San Diego, Blog-o-rama & More

Filed in: blog | events | giveaway | guest blogs | new releases    Tags: | |

SEP

13

2011

2:25 am

It’s deja vu all over again. The lead up to the launch of THE DRAGON AND THE PEARL is well underway, starting with the official start of the blog tour. Come visit me over at The Romance Dish and learn about the symbolism of the dragon and the pearl in Chinese mythology. You can also win an autographed copy of BUTTERFLY SWORDS to get you ready for DRAGON.

The other tour stops so far are below:

9/13-The Romance Dish–blog and giveaway: The Dragon and the Pearl in Chinese Mythology

9/14-Fresh Fiction–blog and giveaway: She’s got the look–Costuming your characters

9/19-Historical Hearts-interview and giveaway

9/20-Limecello’s blog-blog and giveaway: Tang Dynasty courtesans–High class prostitutes?

9/21-Jo Bourne’s blog-interview and giveaway

10/12-Romancing the Book-Interview and giveaway

10/17-Reader, I Created Him – Interview and giveaway

***

I’m heading out to San Diego this Friday for a workshop on “Keeping Them Hooked” Saturday morning with the San Diego RWA chapter. This will be my first book signing for THE DRAGON AND THE PEARL and I’m doubly excited because I’ll be the opening act for Barbara Vey from Publishers Weekly who’s the afternoon speaker.

This also brings me back to Southern California for a visit to my family and then my BFF’s wedding the next week. I’ll be in the wedding party as a very round bridesmaid as the twins are growing inside me.

***

Oh me garshk! Is it that time already. I’ll be drawing for the winners for the first round of the Launch Celebration this Thursday. So far there’s a handful of supporters joining in on Facebook, blogs and Twitter. *blows kisses* Thank you!!

Spread the word for a chance to win books and other cool goodies.

1 Comment

The Dragon and the Pearl Launch Celebration

Filed in: Announcements | blog | events | giveaway | new releases    Tags: | |

AUG

28

2011

8:52 am

THE DRAGON AND THE PEARL releases on September 20, 2011 and I’m still a fresh-faced newbie author where every new launch is exciting. *bounces*

And of course there will be party favors and prizes like last time. I’m even contemplating how difficult it would be to make Dragon sugar cookies for my local booksigning. Butterfly cookies weren’t so hard, but Dragon cookies seem like an intricate affair. I might have to rethink that. Now Pearl cookies would be much easier LOL.

So join in for my launch celebration for THE DRAGON AND THE PEARL and its linked Undone story, THE LADY’S SCANDALOUS NIGHT (release date September 1, 2011), and be entered to win some lovely goodies. All you have to do is spread the word by blogging, tweeting, facebooking about the books. I’ve provided the HTML for the celebration badge the end of the post that you can feel free to link or copy. Remember to come back and comment here about where you posted so I can count you in. On Twitter, use the tag #dragonandpearl so I can find you. The celebration is open to US and international readers.

The Goodies

The celebration is really a way to give back to all the readers who have been so supportive of me from the beginning. Plus I love to throw parties and with a virtual launch celebration, I don’t have to clean up my living room. I hope you enjoy the goodies this time around. A lot of thought is put into creating just the right mood.

The first round!

On September 15st, we’ll have a drawing for the first set of prizes. Three random names will be drawn to receive one of three prizes.

First up, a digital download of THE LADY’S SCANDALOUS NIGHT for your reading pleasure. This linked story takes place concurrently with THE DRAGON AND THE PEARL and will hopefully whet your appetite for the longer novel.

Second, a DVD set with the international release of Red Cliff. Warlords, intrigue, Tony Leung and Takeshi Kaneshiro. The battle of Red Cliff featured in Romance of the Three Kingdoms takes place in the Han Dynasty rather than the Tang, but it’ll put you in the right frame of mind for the power struggle in THE DRAGON AND THE PEARL. (Alas, Tony and Takeshi didn’t answer my casting call for my book trailer.)

Third, a hardcopy of Cindy Pon‘s THE FURY AND THE PHOENIX, sequel to her debut book, SILVER PHOENIX. You’ll also receive autographed postcards with character art that Cindy commissioned herself. This Asian fantasy adventure takes place in the imaginary kingdom of Xia and features a love affair between a courtesan and a eunuch. What, a eunuch you say?!? Actually, those palace eunuchs were the only men allowed in the Emperor’s harem. Historically they had all sorts of affairs with concubines. They also wielded an inordinate amount of power. Scandalous, no?

