to one panel, and I chose to go to a panel that was entirely about the Twilight series by Stephanie Meyer.  It was really, really, interesting, not least because my thoughts about the book are very conflicted.  It is a problematic book, to say the least.  And coming at it with both of my two hats on (the one hat being that of an academic who studies gender issues and issues involving power and ideology; the other hat being that of an Urban Fantasist who writes about vampire nookie) often leaves me even more confused.

So we had a paper on the monsters in the book, from a woman who studies Fairy Tales and monstrosity, and one on liminal spaces within the book, from a woman who, you guessed it, studies liminal spaces, and a very good reaction paper from a woman who considers herself a second-wave feminist AND a mother, trying to understand whether or not this book is anti-feminist, or an excellent representation of third-wave feminism.  So in the discussion afterward we talked about cyborgs, and how vampires are a great representation of the theories regarding post-gender (I used the word disengendered, which is wrong, but I also liked it), and how many adult critics focused on the male (or peni-ed vampires, as the case may be) characters while the young girls reading the books often seemed to focus on Bella, as a protagonist, as their true area of interest.  In that vein, I realized that Bella is, actually, a lot like many UF heroines out there these days, and actually shares a few (and I’m talking FEW, but they’re interesting) similarities to my own heroine.

Anyway, it also made me think in terms of some last minute changes I just made in the manuscript for Tempest Rising regarding some sex scenes.  I do some work for Planned Parenthood in Louisiana, and I’m the faculty sponsor for Planned Parenthood’s VOX group at my university.  And I had my character blithely having unprotected sex –  granted, with a vampire who assures her that it’s fine – but was that really where I wanted to go?  I’d always been slightly bothered by that inevitable paranormal romance scene in which the supernatural love muffin says, “Baby, we don’t need to cover my shit because [insert creature here]’s can’t carry the hiv.”  As a writer, I totally get that it’s a BITCH to have your sexysexy interrupted by a jimmy, but seriously?  I’ve seen the Montel where the girl cries, saying, “He promised me he was shooting blanks!” or the boy sits, sobbing, “She promised me discharge was normal!”  

I was raised never to trust the people I have sex with, when it comes to my bits.  That they are MY bits and I am responsible for them.  And yet, I had my heroine throwing her bits out there without a care in the world, just because some random dude promised her he was a vampire.  Okay, it was a way better scene than that, but the no-protection part of my otherwise sensual and aesthetically superior sex scene (really, yo) always bothered me.

So I fixed it, and I made the inevitably-interruptive aspects of the condom a running gag.  Which totally sounds like something you get when you DON’T wear a rubber.  Anyway, I worked it, and made it work, just like couples all over the world do every night.

And I felt better.  Because my book is a total beach-read, fantasy romp.  But I also want it to be real.  Which is a paradox but it’s true.  I also think this paradox is what bothers so many adult readers of Meyer’s books.  Because our fantasies are, in large part, determined by our realities.  And our realities are determined by our fantasies.  So when a novel, such as Twilight, offers so many mixed messages to our most vulnerable age-groups, we’re not sure who to trust.  Do we trust the author?  The reader?  Do we interfere, as parents or aunts or teachers, and sit the child down to explain that they will never be no-longer-pooping, shiny, 19-year-old mothers of psychic babies, none of whom, apparently, poop, either?

Move over Derrida.  I got some urban-fantasy-filosofizing to do. ;-)

Finally, check out my interview with Cindy Pon, over at the League.  Awesome.

Nicole Peeler needs YOU!

So, if you’re familiar with Orbit’s books, you know that they like to do an interview at the end of a debut author’s first book.

If you’re not familiar, Orbit likes to do an interview with debut authors and print it at the back of their first book.

Anyway, it’s my turn up at bat. Only I don’t know what to talk about! So I need you to help me!

Please use this post’s comments form to send me interview questions you’ve been DYING for me to answer and maybe you’ll see them in PRINTED FORM at the end of Tempest Rising when it gets published. Thanks!

AND as the MOST LOVELY AND INTELLIGENT JAYE WELLS pointed out, I will certainly answer all of your questions, even those I don’t use for the book, in my FAQ section of my fancy website.  When I get one, that is.  Which will be soon . . . ish.  Yes.

NOT just another Manic Monday . . .

