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.

No Comments

Cool Contests, Annotated Version, Grand Prizes

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

OCT

12

2010

4:56 am

Blog Tour: Blogging at The Burton Review about my Tang Dynasty muses. I’m the guest author this week at Unusual Historicals and you can comment up until next Sunday to be entered to win a copy of Butterfly Swords. Also blogging about Mashups and Crossovers with pics of my inspirational Fast Draft collages.

Review Round-Up: A C+ Review for Butterfly Swords from Vagabond. One shining spot is the reviewer is interested in Adrian and Miya’s story. Also a pair of reviews from Poisoned Rationality. One for The Taming of Mei Lin and one for Butterfly Swords. The Romance Reviews is launching their new book portal site and featuring a giveaway for Butterfly Swords on the site.

***

We’re reaching the mid-point of October, so I can definitely say the Butterfly Swords Launch is underway. Fly little book, fly…

This is the last week to enter for the Grand Prize giveaways. I’m quite excited about the prizes as they’re very special to me:

The “butterfly swords”

from my costume

Color poster of

Wendy Wang’s artwork

Butterfly Swords

with author commentary

I realized, however, that there are some people who are entered multiple times and fans of Butterfly Swords. There are others signed up who may not have read it yet. So if any winner wants to opt for just a nice clean copy of Butterfly Swords to read, instead of the geeky annotated version, I’ll happily make the switch. I figured I’d then put any traded prizes up in next year’s Brenda Novak auction or some other worthy cause.

There is also another pretty cool Butterfly Swords contest going on, hosted by Bria Quinlan, YA author and one of my trusted readers. The pictures so far gave me a good laugh. I hope there will be a couple more entries. It’s always good to smile.

I’m tempted to enter a picture of my Asian books collection because…I got some game there. Though, of course, I’d be ineligible to win.

Two more signings this month! This Saturday at the Crestwood Barnes & Noble right down the street and then next Saturday in New Jersey at the NJRW Conference. Here’s the road show. Shortly after that, Butterfly Swords will be flitting out of bookstores and only available for order online.

You can still join the celebration and enter the drawings by blogging, tweeting, and getting the word out. I’ll draw the names October 15 and post on October 16 before I head out to the MORWA meeting and my signing.

11 Comments

ECWC and first book signings!

Filed in: blog | conferences | event | events | promotion | signings | travel    Tags: | | |

OCT

11

2010

6:58 am

Last week was a blast! I’m only barely recovered, but here are the highlights.

I finally made it out to the Emerald City Writer’s Conference. My good friend, author MG Braden, has been urging me to go for years now. It’s the largest RWA conference on the west coast and I can’t recommend it enough. Well-organized, great speakers, and a raffle extravaganza that whips everyone into a shopping frenzy–and it’s all for a good cause too!

MG Braden and me at lunch

I didn’t have a workshop at this conference, so it was nice to be able to enjoy the workshops and the signing. It was my very first signing and I may have done a little dance when I first came up to my table and saw the books stacked and ready.

I whip out the official chop for my first autograph

It went very well! I got to chat with a lot of people — several who had judged Butterfly Swords and remembered it from contests over two years ago.

The conference food was pretty good, though not so photogenic, so I didn’t get any great food pics a la Cindy Pon’s blog. However, I did snap one of the official ECWC drink: The Bodice Ripper.

The Bodice Ripper is posing besides the conference’s true star drink, the Lemon Drop. Best Lemon Drop Ever. It was later responsible for a short bout of karaoke that evening. You have to understand, I’d had my first book signing. Butterfly Swords had sold out. The Lemon Drops at the Bellevue Hilton use freshly squeezed lemon juice with the perfect balance of sugar and vodka. After two of them, I felt on “Top of the World” — Which is the song I proceeded to try to sing on stage.

Jeannie Lin and MG Braden live and unrehearsed

Note the skeptical look that the DJ is casting us. These new experiences keep me humble…

After the conference, I flew to Northern California to visit my sister. Where apparently I said hello to Little Sis and her husband, and proceeded to direct the rest of my attention to their cat. I hadn’t seen Ollie in months and he’d gotten skinny. Apparently they finally allowed him outdoors and it’s amazing how much a little exercise will do for an oversized tabby.