Second Round – The Grand Prizes!!

On October 20 (this was updated from original date–I didn’t realize I’d be running around and have no time to promote this myself!) , I’ll have a drawing for the Grand Prizes. Three individual names will be drawn.

First, I’m so excited to be giving away a copy of Stephanie Dray‘s LILY OF THE NILE and the sequel, SONG OF THE NILE. I’ve read the first book and am eagerly awaiting the second which releases in October. Stephanie has the same love for ancient history as well as for “bad girls” of the ancient world that I do and her writing is gorgeous. Reading this story of Cleopatra’s daughter Selene made me reminisce about the big Marion Zimmer Bradley epics (Mists of Avalon, Firebrand) I used to love sinking my teeth into.

Second, it was hard to find a giveaway item that could be as exciting as the double swords from last year. My personalized dragon chop is always a conversation starter at signings so I thought I’d give away a customized dragon stamp made of wood. I’ll have it ordered in your name for you so you can have an official chop of your own — a must for signing artwork and doing business in China.

Third, the most popular item from last year was the annotated copy. I’ll be going through and jotting author’s notes in a copy of THE DRAGON AND THE PEARL. Think of this as the DVD commentary, but book style. What were the inspirations for specific characters? What sort of decisions did I have to make. What was I thinking when I did that? The annotated copy of BUTTERFLY SWORDS was sold at the Brenda Novak auction for diabetes research last year for a nice donation. I’m really looking forward to reading through the book again and putting down my notes. It’s a labor of love, truly.

Party favors – Romance Trading Cards

All newsletter subscribers can use the contact link in the newsletter to request THE DRAGON AND THE PEARL trading cards. I must thank www.chineseclothingonline.com for the use of the lovely costume pictures!

Want to subscribe to Jeannie’s newsletter?

FRONT BACK – Li Tao BACK – Ling Suyin

 

More Info and Events:

Badge

Copy and paste HTML for badge and link below:

<a href=”http://www.jeannielin.com/?p=4002″> <img src=”http://www.jeannielin.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/TheDragonandthePearl-badge.png” width=”176″ height=”292″> </a>

Giveaways:

I’ll be giving away copies of THE DRAGON AND THE PEARL and THE LADY’S SCANDALOUS NIGHT on various blog tour stops. In the meantime, the Goodreads giveaway is open until Friday, September 2nd. Get an advance copy before the release date.

Goodreads Book Giveaway

The Dragon and the Pearl by Jeannie Lin

The Dragon and the Pearl

by Jeannie Lin

Giveaway ends September 02, 2011.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter to win

17 Comments

Inside the Critiquing Process: Feedback on opening

Filed in: blog | craft | events | writing    Tags: | | |

MAY

2

2011

8:00 am

Yesterday I posted an opening to a manuscript. If you didn’t get a chance to read it, you can check it out here. Working title – My Fair Concubine.

To be fair, my sister read the entire manuscript before commenting on the opening. So she’s working in not just whether this scene works or not, but what can be done with it in the larger context of the entire story.

Little Sis’ critique

When Yan Ling first meets Fei Long at the tea house–can you combine this to be the same tea house/inn that Fei Long finds his sister at and kicks out? I want Yan Ling more active from the start. It’s cute that her feet are tired, but if it’s combined, then all the servers will already know the scandalous story and she can be gossiping with them (this also colors the environment more. right now a little flat overall)–so she can be a little more sympathetic to his plight, admiring of the first noble that she’s seen, admiring of his bearing and manners, ect, until he throws out that line about needing a woman (then sparks fly and she dumps tea on him–so much for all her sympathy! he’s just one of those sleazy nobles, ect).  However, when he explains the plan, she can already be partially on his side, not just because of the money, but because she sympathizes and has thought, “Well if I were Pearl, I wouldn’t throw away such an opportunity…”  Because she has been described more than once as practical–show how she is practical.

On a tangent (sorry, my mind’s not as organized), Dao has a backstory where Yan Ling does not. That also makes Dao more of an interesting character. That’s why these first opening chapters can do a lot more. As well as having Yan Ling more active, having her talk to the other servers, having more of her thoughts, and her interacting will also give you a chance to build her character and her background. Why is she so much more practical? Why is she at the tea house? Has she no family?

Jeannie’s commentary on the critique

Whenever someone gives me feedback, the comments need to garner a sense of trust before I’ll accept them. With my sister, we already have an established critiquing relationship, but even if we didn’t, there are certain things about her feedback which make me trust it.

