Ummm…Er…~cough~

ROW80LogocopyA busy week, but I specifically added the goal of not letting writing-related stuff trump actual-writing stuff more than half the week. It kinda did. Yes, I had important stuff that needed to be done, but in the end if no actual writing takes place, it all comes to a screeching halt. I did have a couple good days, but that needs to be at least four to count as a good week.

I came across the ‘Pacemaker Plan‘ which is similar to NaNoWriMo’s word count tool. As an experiment, I picked my warm-up novella, The Beekeeper’s Mother, and said I would write 25k between October 15 & 30. I still need to finish up a short for The Cities of Luna…hopefully I can do that tonight. Then tomorrow, I start writing at a NaNo pace…while still keeping up with promo, edits, etc.

I’m pretty sure I can do this. It’s definitely a challenge, but it’s doable.

Next week, I’ll be starting to look for hosts for a blog tour. More details then! It’ll probably happen the last week of November… after Thanksgiving.

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Tall Child

ROW80 scroll downMy eldest daughter is five feet, nine inches tall, and at age sixteen she’s still growing. I used to be five feet four inches, but apparently I’m shrinking because I measured in at five feet three inches at my last check-up.

She towers over me.

Tall Child, as she is often called, is adopted and therefore shares no genetic ancestry with us. There’s no telling how tall she’ll get, or whether great height runs in her genes, or if she’s an anomaly.

It’s a strange nickname. Some would say it’s not exactly endearment-like.

I understand the concern of well-meaning folks who think I’m being less than kind when calling my daughter “Tall Child” instead of something more cutesy like “sweetie” or “darling.” It’s just a small part of a very large picture that people don’t understand about a child with special needs.

When we brought her home at age six and a half, Tall Child came with a long list of idiosyncrasies that are very hard to describe. One little habit that quickly became very annoying was that every time I looked in her general direction, she’d ask “What?” in a confrontational, almost fearful way. Even if I simply glanced over my shoulder while driving to see if it was safe to change lanes, she’d think I was turning to confront her.

We worked on this, but for years every time I’d call her, she’d respond defensively. She automatically assumed that, if I wanted her attention, it was because I was going to tell her she’d done something wrong.

Then she grew taller than me. It was a great boon, as I no longer had to get out the kitchen stool just to reach the top shelf.

One day, looking up at something I needed, instead of calling her by name, I called “Oh, Tall Child!”

A miracle happened. Instead of calling back “What?” or showing up hunched over, looking suspicious and defensive, she arrived standing tall, and smiling.

She knew what I needed. She knew I needed her.

It became a term of endearment. When she comes up behind me and leans over to give me a hug and say “I love you Mama,” I say “I love you too, Tall Child.” When I’m addressing her for a random reason, I call her Tall Child. When I need her to do something, I call her Tall Child.

One of the upcoming stories in The Cities of Luna is dedicated to Tall Child. The story is called The Day Lorinda Flew and it’s about a young girl with special needs who firmly believes that chickens, now living on the moon, can learn to fly. Many of the idiosyncrasies in this character come from my own Tall Child.

I’ll write more about that later…

The Fourth Round of Words In Eighty Days For the Year

Goals?

I’ve been doing this a while now. I know what works. However, round three was marked by writing-related work trumping actual-writing work. I need to figure out how to fix that, and work it into my goals.

The daily word count remains the same:

  • 1,000 words is an acceptable day
  • 2,000 words is a good day
  • more than 2,000 words is a great day

This round includes NaNoWriMo. My daily word counts during November will need to be closer to 2k, which is doable.

However…

Editing, promo, and other writing-related activities are all very important. However, they should not trump actual writing. This was my problem in round three.

FaceplantingFor this round, I am creating the general rule that writing-related activities can only trump actual-writing half the time. Weekly, that means that four days of writing is still acceptable, but three days of writing doesn’t cut it. With The Cities of Luna coming out with every full moon, I always have promo to do and I regularly have edits. If I’m ramping up my productivity in the hopes of increasing my earnings from writing, I will need to do writing and promo etc. most days.

