Now, this would be the perfect time for a swear word.

Kaylee ,'Jaynestown'


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 31, 2005 10:09:22 am PDT #3796 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

BWAH! I like "remove from your lexicon".


Amy - Aug 31, 2005 10:13:45 am PDT #3797 of 10001
Because books.

"You wish" made me giggle.


erikaj - Aug 31, 2005 10:14:09 am PDT #3798 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

"Please revisit your politics," is my favorite, followed closely by "Add expletive for emphasis." Go ahead. Act surprised. Has anyone seen my muse? She seems to have pissed off.


Anne W. - Aug 31, 2005 10:19:15 am PDT #3799 of 10001
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

"Delete--no one cares" is one I could use from time to time.


deborah grabien - Aug 31, 2005 10:53:00 am PDT #3800 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Still snickering....


Connie Neil - Aug 31, 2005 5:17:09 pm PDT #3801 of 10001
brillig

Want to write! Must finish moving! Want to write!


deborah grabien - Aug 31, 2005 5:21:34 pm PDT #3802 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Am writing. Am being Pain In The Arse Holy Martyr: not allowing myself to work on "London Calling" book three Kinkaid until I finish "Cruel Sister."

Damn it. At not quite 39,000 words, a bit over halfway.

But R&RNF and the long-form synopses for both Kinkaid books went out to Lyssa Keusch at Avon Morrow today, as she requested.

Speaking of which, did I post those synopses here? I forget.


Amy - Aug 31, 2005 5:22:19 pm PDT #3803 of 10001
Because books.

I think you only posted them in LJ, Deb, but I might be forgetting.


deborah grabien - Aug 31, 2005 5:27:37 pm PDT #3804 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

I think the synopses are okay to post; now that the first two books are done, and are about to be looked at by the nice editor lady, I can ease off some of the lockdown.

In two parts:

ROCK & ROLL NEVER FORGETS: A SYNOPSIS

When JP Kinkaid, aging guitarist for long-lived megastar rock band Blacklight, comes off the road from the European leg of Blacklight's current sold-out tour, he doesn't know that his past, his present and his future are about to collide.

His first morning home in San Francisco, trying to recover from a post-tour exacerbation of his multiple sclerosis, JP gets a phone call from Blacklight's LA publicist. She's got word that a sleazy biographer named Perry Dillon is planning a detailed history and biography of Blacklight.

This is very bad news for the entire band, but JP and his much younger lover of 25 years, Bree Godwin, have special cause to worry. Dillon, famous for his celebrity hatchet jobs, seems to have an uncanny knack of digging up things anyone in their right mind would rather keep buried. And in the case of JP and Bree - the private, fiercely protective girl he fell in love with when she was still a teenager - this means not only secrets that JP and Bree have kept buried for years, but a few that Bree has never shared with him. JP's history with Bree is a strange story, made stranger by the fact that JP is still legally married to Priscilla, the obsessive, ambitious woman he met and married in 1973. As deep and as strong as JP and Bree's relationship is, he's never been able to fully let go of Cilla. And to Cilla, still being able to call herself the wife of a world-famous rock and roller has always been a matter of life and death.

Leaving a balking Bree in San Francisco, JP flies down to LA for a one-hour interview with Perry Dillon. During that interview, JP slips up - and gives away a piece of information, the answer to a question Dillon shouldn't have had the background info to ask in the first place. Worried, he confesses the mistake to Bree. She surprises him by shrugging it off, and agreeing to come on the American leg of Blacklight’s tour, less than a month away. Since Bree is obsessive about staying as invisible as possible in JP's professional life, he's as surprised as he is pleased..

Perry Dillon is told, through Blacklight's management, that his conversation with JP is the only contact he's going to be permitted while the band's on tour. He's officially barred from backstage access at any show. The tour opens at Madison Square Garden, to thunderous applause. But when it's time for the encore, the wings onstage at the Garden are as full of police as they are of family and guests of the band.

Perry Dillon has been found dead backstage. He's been bashed across the throat with one of JP's guitar stands. He was killed in JP's dressing room. And Bree, who has been acting in ways that are highly unusual for her, was the one who found the body.


deborah grabien - Aug 31, 2005 5:28:10 pm PDT #3805 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

part two:

As Lieutenant Patrick Ormand of NYPD Homicide digs deeper into Perry Dillon's world, JP realises that Ormand's prime suspect is Bree. And as deeply as he loves her, he can't shake his own suspicion, that her deep protective streak, her desire to keep the world away from him, may have led her to do something that could get her taken away from him forever.

During the course of the investigation - which parallels the first half of Blacklight's tour - facts begin to emerge. JP has a near-fatal heart attack after Blacklight's Boston show, and comes out of the anaesthetic to find that Ormand wants to know why Perry Dillon's cell phone records show two phone calls to Bree. While she denies ever having spoken to Perry Dillon, it's obvious to JP - who knows her - that, while she's telling the truth about that, she's also hiding something. After Blacklight's Philly show, Ormand asks JP to come to NY and listen to some sound files from Perry Dillon's New York computer. JP is floored to hear Dillon referencing incidents that show he must have had some insider sources.

The tension comes to a high point of when Bree disappears from Blacklight's Miami show, in the middle of the concert. JP learns that she got a mysterious phone call, hurried back to the hotel, and headed to NYC - taking half of JP's prescription meds with her. And while she calls him to let him know she's safe, she won't tell him where she is, what she's doing, or why. For twenty-five years, she's displayed perfect loyalty to JP, sometimes to both their cost. Now she needs some of that loyalty and trust back from him - and he can't question her.

As the clock ticks down, the story becomes clear to both JP and Ormand. JP realises that he's going to have to do something to keep Bree out of prison, or possibly even off death row. And when he gets a phone call that puts the key to the situation in his hands, he must choreograph an intricate dance of timing and location, in a race to get Bree - and himself - home free.

Rock & Roll Never Forgets, with its themes of loyalty, protectiveness and trust, is the first book in the Kinkaid Chronicles, rock and roll mysteries that give the reader an all-access backstage pass to how musicians work, live, and love.