It’s been a while since I did a newsy post and the last day of September seems like a good time to share fun updates.  First, my book has a new title—it’s now called POISON’S KISS. And if that wasn’t exciting enough, I also have a new release year. The book will come out in fall of 2016. (Instead of spring 2017 when it was originally slated.) That means I’ll be holding my book in my hands only one year from now! I should have an exact date sometime soon and in the coming months you’ll be able to see the cover (eek!) and other fun goodies.

In the meantime I’m hard at work writing the sequel to POISON’S KISS and so far I’m excited about where things are going.
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More blog posts to come soon. Until then, I hope you’re reading something wonderful.

Posted in News, Writing Comment

I recently got home from a whirlwind trip to Los Angeles where I got to see so many amazing things like…


Aragog!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And Dobby!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
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And Central Perk!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And illuminated manuscripts from centuries ago!

 

 

But the main reason for my trip was to spend three days at an SCBWI conference (which stands for the Society for Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, and is a great resource.) I took a long time deciding whether or not I wanted to spend the money—not just the registration fee, which was substantial, but also hotel, airfare, rental car and all the other incidentals that come with travel. Would it be worth it? Especially now that I already had both an agent and a book deal?

And along with those concerns, there was this: I would be going alone. To a conference with 1200 attendees.

But, after seeing the program guide packed with fantastic keynote speakers and interesting break-out sessions, I decided to take the plunge. After all, what’s the worst that could happen? (Um, you could be sitting like a loser alone in a room with 1200 people.)

Now that I’m home, I can say that I’m so glad I went. YES, it was worth the money. YES, it worked out just fine to go alone (I met so many great people!) and YES, it was valuable even though I already have an agent and an editor. In some ways, it was more valuable. I didn’t have to worry about pitching anything, I could just sit back and soak in the inspiration.

Because more than anything, that’s what a writing conference offers. The chance to feel inspired and reenergized. There’s something magical about sitting in a huge room full of people who care about books with the same passion that you do.

And as a wonderful bonus, I got to meet my agent for the first time face-to-face and she is just as marvelous in person as she is on the phone. It was wonderful to leave our dinner together feeling like I would have chosen her as a friend even if we weren’t working together.

So, as your budget allows, I would encourage you to find a writing conference, be brave and go. Be inspired!

Posted in Writing Comment

I’m deep in the middle of edits, so I don’t have much time for blogging. But I thought I’d stop by for a quick post on some books I’ve read lately (and loved!) in the hopes that you might enjoy them too.

 

The Wrath and the Dawn by Renée Ahdieh

wrath & dawn

 

Blurb: Every dawn brings horror to a different family in a land ruled by a killer. Khalid, the eighteen-year-old Caliph of Khorasan, takes a new bride each night only to have her executed at sunrise. So it is a suspicious surprise when sixteen-year-old Shahrzad volunteers to marry Khalid. But she does so with a clever plan to stay alive and exact revenge on the Caliph for the murder of her best friend and countless other girls. Shazi’s wit and will, indeed, get her through to the dawn that no others have seen, but with a catch . . . she’s falling in love with the very boy who killed her dearest friend.

She discovers that the murderous boy-king is not all that he seems and neither are the deaths of so many girls. Shazi is determined to uncover the reason for the murders and to break the cycle once and for all.

My thoughts: This is a lush retelling of The Arabian Nights. Both the world-building and the writing are beautiful and the story kept me turning the pages.

 

The Winner’s Crime by Marie Rutkoski

Winner's Crime

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This dazzling follow-up to The Winner’s Curse reveals the high price of dangerous lies and untrustworthy alliances. The truth will come out, and when it does, Kestrel and Arin will learn just how much their crimes will cost them.

My thoughts: The Winner’s Curse was one of my favorite reads last year and this sequel doesn’t disappoint. I loved the writing, the world-building and the complex situations the characters are forced to navigate. I’m anxiously awaiting the final book in the series.

 

 

An Ember in the Ashes by Sabaa Tahir

ember

Blurb:

In a world inspired by ancient Rome and defined by brutality, seventeen-year old Laia has grown up with one rule for survival: Never challenge the Empire. But when Laia’s brother Darin is arrested for treason, she leaves behind everything she knows, risking her life to try and save him. She enlists help from the rebels whose extensive underground network may lead to Darin. Their help comes with a price, though. Laia must infiltrate the Empire’s greatest military academy as a spy.