Steamship 2015 cover 01 with thanksI’m doing something different for NaNo prep this year. Yes, I made a few meatloaves and put them in the freezer for easy dinners. But I’m not waiting until November to ramp up my wordcounts. I have learned that if I don’t write for a few days, I have a hard time getting back in the groove. I also know that, by the end of NaNo, writing a lot every single day, I’m usually on fire and easily surpassing 2k every day.

This year I’m going to finish up my current short in The Cities of Luna. (It’s about a mermaid on the moon…with our current schedule, it won’t be out for at least six months or so.) Then, I’m going to write an Urban Fantasy novella in three parts, The Beekeeper’s Mother. This story has been in my head a while. I almost decided to do it for NaNo, even though it’s a novella and I’d have to add another project to make it count for NaNo. Then again, that’s kind of against the spirit of NaNo, which is to get a complete novel of 50k written in one month, not a couple of 25k novellas. I’m stretching the rules as it is, because I began Steamship Troopers a couple of years ago. However, I only got to 3k before switching to outline/note-making mode because I needed to figure out the arc for the entire five-book series. Last year’s novel was Night on Bald Mountain, which is the fifth book. Steamship Troopers is the first.

I’m hoping that I can do a lot of good work these last few months of the year. Prep this month, NaNoWriMo next month, and then in December I have some major promo around The Cities of Luna not to mention the holiday season.

Maybe I’ll rest in January.

Who’s doing NaNo this year? What genre?

 

 

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In the In-Between Time

FaceplantingWe’re in the in-between time when Round Three of ROW80 has ended and Round Four has not yet begun. It’s been a big week for me, with the release of Faceplanting is Always an Option, and the beginnings of NaNoWriMo prep. I’ve done a fair amount of writing, although yesterday in particular was dedicated to promo. I’m trying to ride that balance between doing enough promo to make my name and story visible, while not going all spammy on my friends and followers.

October is almost upon us, and I’m already prepping for NaNoWriMo. I had been ambivalent about which particular project I was going to use. I have an urban fantasy novella I want to write, but that would require me to fill out the word count either with a second novella or with a short story or two.

The deciding factor came when I looked through the photo gallery from the Springfield Steampunk Festival. I came across a photo of a young woman I’d met briefly, although I didn’t catch her name at the time. The image was perfect for the main character in one of my outlined Steampunk novels! I launched a search, beginning with the photographer, and found her in an amazingly short time thanks to the collective consciousness of social media. I have permission from both the photographer, Patrick Lennox Wright, and the model, Kassandra Bell to use the image to mock up a cover for Steamship Troopers. (If and when the story gets published, that’s a whole different situation.)Riley with attribution

Thinking about what my ROW80 goals will be for next round… I’ll make a goals post next week.

In late November I’ll be doing a blog tour to promote The Cities of Luna. I’m very open to the kinds of posts I do… NaNo encouragement, interview, generic overview of the series, something funny…there are lots of possibilities. Is anyone willing to host me? I’m looking at starting on Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving. (Friday November 27) I also have the goal of setting up all the various posts before November, so we don’t have to think too hard during NaNo.

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When They Know You, and When They Don’t

ROW80 scroll downAbout ten years ago, before we had kids, I took hubby down to the area in southern Connecticut where I lived and worked as a nanny back in the early nineties. I knew the kids had not only grown, but moved to different houses, and I hadn’t kept in touch so we weren’t intending to look them up. (I have since found them on social media, and there’s one I do have fun with on occasion, as we are now in similar fields… Nanny Moira croppedHi Moira!) The one place I felt sure I’d find some old friends, or at least their parents, was my old church.

We joined the congregation for morning worship without anyone giving us a second glance. That’s sad, but not too unusual for a large church. After the service, I found an older couple whose then college-age daughter had been in the young adult group with me. Their claims of “Funny…we don’t remember you at all” were not at all apologetic. They were suspicious and accusing.

It broke my heart.

In both the church where I grew up and the church I was involved in when I met my hubby, I was very active. I was used to being recognized and welcomed. I was needed and appreciated. It was strange to realize that all churches weren’t like that.

