News from the Bedside

Filed in: blog | book reviews | slice of life | writing    Tags: | | | | |

DEC

3

2011

10:54 am

Rather than news from the Desk of Jeannie Lin.

As my Recent Update states, I’ve been on “hiatus” — more specifically bedrest as I incubate my little twins. I sincerely don’t want the blog to turn into a personal journal of my everyday ramblings or a baby blog, which is why I chose instead to remain a bit quiet rather than feel the need to chime in via blog, Twitter or Facebook. My newsletter has also been quiet since October. Typing is rather hard while laying down, but I finally found a comfortable position where I can use my computer now that I’m in the hospital, so I thought it was time for a little update post.

Hospitalization always sounds scary to me, so I didn’t want to alarm anyone. My little zygotes are doing well at 28 weeks and I’m getting good care as I try to incubate them a little longer. First pregnancies are scary things under normal circumstances and mine has been a bit of a roller coaster.

So let’s get on with a few Jeannie Lin authorial things…

***

Thank You

Thank you so much for all the little notes and messages from readers either about the books or wishing me well. I really do read each one, but have been a little slower in responding due to bedrest and hospital visits. Each note gives me a much needed boost and I promise to eventually reply to everyone.

Also thank you to everyone for reading and reviewing or mentioning The Dragon and the Pearl and The Lady’s Scandalous Night. I really had to cut all promotion efforts short for this book and was a bit sad that I was only able to do one booksigning and a few blogs.

***

From the writing front:

My doctor was concerned because one of the biggest problems with bedrest is boredom and feeling unproductive. Everyone seemed a bit worried about my mental state having to go on such long-term bedrest. I revealed that though I had to go on leave for my day job, I did have a couple books on contract that I needed to finish. My doc was thrilled to hear that. She’s a fan of medical thrillers (surprise!), a big reader and had always been curious about what I was reading whenever I came to the office.

And it’s true…I do have a couple of titles contracts, novels and short stories, that I’ve been working on from bed. I wasn’t worried about boredom. I’ve always liked summer breaks as a kid. I was always able to find things to do — write in my journal, make up games, draw, and of course, write stories.

It is rough though. My brain hasn’t been as active without other tasks to keep me moving. I don’t want to blame “baby brain” either, but I do think about the little zygotes a lot. I can spend hours with my hand to my baby belly just feeling them squirm. I tell them to stay with me a little longer and try to become dragons (The Year of the Dragon starts Jan. 23, 2012).

Mostly, I try to brainstorm. My ideas don’t come flying at me as they do with many other authors (jealous!). I need to spend a lot of time developing them. I replay what I now call “the movie versions” in my head and do a bunch of what ifs and director’s cuts. A LOT gets thrown out, because I can see the storyline isn’t compelling or viable. I incubated my third novel for a good nine months before I really sat down to outline and write it in three months.

Tee hee…so try as I might, it takes nine months to make a baby.

What I’ve found is that now there are certain expectations about what to write next to “build readership”. I don’t mind. My editor and publisher have been lovely about giving me freedom in my stories, but there are still schedules and expectations for what comes next and it’s not always the most compelling story in my head that they want next.

I find myself course correcting a lot, which is not something I used to do. I’d start one project only to find I needed to redirect to another one. My latest dilemma was trying to write a short story linked to my next release, My Fair Concubine. I discarded so many scenarios trying to find a linked tale that would fit in a short story format. Because I started out as a short story writer, I take a lot of pride in my Undones and want them to be complete works of some merit. In this regard, sometimes I angst over them as much as I would a novel…maybe more.

But I’m putting words down now. I’m writing like I used to write on those long summer breaks in my notebook. Scene by scene. Raw. Just to keep writing.

***

Publishing news!

I have the title for my next novel release which is MY FAIR CONCUBINE. I believe it’s slated for some time next summer–June or July. By then, the US and UK releases should be synchronized. I’ll keep everyone posted. I’ve been very lucky to be able to retain all my working novel titles: Butterfly Swords, The Dragon and the Pearl, and now My Fair Concubine.