Elias is the Empire’s finest soldier—and its most unwilling one. Since childhood, he has trained to become one of the Masks, deadly fighters who ravage and destroy in the name of the Empire. But Elias is secretly planning a dangerous escape from the very tyranny he has sworn to enforce.

Thrown together by chance and united by their hatred of the Empire, Laia and Elias will soon discover that their fates are intertwined—and that their choices may change the destiny of the entire Empire.

My thoughts: I’ve reviewed this book before here and it remains one of my favorites so far this year. Fast-paced and captivating. Once I started, I couldn’t put it down.

Posted in Book recommendations Comment

I have a writing friend who is in the throes of submitting a manuscript to agents and is pretty depressed. Although she’s had plenty of success—lots of requests for fulls and partials of her manuscript—she’s also gotten a healthy amount of rejection and she feels like throwing in the towel.

I think the mistake my friend is making, the mistake all of us make from time to time, is assuming that failure is the opposite of success. But wait a minute, you say, failure is the opposite of success.

No, it’s not.

I like symmetry as much as the next person: hot and cold, day and night, big and small. But failure and success aren’t true opposites and I think we short-change ourselves when we think of them that way. Failure isn’t the enemy of success, failure is a huge, important part of success.

I would argue that calling failure and success opposites makes about as much sense as saying that going into labor is the opposite of holding a newborn baby. We might scoff at that comparison because we all know that even though labor is painful and difficult and agonizing and holding a baby for the first time is warm and wonderful and life-changing (believe me, those two moments couldn’t be more different) it’s clear you don’t get one without the other.

But when it comes to other things where the connection between the work and the reward isn’t as clear, we’re quick to label any setback, any hard stretch, any sadness on the journey to our goals as failure instead of what it really is–just the less enjoyable part of success.

When I was in the query trenches trying to get an agent, I remember reading a quote attributed to Thomas Edison during his quest to build the light bulb. He said, “I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.” I have to admit, when I read that quote I was more than a little annoyed. First of all, I didn’t want to find 10,000 ways that didn’t work, I wanted to find one that did. And secondly, those 10,000 ways that didn’t work were failures. Anyone who said differently was trying to sell some kind of rah, rah message I wasn’t interested in buying.

However, I missed the point entirely. The point wasn’t “keep trying and maybe one day you’ll finally make it.” The point was that Edison’s success would not exist without those 10,000 other attempts. Each attempt built on the next, step-by-step, and those steps had a destination. The 10,000 failed attempts were not the opposite of the light bulb. They were the ingredients that made the lightbulb possible.
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It wasn’t until I sold my book that I fully understood how many of my “failures” along the way were baked into my success.  Detailed feedback in rejection letters that shaped the characters in important ways, kind words from a successful author on a previous manuscript that changed how I approached writing this one, a revise and resubmit request that gave me valuable insight into how the book could be better. Each of those failures changed the book in small, but significant ways and I can categorically say that I would not have sold it without them. Can we really call that the opposite of success?

I think this is true in other areas of life too. I recently had an experience with one of my children that felt a lot like failure. He was struggling and I kept trying to help, to no avail. There’s not a more helpless feeling in the world than seeing your child suffering and being unable to fix it. I talked a lot and he didn’t seem to absorb anything I said. It felt awful.

And then a few weeks later, things started to improve. Gradually, he returned to his cheerful self. I didn’t know what had finally helped him, only that it hadn’t been me. And then one morning, I was sitting in my office writing when our wireless printer roared to life. (It had been on the fritz and sometimes wouldn’t print things until days after an attempt.) Assuming the document was one of mine, I snatched it off the printer and started to read.

It was my son’s English assignment—a letter written to himself five years in the future. I probably shouldn’t have read it, but by the time I realized the document wasn’t mine, I was already sobbing. My son talked about what a hard year he’d had and then the things that had gotten him through. There were my words in black and white. All the things I thought he wasn’t hearing. All the words of wisdom I thought had fallen on deaf ears. When he came home from school, I told him what happened and we had a good talk about it. I hadn’t failed to reach him. I just hadn’t succeeded as quickly as I’d hoped.