First of all, feedback doesn’t mean that the scene I wrote is all wrong. I’m wary if someone comes in and immediately says something like “the book starts in the wrong place” or suggests that I re-write the scene without sufficient backup. Sure, rewrites like that are sometimes needed, but if the feedback shows that the commenter understands what I was trying to do with the story, rather than just rejecting my work outright, then it builds that trust.

Sis discusses Yan Ling’s character development in a way that tells me she gets what I was trying to do. At least she appreciated the cute detail with Yan Ling’s aching feet. Sometimes when I get feedback, I’m not sure whether the reader just didn’t pay attention or whether I really failed in what I tried to do. Because I’m not sure and the trust has not been established, I’m not sure whether I should fix something. Little Sis has demonstrated an understanding of my opening and what I wanted to do with the characters. She does this by echoing back specific details — I did want to highlight Yan Ling’s practical, no-nonsense nature. I wanted her opening to be sort of cute. I wanted her to show a bit of a temper, but not be completely temperamental or feisty.

Sis also points out a fundamental weakness that became more evident as the book progresses — namely that Yan Ling doesn’t have enough backstory from the beginning. We’re dropped into the story here where she’s presented as a servant and very quickly embarks upon the story adventure which takes her away from that life. Dao is another character introduced later that Sis thought was overshadowing Yan Ling in terms of having more intriguing backstory and characterization — which would be a bad thing since Yan Lin is my heroine and Dao is a secondary.

Most importantly, Sis earns my trust by giving me some very specific and usable suggestions. Instead of saying — “Include more of the five senses” or “I want to get a better sense of the tea house” or “I feel like your heroine isn’t active enough”, her suggestions about making the tea house the same location as the inn and showing Yan Ling interacting more vividly with the other servants are both changes that I could visualize and see myself executing to the story’s advantage. She also explained her thought process behind the suggestions and what purpose they would serve. So if it was the case that I didn’t like the suggestion, I could still address the underlying gaps that she’s identified. Immediately, I could see how the pacing, tension, and characterization of the first two scenes could be vastly improved by these changes.

Tomorrow: I’ll post the updated opening based on Sis’ critique.

Want Little Sis and me to critique your first 30 pages? Bid at the Brenda Novak auction and get both of us cheap. :)

7 Comments

Little Sis & I: Inside the critiquing process

Filed in: blog | craft | events | excerpts | writing    Tags: | |

MAY

1

2011

8:35 am

Little Sis and I are offering not one, but two joint critiques for auction:

Brenda Novak online auction for Diabetes Research

Get Bria Quinlan to RWA

In conjunction with that, I wanted to give a peek into what the critique and writing process is like between us. I’ve posted before that I think Little Sis has killer instincts and knows how to take something I’ve written and guide it to a stronger, better place. She taught me how to critique and thus, pretty much how to be a better writer.

The blog this week will go through a recent opening I wrote, how Little Sis responded, and then my revised opening based on her critique. Throughout each step of the way, I’ll discuss my reasoning and commentary on her critique. I’ll cover what makes a good critique for me and how I know to trust feedback — as I actually get many readers in addition to Little Sis. P.S. Bria Quinlan is another one of my trusted readers.

***

Breaking Good Writing

In workshops, I talk about how the most important lesson I learned was that good writing wasn’t enough to take you to the next level. The hardest part of the game is when your pages are good, solid, workable– but how to make them better?

Here was an example of an opening that I thought was good. I thought it achieved its purpose and hit all the notes I wanted to hit. It made it through several rounds of readers as well, but Little Sis eventually gave some feedback that turned things around.

This is a risk for me because this hasn’t been accepted by my editor yet. So the caveat is it may all change in the final version. You, the blog reader, may also find that you don’t like this opening at all or you would have totally written it differently. Or that my writing isn’t THAT good. That’s all fine. Please don’t take this as an example of how to write a good opening. I’m trying to illustrate the critique process and I hope to learn something myself by deconstructing it in this way.

Version 1:

This is a draft of an unpublished manuscript, prior to any professional editing or copyediting. This is how the story opens.
Tang Dynasty China, 824 A. D.

Chapter 1

Fei Long faced the last room at the end of the narrow hallway, unsheathed his sword, and kicked the door open.

A feminine shriek pierced the air, along with the frantic shuffle of feet as he strode through the entrance. The boarding room was a small one. The inhabitants, a man and a woman, flung themselves into the corner with nowhere to hide.