As the title suggests, it’s a nod to My Fair Lady in Tang Dynasty China. It’s lighter in tone and a departure from the usual political intrigue and angst of my first two books, but I hope readers will enjoy.

The title for my next Undone short release is CAPTURING A SILKEN THIEF. This story is what I consider the most “Tang Dynasty” of all my stories, depicting a classic match-up between an imperial scholar and a song girl. (Yes, in the Tang Dynasty, the heroes were scholars. If you ever wonder about how deeply the emphasis on education goes in Asian culture, this is a big clue)  I drew a lot from my time as a student at UCLA when writing the story (funny where inspiration comes from), at the same time it’s a glimpse into the culture of the entertainment district of Changan, at least as I imagined it. No official release date yet, but I’m really looking forward to sharing this one.

***

Awesome Bedrest Reads

So what have I spent most of my time doing?

Reading. Reading and reading and reading.

I bought an iPad when I knew I was going on long-term bedrest and it’s been wonderful. All of my Kindle books transferred over and I’ve been able to read a book a day for nearly a month, making a huge dent in my TBR pile. I’m a little sad because there are still a bunch of paper books stashed downstairs in my basement that I want to read too, but dear hubby has been so busy attending to me as well as getting ready for the babies all by himself that I didn’t want to bug him — “Honey, down in my office, there’s a pile of books on the coffee table. Can you rummage through them and bring me The Shadow and the Star?”

He’s already complained about how many books I have lying around as he needs to convert my office into a guest bedroom.

Blame the hormones or the freedom (due to bedrest) to immerse myself in books without any distractions, but I’ve been blown away by so many great stories. I’m a bad objective reviewer of books, because I really give over a lot of trust to the author when I read. I want to be swept away. I want to believe.

So here’s my hit list of awesome bedrest reads:

The Winter Sea by Susanna Kearsley

I’ve had this on my TBR forever. Everyone was raving about it and then I met Susanna at RT in Los Angeles. We became convention buddies as we kept running into each other. I was so impressed by the dual storylines, past and present, and how they were woven together in this book. Each one enhanced the other and I just devoured the pages. I felt this book was as good, if not better, than The Time Traveller’s Wife. The historical detail was incredible and the story craft was the sort that filled me with writer envy. This book and the ending resonated with me a long time after I finished it.

 

Heart of Steel by Meljean Brook

One of the books I was hovering over to buy on release day. Great adventurous follow-up to The Iron Duke which also blew me away. This is probably the best steampunk worldbuilding I’ve encountered, though I’m a relatively new fan of the genre. I just love traveling in the world that Meljean has created and how she mixes in historical tidbits (they’re chasing after Leonardo Da Vinci’s sketches in this one), steampunk technology, and settings all over the globe. So much fun. I would love to see movies made of these books!

 

Unclaimed by Courtney Milan

I hate it when I read a review of one of my books that starts with “I had misgivings about reading this…” It always makes me sick to my stomach and then even if they ended up liking it “more than they thought they would”, it’s like having someone meet me and say, “Wow, you’re a lot nicer than I thought you’d be.”

So…um…I had some reservations about the hero Mark through the initial chapters. I love Courtney’s writing and also the psychological nature of her conflicts. In Unveiled, I wasn’t swept away because the hero was so superior to the heroine. Kind of smugly so. Power and emotional differentials are important to me when reading romance, and though Courtney’s heroines are also super-strong, her heroes as of late can be too noble, too self-assured, too perfect. It’s kind of the opposite vibe I get from Sherry Thomas whose characters are so broken and fascinating.

Ha, that’s another problem when I’ve read an author’s entire backlist. Baggage from other books. In any case, I was swept away by the courtship in Unclaimed. I loved how Mark was seeking true love and his idea of it was so very different from what everyone else assumed about him. I cried and cried when his heart was broken. (Oh, also I usually love Courtney’s books for the heroines, but Unveiled and Unclaimed definitely were more hero-centric.)

I said I was a bad objective reviewer, but that doesn’t mean I don’t analyze my reading experience to death.