My most heartbreaking moment in church came when, during the Wednesday night kids’ activity, hubby and I found out we were losing our foster children. The social worker came to the church to get them. We let them finish dinner with their friends, then said goodbye. That story does not have a happy ending, but it’s not one I’ll tell here.

Shortly after that, hubby and I moved to Vermont to be closer to my parents. We came to church with them, to the same church I’d attended with my parents before becoming a nanny. We were recognized as an extension of my parents…nothing more. It didn’t help that just walking into a church at that point in my life caused me to cry uncontrollably. I frequently walked out, or skipped altogether.

We continued to embrace being extensions of my parents for several years after that, as we started college. We didn’t find another church until we finished our associate’s degrees and bought a house in another city.

We loved that church and still miss it to this day. This church immediately stepped up when we began attending, getting to know us and welcoming us. This church prayed with me as I cried, the preacher laying hands on me and praying for my infertility issues. This church celebrated with us when we suddenly started bringing a little red-headed six-year-old firecracker with us, and followed along the long road to adoption with us. This church applauded during her baptism, when at long last her adoption was finalized and she took our last name, and she happily announced to the congregation “Mommy’s having a baby!”

This church oohed and ahed when that baby slept through her role as Jesus in the Christmas pageant that year, watched over by a red-headed angel holding a stick with a star on it.

That church cried with me a year later, when that baby went through not just one, but two back surgeries and the removal a lump that was, thankfully, benign.

And then we moved again, back to my parents’ empty house, because they’d retired to warmer climes but were unable to sell the property. Moving meant either driving forty-five minutes every Sunday to the church we’d come to love, or simply resuming our place at the local, familiar church, but this time without my parents.

Only a few people remembered us. The minister who knew me had retired and moved on. No-one knew my older daughter as ‘the adorable little girl they happily adopted.’ She was just a kid who acted weird, and so by extension, we must be weird parents, and not in a good way.

I started to notice things I hadn’t noticed before. Whereas at our old church, all the kids would run around together after the service while the parents had coffee, in this church (which was at the same time old and new to us) all the kids stuck close to their parents, looking bored as they hugged tightly to their father’s legs. I volunteered in the nursery, but there were more than a few little ones who refused to leave their parents. Many days, the nursery consisted of five parents sitting with five kids. I volunteered on another committee for a while, where my ideas were listened to with a smile and then summarily and politely dismissed. I volunteered to bring food to the youth, only to find another Mom there waving me away telling me she had it covered and my contribution was unnecessary. I showed up to fill the volunteer position I signed up for at a dinner & entertainment style fundraiser, only to be politely shooed away from every place I tried to step in and help, being told that others were already handling it the way it was supposed to be done. (And yes, some of these same people regularly complained that they have to do it all because no one else will help.) When the call came that there weren’t enough volunteers for the upcoming Sunday School, I volunteered to teach (which I’d done at that church and others before) only to be told a few weeks later that they didn’t need me after all.

We could have changed churches. But we didn’t. There aren’t as many Open and Affirming churches as there should be in the world, and this was (and is) one of the few. In spite of numerous little rejections and issues, there are many good people in the church. My eldest, now a teen, has been accepted with her special needs. The other kids don’t exactly embrace her (I don’t blame them. I love my daughter, but she is frequently not nice to her peers.) but most of them understand that she has special needs and they accept and include her. Youth group was the first place she was ever able to go and just be one of the kids, without needing a trained caregiver accompanying her. The youth pastor is absolutely awesome, keeping an honest dialog open, being straight with both my daughter and with me about what is acceptable behavior and what is not. We often have the problem that well-intentioned people say “Oh! She’s so great!” even when she’s doing something downright rotten. The youth group and pastor don’t condescend like that. I feel very happy when I see my daughter start to push buttons, but instead of giving her attention, the other teenagers completely ignore her. Then she stops pushing buttons. WIN!

Church has always been a very important part of my life. Missing Sunday morning service was something that only happened if you were deathly ill. After losing our foster kids, I couldn’t walk into church without breaking into tears. I eventually (mostly…) got over that, especially with the arrival of my own daughters.