His gaze fixed onto the woman first. His sister’s hair was unbound and her eyes widened with fear. Pearl had their mother’s thoughtful features: the high forehead, and the sharp angles that had softened since the last time he’d seen her. She was dressed only in pale linen underclothes. The man who was with her had enough daring to step in between them.

Fei Long glanced once to the single wooden bed against one wall, the covers strewn wide, and his vision blurred with anger. He gripped the sword until his knuckles nearly cracked with the strain.

“Bastard,” he gritted out through his teeth.

He knew this man he’d come to kill, this boy. At least he’d been a boy when Fei Long had last seen him. And Pearl had been a mere girl. Now she was a grown woman, staring at him with a fearful question in her eyes.

“Fei Long.” Pearl’s fingers curled tight over her lover’s arm. “So now you’ve come.”

The soft bitterness of the accusation cut through him. Pearl had begged for him to come back a year earlier when her marriage had first been arranged. He’d dismissed her letters as childish ramblings. If he had returned then, she might not have thrown herself into ruin. Their father’s spirit wouldn’t be floating restlessly between heaven and earth.

The young man stretched himself before Fei Long, though he failed to match him in stature. “Not in front of Pearl,” he implored.

Though he trembled, Han fought to keep his voice steady as Pearl clung to him, hiding just behind his shoulder. At least the dog managed to summon some courage. If Han had cowered or begged for his life, he would already be dead.

“Step away, Little Sister” Fei Long commanded.

“No.”

Pearl.

“I’d rather die here with Han than go to Khitai.”

She’d changed in the five years since he’d seen her. The Pearl he remembered had been obedient, sweet-tempered, and pleasant in all things. Fei Long had ridden hard from Changan to this remote province, expecting to find the son of a dog who had stolen her away.

Now that she stood before him with quiet defiance, he knew she hadn’t been seduced or deceived. Zheng Xie Han’s family lived within their ward in the capital city. Though lower in standing, the Zheng family had always maintained a good reputation. His sister had turned to Han because she had no one else.

The tension drained out of Fei Long, stealing away his rage. His throat pulled tight as he forced out the next word. “Go.”

The two of them stared at him in disbelief.

“Go,” he repeated roughly.

Fei Long lowered his sword and turned away while they dressed themselves. Shoving his sword back into its sheath, he faced the bare wall. He could hear the shuffle of movement behind him as the couple gathered their belongings.

The bleakness of the last weeks settled into his gut like a stone. When he’d left for his assignment to the northwestern garrison, Fei Long had believed his home to be a harmonious place. Upon news of his father’s sudden death, he’d returned to find his sister gone and debt collectors circling the front gates like vultures.

His father’s presence had been an elaborate screen, hiding the decay beneath the lacquered surface of their lives. Fei Long now saw Pearl’s arranged marriage for what it was: a desperate ploy to restore the family honor-or rather to prolong the illusion of respectability.

When he turned again, Pearl and Han stood watching him tentatively. Each of them had a pack slung around their shoulder. Off to face the horizon with all their belongings in two tiny bags.

Han bowed once. “Elder Brother.”

The young man risked his temper to deliver the honorific. Fei Long could bring himself to return the bow. Pearl met his eyes as they started for the door. The heaviness of her expression struck him like a physical blow.

This was the last time he would ever see his sister.

Fei Long took his money pouch from his belt and held it out. The handful of coppers rattled inside. “Here.”

Han didn’t look at him as he took it.

“Thank you, Fei Long,” Pearl whispered.

They didn’t embrace. The two of them had been apart for so long that they wouldn’t have known how. Fei Long watched their backs as they retreated down the long corridor of the country inn; gone like everything else he had once known to be true.

* * *

Yan Ling moved from table to empty table in a restless circle, wash rag in hand, as she wiped away at wooden surfaces rubbed bare from long use. The tea house conversations had quieted hours ago. The crowd had cleared away except for a single patron.

He’d been there for hours and he wasn’t even drinking his tea anymore. Instead, he had taken to staring into his cup. He was seated at the center of the room, drawing attention in every way.

The man had set a sword onto the edge of the table upon arriving. That was when Yan Ling had first noticed him. His robe marked him both as an outsider and a man of high rank. It was of fine woven silk and richly dyed in a dark blue. He wore his thick hair long, the front of it pulled back into a knot in the style of aristocracy. She was stricken by strength of his features; the hard line of his cheekbones and the broad shape of his face which narrowed slightly at the chin.