All my pictures of the Norcal trip consisted of cat and cupcakes. I’m firing myself as a photographer.

I returned home at the end of the week for my first local signing at Rose’s Bookshop. Another wonderfully supportive crowd!

Amanda Berry, Maggie Mae Gallagher, Sunita from DA, and myself

And did I mention the cake?

I think Wendy from Rose’s purposefully found the biggest knife possible to put beside the cake

That evening, Dear Author hosted a book chat about Butterfly Swords. I attended the first part for a Q&A with readers. I was nervous at first, but it was an absolute dream. All I ever wanted was for people to read and discuss my book. *sniffle* I bugged out for the second half so everyone could continue to kibitz without me. I haven’t checked out the rest of the transcript, but you can replay the Dear Author book chat if you missed it.

I’m giving myself a little rest before I check out the last part. According to a few little birdies, there was some discussion about how Butterfly Swords should have ended. Beware spoilers!

And there was one special little birdy waiting for me when I got home:

Hubby got a hold of one of my bookmarks and did a bit of arts and crafts to show me I had a fan at home. Life is very, very good.

I’ve uploaded my ECWC pics to Facebook. You can also check out the Rose’s Bookhouse signing album.

Next booksigning is at the MORWA October meeting where I’ll be signing beside Jim and Shannon Butcher. Yes, THE Jim and Shannon Butcher. Full disclosure: I intend to Photoshop their long line of fans onto my table in post-production. I got skillz and I’m going to use them. (The photos included in this post have not been retouched in any way.)

5 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!

No Comments

RWA 2010 Conference Highlights

Filed in: blog | events | friends and family | rwa | travel    Tags: | | | | | | |

AUG

4

2010

6:07 am

Pre-conference Trip to Hogwarts

I spent $80 dollars to spend three hours in line and went on only one ride — AND IT WAS SO WORTH IT! I must do a separate post on this, but I just wanted to show you my favorite moment.

It was sweaty, sticky hot and we were in a ginormous line that wound around the park just to get into Harry Potter world. But the moment we passed the arch into Hogsmead/Diagon Alley and you saw the snow-covered rooftops, for a moment I actually thought I felt a burst of cold and I believed.

The best part of the experience was walking down the street and being immersed in the world. I took a gazillion pictures there, so I’ll organize them into a post later this week.

hogsmead


hp_snowtop_roof

Met a Favorite Author (and didn’t burst into tears like last time)

I’m always torn about going to RWA and actually meeting authors I love. I was always afraid it might ruin that fourth wall and the fantasy. I want the stories and books to live in their own space and not be linked in my head to the person who wrote them.

The literacy signing was crazy this year! The room was huge and there were people everywhere. Bria Quinlan and I started from “A” and went alphabetically down the aisle, but after Tessa Dare sold out before Bria could get a book, we rushed straight over to Sherry Thomas. I managed to procure the second to last copy of His at Night. I was so giddy that Not Quite a Husband won the RITA for Best Historical Romance and I loved her acceptance speech.

Sherry told me she cried a bucket of tears while writing that book. I must have cried another bucket reading it. I haven’t felt so taken in by a story in a long time and I still have scenes from that book haunting me. We also got to chat a little bit about wuxia and Jin Yong. I was pleased. :)

Good Eats

I haven’t perfected Cindy Pon’s talent for photographing yummy food, but there was definitely plenty of it at the conference. Luckily, my personal trainer isn’t around. *looks left, looks right*

First up, I had afternoon tea at the Floridian with the Harlequin Historical authors and the editors from the UK. One look at the lobby told me that we were in the low-end Disney resort for the conference. The Dolphin is beautiful, but just take a look at the Floridian.

floridian

Anyone who knows me, knows that one of my favorite past times is afternoon tea. For this alone, I think I landed in the perfect publishing spot with Harlequin Historical!

tea_tray

I wish I took more pictures of the finger sandwiches and the little scones with cream, but I was sitting with my fellow authors and the HMB editors, so I tried to behave. Plus I was spending a lot of time eating.