Then, a couple of years ago, I started doing most of my writing late at night. It worked well, and we made it into part of the family routine that Daddy does the mornings. I don’t describe this as “Mommy sleeps in.” This is Mommy’s regular work schedule, very similar to when I worked the swing shift at a call center and got off work around eleven every night. It also works well because (TMI Tuesday!) my health issues and medicine make it important that I stay near a bathroom in the morning until my body has done everything it needs to do. When I take care of myself, I can be productive. When I stop making my health a priority, things deteriorate quickly.

One unfortunate side effect of my second-shift schedule is that it makes Sunday morning church very difficult. Sometimes hubby will take the girls without me, but he’d rather have me join the family. This only reinforces the ‘who are you again?’ aspect of church membership. There are a number of friends there who do know me, and even if they don’t see me at Sunday morning worship every week, they still recognize me as a member of the church. But there are also many people who have no idea who I am.

I am a member of many communities. My neighborhood, my church community, and the writing community, which is divided into many subsets such as RWA, The Pikes Peak Writers, (Still trying to get back to Colorado! Hopefully we’ll be there soon!) and a couple of groups on facebook and Google Plus.

Some of these groups know me.

Others don’t.

But they should. Because I’m pretty awesome.

ROW80 Update for the WeekROW80Logocopy

It’s the end of the round, or close to it. I think I need to alter my goals for the next round; I need to find a way to measure the writing-related activities such as editing. I can track that in words or pages, although sometimes I’ll go through an entire page that needs no changes, and then the next page will need a dozen. It’s tricky to track. Promo, that important task we all hate, must be done, but for the life of me I can’t think of how to track it. I could say that I’ll share some kind of promotional post at least once a day, but other activities such as writing a blog post specifically aimed at promo (like my guest characters over on The Cities of Luna Blog) take more time. I need to strike a balance between  keeping my name visible (and being known) and pissing people off with too much promo.

I also need to do more actual writing. I will keep my standard 1k=an acceptable day, 2k=a good day, and more is a great day of writing. I will keep the idea that sometimes, writing-related activities supplant actual writing. However I need to take a stand regarding just how often the writing-related can push out the actual-writing. Three days a week? Something like that. Also, round four always includes NaNoWriMo, one of my favorite annual writing events. I haven’t decided whether I’ll do another novel, or a couple of novellas. A small publisher is currently considering my Kingdom Come stories; if they give me a ‘yes’ before November, I may make another KC story my NaNo novel. I will still write the Cities of Luna shorts, which are a delight to work on, and I have quite a number of them ready for final edits already. I’d also like to get my Steampunk series up to the point where it’s ready to query.

Decisions and planning to do in October.

On to the next round!

Who’s doing NaNoWriMo this year?

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Cheating at Cosplay

Saturday is Vermont Comic Con! So, what did we do on Friday? Took the family to Party City for costumes.

Halloween FlashbacksOnce upon a time, I sewed gorgeous costumes for myself and my kids, just like my mother did for me when I was a kid. At other times, careful planning and store-bought pieces resulted in some great outfits. We’ve rocked the matching costumes many times, from my tiny dragon and princess, to the characters from Oz, to Alice in Wonderland.

This year is not so organized.

To be honest, although I had a great time at the first ever Vermont Comic Con last year, this year it didn’t show up on my radar until friends started sharing the ads. We thought we’d be in the midst of moving or unpacking now, but instead we’re still waiting for the house to be sold and for my hubby to get a job in Colorado. (He’s still employed here in Vermont, with the same place for more than fifteen years.)

My girls were very disappointed that I did not take them to the Steampunk Festival with me last weekend. To make up for it, we told them we’d do Comic Con as a family and they could have costumes and everything (within reason.)

Flashback CC 2014Early in the week, I started brainstorming our family cosplay. Something fun and creative that could subtly double as shameless self-promo for The Cities of Luna. Last year, my teen donned an astronaut costume and I wore a ‘Mission 42‘ shirt in honor of the upcoming ISS mission.