The Song of the Nile by Stephanie Dray

I’ve been following this series from the first book, Lily of the Nile, and this follow-up took some bold moves. The magical realism or historical fantasy or whatever you call it in this series just pulls me in. I’ve said it before, but I do feel like I’m reading one of Marion Zimmer Bradley’s epic historical fantasies whenever I read a Stephanie Dray book. These books take me back to that time in my life when I hung around the library and books spoke so loudly to me. (Ah, the teenage years) Dray’s Cleopatra Selene is epic, unconventional, larger than life, yet very human in depiction. It’s the type of book that makes me want to Google for hours afterwards, reading up on Augustus Caesar and Selene and the lives of everyone mentioned in the book. I can’t wait for the third book and then I want to sit down and re-read the entire series.

Similar to how I felt with Susanna Kearsley’s book, Song of the Nile makes me believe, as fantastic as it seems, that this was how it happened.

Passing Under Heaven by Justin Hill

I came across this book while researching the life of Yu Xuanji: courtesan, poetess, and a bit of a rebel of the Tang Dynasty. I had come across one of her poems where she laments that her silken robes (being a woman) obscure the lines of her poetry (keeps her from being recognized for her talent). There’s another poem where she mentions being jealous of the list of imperial scholars. Something about her voice, coming from over a thousand years in the past, has always spoken to me.

Passing Under Heaven is a retelling of her whirlwind, restless, and ultimately tragic life. I don’t like Chinese tragedy for the sake of melodrama, but this book was more than just a lament about the trials of being a woman in imperial China. Yu Xuanji’s life provides a rare glimpse into so many aspects of Tang Dynasty culture since she was a concubine, a  Taoist nun, and a courtesan. Plus I loved seeing the depiction of Tang Dynasty culture, the North Hamlet, the justice system, the imperial exam system…I have so few reference works to go to that this was just a special, special find for me.  I would love to have a conversation with the author about Tang culture.

My doc says she likes to check out what her patients read because it says something about them. I guess you can see my hot buttons: stories about remarkable woman, throughout time, across cultures–real or imagined.

9 Comments

Starred review from Publishers Weekly

Filed in: Announcements | blog | book reviews    Tags: |

NOV

30

2010

6:48 am

I had no idea about this until Courtney Milan and the Twitterverse pointed it out to me. I’m stunned, excited, happy!

From Publishers Weekly:
Web Exclusive Butterfly Swords
Jeannie Lin, Harlequin Historical
$5.99 mass market (288p) ISBN 978-0-373-29614-9

Chang Ai Li flees her wedding and her enraged bridegroom in Lin’s exciting debut, an adventure tale set in turbulent 8th-century China. Ai Li, the only daughter in a family of mighty warriors, is trained by her grandmother to fight with light butterfly swords and defend herself and her family’s honor. Ryam is a foreigner trying to get back to his stronghold on the far western edge of the empire. After he helps Ai Li fight off brigands and soldiers, she hires him to help her evade her pursuers and get back to the imperial city. Ryam is uncomfortable when Ai Li calls him honorable, while she is amazed that he listens to what she has to say. Despite being from different cultures and classes, they fall in love. The especially vibrant writing describing the culture, clothes, and countryside saves this from being just another tale of impossible love. (Oct. 1) 

22 Comments

NJRWA and Cool Meet-Ups

Filed in: blog | book reviews | conferences | events | travel    Tags: | | | | | | |

OCT

26

2010

7:47 am

Blog tour: Tuesday I’m being interviewed at Long and Short Reviews (LASR). I’ll be back there tomorrow on their loop for an Author Chat. You need to join the LASR e-mail loop to attend the author chat.  The Pink Heart Society Book Club is also discussing Butterfly Swords today–come by to see their review and give your thoughts and questions about Butterfly Swords.

Also, my friend and fellow Authors of Asian Novels member, Victoria Dixon, is featuring Butterfly Swords all week with a review, giveaway, and interview. Come on over to the Ron Empress blog.

Reviews and mentions: All About Romance gave Butterfly Swords and A- Review and marked it as a Desert Island Keeper. That one had people so excited that they were e-mailing me to see if I’d seen it. On the same day, Barbara Vey of PW’s Beyond Her Book blog blurbed Butterfly Swords. They don’t review, they blurb, and it was a nice one. I remember Barbara explaining the blurbing process to  me. :)

Sarah from Smart Bitches gave Butterfly Swords a nice mention on her inaugural blog for Kirkus’ new romance blog. Victoria Dixon also posted a review at Historical Novel Review.