Oh.  My.  Gods.

Check it:

Tempest Rising Cover

Tempest Rising Cover

Tempest Rising Cover by the amazing artist Sharon Tancredi!  

For Orbit’s take on the whole thing, go here!

For those of you in the Port, it’s another Beer and Bellydancing Monday . . . and since we’ve got no school today and tomorrow, we’ll be reverting to our summer schedule of Beer, Bellydancing, AND BLUES Mondays!  So see you at Lee’s, my good friends.  If you’re not in the Port, have an Abita with me to celebrate in spirit.

Size Does Matter . . .

. . . when it comes to printers!  I had a very small printer.  Now I have a very LARGE printer:

The Big Boss

I am impressed with its performance.  It spat out my entire manuscript (double sided!) while I was taking my walkies.  

I know from past experience that editing from the printed page helps serve as a reminder that a final product is the goal.  Not a Lifetime of Editing (Futzing!).

So this is my way of helping myself edit.  That said, I am turning sentence at an alarming rate.  And enjoying every second of it.

For the rest of the day, however, I will be costumed, masked, and sporting in the Blanc et Noir second line.  If you’re in the Port, see you there!  If not, pictures will most assuredly be posted on my facebook page.

And now I will do my best Gambit/Pirate (all my accents inevitably descend into pirate):

Happy Mardi Gras, Cher!

On Commitment Issues and Revisions. . .

So, those that know me are probably aware that I have commitment issues.  I like being footloose and fancy free.  I can always (I hope) be relied on as a friend, but things that tie me down make me all nervy and shaky, and I may bolt.  I even pursued a career that means I only have to be in the same place about 8 months of the year, and the rest of the time I can wander around the earth like a lost soul.  A marvelously content lost soul.

I am also an extremely OCD perfectionist.  Indeed, the only thing that made me comfortable with having to attach myself to one place for a WHOLE eight months of the year  was the fact that in that place I could keep a Dyson.  A sweet, sweet Dyson with which I could clean.  Obsessively.  

So now that I sound well crazy, let me get to my point.  Which is that I’m starting TODAY on “final” revisions for Tempest Rising, and I am kakking it.  Through this whole process, I have been saying, “It ain’t over til the fat lady sings.”  But the fat lady has begun to warm up her tonsils, and this is the beginning of the end of me being able to continually bother Jane & Co. 

I spend about an hour, every day, turning about various sentences in this manuscript or Tracking’s.  I am like the Henry James of Urban Fantasy.  Minus the genius.  And the confusion over my repressed sexuality.  But the whole point is that I get to tinker to my heart’s content.  Now, however, the tinkering is not tinkering, but FINAL REVISIONS, and the choices I make are going into galleys, then some other stuff I can’t remember, but eventually into ARC’s and the FINAL PUBLISHED BOOK.  AAAAGH!

Terrifying.  I will be MARRIED TO MY CHOICES.  And that’s a word that gives me hives.  Marriage, btw, not choices . . . I enjoy choices.  But marriage?  AGH!

What if I miss a colon?  Seriously?  I may cry.  A repeated repeated word word?  That might bring on a heart attack.  And what if, gods forbid, I one day realize there was SUCH A better way to put something, and I missed that opportunity?  I’ll probably write it in the margins.  And stare at it, disgruntled, for days.

So, yes, I am crazy.  And yes, I am apparently being forced to commit to something.

BTW, I am stretching my neck.  I am not frantically looking around for my running shoes.  Really.

Hmmm . . .

dsc00021       So I’m a little freaked out by my Mangatar. I think it sorta actually looks like me, if I were manga.  Keep in mind the hair’s been dyed again.What do you think?nicoledpeelerhotmailcom_fad86fb9

Monday, Monday, Monday!

Stay tuned for the BIG COVER REVEAL on Monday! (she says with both enthusiasm and certainty)

In the meantime, check out my assassination attempt cum interview of the YA UF writer JEN HAYLEY at the League!

Coming soon . . .

Nicole Peeler will have a real website, very shortly.  Until then, you can find her blogging, attempting assassinations, and generally being rather inappropriate, here:

newleaguebanner

 

That said, keep your eyes peeled.  She is slowly learning how to use “technology” and may start actually doing things here.  You can also find her on Facebook.  The password to her friendship is “selkie.”