Kaylee: So how many fell madly in love with you and wanted to take you away from all this? Inara: Just the one. I think I'm slipping.

'Serenity'


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.


deborah grabien - Aug 26, 2005 6:36:07 pm PDT #3759 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Susan's gonna partay!


Susan W. - Aug 26, 2005 6:46:37 pm PDT #3760 of 10001
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

They're going to be at CascadiaCon, which is mostly a fantasy convention, since both are kind of moving into historical paranormals, MJP especially. JB mentioned in her newsletter that if anyone was going to be there, let her know and she'd try to meet them. So I emailed her and said hi, you may know my name from the Beau Monde list, can't make the conference itself, but if you have any spare time outside of it, I'd love to meet you. And it went from there.

I'm already feeling tongue-tied over a week in advance. One of my CPs and I have been drafting query letters together, and the target market phrase we came up with for me was, "My work should appeal to fans of the character-driven romantic adventures of Jo Beverley and Mary Jo Putney, along with women who enjoy the military fiction of Patrick O'Brian and Bernard Cornwell." And I'm having breakfast with half those people! 2/3 of the living ones! Eek!


Nutty - Aug 27, 2005 1:20:22 pm PDT #3761 of 10001
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Susan, if it makes you feel any better, I was much less intimidated by Connie Willis once I saw her in person, because she is the literary embodiment of Julia Child [*], and who can be intimidated by Julia Child?

[* Gracious, aggressively intelligent, ready and willing to tell the only limerick she knew, which was about balls.]

erika, if it makes you feel any cooler, Peter Jennings was a two0finger typist to the end of his days, so he always had to look at the keyboard. Not to imply that looking at the keyboard is fatal; he is just the most famous two-finger keyboardist I know of, and is only dead by coincidence.


erikaj - Aug 27, 2005 1:45:57 pm PDT #3762 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Well, it did not hold him back very much at all, so I guess I'm not gonna worry about it. Although the death connection has made me picture a detective gazing over my lifeless form, being all "Lost art, the hunt-and-peck."


SailAweigh - Aug 27, 2005 1:57:12 pm PDT #3763 of 10001
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

erika, you need to write that! Maybe have Munch-n-Kay find a pretty blonde in a hotel like that. With a whiskey sour to the right and a .38 on the left, but it's not what killed her.


erikaj - Aug 27, 2005 5:28:23 pm PDT #3764 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Heh. I think the crime is affecting me, because this afternoon I saw on Food Network some show with "Nourish" in the title and I read it as "noirish" and I thought...never noticed much *cuisine* in those.


SailAweigh - Aug 27, 2005 5:34:35 pm PDT #3765 of 10001
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

never noticed much *cuisine* in those.

Yeah, I was real disappointed when I first watched the Naked Chef. Not what I was expecting at all. No guns, no hardboiled blondes, not even a dead naked chef! Just some goofy Brit, cooking. What a tease.


Topic!Cindy - Aug 29, 2005 3:30:14 am PDT #3766 of 10001
What is even happening?

ION, it looks like I'm going to be having breakfast with Jo Beverley and Mary Jo Putney on Labor Day. Someone remind me that authors I was reading for years before I decided to write myself aren't inherently any scarier than the other kind, because I'm all "Eek! What am I going to SAY?" even though I more or less started this myself by sending JB an email when I saw on her website that she's going to be in town for a con.

Dude, you could sleep over Deborah Freakin' Grabien's house at the drop of an email. Breakfast ain't no big thing.

I just got to see the starred PW review for Matty Groves, on the agreement that the early look = me not posting or forwarding it until Monday.

But DAYUM!

Just thought I'd remind you that it's Monday. I actually hope you're still sleeping, but once you're not, we are waiting.


deborah grabien - Aug 29, 2005 6:18:18 am PDT #3767 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Review. Starred.

In Grabien's third tale of ghostly detection (after 2004's The Famous Flower of Serving Men ), her most chillingly effective performance to date, folk singer Ringan Laine and his group, Broomfield Hill, have been invited to perform at the prestigious Callowen Arts Festival at Callowen House in Hampshire, England. Accompanied by his longtime lover, actress Penelope Wintercraft-Hawkes, Ringan sets off in high spirits, but quickly strange things begin to happen. Jane Castle, vocalist and flautist for the group, has unsettling nightmares in her bedroom, while Penny and Ringan are deeply disturbed by some ghostly presence in theirs. Penny, Ringan and the others embark on a desperate race to uncover the truth about a vicious and malevolent ghost that haunts Callowen House. As in previous entries, a folk song, "Matty Groves," provides clues. Grabien ratchets up the suspense steadily and implacably, and the resolution is deeply satisfying. Fans of Barbara Michaels's classic ghostly suspense stories will enjoy this immensely. Agent, Jennifer Jackson at DMLA . (Oct.)


Topic!Cindy - Aug 29, 2005 6:19:34 am PDT #3768 of 10001
What is even happening?

Wooohoooo!