In lieu of money, he’d shown a jade seal to the proprietor. Her master and his wife had nearly broken their backs bowing and welcoming him. Government official, they’d guessed in the back room. Though he traveled without any escort and had a sullen expression that sunk lower with each hour. Her guess was that he needed something stronger than tea.

After a day that had begun with the first light of the sun, Yan Ling simply wanted to sit. She envied the proprietor, who was seated quietly in the corner, tallying up the day’s cash. The wooden beads of his abacus clicked together, signaling that the day should be done. Her feet ached and no matter how much she wriggled her toes in her slippers, the feeling wouldn’t quite return to them.

The clang from the kitchen meant that the cook and his boy were cleaning their pots. A mountain of cups and bowls and little plates would be waiting for her. And yet this one patron was still hoarding his cold tea. One more customer and she could rest for just a moment. The tea house was so humble that it couldn’t ignore any earnings, not even a few coins from a traveler who wanted to nurse his tea for hours.

She guessed him to be twenty-five years. With a slight crease between his eyes that she imagined came more from deep contemplation than age. Really too young to be muttering to himself out of senility. Yet he was doing it. Again.

Gingerly, she approached the table. “Does the honored guest need anything?”

She reached for the clay tea pot only to have him wave her back with an irritated scowl. For a gentleman, he was uncommonly rude, but she supposed wearing silk and jade gave him that privilege. He propped his elbows onto the table, shoulders hunched to return to his vigil.

He was never going to leave! Occasionally the tavern at the other end of the street would need to throw out drunks, but it had never been an issue here. She stood a respectful distance away and looked to the proprietor for help.

Her master was deep into his coins. His wife was shouting orders back in the kitchen. No help was coming. Defeated, Yan Ling turned to wipe down her already cleaned table once more when the stranger spoke.

“I need a woman,” he mumbled. “Any woman would do.”

Her stomach dropped. She swung around, her mouth open in shock. The stranger raised his head. For the first time, his eyes focused on her, looking her up and down.

“Perhaps even you.”

If his tone had been leering, or his look more appraising, it might have been less offensive. But the coldly pensive way he’d said it-and then the addition of ‘perhaps’ as if to plunge her worth even further.

Yan Ling grabbed the teapot and flung the contents onto the scoundrel, expensive robe and all.

Suddenly there were plenty of people crowding the tea room. Her master jumped up from his table. His wife had come like a windstorm from the kitchen, rag in hand as she apologized profusely. Even the cook and his boy were gawking through the curtained doorway.

The stranger had shot to his feet. The front of his robe was stained dark with a splatter of tea.

“Get out!” The master’s wife shrieked at Yan Ling before turning to fuss at their precious patron. “We are so sorry, my lord. So sorry.”

Yan Ling was still clutching the tea pot while she stared.

The nobleman reached up to swipe the tea leaves from his chest in one angry motion. His eyes remained fixed on her the entire time. He had lost that distant, brooding expression he’d worn all day. Heat rose up the back of her neck as she stumbled a few steps back.

What had she done?

“That know-nothing, good for nothing girl,” the proprietor railed.

Her ears rang as she ducked into the kitchen through the beaded curtain. The steam enclosed her, but the clang of the pots couldn’t block the nobleman’s deep voice as he complained about her. She could hear her master agreeing wholeheartedly, accompanied by the cooing apologies of his wife.

It wasn’t as if she hadn’t been taunted before, but over the last years the teasing had taken on a different tone as her bone-thin figure had curved its way into womanhood. She’d learned to deafen her ears and stare ahead, never meeting any of the not-so-subtle glances thrown her way. Yet to suffer such insult from someone who appeared so refined-it was unbearable.

Ignoring the curious stares from cook and the kitchen-boy, she slipped through the back door. Her palms were damp and she wiped them restlessly against the sides of her gray tunic. Fear set her heart pounding.

One moment of hot-headedness. She’d lashed out at a well-dressed gentleman, of all people. She wasn’t even a servant when it came to this man. She was the humble servant of humble servants. Who was she to be outraged? She wasn’t allowed it.

She would certainly be scolded by both her master and his wife, each separately and then together. Yan Ling could hear them already. She was too much of a burden to feed, to clothe. She wasn’t even pretty enough to bring in more customers.

They might even be angry enough to take a bamboo switch to her. A beating was all she’d have to suffer, if she was lucky.