Then I started asking my girls what they wanted.

For a brief time, they both wanted to be Batman. Last year, we got excited when we finally saw a grown-up one, since most of the Batmen were smaller than my youngest girl.

Other ideas came up, and I decided that, promo be damned, we’re just going to have some fun. We’ll walk into the costume store and let them both pick out what they want.

Anna masksMommy says “scary is OK, but no gore” which made zombie costumes difficult, but not impossible. However, my 7yo was frustrated that all the cool masks stunk, and were difficult to breathe in. She did say the line “Are you my mommy?” while wearing the gasmask, even though she doesn’t remember that episode of Doctor Who. I thought the half-mask was pretty neat, but she rejected it.

20150918_165738We then joined her sister in perusing ‘The Wall’. This is a huge catalog of costumes, and all you have to do is tell an employee which one you want and they go get it for you.

Except that most of the items are still in boxes, because we’re still more than a month away from Halloween. My teen asked for four different costumes before they finally found one in stock. My 7yo lucked out when she spotted the Monster High stuff, and picked her favorite character.

20150918_170834I drooled over the various costume pieces in the mix and match area, and hubby found a Viking Beard that suits him well. I found a sexy Teenage-Mutant-Ninja-Turtle corset I could have totally rocked, but eventually declined.

After carefully selecting a reasonable amount of accessories (matching wigs) for the family, we checked out, had a nice dinner out, and headed home. I had both girls try on their costumes, and was unpleasantly surprised that the ‘adult large’ costume for my teen, who usually wears a woman’s small, was much too small for her. I ran back out and exchanged it for a generic corset. Not ideal, but more versatile, and although they promised to wear the same thing for Comic Con and Halloween, I’ll probably add to hers before then. When she moaned ‘but what am I?’ (ironic, since her chosen costume had been rather vague…) I told her “You’re Monster High’s Big Sister.”

So, in just a few hours, we’ll be off. I expect to see a plethora of amazing cosplay, just like last year.

And we’ll have fun.

As a family.

 

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Are We There Yet?

For the past few weeks I’ve posted about how little actual writing I’ve done even though I’ve been busy with editing, promo, and other writing-related stuff. Last week I swore I’d get back into the actual-writing goal, and I did. Today. A few hundred words. That’s it.

Grands Faceplanting LorindaLike the previous weeks, I’ve been knee-deep in promo and editing. Grands came out August 29, Faceplanting is Always an Option is up for preorder, and I do regular blog posts on The Cities of Luna to promote the series.

I got comments back from a beta reader on an Urban Fantasy novella, so I did revisions on that and sent it to the proofreader.

This weekend I did an author reading from Victoria Pontifex at the Springfield Steampunk festival. It was SO much fun! I wrote up a blog post about it, including lots of pictures.

This round is almost over. My usual goals of 1k being an OK day, 2k being a good day, and more than 2k being a great day still apply. Worked into those goals are the more-difficult-to-measure writing-related activities such as editing and promo. What I need to think about for the next round is balancing the actual-writing with the writing-related. Some promo is a PITA. Some promo is tons of fun. I actually like revising, especially when it’s in response to an editor or beta-reader I work well with. I also know that my actual writing is much more productive if I can do it in large chunks. I absolutely love NaNoWriMo; the format of cranking out a large number of words in a short time works well for me. If several days go by with no writing, the day I re-start I find I’m slow and clunky. If I write regularly for several days, I find myself back in the groove and my productivity soars.

But the balance…do I need to accept writing just a couple hundred words some days? Or is it better if I specify certain stretches as writing-time while allowing myself to do other stretches of writing-related stuff with no actual-writing? Add non-writing commitments like Mommydom to the mix and it can get really complicated. Some days it’s easier to do the writing-related stuff. Scratch that… it is almost always easier to do writing-related stuff as opposed to actual-writing. So, yes, I must find and guard the time I need for writing. The main decision now is whether I try to make that a little-bit-every-day, or large-chunks-with-time-off-in-between.Steampunk trio

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Steampunk Festivities

2015-08-vermont_steampunk_tales_full_resThis weekend I was honored to participate in the author reading at the Springfield Steampunk Festival alongside Elizabeth Bear, Brett Cox, Jennifer Eifrig, Bruce Hesselbach, and Daniel Mills. The reading was part of the Vermont Speculative Fiction Writer’s Series organized by Geek Mountain State.