Meet Ups

It’s hard to capture the spirit of all the random meet ups that are so special about conference. The main meeting place was the fountain in the lobby. I like this picture even though it’s fuzzy because it shows a couple of us all converging there, unplanned, unposed, all with probably different places to go. It also has some of my closest and long-time writing buddies Gwen Hayes and Bria Quinlan as well as romance divas December Gephart and Victoria Janssen.

meetup_at_fountain

For A Shy Gal, I Really Like an Audience

I was able to use my teaching background and share my lessons learned about querying and submission in “Selling the Hard Sell”. This was my first time presenting this particular talk, so I feel it went well based on the audience response. I was going up in the same time slot with Donald Maass and Brenda Novak, so I was grateful to have a decent showing. Big thanks to my CP Kristi for snapping this photo from the back.

hard_sell_workshop

The Dress for Historical Success costume workshop was pure fun. I learned so much about costuming throughout the many popular periods in historical romance and I got to strut my stuff in Tang Dynasty costume, a fantasy of mine since childhood. I’ve decided to offer the twin swords used in the workshop as a prize as part of my Sept/Oct release celebration.

I’m still gathering the photos and editing the video from the workshop, so this one is also going to have it’s own post. Just a preview of me in the lobby with swords in hand (sheathed) after the workshop:

tang_costume

Ruby-Slippered Sisterhood Rules!

One of the huge highlights of conference was catching up with the Ruby Sisters. In my excitement, I baked ruby slipper cookies the weekend before heading to Orlando:

ruby_slipper_cookies

Dinner was at Kouzzina on the Boardwalk. I showed up a bit late coming from the literacy signing, so I missed the group photo in the lobby. Doesn’t everyone look fabulous?

2010Ruby+Sisters_dinner3

And the gratuitous food shot. Kouzzina is Iron Chef Cat Cora’s restaurant. One entree would have been enough, but I had to go for the sampler: Greek lasagna, lamb burger and a spiced chicken with orzo. Every bite was fabulous! My drink was a special martini made with ouzo, also delicious.

kouzzinas_meal

So many great moments: Liz Talley and Addison Fox were signing for the first time. Jamie Michele was absolutely sweet, reminding us during rehearsal to give the envelope to the winner after announcing. She was the one who grabbed my envelope and gave it to me last year. Darynda Jones and Sara Ramsey and I sat at the same table for the GH/RITA awards and sipped champagne together while we cheered for this year’s finalists. And two more sisters, CJ Eernisse Chase and Elisa Beatty took home Golden Heart awards this year!

The Harlequin Party

harlequin_party_drink

I got in, got a ridiculously girly-looking martini glass, sat down, and looked around the beautiful room. Then I turned to Victoria Janssen and gushed, “It’s pretty awesome being a Harlequin author!” (See previous note about Jeannie not being able to play it cool.) Victoria replied in the fashion of, “Ah, young grasshopper…”

victoria_janssen

Fellow Ruby Sister Liz Talley (below), who writes for Superromance looked fabulous.

liz_and_jeannie_hqn_party

And I quite like this rather artistic photo of me with chaptermate Megan Kelly behind the roses. It’s actually the beginning of the night, so that’s not me passing out from exhaustion. I just always blink in photos.

jeannie_megan

My roomie and plus one, MG Braden, posed with Diva Dude Mike Myers for a photo.

mg_and_mike

I made a vow to try every dessert at the Harlequin party. I fulfilled that vow. I showed two of the most photogenic here, the Yule log style cake and the sorbet bar.

log_cake

sorbet_bar

We danced for hours and I nearly lost my voice from singing and shouting. (The source of my sultry microphone voice at the RITAs, if anyone was wondering.) Amanda Berry didn’t let recent hip surgery or a cane stop her from hitting the dance floor. And I must say, I think her electric slide was still better than mine. (That dance was the electric slide, right?)  I’d be in indebted to anyone who has a picture of Amanda dancing with her cane, by the way. Can’t keep a party girl down.

At the end of the night, I was a very happy, very sore grasshopper. My hip still hurts from dancing — maybe I’m doing it wrong?