Jeannie’s Commentary:

Now I know the pages have to stand on their own. The author never gets to explain why they did things to the reader. So I’ll just say I felt this opening was solid when I sent it on to beta-readers and Little Sis. It set up both my hero and heroine as sympathetic and interesting characters (hopefully!) and also eased readers into my world. Nothing says wuxia and adventure like a good ol’ tea house, you know?

Tomorrow I’ll post Little Sis’ comments with more discussion.(See feedback on opening.)

In the meantime, check out my auction items at Brenda Novak’s auction which opens today:

For writers: Joint critique with Little Sis

For everyone: Butterfly Swords fan pack (the one-of-a-kind annotated copy is included)

5 Comments

Brenda Novak: Online Auction for Diabetes Research

Filed in: Announcements | blog | events    Tags: | | | |

APR

27

2011

2:52 pm

This is a great event with an amazing amount of online support and some great offerings — and all for a great cause. It starts up May 1 and goes until May 31. Last year I bid on a bunch of items, but came away empty handed. Maybe this year I’ll get lucky…

I’m also very proud to be donating several items:
1) Butterfly Swords fan pack – Last year during the Butterfly Swords launch celebration, I was giving away an annotated copy of Butterfly Swords. Think of it as the DVD commentary, but in book form. The winner, Desere, generously offered to donate it to the Brenda Novak auction since she hadn’t read Butterfly yet. Like me, she had diabetes in her family.

So for the one-of-a-kind annotated copy of Butterfly Swords, a special souvenir map of the Tang Dynasty (which I’m also creating with my little hands) and a pack of autographed romance trading cards, head over to the auction and start bidding!

2) The Sisters’ Critique – I’m quite happy about this. Little Sis has agreed to do a 30 page critique along with me. The winner will get two separate critiques from me and Little Sis. We both talk books and movies all the time, so I’m curious to see how we’ll both approach the same manuscript.

Aside from those personal reasons, I swear by Little Sis’ insight and feedback. I think she has a lot to offer any writer. I’ve also been giving workshops where I talk about making that last leap from “almost there” to getting read and getting published. In the workshops, I talk about “breaking good writing to make it better.” In honor of the Sisters’ Critique, I’m going to run a blog series next week about a specific example of one of my openings, how my sister critiqued it, and how I modified it. It’s a special peek into my writing process. I’m a little nervous about that, but I think it could be fun. Stay tuned starting next Monday! Oh yes, and bid!

More items:

1) Honorary Ruby-Slippered Sisterhood membership – You know you want to be a Ruby-Slippered Sister (or Brother). Here’s a fun chance to get 3 critiques and network with the RSS as well as be the first ever Honorary Ruby.

2) Kindle e-Reader with Ruby-Slippered Sisterhood releases

3) Set of Romance Trading Cards(ITEM NO. 2170283 – 2170287) Over 300 cards in the set. Five sets available!

You must register to bid. Register now and be ready for next week.

1 Comment

The Cool Hunt at RT

Filed in: blog | conferences | cool finds | events    Tags: | | |

APR

11

2011

11:53 am

I was hunting out that ephemeral thing called “cool” at the Romantic Times convention last week. It’s one of those reasons you gotta be there–you never know what’s going to be trendy, splashy, and fun until the conference unfolds. My cool hunt was determined by listening to buzz around the conference, the #RT11 tweet feed, and just my own wanderings.

Other than Romance Trading Cards *wink* *wink*, these were the things that tripped the cool meter for me:

Chocolate Martinis

These emerged as the cool drink of the conference. After Susanna Kearsley introduced me to them, I had to limit myself to just one. Drink orders for the delicious, creamy, chocolatey drink started flying left and right and I even went upstairs to my room to see, lo and behold, a mini room service party in progress complete with chocolate martinis and cake.

Purple Prose Taboo

This was a reader-author meet-up activity hosted by Victoria Dahl, Courtney Milan, and Tessa Dare. I didn’t get to go, but I heard the buzz from several sources. The idea is ingenious in its simplicity — you play the popular board game Taboo with romance terms, trying to guess the *ahem* body parts and other romance-isms from the purple prose equivalents. According to Stephanie Dray, who stumbled upon the session: “It was like I was in a fugue state. There were people yelling and throwing feather boas.”

Way cool. If anyone has pictures or a report from this, would SO love to see or hear from you.

