Everyone's getting spanked but me.

Willow ,'The Killer In Me'


The Great Write Way  

A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.


Nilly - Sep 21, 2003 12:25:05 am PDT #1950 of 10001
Swouncing

It is charming, in all senses of the word, but also a meditation on love and eternity and all the lives that have been lived, for good or ill, in fields and cottages far from History's main roads."

Like others before me posted, the best part of this is that it's so true. Deb, I'm happy for you from afar.

t /delurking in a thread I like to read and have nothing to contribute in, once again


Beverly - Sep 21, 2003 5:51:19 am PDT #1951 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

Read and backflung, Deb. Ooooh!


deborah grabien - Sep 21, 2003 8:14:06 am PDT #1952 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Thanks, all. I am starting out my catering day from hell on a very nice note.

My email Friday night to Ruth (my editor at St. Martins) comes first, then her resonse:

Excuse an extremely unladylike crow of delight, but:

WHOOOOHOOOO!

Just got a call back from Ed Kaufman at M is for > Mystery. Have a look at the Authors Events listing, which is quite impressive:

[link]

Ed read Weaver earlier this week, and he would *love* (emphasis his, not mine) for me to come and do a reading/signing at M is for Mystery. We're going to set it up. He's out of town until 30 September, but will call me right after he gets back to arrange it.

So, colour me stoked.

cheers, Deb

---

Cheers, indeed. I think you should write a sequel to How to Win Friends and Influence People called "I Did it all With a Book!" This all bodes very well for the series.
---

I am reeeeeeally pleased.


Astarte - Sep 21, 2003 8:19:12 am PDT #1953 of 10001
Not having has never been the thing I've regretted most in my life. Not trying is.

As well you should be. Fantastic company you're keeping.

I'm so pleased for you, Deb. YAY!!!


deborah grabien - Sep 21, 2003 8:21:28 am PDT #1954 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Heh. I hadn't told her about them wanting to host the book launch party. I just did.

Lalalalala, "all bodes very well for the series" lalalala.

Taking off writer hat and putting on caterer's hat. Today is huge party I'm being paid to do, and I gots to go. Good days to one and all.


Beverly - Sep 21, 2003 8:25:07 am PDT #1955 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

Cook well, Deb. And yay for the mystery bookstore's reception, and your editor's reaction.

And for the decided upgrade in price and a home for the series! WooHoo!


erikaj - Sep 21, 2003 11:48:27 am PDT #1956 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

I wrote this as I thought of it, didn't edit at all, so it needs betas. And it's not finished: WHY I GOT MY TATTOO(it needs a title, too) When I was a little girl, the current mainstream tattooing trend hadn't started yet. But every once in a while, I'd see a guy wearing a home- or jail-inked one.They were usually greenish, and I was not allowed to ask about them, ever. Kind of like other people and my chair(but people always asked, anyway) But I wouldn't, because even though I was very curious, I was the kind of girl who didn't like to hurt people's feelings. I wondered why somebody would get something others would have to be stopped from staring at. I would give mine up in a minute.
In the 1990s, the first tattoos start showing up at my high school.Only the wilder kids from the class I call idiot math, and the people in the back in newspaper that get mad when they are not allowed to write about local bands or hemp have them.Or maybe I just don't see ankles and backs in AP history or Accelerated English. We are learning How To Make Good Impressions. I wear pink sweaters and end sentences as questions a lot. I'm convinced that my disability will only be a minor roadblock to my success, but I never even ask, because that will break my unwritten rule against talking about it, which I do in the classroom four times in three years. The fourth year I leave it in the offices of either the vocational counselor or the Occupational therapist, two nice but very vague people who forget who I am every week.I decide tattoos are not very responsible and look down on people that have them. _More-


erikaj - Sep 21, 2003 12:10:41 pm PDT #1957 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

I finally move out of my parents' house when I am nineteen.Yay, Freedom, right? Not exactly. I'm now living in a "licensed setting" so I can learn "independent living skills." So I try to learn them, from people who make out on the overnight shift, and eat tacos left in their cars overnight. But when they are with me, they are paid to recreate a place I think of as "America 1954". Where everybody likes meat with their breakfast, June Cleaver keeps surfaces clutter-free, and women like to be called "ladies".
I try to resist but the acculturation is too strong. Maybe the fact that they pay the electric bill does mean they can tell me to get a haircut. I keep my hair long and shaggy for a year. I hate it, but they hate it more.My body is not my body, just something on somebody's checklist. I barely care enough to pick my clothes. What's the difference? It's just the same old me in there. The few funky or low-cut things stay buried in the closet...they are not appropriate. And it important for us to look "appropriate" in the "community" so that we reflect well on the program. The fact that the staff smell like taverns sometimes is not part of this discussion, because that's personal. Getting personal with me is "furthering an independent-living goal." So someone is always there to tell me if my bra fits or I need to shave more often. I already think I live in the community...there it is, right outside my door, full of fat women in tube tops and students in Manson t-shirts.


Beverly - Sep 21, 2003 12:14:10 pm PDT #1958 of 10001
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

erika, this is so powerful. Get it down, all you can, then it can be edited just a tiny bit. But wow. Bite. And truth, and clear sight.


erikaj - Sep 21, 2003 12:18:23 pm PDT #1959 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Thanks. I know it needs work, my internal editor hasn't even seen it yet. But I'm glad there's good stuff in it.