Monthly Archive for March, 2011

Book Tour News: Who’s Afraid of SNARK-LA-TEX??

In today’s big, exciting announcement, I’d like to warn anyone who lives in or near Texas or Louisiana: Jaye Wells and I are coming to gitcha!

It’s the SNARK-LA-TEX Book Tour! Come for the signing, stay for the snark!

Sunday, May 15th — DALLAS, TX

4:00 pm, Borders (965 West Bethany Dr., Allen, TX 75013)

Monday, May 16th –  AUSTIN, TX

7:00 pm, BookPeople (603 North Lamar Boulevard, Austin, TX 78703)

Tuesday, May 17th — HOUSTON, TX

6:30 pm, Murder By The Book (2342 Bissonnet St., Houston TX, 77005)

Thursday, May, 19th — BATON ROUGE, LA

6:30 pm, Books-A-Million (2380 Towne Center Blvd, Baton Rouge, LA, 70806)

Friday, May 20th –  SHREVEPORT, LA

7:00 PM, Barnes & Noble (Bayou Walk, 6646 Youree Drive, Shreveport, LA, 71105)

We’ll be reading, answering questions, and probably saying something offensive. So strap on your snark and come play!

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A Few Updates and Things I Like!

Hello mah beauties!

It’s been crazy here at Casa Peeler. Midterms, then a visitor in town, and prepping for Romantic Times in a few weeks. There’s also a LOT of very fun things in the works that I’ll be able to tell you about very shortly. But until then, here’s an update of some fun things going on with Jane and with me.

In AWESOME news, our League Red Cross Critiquing Auction for Japan raised $576.00! I’m so proud of all of us, and so happy for the winners. We will tear your shit apart, in a good way! You’re awesome for donating that much to charity, and we heart everyone who bid.

I’ve just mailed out the page proofs for book 4, Eye of the Tempest. So that’s another book put to bed! I’ll hopefully have some cover art and everything to show you, soon, and then I’ll get up its official page on this website.

Book three, Tempest’s Legacy, has been bought by Germany, so there’ll be another beautifully inaccurate mermaid cover coming at you, shortly!

In very exciting personal news, I’ve found and booked a lovely flat in Bloomsbury, London, for a month this summer. I can’t tell you how excited I am for this trip, and if it works well I may try to spend the majority of the following summer in England, next year. Minus our MFA residency, of course. ;-)

As for Things I Like, I’m totally digging the new super-long chain necklaces everyone’s sporting. In fact, I just bought myself a rather lovely one at Nordstroms. I feel like I could use it in a barroom brawl, if I have to, or maybe to tie someone up. Hey, it happens! Anyway, here are some somebodies wearing them:

I’m also totally digging all the biker chic looks in stores right now. And I like that, due to my running and hot yoga, I’m starting to fit back into ‘em. I’m dangerous when I’m thinner, especially to my wallet. I’d forgotten that. ;-) Here’s an example of biker chic from Burberry:

I also have to say I am seriously obsessed with this season’s crop of updated Oxfords. They’re so androgynously sexy, with just a hint of nerd chic (to balance out the biker chic):

So there are some Things I Like, in terms of current fashion.

And here’s some music that had me singing along on the looooong drive home from the airport, today. Cat Power singing, “Silver Stallion”:

I hope you enjoy! See you soon with probably another blog post on querying, unless one of my announcements breaks early. ;-)

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Dr. Peeler Does Rejection!

On my post on query letters the other day, in comments someone asked me to talk about rejection. Now, this is a topic near and dear to my heart.

For I am the Queen of Rejection.

That might sound funny to those of you who know my publishing history, which has gone remarkably smoothly. I published the first novel I ever wrote, which is relatively rare. So I must know nothing about rejection, right?

Wrong.

Like everyone, I’ve been rejected from all the normal things most of us have been rejected by. I’ve been rejected for a lack of natural talent (I can’t carry a tune–either with my voice or on an instrument–to save my life, and I tend to hit myself in the face if I try to throw anything). I’ve been rejected by individuals I’ve liked, both in friendship and in love. I’ve definitely been second, third, or even fourth at a number of things, and I’ve had to admit I’m only passable at some things I’d really like to rock.

But I’ve also been blessed (or cursed) with an almost stupidly bolshy personality. I am constantly seeing things and thinking, “I’ll have that,” even if I’ve got no idea whether it’s actually a possibility. This attitude worked remarkably well when I thought, “I want to write a novel,” but it failed me rather miserably when I thought, “I want a Rhodes Scholarship.”

So I’ve tried out for a lot of things that were way out of my league, such as Harvard, a Rhodes Scholarship, and that really hot senior. But every once and a while I achieved something that seemed equally out of my league, such as publishing a novel. The endless cycles of rejection and success in my life are not arbitrary, meanwhile, as they’ve taught me as much about myself as the world we live in.

Indeed, rejection is one of those things that can help us grow, if we let it. The trouble is learning to interpret rejection. How do we know what a particular rejection really means?

(This blog post is now going to devolve into a series of lists. I wish I could make this into a flowchart, but I was rejected by science.)

First of all, there are two kinds of rejection: rejection you can keep working at and rejection that’s final.

I can’t go back in time and re-apply for Harvard or for the Rhodes Scholarship. The hot senior is now a bloated crackhead. These opportunities are over.

I probably could have kept at singing, or playing the guitar, or throwing balls and hitting myself in the face. But upon doing these things, I discovered my ineptitude at around the same time I discovered that I didn’t really care I was inept. I would have had to work my tuchus off to become even mildly average at music or athletics, and I realized I wasn’t willing to invest that much in something that really didn’t rock my soul.