***

Sorry it took so long to get to the meat of the post. The mentions last week and this one are a nice hurrah to end my debut release month.

I was at the New Jersey Put Your Heart in a Book conference last weekend. It was so nice to go to so many workshops. I really miss that about Nationals since things are so busy. Saturday was an all day string of classes, all about writing. I’m a student at heart and I gobbled it up. Now I have ideas about how to ramp up the worldbuilding in my paranormal after attending Jessica Andersen’s workshop and Sherry Thomas’ workshop on chemistry has me refocusing and rethinking how I handle romantic progression.

Here’s me and my CP Amanda Berry, being suitably nerdy

One of the best parts was the signing, where I had several unexpected meetings. The most memorable was when a woman came up to me with a big grin. “I won the swords!” she announced.

Professional Romance Reader, Stephanie Hyacinth

It was Stephanie, self-proclaimed professional romance reader, whose name was drawn as the Grand Prize winner of the butterfly swords. Of course, she didn’t have them with her since I’d just shipped them. She didn’t realize I’d be there at the signing, but I’m glad she sought me out.

The wonderful ladies from VFRW were there as well. Several bought the book in preparation for next year as Butterfly Swords was their book club selection. Many other members who already had the book came by say hi and congratulate me. “We’re claiming we discovered you,” they told me excitedly. Claim away.

And author and reviewer Katie Babs also stopped by so I got to thank her for reviewing Butterfly Swords. She had a little stuffed sheep that was adorable. That was completely non-sequiter, I know. My Little Sis loves sheep.

Jeannie with author and book blogger, Katie Babs/KT Grant

A couple of readers at the signing did say that they were buying my book because of review sites. Specifically cited: Dear Author and Mrs. Giggles.

Of course, the lovely Romance Divas as well as the Ruby-Slippered Sisters had a presence at the conference. Autumn Jordon won the Golden Leaf award for Best First Book for Evil’s Witness. We were all so proud. This is the first published award a Ruby has won, I believe.

Autumn Jordan with her Golden Leaf award for Best First Book

The NJRW conference committee even had little gift bags for the signing authors. I got me a book horse.

I think I would have sold the last 3 copies for sure had the horse been with me from the beginning

Wonderful conference! I’d highly recommend it to anyone who wants an alternative to RWA Nationals. Because of the proximity to New York, the editor and agent panels rivaled what you’d see at Nationals and the speakers were first rate. They even had several tracks for published authors which focused on promotion and the business side of publishing. A well-organized conference, good for writers for any level.

Lesson learned: Experienced authors lure readers with candy at signings.

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Intervew With Debut Author Stephanie Draven

Filed in: blog | book reviews | interviews    Tags: | | |

SEP

25

2010

8:01 pm

Blog tour: Stephanie Draven interviews me on her blog. We exchanged interviews, how cute is that?

Also blogging at The Ron Empress about Surface culture vs. Deep culture in writing.

And I’m absolutely thrilled to be interviewed by Patricia Rice, one of my adopted writing mentors, on Word Wenches Monday. This is also where Mary Jo Putney hangs out. Mary Jo gave me an awesome cover quote and was the first author to put Wing Chun in romance in The China Bride. Please come by Monday and make me look like a cool kid amongst these bestselling ladies! Pretty please?!

***

I am quite thrilled to feature debut author Stephanie Draven on the blog today. Stephanie writes paranormal romance for Harlequin Nocturne and historical romance as Stephanie Dray. Her paranormal debut, Poisoned Kisses, releases on October 1st. Her historical debut, Lily of the Nile, recounts the story of Cleopatra’s daughter Selene and will be available January 2011.

I was first introduced to her writing through her Nocturne Bites, Midnight Medusa and Wild, Tethered, Bound where she weaves Greek mythology in seamlessly with relevant modern stories of war, survival, and the illuminating and healing power of love. Like the classic Greek myths, Stephanie Draven’s stories feature strong heroines facing hard decisions which make them a perfect addition to finish out Warrior Women month.