This was Springfield’s first Steampunk festival, and I was incredibly impressed by the scale and organization of the event! Springfield may be a small town in rural Vermont, but it has a lot of history and was the perfect venue for the festival. They had two main locations…The Great Hall downtown, and The Hartness House up on the hill.

20150912_175601The reading took place in the ballroom at the Hartness House. There were many other events going on simultaneously, but we had a pretty good turnout. Six different authors with six very distinctly different voices each read for about fifteen minutes. I read the first scene I wrote in my Victoria Pontifex series. Although Give Me Your Answer Do is the middle of the five books, it is the first one I wrote. It began on a dare to write a story about a Steampunk mermaid, an emo pirate, and a metrosexual naval officer. I put the thousand-word excerpt up over on Under Loch and Key.Steampunk Readers

20150912_175825The event attracted more vendors than I ever believed could exist in or near our tiny state! So many wonderful artists and creative people. The fun with Steampunk is that the rules (if there are any) are broad enough to allow for a great deal of variety. 20150912_181444Some vendors had Doctor Who inspired merchandise, which fit right in. I had an hour in between the reading and the ball, so I grabbed dinner from the Samosa-man. (Not exactly Steampunk, but nummy!) And then I went with a bunch of other folks to tour the Inn’s tunnel to the mini-museum and telescope room in the back garden. Bruce took this great picture for me standing by the astro globe. I have no idea who the women photobombing me are…but aren’t they awesome?20150912_190507

Besides having so many incredible vendors, the festival attracted a crowd in the most fantastically diverse variety of costumes imaginable. Patrick Lennox Wright photography set up a ‘booth’ in the parlor of Hartness House for anyone and everyone to have their picture taken and shared. There are almost two thousand pictures across two galleries, but it’s well worth paging through! So much great cosplay. My pictures are in gallery one, starting at 604.Steampunk trio

I love to dress up. Alas, I do not have a suitable Steampunk outfit…yet. I did do my hair up fancy, though… it’s hard to see in the picture, but the charms in my bun are a beautiful purple stone, a little paper origami thing I made, a tiny pair of scissors, a dangly lizard, and in the center is a cameo-like hand signing ‘Live Long and Prosper.’

Add a comment if you get it. 🙂

I wish I had stayed longer at the ball. Normally, I would have danced the night away. Unfortunately, I was already pretty darn tired and I pooped out early. I was sitting with a lovely young woman in red who also left early, frustrated that no one else was dancing. I hope the party perked up later…the band was awesome! But rocking too hard for my middle-aged bones to handle.

I should find that lovely young lady. Her picture number 204 in the first gallery would be perfect as Riley for the cover of Steamship Troopers

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I’ve Got Myself Surrounded

Lunar LogoEarly in my career, when I still had the word ‘aspiring’ in front of ‘author,’ I took to heart the advice I’d received from several sources about surrounding myself with great people. I was hoping to find the actual quote, but when I asked Michael Underwood (from whom much good advice flows) he could just recall saying  ‘don’t network, make friends,’ which isn’t as poetic as I remember it being.

Some analogies involve invoking karma. Doing something for someone, not just because you think there is something specific they will do for you, but simply because it’s a nice thing to do. There’s a vague sense of ‘someday it will circle back around to you’ but that’s not why you do it.

After my first NaNoWriMo in 2010, I picked an agent and started following her on twitter. Her advice (amidst much wonderful advice) was to network not just with other writers, but all kinds of people who interest you are are doing the kinds of things you want to do.

For five years now, I’ve been doing this. I began by following people on social media and doing interviews with my favorites. I attended my first conference (I really want to do more, and money is the only thing stopping me.) I seek out people who are a positive influence, and I bask in their presence.