But then there are the things that, in trying for them, we realize we really do want. And sometimes it takes us mutltiple shots to get them, and sometimes we have to adjust the level of the rewards we think we deserve.

When I went into the Rhodes scholarship application process, I did not go in thinking, “I absolutely don’t deserve this.” I knew the competition would be fierce, but I thought I had a shot. And therefore when I was summarily rejected in the first round, despite how excited my university had been about my chances, I was really disappointed. I thought, “Why?” And then, eventually, I saw who did win. These people had brought vaccine programs to villages in Africa. They’d already been involved in studies to end poverty. They’d rebuilt shanty towns.

They deserved to win.

I couldn’t go back in time and start building international programs, so I had to accept my rejection. Unfortunately, there also wasn’t a whole lot I could learn from that rejection, other than I wasn’t cut out for the Rhodes.

Unlike this sort of rejection that one can’t appeal, the query process does give us a chance to learn and develop. When I started querying, and started getting rejections, there was no “end” to this process. First of all, there were multiple more agents I could still query. Secondly, I’d already written one complete manuscript. So if this one wasn’t good enough, I could write another. But how do we know when to try to make something of rejection?

There are three stances to take on rejection: “Shit, I do suck,” “Dude, YOU SUCK,” and “Okay, fine, this needs work.”

Let’s say I’ve nanowrimoed a novel. I’ve spent a whole month of my life writing what I think is my magnum opus. It’s got thrills, chills, and a frank exploration of the perfect love I share with my pet pig, Petunia. With great pride, I send “Petunia’s Pleasures” out to agents and they tell me that a) no one will ever buy my manuscript and b) I might want to get a good lawyer as what I’m describing is illegal in most of the continental United States.

What I have to think through at this stage is, “Shit, do I suck?”

Nobody wants to be that person on American Idol who sings like a kangaroo accidentally sat upon a corncob, all the while insisting that he or she is the next Streisand. As reality TV has taught us, however, such crazily delusional people abound.

So when a hundred agents have told me they want nothing to do with “Petunia’s Pleasures,” should I just give up? I’m going to go against the American urge To Tell Everyone They’re Always AWESOME No Matter WHAT and say, “Yes. Maybe you should.” Only do this, however, after you’ve reassessed your reasons for writing, in the first place. I might ask myself if I really want to be a writer, or if I want to have my names on books. In other words, do I want the hard job or the kudos? I also might ask myself if I want to go beyond exploring my love of Petunia. Did I write what I wanted to write, and there’s nothing else in the kitty? Finally, I need to ask if it’s really worth it, to me. Being a writer was tough for a month, what’s it like for the long run? Do I love the writing, itself, enough to sacrifice all the time it’ll take to get to a professional level?

Let’s say I’ve asked myself all these questions, and I know I want this. I want to be a writer, I’ve not even tapped into the sequel potential on how many ways we can love barnyard animals, and I am in for the long haul. And yet, “Petunia’s Pleasures” got no love from the industry? Could THEY be wrong?

The “Dude, YOU SUCK!” Attitude, or: How to get Nowhere Fast

I think that an immediate response to finding out someone has rejected us is to say, “Dude, you just don’t get it. In fact, YOU SUCK!” And this sometimes is true. When I first started querying, I had an agent reply MINUTES after I sent her a query, and her response was basically, “What is this bizarre combination of URBAN and FANTASY that you’ve written?? No one will ever buy such nonsense!” I stared, puzzled, at the email for a bit, then did some more research on her. Turns out, she’s infamous for saying things such as, “Romance? Why on EARTH would people want to read about other people’s happy relationships? You’re crazy!” or “What is this MYSTERY of which you speak? Detectives solving crimes . . . how insane!”

In other words, she apparently really is a lunatic. But what happens when every agent and every publisher on the planet says, “Thanks, but no thanks?”

You CAN always self-publish!

I could assume that they all suck, and they are incapable of understanding my vision of a perfect utopia where love between a girl and her pet pig is considered beautiful. It’s important to remember that I do have the option to self-publish.  Nowadays, with self-publishing options so readily available, I can slap that bad boy up on the internet within minutes.

If my whole purpose in life was to tell my pig and I’s story (the musical to follow), then I’ve done the right thing. If I ever did want to get into traditional publishing, however, then I need to be careful. For example, I need to refrain from publicly, and in great detail, using the internet to swear off the whole publishing industry as bigoted pedants while insisting that my vision of man-pig love doesn’t need them to be read. If I do that, I burn my bridges making a public fuss AND, if it’s the case that I secretly still want “Petunia’s Promise” to get picked up by mainstream publishing, I’ve shot myself in the foot by slapping my work up, in its entirety, onto the internet. Unless I do discover there are secretly hundreds of thousands of pig-loving readers out there willing to download my book, a la The Shack, I’ve insured no agent or publisher will touch it with a ten-foot-pole.

That said, I could very well discover that I love self-publishing, and that it was absolutely the right thing for me and my project, at that time.

But if I do still want to get into NYC publishing, and I’ve not even tried to listen to what the process is saying about my work, then I’ve learned nothing by avoiding all self-examination. I’ve not learned what will sell, if “Petunia’s Pleasures” isn’t the way to go. I’ve not learned if it’s my query or the MS that’s turning off readers. I’ve not learned what I can do better, next time.