***

Thanks for having me on your blog, Jeannie!

Jeannie: One of the things that sets your Mythica stories apart is the focus on the Greek monsters as heroes. What inspired you to focus on the monsters versus the usual gods and heroes?
Stephanie: Gods and heroes are usually representations of the human ideal, and even though the Greek pantheon could be a squabbling dysfunctional family, they generally reflect what mere mortals aspire to be. Monsters, by contrast, represent our deepest, darkest, most primal fears. Not just our fears about the evil forces of the world that might do us harm, but also our fears about what evil might lurk beneath our own skin. For most people in our country, the last decade has been pretty rough. Fiction has become darker and darker as if to reassure folks that things could be even worse.

I also write pretty dark, but I like to use it as a vehicle to appeal to our better angels. You might be faced with monstrous circumstances and you may have even performed a monstrous act or two yourself, but that doesn’t have to define who you are, and it doesn’t mean a little bravery and a lot of love can’t transform your life. So I try to write about that.

On a more personal note, I’ve never been as interested in stories about the struggles of pretty golden people as I have been interested in stories about the ugly malcontents who manage to hack out a happy ending for themselves.

Jeannie: What’s your favorite lesser known Greek myth and why?
Stephanie: I’m afraid this is going to make me sound very bloodthirsty, but my favorite lesser known myth is the story of the Danaids. They were the fifty daughters of Danaus who were forced to marry the fifty sons of their uncle Aegyptus. They were all very unwilling brides, and decided that they would each kill their husbands on the wedding night. When their new husbands came to ravish them, they would all have a dagger waiting. But one of the Danaids had a change of heart when her bridegroom approached her with loving gentleness and told her he wouldn’t take her virginity without her consent. By morning, forty-nine of the husbands were dead. It’s a gruesome tale that ends badly for just about everyone–the Danaids were cursed to carry jugs of water with holes in them, and the one sister who didn’t murder her husband was imprisoned–but its still a story about female self-determination and those were rare in Greek stories. It’s a story about women capable of protecting themselves and making their own choices, but also of showing compassion when treated with respect.

(Jeannie: Most Greek myths are pretty bloody aren’t they?)

Jeannie: How has your legal career shaped your approach to writing?
Stephanie: It made me work very hard at my writing so that I won’t ever have to practice law again…oh, uh, you had a different kind of answer in mind, I’ll bet. Okay, let me try again. I suppose the most obvious influence over my writing is that even though many of my heroes and heroines are vigilantes, the overall message of my stories have a serious law and order bent to them.

Jeannie: What made me sit up and notice immediately when reading your Nocturne Bites was your portrayal of the casualties of war and the complex journey of recovery and healing. I also noticed that you are involved with several charities for veterans. What drew you to this theme?
Stephanie: I’m of the opinion that you probably haven’t lived a very full life if you haven’t been dealt a few brutal emotional wounds along the way. We all suffer, we all struggle to heal from our own private tragedies, and I suspect that makes it easier for all of us to identify with the plight of soldiers who have suffered on our behalf. I have several veterans in my family, and I try to be sensitive and respectful to their sacrifices.

Jeannie: Dream “research” vacation. What is it?
Stephanie: Best question ever! Excuse me while I enjoy my little fantasy here…I want to spend a month in Italy walking through the ancient Roman ruins, having a picnic in the sun-drenched hills of Tuscany, frolicking in the sunflower fields, envisioning ancient life in the ashes of Pompeii. But those are all things I could actually do, given enough money. Less possible in the current climate is the month-long cruise down the Nile in Egypt I want to take. But maybe, some day…

Jeannie: Wonderful answers. Thank you Stephanie!

Poisoned Kisses is in bookstores now as well as available from eHarlequin, Amazon, Borders, and Barnes & Noble. Having just finished this modern day story of an immortal nymph and a war-forged hydra, I can guarantee that anyone who loves strong heroines and heart-wrenching conflict will not be disappointed. I loved this story from start to finish and could not put it down. Learn more about Stephanie Draven at http://www.stephaniedraven.com.