The opposite of success is not failure (at least not the way we label it.) The opposite of success is quitting.

So my advice to my friend who is looking for an agent and my friend who wonders if she’s doing a good job raising her kids and my other friend who is trying to finish her degree with small children at home is this: don’t quit.  Just stay on the path. If you hit bumps and boulders and obstacles, don’t throw in the towel and say you can’t find the path or it’s clearly the wrong path or maybe you’re not good enough to be on this particular path. The obstacles are the path. They aren’t the most fun part, but there’s no way to avoid them if you want to reach the finish line.

So just keep going. As long as you’re still trying, you’ve already found the path to success. Now you just have to be brave enough to stay there.

Posted in Life, Parenting, Writing 2 Comments

I’m over at the YA-NA Sisterhood today with a book review of AN EMBER IN THE ASHES by Sabaa Tahir. (Spoiler alert: It was one of my favorite reads Hence, for the betterment free prescription for levitra of intercourse this drug is developed, so that a person will have good intercourse without any obstacles. Kamagra ingredient The primary active ingredient in this cream and is accounted for supplying great results. http://icks.org/n/data/ijks/1482456493_add_file_4.pdf levitra side effects With this medicine, you can regulate it cheap professional viagra with the pills containing Sildenafil, Tadalafil & Vardenafil component. We see, at least in this first term of the prices of http://icks.org/n/data/ijks/1482456353_add_file_2.pdf super viagra uk pills, and the quality of life. in a long time.)  Click on over and check it out.

I’ll be back soon with more updates and blog posts, but until then I hope you’re reading something wonderful!

Posted in Book recommendations, YA-NA Sisterhood Comment
This unfortunate lip-biting pose is probably because I was uncomfortable with the photographer staring at me for the 2.5 seconds it took to push the shutter button.

This unfortunate lip-biting pose is probably because I was uncomfortable with the photographer staring at me for the 2.5 seconds it took to push the shutter button.

I was a shy kid.

Actually, the word shy probably doesn’t do justice to how uncomfortable I was with any kind of attention. (And by “attention,” I mean things like people looking at me or speaking to me.) I was really good at fading into the background. I didn’t make a lot of fuss. I kept my head down, did my work and never raised my hand in class.

One teacher told my parents that he didn’t know what my voice sounded like until midway through the school year because it took me that long to feel comfortable speaking to him. Ouch!

It’s not that I never had things to say—quite the opposite. I had opinions and feelings and lots going on behind the cone of silence I created around myself. Often I would sit in class and hope someone made the comment in my head, hoped they got the right answer so that itchy feeling of having something to say that wasn’t being said would go away.

And then I started fourth grade with Mrs. Nelda Reed.

Mrs. Reed didn’t fall for my invisibility act. She looked at me plenty, but she did more than that. She saw me.

One time we were learning about the science of goosebumps. My over-active imagination kicked into gear and soon I had chills racing up and down my arms. She stopped and whispered in my ear, “Yes, it happens just like that!” I hadn’t moved a muscle. I hadn’t wrapped my arms around myself to get warm. But still, she noticed. She looked. She saw.

She saw not only a little girl getting goosebumps, but a girl who could imagine things so vividly that she really felt them.  She saw me as I really was and it was the first time that had ever happened to me—that spark of connection that happens when another person understands you on a deeper level. From then on, she encouraged me to dream and fed my need for knowledge. She was the first person to tell me I was a good writer. “That story was so beautifully written,” she told me once. “You really made me see it.”

She also wouldn’t let me disappear. In fourth grade, we studied Idaho State History and at the end of the year, we put on a big show for our parents to illustrate all we’d learned. All of the kids sang, but there were also some speaking parts. Mrs. Reed insisted I try out for the part of the narrator. Even though it had the fewest lines of all the speaking parts, I was terrified. But Mrs. Reed told me she knew I could do it. At the first rehearsal, I read the part so quietly no one could hear me. Later she pulled me aside and said, “I know you have things to say and it’s okay to say them loudly.”

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Mrs. Reed often read to us out of a big book of Greek myths, but she always refused to turn the book around and show us the illustrations. “Your imagination will create more beautiful pictures than these,” she said. “Close your eyes and really see it.”