Which Is Why Sometimes We Must Suck It Up and Say: “Fine, This Needs Work”

Admittedly, a lot of hard questions have to be asked at this stage. What are people reacting to in their responses to me, if they give responses? In my “Petunia” example, people seem to be telling me they’re actually offended by my manuscript.

But what if I’m just getting blanket, empty, pre-fabbed rejections. It might be the query letter, and there’s a number of places you can have those vetted. Absolute Write Water Cooler is a great forum where these things are done.

You can also find or start a critique group and start workshopping what you’ve written. If everyone questions the same thing, maybe there’s something wrong. I always use the “three-person rule” when it comes to whether or not it’s me or them. If one person says, “I hate this name,” I take it on board but might not act on it if I really like the name. If another person says, “I hate this name,” then I ask a third. If they agree, I change the name. I don’t care if I love it.

Sometimes, even Dr. Peeler is wrong. I know it’s hard to imagine a world in which that is the case, but it’s true.

Finally, you might have to admit to yourself that this MS needed to be written, but not for publication. It needed to be written because you needed to finish that first big project, to prove to yourself you could. It needed to be written to get that story off of your chest, so you could move on. It needed to be written because you needed to practice, and learn from everything that didn’t work very well that first time, for your next time.

I think that, ultimately, rejection is what we make of it. It will hurt, and sometimes it is unfair. But oftentimes rejection is fair. If we’re honest with ourselves, we’re not ready, or we need to work harder, or we need to nail down some groundwork that we’ve been avoiding. Even more importantly, oftentimes rejection is, quite simply, final. We can’t change someone’s mind once they’ve made a decision, or turn back the clock for a do-over. Sometimes we just have to pick ourselves up and start from scratch.

Doing so isn’t easy, and that’s why how we react to rejection not only defines who we are, as people, but also helps define how successful we become. If I’d taken my first (dozen) rounds of serious, personal rejections and said, “everyone’s an idiot, no one understands me, I’m perfect, and I’ll never change,” I’d still be sitting on my thumbs in my hometown. I’d be angry at and resentful of the world, continually insisting on a personal greatness that had absolutely no real-world evidence.

I bet you’ve encountered such a person at some point in your life.

Instead, the way to succeed is to continually self-examine after each and every big rejection. Is what you’re striving for something you really want? How can you improve to get it, next time? What did you learn this round that you can apply for next round?

Rejection by others is, for the most part, out of our control. But how we deal with rejection is ours to control. Indeed, it is the space in which we prove our maturity, our ability to learn, and our ability to have that vitally important perspective on ourselves and our talents that we need to succeed.

Rejection should never define us, but that doesn’t mean we all couldn’t use a little refining.

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Dr. Peeler Does Querying!

While chatting with some of my Seton Hill MFA students the other night about agents, they asked me about my query letters. I asked if they’d like a blog post about this subject, and they told me they would.

I am NOTHING if not amenable, people. So here it is!

First of all, you might be wondering how I learned to query. That’s easy: I Googled “how to write a query letter.” And yes, I’m completely serious. There are great internet resources out there, with everything you need to know about the subject of finding agents, vetting agents, and how to write queries. Now, I do not mean for you to trust everything on the internet. Not all of the information you’ll read can be trusted and some otherwise good advice won’t be great for you, so use common sense. If the “expert” telling you how to query doesn’t have an agent, maybe they’re not the best resource. Ignore advice that doesn’t make any sense or that solicits anything, especially money, from you. Finally, if someone gives great advice but it doesn’t suit your personality or voice, keep looking till you find what does.

What I’m going to do now is give you one of the very, very early versions of my query letter:

I am seeking representation for my contemporary urban fantasy novel, Tempest Rising, complete at around 89,000 words.  The sequel, Tracking the Tempest, is in its initial stages of writing and I have tentatively outlined a series of six books involving the same characters.  My novel is urban fantasy at its most razor sharp—I like to describe it as inhabiting the space created if Interview with the Vampire collided with Sex and the City.

In the tiny village of Rockabill, Maine, Jane True—bookstore clerk and secret night swimmer—has no idea that her absent mother’s legacy is entry into a world populated by the origins of human myths and legends.  It is a world where nothing can be taken for granted: vampires are not quite what we think; dogs sometimes surprise us; and whatever you do, never—ever—rub the genie’s lamp.   For Jane, everything kicks off when she comes across a murder victim during her nightly clandestine swim in the freezing winter ocean.  This grisly discovery leads to the revelation of why she has such freakish abilities in the water: her mother was a selkie and Jane is only half human. With this knowledge, Jane soon finds herself mingling with supernatural creatures alternately terrifying, beautiful, and deadly—all adjectives that quite handily describe her new friend Ryu, who is a handsome bloodsucker (literally—not in the corporate sense).  When Ryu is sent to Rockabill to investigate the murder, he and Jane fall hard for each other even as they plummet into a world of intrigue threatening to engulf both supernatural and human societies.  For someone is killing Halflings like Jane.   The question is, are the murders the work of one rogue individual or part of a greater plot to purge the world of human life as we know it?

Despite the seriousness of her situation, Jane’s sardonic voice carries the action.  Strong-minded and incapable of taking herself seriously, Jane is someone we both laugh and sympathize with as she learns as much about herself as about her strange new world.  Her strong voice is especially evident in the short sample chapter, comprising the first six pages of the book, which I have embedded in this email.