Geeks vs. Hunks

I have to say, after hearing so much about the EC Cavemen, cover models, and the Mr. Romance contestants, I was a bit bummed at how low key their presence was. (Of course, I did miss the Mr. Romance contest. And let me qualify that the ones I met were very nice blokes.) In my little snowglobe of awareness, it seemed that the models were overshadowed by these other notable men attending the conference. I love it when geeks win.

I couldn’t attend either Dean Koontz or Barry Eisler’s talks since I was speaking or at Club RT, but I did get to meet Patrick Rothfuss briefly. And Lee Goldberg’s talk on “How to Tell a TV Story” had me rolling. So I must rely on someone else’s report: Did these non-romance writers hanging out at RT deserve to trip the cool meter?

Ellora’s Cave does Bollywood

Bollywood Romance Divas

I did miss out on the beginning of the Faery Ball and also the Vampire Ball. However, I can’t imagine any of those could top Ellora’s Cave and their fabulous Bollywood extravaganza.The table decorations were both exquisite and interactive. The chairs were draped with colored scarves decorated with gold disks that doubled as costumes for those of us who didn’t come dressed in saris and wraps. This drew everyone into the festive mood–as if we needed any prompting.

When planning a party, it’s all about the little things. And EC paid great attention to detail. Finger castanets at each place setting, peacock feathers, on the spot henna tattoo artists for a personalized touch.

And to blast the cool meter off the scale, they featured a live Bollywood dance number. Thumbs up Ellora’s Cave! You sure know how to throw a party. It almost makes me wish I could write something for EC, but then again, everyone’s invited to the party, from sweet to steamy.

Disclaimer: The hookah is a centerpiece display only. There is absolutely no type of substance being inhaled in this picture other than a big whiff of cool…which I admit, did give me a head rush.

Melissa Marr – App Enabled Promo

This is the first time I’ve seen anything like this. You can scan the postcard with your smartphone or type in the code online to “experience the enchantment”. We are inundated by a bunch of promo chotchkies and bells and whistles at conference. They’re like those little plastic prizes you win at Chuck E Cheese. Fun for the hour, but not memorable afterwards. Perhaps this was not the most picked up item, but it gets my cool stamp for its edginess and for being forward thinking. Off to research how I might do such a thing…

I really couldn’t be everywhere at once, so help me out. What tripped your cool meter?

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There must be a bee in my bonnet…

Filed in: blog | conferences | events | promotion    Tags: |

APR

9

2011

6:48 am

Cause I’m hearing all this buzz

Please excuse the poor joke. Tee hee.

One of the things I said in my workshop with Stephanie Dray on “How to Promote Like a Big Name Author” is that you know there’s buzz when people start picking up your banner and they start coming to you. So I’m jumping up and down this morning because Romance Trading Cards received a huge shout out in the L.A. Times article on the Romantic Times Book Convention: first in the picture and then with a great quote from Joanna Bourne.

Bodice-Rippers Unite

And I’ll miss all the fun at the Saturday booksigning *sniff* because I’ve whisked myself back to St. Louis for another conference and booksigning. *brightens up* I’ll be speaking today (Saturday) on Selling the Hard Sell and then I’ll be signing Butterfly Swords from 4:30-6:00pm. Tomorrow I’ve got a Master’s Class on Keeping them Hooked.

Missouri Writers Guild conference at the Sheraton Westport Plaza Hotel in St. Louis.

I think I have a few of those famous Romance Trading Cards left to hand out too…What? Did you think I was above gloating?

Buzz…buzz…

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RT Booklovers Convention

Filed in: Announcements | blog | events    Tags:

APR

2

2011

12:33 pm

This California Girl is going back to Los Angeles today. I’ll be attending the Romantic Times convention for the first time. *bounce* If you happen to be going to RT, please come by and see me.

Where’s Jeannie?

To the best of my knowledge, this is where I’ll try to be.

Tuesday:

1:30-8:00pm: RT Book Camp

8-10pm – I’ll be at the bar from in case RTCers want to find me to get their buttons and stickers(wherever the bar is at the Westin Bonaventure).