She taught me to really see because she really saw. She also taught me that the things I had to say were worth saying and worth saying loudly. And those are two important qualities of a good writer.

I ran in to Mrs. Reed again on my wedding day. In a stroke of pure serendipity, she was working at the temple where I got married, saw my name on the schedule, and came into the Bridal Room to say hello. It had been years since we’d seen each other. But still, I hugged her tight while she fussed over how beautiful I looked and helped me arrange my veil.

It was poetic to see her on the most important day of my life when she was such a force in shaping the woman I became. I wasn’t a shy little girl anymore. I had been on newspaper staffs and interviewed politicians and administrators, written scathing articles about injustices in the world, gone to national competitions with hundreds of other writers, spoken in front of big crowds. I said things and I said them loudly. (Okay, maybe not literally loudly. But with conviction.)

But I didn’t need to tell her any of that. She was really good at noticing things all on her own.

Not every kid has a teacher or parent or friend who will really see them at the exact moment they need to be seen. And that’s one of the reasons reading is so important. Because sometimes we find what we need in the pages of a book—a character that sees the world like we do or who expresses something in a way that we’ve always felt, but couldn’t find words for. And reading helps us do the reverse too—to see things from a new perspective, to open our eyes so that we can really see someone else.

Isn’t that the definition of love? Really seeing someone and having them really see you?

Sometimes all it takes is a book, or a teacher or a friend for us to see the world differently. For us to see ourselves differently. It really is that simple.

The echo of those whispered words is still resonating all these years later. Yes, it happens just like that.

Posted in Life, Writing Comment

My mom was the first to ask the question. When I told my parents I had an offer on my book, (after all the screaming and cheering died down) my mom said, “So, will it come out this year?”

She was shocked when I told her that it probably wouldn’t even come out next year. I’ve since found that her reaction is pretty typical. It’s probably the question I get most often: Why is the release date so far away? I mean, you already wrote the book, right?

I can see the wheels turning as people realize that my book sold in early 2015, but won’t be released until early 2017. I can see them wondering if maybe I’m a really slow writer or maybe the editor thinks the book needs so much work that it will take me two whole years to get it right. But I assure you, a two-year lead time is commonplace in publishing. So what takes so long?

Well, it takes a lot of people to make a book and the author is only one of them. There are quite a few stops a book makes between the author’s desk and the bookshelf. Here are some of them.

 

Editorial

The editor who bought the book will send an edit letter addressing any changes she thinks would make the book stronger. She’ll look at character arcs and motivations, pacing, etc. And because she has other books she’s working on in various stages of production, it might be several months between selling the book and receiving the edit letter.

The author makes changes and turns in new draft to the editor. There may be some back and forth here and this step can also take a few months.

 

Copyediting 

The next step is for the manuscript to be turned over to a copyeditor, who will look at not only things like commas (oh, Oxford comma, how I loathe thee) and grammatical errors, but will also check for consistency to make sure a characters eyes don’t change color mid-book or that there aren’t three Tuesdays in the same week.

The author makes changes on items she/he agrees with and marks other items as STET (latin for “let it stand.”)
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Design and Typesetting

Now that the book is edited and copyedited, it’s time for the production team to decide how the book will actually look on the page. This includes things like layout, font, paper weight, end pages and if there will be any artistic flourishes between scene breaks or at the beginning of chapters. Production also includes cover art and design, which is one of the more anticipated reveals for a new author. (To see your name on a beautifully designed cover–ahhh!)

 

Marketing

The editor works on writing copy for the publisher’s seasonal catalog that will be produced months before the book’s release and will hopefully get booksellers excited about placing orders. Big books stores like Barnes & Noble often buy books up to six months before the publication date. Based on the number of orders received, the publisher will decide the size of the print run.

 

Printing and Distribution 

The book is finally printed and shipped to bookstores! Huzzah!

 

And keep in mind that this is an extremely simplified timeline. There are lots of smaller steps between each of these larger ones—first pass pages, second pass pages, copies of the book sent to reviewers, soliciting other authors to read and provide blurbs for the front and back covers. The list goes on and on and each of those steps takes time.  So, that’s why the release date is so far away. I can write a book, but it takes a whole army of people to make a book.

Posted in Publishing 101, Writing 1 Comment