Jordan Castillo Price is one of the first m/m authors I read, and she is part of the reason I started writing in the genre. So not surprisingly, I was a tad nervous meeting her in person at the Atlanta GRL, even though we had interacted only plenty times before. Fortunately, she was cool, and a little crazy, and we hit it off.
Jordan and I both design book covers too, and it's nice to have someone to talk shop with. It was her idea to do a design-off—both of us coming up with an original book cover using the same basic elements. These are the final result. Guess who did which one.
See the whole creative process in action on JCP's web page.
Tuesday, December 29, 2015
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Wednesday Word: Tiffin
tiffin |ˈtifin| nounIndian or dated a light meal, especially lunch.ORIGIN early 19th cent.: apparently from dialect tiffing ‘sipping,’ of unknown origin.
So very British. I think I spotted it in a Ngaio Marsh novel.
So very British. I think I spotted it in a Ngaio Marsh novel.
Monday, October 26, 2015
EPIC Cover
I'm usually terrible at entering competitions—too clueless to know about them, and lazy to do something about the few I know—but for once got my shit together enough to enter a couple of my cover designs to EPIC. One of them was chosen to be a finalist. This is the full print version of the cover:
The book's not m/m but straight-up mystery. Most of the covers I design are not even romance, and I like the variety. The concept came from the author, as it's generally the case. It has more individual elements than any cover I've done so far. This is where it begun:
Yes, it was a bit of work putting it all together. :P
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
Wednesday Word: Propinquity
propinquity |prəˈpiNGkwətē| noun1 the state of being close to someone or something; proximity: he kept his distance as though afraid propinquity might lead him into temptation.2 technical close kinship.ORIGIN late Middle English: from Old French propinquité, from Latin propinquitas, from propinquus ‘near,’ from prope ‘near to.’
I acquired this word curtesy of P.G. Wodehouse. Propinquity, desired and otherwise, is a major theme of his books. And pigs.
Characters in British books have such great names. Like Gussy Fink-Nottle. American books suffer from a shortage of Fink-Nottles and the like. Somebody much more assiduous than me could do a scholarly research about the relationship between national character and naming of fictional characters. I've often wondered how Terry Pratchett named the denizens of Discworld.
I acquired this word curtesy of P.G. Wodehouse. Propinquity, desired and otherwise, is a major theme of his books. And pigs.
Characters in British books have such great names. Like Gussy Fink-Nottle. American books suffer from a shortage of Fink-Nottles and the like. Somebody much more assiduous than me could do a scholarly research about the relationship between national character and naming of fictional characters. I've often wondered how Terry Pratchett named the denizens of Discworld.
Friday, September 25, 2015
Guest Post by Edmond Manning
Tomorrow, I sit with a panel of
authors at the Great
Northwest Meet-Up devoted to how authors research their books. I imagine
one of the big questions will be, “How much is enough?” Like most expert
panelists, I will default to the safe answer: “I don’t know. It depends. What are you writing?”
Maybe I shouldn’t answer based
on personal experience. I mean, I’ve done some crazy shit researching books.
- In Marin County, California, I bought a giant cooler so I could fill it with food and rope it to rocks jutting out of the ocean. This was an almost impossible task. And I was almost swept out to sea, so dangerous AND stupid.
- One summer, I bought a dozen ears of corn and spray-painted them each with a wide variety of fluorescent green paints. When these tests were concluded, I drove into the country to visit actual corn fields and spray-paint corn stalks to see which combination of paint and sparkles glowed in the dark. I painted at sunset and then came back hours later to conduct my tests.
- I convinced my employer to let me move to New York City for a month so I could research what it’s like to live in the city. I lived in a tiny studio apartment and slept on a mattress on the floor.
- While in New York, I pretended to be homeless for a day, begging for change on Wall Street, so I could capture the experience in writing (as much as one can after one day).
I’m willing to go quite far. Maybe even too far. But how much book research
is enough?
It depends.
There are a couple questions an author should answer before deciding
how much to invest.
- Is the physical setting important? Follow-up question: Does the exact time frame (year, month, day) matter in this physical setting?