As for me, Tempest Rising is my first novel.  I’ve just finished my doctorate at the University of Edinburgh, and will soon be returning to the States to take up a teaching position at Louisiana State University in Shreveport.  Thank you very much for considering my query and I hope to hear from you soon.  If you give me a shot, I’ll live up to your faith in me.  Promise.

I very much liked aspects of this query. Although most of my queries were emailed, they would fit on a single page if printed out. I knew I was doing the right thing by starting out with the basic facts of my manuscript, then moving to a synopsis, then moving to my bio. I also liked my synopsis, for the most part. But I had this third paragraph thrown in, that I wasn’t sure I was happy with. It felt a bit like I was bragging. Plus, I’m pointing out something I say they should be able to see in my synopsis. So why am I saying something that’s supposed to be obvious? Finally, I knew I was showing my nervousness about my lack of experience in that last, biographical paragraph. It screams, “I know I have no credentials! I’m sorry! Please like me anyway!”

So here’s the next evolutionary stage of my query that I sent out:

I am seeking representation for my supernatural novel, Tempest Rising, complete at around 89,000 words.  I believe that Tempest Rising would interest your agency in that it’s a contemporary urban fantasy that’s sassy, intelligent, and sexy.  I like to describe it as inhabiting the unique space created if Interview with the Vampire collided with Sex and the City.

In the tiny village of Rockabill, Maine, Jane True—bookstore clerk and secret night swimmer—has no idea that her absent mother’s legacy is entry into a world populated by the origins of human myths and legends.  It is a world where nothing can be taken for granted: vampires are not quite what we think; dogs sometimes surprise us; and whatever you do, never—ever—rub the genie’s lamp.   For Jane, everything kicks off when she comes across a murder victim during her nightly clandestine swim in the freezing winter ocean.  This grisly discovery leads to the revelation of why she has such freakish abilities in the water: her mother was a Selkie and Jane is only half human. With this knowledge, Jane soon finds herself mingling with supernatural creatures alternately terrifying, beautiful, and deadly—all adjectives that quite handily describe her new friend Ryu, who is a handsome bloodsucker (literally—not in the corporate sense).  When Ryu is sent to Rockabill to investigate the murder, he and Jane fall hard for each other even as they plummet into a world of intrigue threatening to engulf both supernatural and human societies.  For someone is killing half-humans like Jane.   The question is, are the murders the work of one rogue individual or part of a greater plot to purge the world of Halflings?

As for me, Tempest Rising is my first novel.  I’ve just finished my doctorate at the University of Edinburgh, and will very shortly be returning to the States to take up a teaching position at Louisiana State University in Shreveport.  Thank you very much for considering my query.  If you give me a shot, I’ll live up to your faith in me.   Promise.

Notice I’ve taken out that useless, floppy third paragraph. You want to keep your query toight (said in Mike Meyer’s Goldmember accent). I’ve also tweaked my synopsis, to make it less apocalyptic by taking out the “human life as we know it” in order to focus on what’s unique to my book, the purging of halflings.

I’ve also fiddled with my first paragraph. I was never sure, exactly, what genre TR was, since I hadn’t been reading genre fiction for years. From what I could tell by researching, it seemed to be this new Urban Fantasy genre, but I wasn’t entirely confident it wasn’t paranormal romance or something else. So, here, I waffled and wrote an extra “supernatural” along with UF. Which, basically, does nothing. I would have been better off sticking with only UF, or introducing the other genres I thought it might be. I do like, however, how I took out the bit about the sequel. It’s important information, but they have to like this project before they’ll want another project. When an agent did like this project, that was one of the first questions they asked. And I think it was sort of like rationing treats: I got to say, “Oh, yes, of course, I have a series planned,” then, after they already were interested. So my query was a treat, the fact I had a series planned was another treat, all doled out slowly rather than thrown in the agent’s face.

There’s also still that pesky, beggary last sentence.

Here’s my final version:

I am seeking representation for my paranormal mystery/romance novel, Tempest Rising, complete at around 89,000 words.  I believe that Tempest Rising fits your agency’s interests in that it’s a razor-edged example of commercial and contemporary urban fantasy: sassy, intelligent, and sexy.  I’ve included a short synopsis with this email.

In the tiny village of Rockabill, Maine, Jane True—bookstore clerk and secret night swimmer—has no idea that her absent mother’s legacy is entry into a world populated by the origins of human myths and legends.  It is a world where nothing can be taken for granted: vampires are not quite what we think; dogs sometimes surprise us; and whatever you do, never—ever—rub the genie’s lamp.   For Jane, everything kicks off when she comes across a murder victim during her nightly clandestine swim in the freezing winter ocean.  This grisly discovery leads to the revelation of why she has such freakish abilities in the water: her mother was a Selkie and Jane is only half human. With this knowledge, Jane soon finds herself mingling with supernatural creatures alternately terrifying, beautiful, and deadly—all adjectives that quite handily describe her new friend Ryu, who is a handsome bloodsucker (literally—not in the corporate sense).  When Ryu is sent to Rockabill to investigate the murder, he and Jane fall hard for each other even as they plummet into a world of intrigue threatening to engulf both supernatural and human societies.  For someone is killing half-humans like Jane.   The question is, are the murders the work of one rogue individual or part of a greater plot to purge the world of Halflings?

As for me, Tempest Rising is my first novel.  I’ve just finished my doctorate at the University of Edinburgh, and will very shortly be returning to the States to take up a teaching position at Louisiana State University in Shreveport.  Thank you very much for considering my query.