RITA/Golden Heart Awards Ceremony

All dressed up….and I forgot my camera!! I presented the Golden Heart for Best Historical Romance this year and once again Kristi came through with a shot of me on the jumbotron.

jumbotron

The highlight of the ceremony had to be when bottles of Clicquot (get that? multiple bottles of champagne…the good stuff) appeared magically on the table, compliments of the general manager. The reason, of course, was that Roxanne St. Claire and Kresley Cole were sitting with us. Roxanne and Kresley are charming, gorgeous, talented and they must practice voodoo and possess magical powers.

champagne_at_rita

Kresley won the RITA for best paranormal romance for her book, Kiss of a Demon King. I asked to touch her RITA statue for good luck because I’m a dork like that. The photo here doesn’t do it justice. Sara was able to get a better one. The RITA really is so shiny and pretty. Maybe one day, if I work really, really hard…

rita_statue

After the ceremony, the Tuesday critique group was able to get together for a photo. Dawn had gone back to her room since she had a drive early the next morning, but here’s Shawntelle, me, Kristi, and Amanda.

after_awards

So that is it. Until New York, my friends!

23 Comments

Letter to an Aspiring Author

Filed in: blog | events | pitching | publishing | rwa    Tags: | | |

JUL

23

2010

5:49 pm

Dear Author,

Forgive me for this bout of sentimentality, but I’m a reflective sort of person. Last year, on this day, the Friday before RWA conference, I received a call on my cell phone while at work. Blithely, I called the number back when I had a break and found that it rang to the message machine of Harlequin Mills & Boon in the UK. An English accent never sounded more lovely!

The actual “Call” wouldn’t come for another several days. I had the weekend to stew, my agent had other editors to nudge, and after a little bit of this and a little bit of that, I sold Butterfly Swords five days later on Wednesday morning in Washington D.C. at RWA ’09.

It was an exciting conference for me, to sell right there among so many friends. I was also up for a Golden Heart award. Someone asked me if I still wanted to win even though I’d sold.

“Heck, yeah, I want it,” I said. “Winners always want the ball.” (Extra credit for anyone who can place that quote.)

You see, I’m absolutely awful at playing it cool and nonchalant. Some people try to downplay the possibility of disappointment by voicing their denials. I have as much self-doubt as the next person, but I’ve always been someone who fell on the side of saying, “Yes, I want it, I want it. Disappointment, I dare you to smack me in the face.”

Because can’t we all admit, we all WANT IT?

Neither approach affects the outcome. The Golden Heart scores were already tallied and that envelope was already sealed. But maybe the attitude does matter. Maybe just admitting your dreams proudly, as vulnerable as that makes you, affects you in little ways — affects your pen upon the page, trying just a little harder to pull out the words from inside you.

Anyway, it’s RWA time again. A bunch of authors, hopefuls, and the rest of Romancelandia will be converging on Orlando. I’ll be heading there and not blogging for the entire week.

This year, I’m presenting the Golden Heart award in the historical category and I just wanted to say to whoever the winner is going to be, and also to all the other writers who are pitching, networking, and waiting for “The Call”:

Aim high. Dream big. It can happen, it can happen, it can happen. Exactly as you dream.

You don’t have to play it cool.

Good luck.

- Jeannie Lin

4 Comments

The RWA conference cha-cha

Filed in: blog | events | rwa   

JUL

21

2010

9:00 am

I don’t think I’d be able to handle not going to RWA conference. This will be my fifth year going and it’s an addictive yearly ritual.

This year I’ve been dancing double time, though less concentrating on preparing a pitch and shopping for clothes. I feel like I’m going to really be a part of the conference this year. I’m presenting in two workshops and giving away the Golden Heart award in my category. I even loved stapling and folding all the excerpt booklets for Butterfly Swords by hand for the goody tables. It feels like an amazing journey from when I stumbled through conference five years ago in Atlanta, wet behind the ears and completely at a loss.

A bit of confession. I’ve probably spent the most time preparing for the Dress for Historical Success workshop — as my YouTube video can attest. I’ve practiced Tang Dynasty-esque hair dos that I can do on my own. And yesterday….tee hee…yesterday I put on my costume to practice walking in it. I also tried out the swords and couldn’t resist playing dress up and striking a few Wing Chun poses.