- Are you inventing a world? Follow-up question: What does the audience expect in your world?
- How familiar is the audience with the environment of the novel?
I’ll answer each one. Maybe these answers provide something more
concrete than “it depends.”
1. Is the physical setting important?
The obvious answer is, yes, of course it is. But is it really? If your
book takes place in Paris, France, you must ask yourself if the readers want to
know that Rue des Barres is cobblestone, unlike its intersecting street, Rue
Francois Miron. Does that matter? Or do your readers want to know that your
main character “…strolled down a cobblestone street, admiring the cathedral
gargoyles on either side who showered stone glares down upon him.”
There is no right answer here, just this question: are you going for
accuracy or are you going for mood?
Readers enjoy Tom Clancy novels because of his unswerving dedication to
describing every deck—every bolt—of a military-grade warship. They WANT
accuracy. If you’re writing a thriller, and the secret documents are buried
under a national landmark, every detail matters: the number of rooms, the year it was built, the security
measures, etc. Readers want to believe in your accuracy.
But if they’re reading for mood….
Mood is created by a combination of accurate details and invented ones.
Too much accuracy and you don’t create a mood. For example: “Babe, I picked up groceries for our
romantic dinner. I got some organic, gluten-free noodles from a company that
sponsors the right political candidates, cage-free, locally sourced eggs from a
farm that treats its chickens humanely and does not feed them ground up chicken
beaks, butter with no trans-fatty acids…”
One hundred percent factual and accurate. And horribly dull.
Follow-up question: does the exact time frame (year, month,
day) matter in this physical setting?
If it does, it means you’re trying to capture a very specific mood
which is essential for the story. Great! Be sure to capture those exact details
which make it different from what was before and what came after.
In King John, I wrote about
Burning Man in 2002. The year mattered. In 2002, Burning Man was roughly twelve
years old, and was well established as an insane costume party in the desert.
Crowds were up to roughly 30,000. Massive, but not the overwhelming 75,000
crowd event it was in 2014. More importantly, some of the deep criticisms that
began in 2004 and grew through 2008 had not yet surfaced. Beginning in those
years (and continuing into more recent years), burners felt the event had
become too corporate, too top-heavy with bureaucracy, had imposed too many restrictive
rules. The unpopular 2007 raffle for admission tickets created furious outrage among
dedicated attendees.
The year 2002 is important because it’s possible to highlight the art,
the music, the wild freedom and exploration at a time before more serious
disgruntling began. (Disgruntling is completely a legitimate word. Do research.
Look it up.)
One caveat to discussing the exact year or month. Usually, the
important details are expressed in atmosphere and mood. If I have my narrator
say, “Burning Man at this time isn’t so corporate,” that’s telling, not
showing. (Also, how does he know what’s going to happen in the future?) You’ve
got to do your research and then find a way to show your research, not tell it.
2. Are you inventing a world?
In 2014, I wrote a short story for the Goodreads M/M Romance Group event,
Don’t Read in The Closet. The title was Broken
Phoenix. I found this writing
activity to be a lovely diversion from writing my series, which requires a lot
of detailed research. Once I started writing, what surprised me was how much
MORE research I had to do for a fake, invented world. As the world’s creator, I
needed to understand and explain why the rocks on the ground lit up from the
inside, how many kilometers between important geographic milestones, why the
sky was the color it was. Why was the planet’s dog moon broken? Why was it called
the dog moon?
One of the oddest things I had to “research,” was the exact process a
phoenix goes through as it bursts into legendary flame. My main character (a
phoenix) could not “flame on,” so I had to explore and explain where he broke
down. What didn’t happen? Chemical malfunction? Did he not secrete the right
hormones? Was he inhibited by some mental anguish, such as lack of confidence? My
beta readers asked me questions I could not answer. Until I answered them, my
readers were not happy.
Just because there’s no Wikipedia entry for your made-up world, doesn’t
mean you’re off the hook. You have to “research” all the origin stories, the
languages, the technology (or lack of technology). Do you have to communicate
it all? No. Do you have to communicate all the details of this world in the
first paragraph of your story? No. Only do that if you’re a terrible writer.
