I did! It's Die for Love.
The Great Write Way, Chapter Two: Twice upon a time...
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
I've read it, too, Fay, and there's a sequelish thing called "Naked Once More." Though I'm very often tempted to smack Jaqueline.
Yes! I read Naked Once More too. I liked these two books much more than the couple of Vicky Bliss stories I've attempted. Although not quite as much as the Amelia Peabody ones.
I like Vicky more than Jacqueline, because Vicky doesn't strike me as being as arrogant. Plus Vicky's got that sincere "I am so sick of being a six-foot blonde Valkyrie, I want to be tiny!" thing. And, of course, John and Schmidt. "Night Train to Memphis" was fun.
Huh. Thought for a moment there I'd wandered into Literary....
Susan, I thought Crusie's letter about the awards clusterfuck - the tack she took, the points she made - was one of the most perfect things I've seen in years. What a mess.
At a cost of roughly $25,000 in Pentagon research grants, 15 elite scientists from across the country are being taught how to write and sell screenplays. [link]
Tomorrow morning is going to be interesting; I've got a Mystery Writers of America special breakfast for the NorCal membership, and the guest speaker is Lyssa Keusch, Senior Editor at Avon/Morrow HarperCollins.
She's going to be allowing a series of mini-pitches. I've just left Jenn a message: if I get the opportunity, should I pitch the Kinkaid Chronicles?
Then dinner with Sparky and Lee and JohnSweden tomorrow night. It's going to be a fun, fun day.
Is Sandra coming out this weekend, Deb?
Next weekend - I'm going down to San Diego, we will hang out all day and all of the night Saturday at the hotel. Sunday, I get to spend the entire day with Cass - my flight back isn't until eight.
I'm soooooooooo looking forward to this. Dying to meet Sandra, dying to see Cass. Woot!
And bringing prosecco for both.
Lyssa Keusch was the first person I ever pitched to, back at the 2003 Emerald City Writers Conference. My first-time jitters were so bad I don't remember a lot of details, but I do recall that she asked cogent questions about everyone's pitches (this was a group session with 5-6 people), and had people send partials as long as they were at all in line with what her house published.