It’s as short as I could possibly get it, with no extraneous padding. No jazz hands, no cartwheels, no sequins: it just says the facts, ma’am. You hear a lot about how your query letter’s tone should match the voice of your novel, but notice how I reserve that for my synopsis. The way I look at it, agents get 1,000 witty appeals a day, and I’m not going to spend hours trying to outwit all the other witty authors. So I keep the query streamlined by having a “just the facts ma’am” approach to my bio and the facts of my MS, and inject voice into my very short synopsis.

Notice I’ve taken out the stuff about Interview with the Vampire and Sex in the City. We’re often told to compare our manuscripts to established writers, but I’m not sure I like this advice. My books ended up having something about “If you love Sookie Stackhouse, you’ll love Tempest Rising!” stuck on them, and I’ve noticed some reviews read as if the author came to the book with this expectation solely in mind. Then, they’re either pleased OR disappointed to discover they either do or do not find my Jane to be similar to Sookie. In other words, it sets up an expectation I don’t know if I really can, or want to, meet exactly.

I think the other problem with this approach is that I meant something specific from comparing Interview with the Vampire and Sex in the City about the tone of my book. But people could read this a hundred ways. Does this mean it’s a horror novel with fashionable female vamps instead of male vamps? Does this mean it’s about the dating lives of four female vampires? No matter what, though, a reader of this line is led to two conclusions: sex and vampires. While this isn’t wrong, my book only has one vampire, and he’s “not really” a vampire. So if an agent does read this line and think, “Finally! That Sex in the City with vampires books I’ve always dreamed about!” they’ll be disappointed I didn’t give it to them, and may dismiss the project because they can’t see past that disappointment.

I’ve also gone ahead and admitted I have no idea what I wrote, by calling it paranormal mystery/romance in the first sentence, then urban fantasy in the second. If you do know what you wrote, definitely say what you wrote. But if you’re like me, and you’re writing in a cross-genre, I like the idea of giving the agent space to figure out how he or she thinks it can best be marketed. This does not mean call your clearly-mystery MS an “epic fantasy mystery thriller romance” so that you “appeal” to everyone. That sort of trick will appeal to no one. But do keep your genre-bindings as loose as possible if you are writing in a cross genre.

Also note how short my bio is, especially without my silly appeal. That’s because I hadn’t done anything an agent would be interested in, really. If you have done something interesting, definitely say it! But don’t feel the need to explain to the agent in great detail what an amazing, unique individual you are. They don’t care. They’re buying into your manuscript, not you as a person.

Here are my top five rules for querying:

  1. KISS: Keep It Short, Stupid!
  2. Agents want a manuscript they can sell, not a BFF, so focus on your work and not on yourself. The only caveat would be if your experiences are important to your project (e.g., you wrote a book about climbing Kilimanjaro, and you’ve actually climbed Kilimanjaro).
  3. Nail that synopsis!
  4. Don’t be tempted to pad or apologize for your experience (or lack thereof).
  5. Desperation is a stinky cologne. Thanks to Super Troopers, we have a pithy way of saying be confident, or at least act confident. No begging allowed!

The harsh truth is that querying is a brutal process, so don your thickest skin. Just as with insemination, however, remember that it only takes one. You don’t need forty agents, you just want that single agent that loves your project and really wants to see it succeed. So keep at it–keep polishing that query, tweaking the synopsis, and tightening that manuscript–until your agent comes along.

And good luck!

Feel free to ask me any questions you have in comments. I’ll either address them in comments or I may go ahead and make this a series.

Hope this helps!

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CRITIQUING FOR JAPAN!

Hello folks! Ever wished members of the League would come over and critique some of your writing?

Are you also thinking you’d like to do something for Japan and the Red Cross?

Well, now you can DO BOTH!

We at the League are offering our services for charity! In two different auctions, you can bid to have a portion of your MS critiqued by either TEAM CLAW (Sonya Bateman, Michele Bardsley, Carolyn Crane, Kevin Hearne, Jackie Kessler, Diana Rowland, Jeanne Stein) or by TEAM FANG (Mario Acevedo, Dakota Cassidy, Stacia Kane, JF Lewis, Nicole Peeler, KA Stewart, Anton Strout).

We promise NOT to be gentle and to give you our all, just like you’re giving to Japan!

Here’s the exact details:

Get a helpful critique of your first pages and synopsis from a group of authors from the League of Reluctant Adults! (Team Fang)

Highest bidder (100% of proceeds go to the Red Cross to help Japan) gets to submit a synopsis and first batch of pages (up to 6000 words between the two – you decide how that works) of any fiction project for “expert analysis” by Team Fang, a group of authors from the League of Reluctant Adults! (We’re a group of published authors of urban fantasy, young adult, and paranormal romance; see our blog at http://reluctantadults.blogspot.com/)

What you get: We’ll each commit to taking at least an hour to read your stuff and let you know what we think is working great, and what we think isn’t working, and give ideas for improvement. Some members may concentrate more on the synopsis, some on the pages, but we’ll all be giving our best constructive advice. Be ready to get a spectrum of opinions, and possibly disagreement between league members, either noted on the document itself or on separate documents. It’ll be like we’re all sitting in a room, discussing your story and early pages. You will have six months to submit your document (Microsoft Word ideal), we’ll have a month to look it over and comment. (note, this is for craft/story feedback only, and not in any way a guarantee of representation or publication). At the end, we’ll email your word doc back, full of all of our comments, either on the document, or on separate documents.

That’s a lot of League snark-power, for a good cause. So come on, bid, and let’s all help rebuild lives in Japan!