But you must have worked through these details either in drafts or in your head.
Follow-up question: What does the audience expect in your world?
In reading the reviews for Broken
Phoenix, I learned a curious thing. I had written a shifter story. Any
being that can transform into something else (like a bird into fire and then
back to bird form), is a shifter. Seriously, I had no idea. I don’t read
shifter fiction. (I didn’t know the word “shifter.”) But apparently, there are
a lot of expectations in shifter fiction.
Broken Phoenix was criticized for not giving the more
detailed explanations in the backstory that shifter fiction traditionally provides.
I did not provide the entire history of these shifters. I did not explain how
they could or could not shift into other animals. Why birds? I did not explain
(deliberately in this case) how phoenix traveled between worlds.
I would argue that, as an author, I can provide (or not provide)
whatever details I want. If you don’t see what you were expecting, tough luck.
It’s my story. That’s a pretty shitty attitude, however. Authors are in relationship with their readers. I had
no idea I would frustrate readers who might have otherwise loved the story. I
know now! In the rewrites for that story (a second edition), I’m answering some
of the questions that I did not address in the first edition.
This isn’t just an issue of creativity. It’s research.
3. How familiar is the audience with the environment of the
novel?
If your audience might know San Francisco quite well—and you’re writing
about San Francisco—you could get yourself in trouble. Well, unless you do your
research. Again, you may not have to know which streets are cobblestone, but
you should know how long it takes to get from Chinatown to the Golden Gate
Bridge, or from which buildings you can see the bay. Details.
I myself find research difficult, so I cheated.
My cheat? Well, my first book, King
Perry, was set in San Francisco. I needed the book set in a time before
cell phones were ubiquitous, so I chose the year 1999. I benefited from the
fact that very few people could argue some of the city’s details with me. Ha!
Can’t catch me with inaccurate building names for a city that existed in 1999!
Another way I cheated is in the excerpt below. Vin and his weekend guest,
Perry, drive up to a fancy hotel in the financial district.
"This
chain isn't performing well financially," Perry says at last. "Their
San Francisco location was a big investment, and first and second quarters were
far below expectations. They could close this site before Q4."
"Is
this big news on Wall Street?"
"Yeah,"
he says, uncertainly.
I
watch him and wait.
He continues with a quick blush, "People in the bank are
talking, because they want to see the duck parade before the hotel
closes."
After the book was published, several readers emailed to tell me that
there was “no big fancy chain with a duck parade in San Francisco.” I agreed
and reminded them that Perry had mentioned the chain wasn’t doing well in San
Francisco. They said, “Oh, that’s right…” That was back in 1999. I explained
that in my imagination, the hotel closed down.
Ha.
Research problem solved! Fake hotel demolished!
In the end, the solutions to research issues are all about your
relationship with your readers. What do they want? How much do they need to
believe? Where can they suspend disbelief? At what point do they shake their
heads and say, “You’ve gone too far.”
It’s surprising, what matters to people. In King John, I referenced art that was displayed in 2002. I included
historical events from that year’s Burning Man. Still, someone emailed me to
say, “You never once mentioned where the Porta Potties were.”
Perhaps some research details are best left unshared.
If you’re attending the Great Northwest Meet-Up
tomorrow, come visit our research panel! I’m joined by Anne Tenino, Ethan Day,
and Jove Belle. We’re speaking from 11:10 am–12:00 noon, on the fourth floor in
Room 5. We’d love to see you.
Oh, and feel free to ask me how to make a stalk of corn glow in the
dark.
* * * * *
Edmond
Manning is the author of the romance series, The Lost and Founds. The books in this series include King Perry, King Mai (a 2014 Lambda
Literary finalist), The Butterfly
King,
and King John. King John takes place at Burning Man.
Giveaway!
Winner’s Prize: An eBook copy of King John
(Leave a Comment here and then click the link below)
* * * * *
Where to get your copy of King John:
***
* * * * *
About King John:
English attorney Alistair Robertson can’t quite believe an
astonishing tale of kingship and transformation he hears at Burning Man, the
annual counter-culture art festival in the Black Rock desert. Who are the Found
Kings? Is “being kinged” as magical as it sounds?