Most of the opportunities that have moved my career forward came about because of a connection with someone in my network. Not the kind of connection that’s formed when two people pass in the night and exchange promo materials, but the real kind of relationship that is its own brand of friendship.

My ROW80 Update for the Week:

I have a problem.

Not enough writing.

With a new release a couple weeks ago and another new release coming up soon, it’s understandable that I’d be doing more editing and promo than actual writing. However, looking back at my last few updates, that’s happened several weeks in a row now. If I hadn’t been doing these updates, I might never have noticed.

So… yes, at the moment I have a story open that needs to be edited. I’ll be working on that in a few minutes. Then…more writing.

Se ya’ll next week.

Grands is up at all outlets and Faceplanting is Always an Option is up on Amazon for preorder!

Amazon
Apple
Barnes & Noble
Kobo
OmniLit
Smashwords

Grands Faceplanting Lorinda

 

 

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The Same with Some Differences

ROW80LogocopyA Round of Words in Eighty Days

is set up to allow us to define our own writing goals. The main rule is that it must be something measurable. Word count, hours, chapters or pages are all easily accounted for.

This past week, I haven’t been able to measure something. Like last week, I was sick. The main difference is I now have antibiotics and cranberry juice (draw your own conclusions.) Much time has been spent, moreso yesterday and today, playing catch-up now that I’m starting to feel better. Catching up on things like this weekly update post, which I would usually do on Tuesday night, but it’s now the wee hours of Thursday morning. I know my fellow ROWers will forgive me.

Grands cover 09The other main difference between last week and now is that Grands is out! The latest story from The Cities of Luna is about a couple of centenarians whose birthday coincides with the founding of the lunar colonies. Kellan and Moriel are pretty darn frisky, in spite of the wheelchair and cane. I had fun writing them!

I’m pretty sure there was NO writing taking place this week. That’s a bad thing, even while I’m sick. But I have been working hard in spite of feeling terrible, doing promo for Grands and all the organizational stuff that goes along with that, such as waiting several days for the book to be up on Apple and B&N and then updating the links when the finally started working.

This past week I also touched base with the publisher who is considering my Kingdom Come stories. I was thrilled and cautiously optimistic to hear that they are still considering the stories, and haven’t made a decision yet. That’s very good news! It is much easier for them to send a rejection letter. They haven’t done that. Yet.

Steampunk lunapicThe other new thing that came up is the Steampunk Festival in Springfield, Vermont. Although my Steampunk series, Victoria Pontifex, is still in development (Tying the five books together with an overall arc and making sure the tone of each is in line with the others,) I’m going to read an excerpt from Give Me Your Answer Do. This was my first Steampunk book, although it’s not the first in the series. It began on a twitter dare to write a story with a Steampunk mermaid, an Emo pirate, and a Metrosexual naval officer.

Come to think of it… Steamship Troopers also started on a dare. Sort of. I was participating in a discussion on John DeChancie’s facebook page, and Starship Troopers came up. I don’t remember the details, but I made some comment like ‘Now I want to write a book called Steamship Troopers‘ and another of Mr. DeChancie’s friends named Pournelle told me ‘go write it.’ So I did. I logged off facebook and started it that same hour.

Siren’s Web was sort-of a dare… I wrote it during the 3-Day-Novel competition in 2013.

Lastly, congrats to former ROW80 sponsors Susan Bischoff and Lauralynn Elliott on The Forge: Affordable Book Finishing! I’m sure this will be a great resource for many authors.

Anyone else juggling genres?

Anyone else write something just because someone dared you?

Where to purchase Grands:

Amazon
Apple
Barnes & Noble
Kobo
OmniLit
Smashwords

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Happy Release Day GRANDS!

Fireworks release dayHuzzah! The new story from The Cities of Luna is now available!

You can find the story wherever e-books are sold:

Amazon
Apple
Barnes & Noble
Kobo
OmniLit
Smashwords

Sharing a birthday not only with each other but the founding of the lunar colonies themselves, Moriel and Kellan are resigned to being minor celebrities for the centennial celebrations. But the friendship that has lasted a century is sorely tested when old jealousies arise.

.Grands cover 09

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