Again, the auction for TEAM CLAW is located here.

And the auction for TEAM FANG (that’s my team!) is located here.

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(More) Thoughts on Sex in Urban Fantasy. . .

I’ve written before about sex and urban fantasy, partly because people often ask me about it. This curiosity isn’t surprising, as sex is a big part of a lot of the genre. Meanwhile, sex is also a huge part of human life, and yet, for the most part, as a literary trope sex is associated mostly with women.

Notice I said “literary,” meaning not sex of the porn and Penthouse letters variety. Instead, I mean the writing of a character’s sexual proclivities as a way of fleshing out that character, or of making him or her more three-dimensional.

This is not to say that men have not written sexually explicit material the purpose of which was to expose character. A most obvious example of this would be Mickey Sabbath in Sabbath’s Theater, or Alexander Portnoy in Portnoy’s Complaint, both by Philip Roth. And yet, if you know your Roth, you know that the point of these two characters is to shock us with their sexual proclivities, and make their form of extreme sexuality endemic of their intrinsically extreme characters.

In fact, a lot of the sex written by men that I can think of falls into one of two categories: It either establishes the male character as some sort of sexually frenzied individual or it does the opposite, and reveals the character to be a sexual failure.*

In genre fiction, sex is often not touched on by male writers. Or, if it is, it’s done “off screen,” with the bedroom door shutting in our faces for the bulk of the action.

Obviously, however, women’s fiction has been very different. Ever since Kate Chopin wrote about a storm that didn’t foreshadow doom, but an orgasm, women have been writing about sex in all its vagaries. In both literary and genre fiction, female writers have insisted on portraying sexuality in ways that are nuanced and valuable to characterization: from the bleak and lifless sex of a Jean Rhys protagonist to the buxom sensuality of a Harlequin heroine.

I’m not sure why this is true. Partly, I think women feel they have less at stake: for the bulk of (at least Western) history, women were expected to be utterly passive partners in the bedroom. In other words, we’ve gotten to lie back and think about what everything means while the man has to do all the work. Traditionally, we’re judged less on our performance than men are, although that’s been changing for the past few decades. And, finally, sex is considered part and parcel of all those ooky girl feelings like love, and emotion in general.

Which is why I get so steamed when people (read a tiny but obnoxiously loud portion of hard core misogynistic SF/F fanatics) moan about “urban fantasy being all about sex.” What they’re really saying is, “Dammit, women started writing OUR STUFF and they BROUGHT THEIR VAGINAS.”

Yes, my little spotty Lords of Onanism, we did bring our vaginas to this party. And we are going to use them!

Because sex isn’t just about mushy feelings, not that there’s anything wrong with exploring emotional responses other than “Hit! Pillage! Attack!” Sex isn’t about one emotion, or even a single set of emotions. At different times (and sometimes at the same time), sex between the same two people can be about power, control, possessiveness, obsession, love, hate, adoration, infatuation, affection, comfort, mortality, life, fecundity, exploration, grief, hunger, yearning, anger, revenge, or simply scratching an itch.

Which of these emotions is actually revealed during sex is often a surprise to the lovers in question. “Surprise!” says the claw marks down his back, “I didn’t actually forgive you for checking out that checkout girl’s ass, even though I said I did.” “Actually,” says that tender kiss delivered by the playboy, “I hate being alone.” These are only a few examples of the sorts of things that physical actions can say that a character would rather die than admit, consciously.

So why do we ladies (and those awesome men out there who also read UF) like our fantasy with a little fa-fa-fantasy? It’s because women, for the most part, aren’t afraid to admit that even meaningless sex means something. Not necessarily about the love between two people, no, but it can still say a lot about who we are, how we treat ourselves, and how we see others.

And let’s not forget that sex is also fun. I bet even the Lords of Onanism would think it was fun, if they managed to do it with someone else.

Now go wash your hands!

*James Joyce’s Molly Bloom is the best example I can think of a male writer who writes an interestingly sexual female character. Yes, yes, yes, he does. D. H. Lawrence also explores sexuality and character in great detail, but he is inchoate and crazy, bless.

Why do you think we like sex so much in our urban fantasy?

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I’m SO CHEAP! And a WIENER!

Hello mah friends! I was super chuffed to see the HUGE numbers who came over to say hello and enter the contest I ran last week. Before I share the wiener of that contest, I have a couple of fun things to announce:

First off, guest blogs!

You can find me guest blogging over at Richelle Mead’s site, where I talk about “How young is too young?” in regards to reading, and you can also find me at Vicki Pettersson’s site, talking about my rather ridiculous mental version of Las Vegas. Vicki also says such nice things about me she made me go all vaklempt.

Kat Richardson also made me blush with what she said before my guest post at her site, about truly inspirational places to live. Next, I’ve got a guest blog up at Kevin Hearne’s Writer’s Grove, regarding butts that can crack walnuts and the urban fantasy heroine. It makes more sense when you read it. ;-)

Finally, you can catch me talking NOLA cuisine over at Suzanne Johnson’s Preternatura. She’s even offering a NOLA gift bag as a contest prize. Fun!

I’m wandering around to other people’s blogs partially because, for the month of March (and a bit of April), if you live in America you can OFFICIALLY call me cheap. Because Orbit’s offering its US readers the chance to download my first book, Tempest Rising, for only $2:99. Click on the ad below for more info:

So if you want to give Jane a shot, and you live in the states, she’s gorgeously cheap. Yay for cheap!