Determined to find the mysterious garage mechanic named Vin
who helps men “remember who they were always meant to be,” Alistair catches his
quarry amid the extravagant sculptures, fire worshipers, mutant cars, and
lavish costumes. After searching for three years, he’ll finally get to ask the
question burning inside him: “Will you king me?”
Wandering together through the desert, Vin Vanbly and
Alistair explore Burning Man’s gifting culture and exotic traditions, where
they meet the best and worst of their fellow burners. Alistair’s overconfidence
in Vin’s manipulative power collides with Vin’s obsessive need to save a
sixteen-year-old runaway from a nightmarish fate, and the two men spiral in
uncontrollable, explosive directions.
In this fourth adventure of
The Lost and Founds, beneath the sweltering summer sun and the six billion
midnight stars, one truth emerges, searing itself on their hearts: in the
desert, everything burns.
* * * * *
King John Blog Tour:
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Wednesday Word: Pawl
nouna pivoted curved bar or lever whose free end engages with the teeth of a cogwheel or ratchet so that the wheel or ratchet can only turn or move one way.• each of a set of short stout bars that engagewith the whelps and prevent a capstan, windlass, or winch from recoiling.ORIGIN early 17th cent.: perhaps from Low German and Dutch pal (related to pal ‘fixed’).
One of those things you never knew what they were—like the metal bit at the end of shoestrings. The things for which the words thingamajig and whatchamacallit were invented.
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
Wednesday Word: Theurgy
theurgy |ˈTHēərjē| nounthe operation or effect of a supernatural or divine agency in human affairs.• a system of white magic practiced by the early Neoplatonists.DERIVATIVES theurgic |THēˈərjik| adjective.theurgical adjective.theurgist nounORIGIN mid 16th cent.: via late Latin from Greek theourgia ‘sorcery,’ from theos ‘god’ + -ergos ‘working.’
I nicked this word straight from Grand-Wizard Terry Pratchett to use in my own story. Magic is all fine and well for common use, but institutional purposes—like police reports—you need a more officious-sounding term.
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
Stuff About World Building
Charmed and Dangerous finally hit the shelves today, and I figured I’d blather about world
building a little. Not because I’m an expert, but reading the other stories in
the anthology I kept going oh, that’s
brilliant, I wish I thought of it! And it started me thinking about world
building. So much of what makes a speculative fiction story solid is behind the
scenes.
One Hex Too Many centered on magic, the fae
only got a mention, but they were already in the background, waiting for their
chance to step out. They’ll get that chance in the sequel. Here are a few
tidbits about them.
In this world magic is real and paranormal
creatures share it with humans. The history if this reality was much similar to
ours up till the industrial revolution. At that junction the encroachment of
human technology forced a portion of fae kind deeper into hiding, some withdrew
completely—they might have even gone extinct, though one never knows for sure.
Others responded to the challenge by stepping out of the shadows, make their
presence known beyond all doubt.
As you might expect, humankind had a mixed
reaction to the arrival of these emigrants of another dimension. Preternatural
Beings (official term) still haven’t fully integrated into human society, but
the Fae Rights League is working hard
to change this. Some fae do better than others.
The strength and resilience made ogres
perfect for strong-arm jobs from body guards to mob enforcers. The drawback of
employing ogres is that you can buy only their services, not their loyalty.
That belongs only to their clans. Ogres are also smarter than they look, and
are staring up their own businesses—something not all humans find agreeable.
Trolls are as strong, if not stronger, than
ogres, but their solitary nature and idiosyncratic ways keep their interactions
with humans minimal. They are masters of adaptation a can seamlessly blend into
their environment. Griffin Park, across from the river from New Sky is the home
of sever rock trolls and forest trolls. There’s at least one city troll living
in Faetown, but he spends the daylight hours looking just another brick wall.
Well, that’s it for now. I might prattle on
about goblins and pixies at some other time.