Wednesday:

11:00-12:30pm – Welcome to LA Mixer

2:45-3:15pm – Club RT

4:45-5:45pm – Specialty Workshop: Kung-fu Fighting (presenting with Lynn Lorenz & Belinda McBride)

6:30-8:00pm – Saucy Sirens Through History

9:00-12:00am – Ellora’s Cave Fantasy Party

Thursday:

10:00-11:00am – Marketing: Promoting Like a Big Name Author When You’re Not One…Yet (presenting with Stephanie Dray)

1:30-2:00pm – Club RT

8:30-12:00am – Venetian Masquerade Faery Ball

Friday:

11:15-12:15pm – Multicultural: The Next Generation ( panel with Brenda Jackson and Monique Patterson)

And then sadly I’ll be flying out Friday afternoon for the Missouri Writers’ Guild conference in St. Louis. So y’all have to tell me how the signing and the rest of the weekend goes.

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Unusual Historicals and Cocktails with SEP

Filed in: blog | events | guest blogs    Tags: | | | |

JAN

18

2011

11:42 am

Two completely unrelated topics, of course. I’m over at Unusual Historicals discussing the movie adaptation of John Woo’s Red Cliff in light of the historical events of the Three Kingdoms Period.

Unusual Historicals: Movie Adaptations – Red Cliff

***

On a more exciting note, I actually went out yesterday! I got dressed in something besides my workout clothes. I even wore heels. There were cocktails and those little hors d’oeuvres on little platters.

Oh, and I got to meet Susan Elizabeth Phillips and a roomful of her wonderful SEPPIES. Here’s me and Amanda Berry mugging it up with SEP and her new book Call Me Irresistable (of which I have an autographed copy!!)

Group pic where of course I decided to make a weird face. Keep your day job Jeannie. Keep your day job.

Turns out we had a full on dinner and not just cocktails. I learned that apparently it’s tacky to post food pics. Wha..wha…what?!? Those are my favorite pics on the Internet!

Of course, I learned this from Susan as we both pulled our cameras to take a picture of the dessert:

Ten minutes later, this dessert no longer existed in this world. It was “fight-off-the-wait-staff-so-I-could-scrape-the-plate” good. “How’s the diet going this week?” my trainer asked this morning. “Oh, awful,” I said proudly, as my thoughts strayed to this lovely little plate.

Here’s my tip: If you’re ever going to a Susan Elizabeth Phillips signing or event, bring the cute shoes because there’s a traditional “Shoe Shot”. My little gray Anne Kleins are nice, but didn’t photograph very well. I should have busted out the candy red Jessica Simpson Ruby Slippers, eh? (It is absolutely fair game to whip out the shoe just for the shoe shot.)

A really lovely night with a wonderful author and warm, friendly people. I laughed a lot, talked all sorts of books, and ate everything in sight.

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Birthday Presents and the Friendly Skies

Filed in: blog | events | friends and family | slice of life | travel    Tags: | | | | |

NOV

15

2010

1:00 am

Guest spot: Trish Milburn interviewed me for Romance Bandits. The post is up today. Come by and reminisce about what games you used to play

***

I got my birthday present early from hubby!

Isn’t she all pretty and shiny? I love my Kindle already. I didn’t need to hook up a single cable to sync it with my Kindle apps on my computer. Yes, apps plural, because I have an app on each laptop so I can read from anywhere. I’ve also downloaded a couple of sample chapters and bought a couple of titles on it. Hubby is happy that I like it, and I think he’s also happy I didn’t ask for the iPad instead which was about three times the price.

One book that I couldn’t find on Kindle was EON by Alison Goodman. No worries because that very same day, a package arrived in the mail from Little Sis. Apparently, we still share the same brain, because she’d sent me a hardcopy of EON for my birthday.

She said she hasn’t read it yet, but had an idea I might like it. How did she know? Just because there’s a woman wielding two swords and a dragon on the cover doesn’t necessarily mean that…Okay, so it was an easy call.

Little Sis said she sent EON to me so I’d have reading material on the plane, but she needn’t have worried. I gushed to her about the Kindle and how tiny it was. No more big bulky books on planes. No more grabbing something from the newsstand in the airport when I don’t have anything to read.

Through a last minute arrangement with the day job, I’m going to be flying on my birthday (Nov. 16) to NYC. Perhaps I can meet up with a couple friends for drinks. I feel so cosmopolitan.

After that, I get a quick stop at home before I head to Nashville for a workshop and signing. I’ll get a chance to visit with my fellow Ruby Sister Kim Law.

That’s a lot of flying for one week, so I’m glad I have my nifty new Kindle. With all the traveling I’ve done in the past, surprisingly I’ve never flown on my birthday before. Hubby said the airline gave him a bottle of wine when he had to fly on his birthday. I don’t know if service is that good nowadays. Maybe an extra bag of pretzels?

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