I felt like a kid playing in the yard with my brother and cousin Mary, pretending I was a wuxia heroine. (I’m alone at home, btw. Hubby is thankfully away on business so he doesn’t have to be subjected to this outlandish behavior.)

When I say it’s a dream come true to publish this book, I’m not just talking about the dream of being a writer. There’s so much more behind it. The movies we watched, the games we played, the endless TVB videos my grandmother would dub late into the night (illegal by the way…shh….)

I can’t stop smiling. I’m looking forward to every moment of RWA conference this year and, I must warn, there might be just a little bit of strutting when I’m in costume.

2 Comments

Video Blog: Preparing for RWA 2010

Filed in: blog | events | rwa    Tags: | | |

JUL

11

2010

7:47 pm

After multiple takes and hours of editing, I present to you my first video blog. Take a look at my preparations for RWA conference in Orlando this year, ANTM style.


28 Comments

Post-workshop wrap-up

Filed in: blog | events    Tags: | |

MAR

29

2010

6:17 am

I remember reflecting back on the NECRWA conference from 2009 and rejoicing how I didn’t have to pitch anymore. Now I could finally enjoy the conference!

How naive was I? I was tossing and turning all night before the workshop on Saturday and I was too keyed up to go to any of the workshop sessions before mine. Let me say, presenting is way more nerve-wracking than pitching to an editor or agent.

But it went extremely well! I happened to know my moderator, writer Mike Myers, from previous conferences and he did a fabulous job. The attendees were welcoming and interested. My only grave error was running out of handouts — I didn’t think more than 30 people would attend the talk considering MaryJanice Davidson was speaking at the same time.  Luckily I had extra excerpt booklets which I think worked out really well.

The actual talk was a bit of a blur for me. Adrenaline will do that to you. But I got through everything, had a couple of laughs, and hopefully gave some useful information. Many people approached me afterward and for the rest of the day to tell me they enjoyed the workshop, which is a good sign.

Lessons learned:

  • Breathe
  • There will be no sleep the night before a presentation. I need to come to terms with that.
  • More handouts! I thought 30 was an overestimate, but I should overestimate and tack on 10 more.
  • Do you know you can request moderators? I’m totally doing this from now on.
  • I also have a good idea now of what sort of questions will be raised and what parts I can narrow down or cut in the presentation for my shorter version at RWA national conference in July.

Next presentation is a panel this Friday at the Popular Culture Association conference in St. Louis. Thank goodness I have back-up from authors Crystal Jordan, Sela Carsen, and Amanda Berry for this one.

I just received a note from the workshop chairperson reminding us that the attendees there want a lot of time to ask questions. In other words, keep it short and simple gals. I’m very much okay with that. :)

2 Comments

Workshop in Framingham, MA on March 27

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

MAR

22

2010

10:49 am

I have my first speaking engagement this weekend in Massachusetts at the NECRWA conference. The workshop is titled, “Page 1, 5, 50 — Keeping Them Hooked” and is based on how I was using my contest and submission process to track the “red line of death”. I learn what was working to keep readers hooked from page to page.

I’m going by the old teaching adage of being overprepared. I have excerpt books printed with my first 10 pages to hand out. I also have an outline. I’m going to be bringing a couple of craft books — got to have props!  I’m even going to wear a watch like I did when I was a newbie since I no longer have my internal clock set to be able to feel out 50 minutes. It’s been a while since I’ve had a watch with cell phones and all.

The thing about teaching is no matter how much I’ve prepared, I’m absolutely jittery until that moment I’m standing in front of class. Then an hour just flies by. Right now, I’m a total nutcase. Just thinking about it sends the butterflies swirling in my stomach. This is odd when I consider that I’ve gotten in front of groups of people to present over a thousand times. It must be the adrenaline, that’s my story.

I should be updating my webpage with an Appearances section soon. My next talk is the week after. Just an author panel though at the PCA conference in St. Louis. So it begins!

4 Comments

« Previous PageNext Page »

 

Recent News

 

Recent Posts