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The Date is Nigh!

Filed in: blog | book reviews    Tags: |

SEP

24

2010

7:16 am

A funny thing happened at the local Schnucks grocery store. For the first time, hubby wanted to go down the book aisle. I wondered why, since I usually wander over there while he’s picking up cookies or what not. Turns out he wanted to check out the shelves.

“Is your book going to be here?” he asked, scanning up and down.

*beams* “Yes. They carry Harlequin Historical.” I pointed to one of the September releases. “That’s my line.”

“So you’ll be in all the Schucks stores?” (I like to think there was a hint of pride there.)

“Not all, but some.”

Next Tuesday is the official “drop date” in bookstores. It thought it was so sweet that hubby was already looking.

More advance reviews came in this week for Butterfly Swords as well as reviews for The Taming of Mei Lin which was released Sept. 1. I have yet to update the Books section and grab pull out quotes, but I do wish to acknowledge the many book bloggers and reviewers who have taken the time to read and review.

The Taming of Mei Lin

4 star review in Romantic Times – review by Dawn Crowne

Review at The Ron Empress by Victoria Dixon

Butterfly Swords

9 1/2 stars out of 10 from The Season and Top Pick – review by Miranda

Review by Jackie Barbosa – Author of Behind the Red  Door

B- Review by Katie Babs on Babbling about Books, and More

Review by Sela Carsen – Author of Carolina Wolf

5 out of 5 rating at My Book Addition - Review by April Renn

4 out of 5 stars by Gail Dayton – Author of the Blood Rose trilogy

And of course, all the reviewers on Goodreads.

Love it or hate it, I do appreciate that reviewers are taking the time to review the book. One last little brag–Butterfly Swords is currently the #1 requested galley for HQN on NetGalley. Of course, it was only because they took off some of the earlier popular galleys from previous months, but it’s kind of nice to be requested.

3 Comments

Weekly Round Up

Filed in: blog | book reviews | events    Tags: |

SEP

10

2010

8:56 am

Blog Tour: I discuss the role of family and secondary characters in The Taming of Mei Lin today at Thoughts in Progress, a book blog by Mason Canyon.

***

Just a quick round-up of the week:

Dear Author reviewed The Taming of Mei Lin with a B-. I am quite pleased.

I also received some reviews for Butterfly Swords from author and blogger Kay Bigelow and Michelle Henriques-Wilson.

Next week, I’ll be featuring stuntwoman and Ninja Warrior Luci Romberg on my blog in honor of Warrior Women month.

On Saturday 9/18, I’ll be doing my “Page 1, 5, 50: Keeping Them Hooked” workshop in Bartlett, TN for the River City Romance Writers. No books to sign yet, but I’ll be giving a print copy of Butterfly Swords away to the participants.

Also looking forward to seeing Jade Lee on Friday! I just bought her new historical romance, Wicked Surrender.  I’m so bummed to miss her Saturday talk at MORWA (since I’ll be speaking in TN). Do come check her out if you’re in town.

Have a great weekend!

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Butterfly Swords Review Round-Up

Filed in: Announcements | blog | book reviews   

SEP

3

2010

11:06 am

Guest blog: Forgot about that UK time difference thing. My Call story is up at the Pink Heart Society. Anyone curious about how it all happened. :)

***

Advance reviews are always coming out and, I confess, I hungrily search for them. I’m weak…

I never know whether to respond or not, but I liked Stacia Kane’s take on it. Good or bad, acknowledge the review and thank them for their time. It does take a lot of time and effort to read through the book and then to put your thoughts together coherently.

I’m making it my policy to not comment on reviews other than a nice thank you and I will not show up on any review sites to comment or reply. If you ever see me doing so, smack me upside the head and send me away. But I can acknowledge the reviewers here on my blog.

For Butterfly Swords:

Romantic Times
★★★★ Review
You need to be a subscriber to view this early. Otherwise it will be available in October.