But now onwards and upwards to our wiener. THE CONTEST CAN HAS SPOKEN!

And the wiener is . . . . . . . . . . . . *drum roll* . . . . . . . . . . . JESS TOWNSEND!!!!!!

Congratulations, JESS! Email me at iheartelkies(at)gmail(dot)com, telling me which of the two books you’d like that are on offer, as well as your address, and I’ll have them sent your way!

Thank you ALL for playing. I loved reading your comments and it was great to have you here at the Emporium!

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A WIENER! And a Thing I Liiiiiike . . .

Hello mah friends!

Before I announce the wiener of Sophie Littlefield’s AFTERTIME, I want to introduce you to something new I like. Well, only half new: Y’all should know by now that I loves me some Airborne Toxic Event. They’ve just released their new video for the song “Changing,” and it is amazing.

And by amazing, I mean that on the scale of shagability, pretty much everyone in this video is a perfect 10, up to and including the drum set. So much eye candy! And such a great song! And it’s so fun! Here’s the video:

Isn’t that fun!

But even more fun is being a WIENER. The Contest Can has spoken!

The wiener of Sophie Littlefield’s AFTERTIME is Kt! Kt, email me your address at iheartselkies(at)gmail(dot)com and I’ll have Sophie send you your book. Congrats!

And thanks to everyone for playing. It was great fun! Don’t forget there’s now another contest, underneath this post.

Ciao for now!

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Pimpage and a Contest

Hello my beauties! It’s pimpage time here at the Emporium, and the pimp hand is smacking down stronger than ever, thanks to all that zumba I’ve been doing. Check out some of the books written either by Leaguers or those beloved of me:

How to Knit a Heart Back Home by Rachael Herron (Cypress Hollow Books #2)

Blurb: Lucy Harrison sells books by day and volunteers with the Cypress Hollow fire department by night. Her life is just the way she likes it—full, even-keeled, and smooth—until bad-boy ex-cop Owen Bancroft comes back to town. Lucy has always been fearless, never scared about diving in to help others. When it comes to risking her heart, however, she realizes she’s absolutely terrified.

In a small town like Cypress Hollow, everyone knows your business—and there is nowhere to hide. Then Lucy and Owen are thrown together by the discovery of the lost work of local legend, knitting guru Eliza Carpenter. Now Owen, adrift and struggling to redefine himself as a civilian without a badge, will have to learn how to open himself up to life’s new possibilities . . . while Lucy decides just how much of herself she’s willing to gamble on love

 

Never Again by Michelle Bardsley (Wizards of Nevermore #1)

Blurb: Welcome to Nevermore, Texas, population 503, where witches and wizards live side by side with humans, and where witch Lucy Rackmore is in trouble. Ever since her former lover snuffed out her magical abilities, everyone in town is looking to settle a score with her family. And Lucy’s only hope for survival may be her ex-brother-in-law-whom her sister betrayed and nearly killed.
“4.5 Stars! Top Pick! “This edgy and sexy series provides more evidence of Bardsley’s supreme storytelling chops!” ~ RT Book Reviews
Excerpt and more at Michele Bardsley’s site.
Accidentally Catty by Dakota Cassidy (The Accidental Series book #5)
Blurb: Katie Woods never thought she’d be forty-one, divorced, and thrust back into the dating world. To start fresh, Katie uproots her veterinary practice to upstate New York-not exactly the hottest dating scene on the planet. But when an unconscious cougar appears at her clinic, Katie’s newly single life gets a much needed jolt of the supernatural kind.
After Katie examines the cougar and leaves him caged overnight, she’s shocked to find a big strapping specimen of young, hot man in its place. And when the scratch she got during the exam results in some unnatural side effects, Katie has more to deal with then her animal attraction to a much younger guy-she has to figure how to stop herself from becoming a cougar of the four-legged variety.
Hell to Pay by Jackie Kessler (Hell on Earth #4) 

Blurb: In this fourth and final Hell on Earth novel, everything changes.
After turning her back on Hell and becoming human, the former demon Jezebel – now the mortal dancer Jesse Harris – is ready to settle down with her true love, Paul Hamilton, and make with the Happily Ever After. But that’s not in the cards. Jesse is accidentally wielding her former Hellish power – with devastating results. Another former succubus has targeted Paul. Someone is killing the dancers at Jesse’s club. And the King of Hell is leading the world to the brink of Armageddon. All in all, it’s not looking good for Jesse, or for anyone she loves. And there’s going to be hell to pay.

Available at Barnes & Noble, Amazon and probably lots of other places…$2.99!

Iron Crowned by Richelle Mead (Dark Swan #3)
Blurb: Shaman-for-hire Eugenie Markham is the best at banishing entities trespassing in the mortal realm. But as the Thorn Land’s queen, she’s fast running out of ways to end the brutal war devastating her kingdom. Her only hope: the Iron Crown, a legendary object even the most powerful gentry fear. . .
Dead Waters by Anton Strout (Simon Canderous #4) 

Blurb: Simon Canderous, of the Department of Extraordinary Affairs, is used to fighting vampires and zombies. But the strange murder of a professor has everyone stumped. And it’s making some people crazy. Literally.
“Simon Canderous is a reformed thief and a psychometrist. By turns despondent over his luck with the ladies (not always living) and his struggle with the hierarchy of his mysterious department (not always truthful), Simon’s life veers from crisis to crisis. Following Simon’s adventures is like being the pinball in an especially antic game, but it’s well worth the wear and tear.”  – Charlaine Harris, author of the Sookie Stackhouse series