Charmed and
Dangerous
is available on Amazon
- BN - iTunes - Kobo - Smashwords (ePub) -
Payhip
(multiformat, accepts PayPal)
Wednesday, August 19, 2015
Wednesday Word: Balaclava
I was listening to Star Trap by Simon Brett when the word came up, and left me puzzled. So I stopped the audiobook, opened the dictionary app, and got a mini history lesson.
balaclava |ˌbaləˈklävə| (also balaclava helmet) nouna close-fitting garment covering the whole head and neck except for parts of the face, typically made of wool.
ORIGIN late 19th cent.(denoting a garment worn originally by soldiers serving in the Crimean War): named after the village of Balaclavain the Crimea (see Balaclava, Battle of).
Balaclava, Battle of |ˌbaləˈklävə| a battle of the Crimean War, fought between Russia and an alliance of British, French, and Turkish forces in and around the port of Balaclava (now Balaklava) in the southern Crimea in 1854. The battle ended inconclusively; and is chiefly remembered as the scene of the Charge of the Light Brigade.
Charge of the Light Brigadea British cavalry charge in 1854 during the Battle of Balaclava in the Crimean War. A misunderstanding between the commander of the Light Brigade and his superiors led to the British cavalry being destroyed. The charge was immortalized in verse by Tennyson.
Most I recall of my high school history classes is boredom and the recitation on names and dates. All I actually know of history is from books, films, and television.
The Charge of the Light Brigade sounds like humongous military fuck-up worthy of Black Adder. Although George McDonald Frasier gave it a good go too in Flashman at the Charge. Sir Harry Flashman is the perfect anti-hero, an unabashed coward who constantly finds himself in the heat of the battle, despite his best efforts to avoid them.
My favorite though is Astrid Amara's Devil Lancer. Probably because it's full of dark paranormal mystery and steamy m/m goodness.
As I was searching for images on Pinterest, I discovered that the Crimean War was also Florence Nightingale's first big job.
balaclava |ˌbaləˈklävə| (also balaclava helmet) nouna close-fitting garment covering the whole head and neck except for parts of the face, typically made of wool.
ORIGIN late 19th cent.(denoting a garment worn originally by soldiers serving in the Crimean War): named after the village of Balaclavain the Crimea (see Balaclava, Battle of).
Balaclava, Battle of |ˌbaləˈklävə| a battle of the Crimean War, fought between Russia and an alliance of British, French, and Turkish forces in and around the port of Balaclava (now Balaklava) in the southern Crimea in 1854. The battle ended inconclusively; and is chiefly remembered as the scene of the Charge of the Light Brigade.
Charge of the Light Brigadea British cavalry charge in 1854 during the Battle of Balaclava in the Crimean War. A misunderstanding between the commander of the Light Brigade and his superiors led to the British cavalry being destroyed. The charge was immortalized in verse by Tennyson.
Most I recall of my high school history classes is boredom and the recitation on names and dates. All I actually know of history is from books, films, and television.
The Charge of the Light Brigade sounds like humongous military fuck-up worthy of Black Adder. Although George McDonald Frasier gave it a good go too in Flashman at the Charge. Sir Harry Flashman is the perfect anti-hero, an unabashed coward who constantly finds himself in the heat of the battle, despite his best efforts to avoid them.
My favorite though is Astrid Amara's Devil Lancer. Probably because it's full of dark paranormal mystery and steamy m/m goodness.
As I was searching for images on Pinterest, I discovered that the Crimean War was also Florence Nightingale's first big job.
Wednesday, August 5, 2015
Wednesday Word: Bollix & Bollocks
Another word I want to steal from the Brits. The greedy imperial bastards keep hogging the best ones. Bollocks to them, I say.
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Wednesday Word: Embonpoint
(Illustration by Duane Bryers)
embonpoint |ˌäNbôNˈpwaN| nounthe plump or fleshy part of a person's body, in particular a woman's bosom.ORIGIN late 17th cent.: from French en bon point ‘in good condition.’
I don't recall where I picked up this beauty. Might have been a book by Terry Pratchett. Or was it KJ Charles? They are both excellent at broadening my vocabulary.
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
Wednesday Word: Eldritch
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