Monkey Bear Reviews
A- Grade Review by Sarah

Sonoma Lass (x-posted on Dear Author)
A Grade Review by SonomaLass

The Romance Reviews
★★★★★ – Review by Carol

And various reviewers from GoodReads
Range: ★★★ – ★★★★★

For The Taming of Mei Lin:

The Season
9 stars out of 10 – Review by Katrina

Dear Author
B- Review by Jane

Various reviewers from Goodreads
Range: ★★★★ – ★★★★★

Thank you for everyone for reading and reviewing!

10 Comments

I solemnly swear…

Filed in: blog | book reviews | guest blogs | promotion    Tags: | | | | | | |

AUG

17

2010

2:59 am

…that I did not in any way bribe, cajole, court, or exercise voodoo upon a certain someone at Dear Author.

I may, however, need to name my first child after her. Jane if it’s a girl and Jayne if it’s a boy.

I would then have to name my second child after the Harlequin art department. Jane and Harlequin Art Lin. I think they’ll be very popular in school.

You must be wondering what I’m rambling about. Dear Author has set up a page to invite anyone to submit reviews of Butterfly Swords to the Dear Author site. I learned of it from Twitter and was completely blown away.

jane_l: I made up a page where anyone can submit a review of @JeannieLin’s Butterfly Swords http://bit.ly/bjug54 to be posted at Dear Author

Actually, it’s not just DA. Many other reviewers have been so supportive by reading ARCs and getting the word out. Whether the reviews end up being good or bad, I’ll be forever grateful. And then I have to mention the amazing support from Harlequin and my editors, putting Butterfly Swords up on NetGalley and making it available because they were getting so many requests for reviews.

I believe the buzz all started with the Harlequin Art Department who came up with the bold and beautiful cover. The most common thing I heard at conference was, “You’re the author with that gorgeous cover!” Yes, I am my book. My book is me. At least for a little while — and I’m okay with that. :)

That cover still makes my heart beat faster. The promo page for Butterfly Swords says it all: http://www.butterfly-swords.com. Kimberly Killion, author and owner of HotDamn Designs, created the design. When she showed it to me, I couldn’t stop staring.

“That’s AWESOME!” I gushed. “I’d buy that. Wouldn’t you?”

And finally, in all this hub-bub, I’m blogging today at Unusual Historicals. I work harder for the Unusual Historicals posts than any other site because my fellow contributors are such conscientious researchers and accomplished writers. I always try to make sure my posts are up to the high quality of the rest of the site. That being said, I’m quite proud of this one in which I discuss a little history of women and literary discourse in China and how Lisa See’s Peony in Love brought that to light for me. Unusual Historicals Blog – Tragic Tales: The Lovesick Maidens of Hangzhou (Link live at 6:00 am)

2 Comments

Butterfly Swords is up on NetGalley

Filed in: blog | book reviews | cool finds    Tags: | |

AUG

12

2010

7:23 am

netgalley

Which means people are reading it. *swoons*

Actually, it’s pretty darn cool. I didn’t know much about NetGalley before, but apparently it’s the best thing since sliced bread for reviewers. It allows reviewers, librarians, journalists and other professional readers to request digital galleys directly from the publisher.

Butterfly Swords on NetGalley

50 more days! Let it begin, let it begin….!

2 Comments

Interview at Romance Writers on the Journey

Filed in: Announcements | book reviews | friends and family | interviews | The Bookshelf | writing    Tags: | | | | | | |

SEP

3

2009

6:00 am

keligwyn-square

Keli hosts the "Romance Writers on the Journey" blog

My interview is featured today on Keli Gwyn’s “Romance Writers on the Journey” blog. The blog features unpublished and debut authors on the road to publication. I like to read the blog for inspiration and Keli caught me when I was hanging around to find out more about some of my fellow Ruby Slippered sisters from the Golden Heart® 09 tour.

I think she does a fabulous job researching these interviews. It’s all the dirty details on my contest warpath and the  roller coaster I’ve been on since March. (Never before revealed online…shhh!!!) To put things into perspective, when I volunteered to do the interview in June, I had received the GH@ nomination and was thinking the Call would never come.

Hop on over and take a look.

http://romancewritersonthejourney.wordpress.com/2009/09/02/meet-debut-author-jeannie-lin/

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