Check out Anton online here

Green-Eyed Demon by Jaye Wells (Sabine Kane #3)

Blurb: The clock is ticking for Sabina Kane. Her sister has been kidnapped by her grandmother, the Dark Races are on the brink of war, and a mysterious order is manipulating everyone behind the scenes.
Working on information provided by an unlikely ally, Sabina and her trusty sidekicks–a sexy mage named Adam Lazarus and Giguhl, a Mischief demon–head to New Orleans to begin the hunt for her sister. Once there, they must contend with belligerent werewolves, magic-wielding vampires and–perhaps most frightening of all–humans.
But as much as Sabina is focused on surviving the present, the past won’t be ignored. Before she can save those she cares about most, she must save herself from the ghosts of her past.
“From the opening page, the story hurtles along at full throttle. Yet it is not without its funny moments, like the evolution of ‘Team Awesome.’ A seriously wild ride! 4.5 Star Top Pick!” ~Romantic Times Book Reviews
Blackout by Rob Thurman (Cal Leandros Book #6)

Blurb: Half-human Cal Leandros has always walked a bloody line between keeping his mortal soul free and clear (sort of) and unleashing the horror of his otherworldly heritage. The one thing that’s always saved him is the memory of his brother, Niko, his friends, and those he loves… until now.Cal wakes up on a beach littered with the recently slaughtered remains of a variety of hideous creatures that were obviously looking for trouble. The fact that he was the one doing the slaughtering doesn’t bother him. The fact that he feels like a natural-born killer doesn’t either. What bothers him is that Cal doesn’t remember Cal anymore…

Inevitable by Michelle Rowen
Blurb: Paranormal investigator and erotic novelist Emma Black is at a masquerade ball and looking for a coveted lust potion. Unexpectedly, she bumps into her former partner, the ridiculously sexy (oh so sexy!) Ryan Shephard. And, for added bonus temptation points, the rare lust potion is splashed on both of them—with instantaneously hot results!

But is the incredible, mind-blowing sex between them only the result of the potion? Or are Emma and Ryan simply giving in to the inevitable?

“4 Stars! If you’re not afraid to set foot in X-Files/Fringe territory, you’ll enjoy this hot, sexy paranormal romance.” –RT Bookreviews

 

ANTHOLOGIES!

AFTER HOURS: TALES FROM THE UR-BAR
Includes Anton Strout & Jackie Kessler

Blurb: Science fiction and fantasy readers have long shown an affinity for a good “bar story”. Now some of today’s most inventive scriveners have decided to tell their own tall tales-from an alewife’s attempt to transfer the gods’ curse to Gilgamesh, to Odin’s decision to introduce Vikings to the Ur-Bar, from the Holy Roman Emperor’s barroom bargain, to a demon hunter who may just have met his match in the ultimate magic bar, to a bouncer who discovers you should never let anyone in after hours in a world terrorized by zombies.
Those who Fight Monsters
Includes Jackie Kessler!

Blurb: Those Who Fight Monsters: Tales of Occult Detectives, is your one-stop-shop for Urban Fantasy’s finest anthology of the supernatural. 14 sleuths are gathered together for the first time in all-original tales of unusual cases which require services that go far beyond mere deduction!
Whedonistas: A Celebration of the Worlds of Joss Whedon by the Women Who Love Them
Including Jeanne Stein and Jackie Kessler!

Blurb: In Whedonistas, a host of award-winning female writers and fans come together to celebrate the works of Joss Whedon (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Firefly, Dollhouse, Doctor Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog). March 15! By discussing the impact of Whedon’s work, their involvement with his shows’ fandoms and why they adore the worlds he’s created, these essayists aim to misbehave in Whedon’s rich, fantastical worlds. Essay topics include Sharon Shinn (“Samaria” series) and Emma Bull (Territory) elaborating on the perfection of Firefly, Jeanne Stein (the Anna Strong Chronicles) revealing Buffy’s influence on Anna Strong, and Nancy Holder (October Rain, The Watcher’s Guide) relating on-the-set tales of Spike menacing her baby daughter while Riley made her hot chocolate.Other contributors include Seanan McGuire (October Daye series), Elizabeth Bear (Chill), Catherynne M. Valente (Palimpsest), Maria Lima (Blood Lines), Jackie Kessler (Black and White), Mariah Huehner (IDW Comics), Sarah Monette (Corambis), and Lyda Morehouse (AngeLINK Series). Also featured is an exclusive interview with television writer and producer Jane Espenson.

So many books! So little time!
But just to facilitate your reading, I’m going to do a CONTEST. It’s very similar to the CONTEST that Carolyn Crane is running, over at her site, because everything that Carolyn does, I want to do, too. That’s how much I adore Carolyn.
It’s also because I cribbed a lot of this release information from her website, as it’s that time of year again, and I’m in my grading oubliette. But I am citing my source, which is Carolyn Crane.
Anyway, the contest is THIS:
Comment here about which of these books you’re most looking forward to, and I will let the Contest Can choose a weiner NEXT Friday, March 11th, 2011. That weiner can pick any TWO of these titles, and I will have them Amazoned straight to you. You can also choose from any of my three titles that are currently in print, just in case you’re some straggler who wandered over here not even knowing who I am.
This contest IS international, so start a-commentin’! And don’t forget, you have until TOMORROW, Friday, March 4th, to comment on Sophie Littlefield’s guest post, below, to enter to win a signed copy of AFTERTIME!
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