Blog Without A Name

Five Minutes of Fame

Locus arrived today, and I find that Carousel Sun, by Sharon Lee, has landed the coveted fourth place (out of a possible five) in the Trade Paperback Bestseller List.  Thanks to everyone who made this possible!

While I was in town, I stopped at Framemakers and picked up the framed cover painting of Carousel Seas, which is out of reason gorgeous.  If I manage to get it hung up with its sisters this afternoon, I’ll post a picture of the entire happy family.

And that’s what’s doin’ in East Winslow.

Hope your Tuesday is swell.

Splinter Universe News

Steve has written here about our intentions and upcoming goodies for Splinter Universe.

For today’s goodies, we have an intro to “Code of Honor,” here.

The story itself is here.

And, if you haven’t read Alma Alexander’s Guest Story, “Leaving Via Callia,” here’s the link.

Read, enjoy; send the link to your friends so that they can read and enjoy, too!

 

. . .we now return you to your Regularly Scheduled Monday.

#SFWAPro

Books read in 2014

17.  Something Wicked This Way Comes, Ray Bradbury (re-read aloud w/Steve)
16. The Vanished Priestess, Meredith Blevins
15.  Nine Princes in Amber, Roger Zelazny (re-read aloud w/Steve)
14.  Code Name Verity, Elizabeth Wein
13.  Ghost Point, James A. Hetley, manuscript (read aloud w/Steve)
12.  Peacemaker, C.J. Cherryh (read aloud w/Steve)
11.  The Red Hot Empress, Meredith Blevins
10.  Hogfather, Terry Pratchett
9.  Black Widow: The Name of the Rose, Marjorie Liu, Daniel Acuna
8.  Agent of Change, Sharon Lee and Steve Miller (e)
7.  The Emperor’s Agent, Jo Graham (e)
6.  Eternity and a Day, Aline Hunter (e)
5.  Kindred Rites, Katharine Eliska Kimbriel (e)
4.  Billy the Kid, the Endless Ride, Michael Wallis
3.  The Steerswoman, Rosemary Kirstein (e)
2.  Uncovered, Jordan Matter
1.  Dancers Among Us, Jordan Matter

Books read in 2014

16. The Vanished Priestess, Meredith Blevins
15.  Nine Princes in Amber, Roger Zelazny (re-read aloud w/Steve)
14.  Code Name Verity, Elizabeth Wein
13.  Ghost Point, James A. Hetley, manuscript (read aloud w/Steve)
12.  Peacemaker, C.J. Cherryh (read aloud w/Steve)
11.  The Red Hot Empress, Meredith Blevins
10.  Hogfather, Terry Pratchett
9.  Black Widow: The Name of the Rose, Marjorie Liu, Daniel Acuna
8.  Agent of Change, Sharon Lee and Steve Miller (e)
7.  The Emperor’s Agent, Jo Graham (e)
6.  Eternity and a Day, Aline Hunter (e)
5.  Kindred Rites, Katharine Eliska Kimbriel (e)
4.  Billy the Kid, the Endless Ride, Michael Wallis
3.  The Steerswoman, Rosemary Kirstein (e)
2.  Uncovered, Jordan Matter
1.  Dancers Among Us, Jordan Matter

May Day underway

There are a couple of announcements before we get May Day underway.

First, there’s a brand-new, never-before-published Guest Story at Splinter Universe:  “Leaving Via Callia” by Alma Alexander.  Here’s your link to the story.  Please note:  The donation button at the bottom of the story goes directly to the author’s PayPal account.  If you want to show your appreciation for her work by donating, make sure you use that button.

Second Announcement:  Baen Books is proud to announce the inaugural Baen Fantasy Adventure Award, to be given at this year’s Gen Con to the best piece of original short fiction that captures the spirit and tradition of such great storytellers as Larry Correia, Robert E. Howard, Mercedes Lackey, Elizabeth Moon, Andre Norton, J.R.R. Tolkien, David Weber and Marion Zimmer Bradley.

You can get more information, including deadline for submissions, by clicking this link.  The award will be given at GenCon

In Cat Farm and Confusion Factory news:

Steve has an appointment with the vampires today; I have an appointment with the Road Boss on Surebleak.

Sprite has decided to become Vastly Silly, and be Afraid of her string.  This is at once amusing and frustrating, since, before yesterday, her string was her Treasure, her Precious, the Best. Toy. Ever.  I don’t know what it did to her when I wasn’t looking, but when I pick up the string to play with it, she runs and “hides” on the top cellar stair.  I do realize that she’s only 21 months old, and the Silly Goo hasn’t completely left her system, but I hope this phase passes quickly.

Also, she now occasionally answers to “Boopsie.”  Guess I better cut back. . .  OTOH, we do like them to answer to something.

And that’s all the news that’s fit to print from Central Maine, where it’s raining very gently.

All you folks who got Weather yesterday (including my friends in Maryland, who lost part of 26th Street in Charles Village to a massive sinkhole/landslide.  The pictures I saw showed a street-full of cars down on the railroad tracks.  I hope CSX has another way outta town, ’cause it didn’t look like that was going to get cleared out soon.) — how’re you doing?  Safe and dry?

* * *

Progress on One of Five
58,701/100,000
OR
59% completed

He shook his head. “Who names a planet Surebleak?”
She laughed.
“It was descriptive, surely?”
“Oh, surely; and still is. Until Mr. Brunner gets those weather satellites up and tuned, and even then, I fear we’ll only have graduated to Halfbleak.”

Hi-diddle-de-de, a writer’s life for me

In what may be the fastest flip in my own personal history, yesterday I wrote a story.

No, actually, that’s not true.

On. . .what was yesterday, Tuesday?

Right.

So. . .On Sunday, a story idea surfaced; nothing particularly new; I’d been meaning to get to a story kinda, sorta like it for a while now, but. . .press of other bidness, plus — no brain.  This time surfacing, the idea had more grit to it, which they do accumulate down there in writer’s stewpot.  I talked the new wrinkles over with Steve, and we brainstormed a little, mostly around the idea of how a certain thing could come into the hands of the main character — in fact, would it come into the hands of the main character — and in the course of that discussion, Steve came up with the shadow of a new character.  We proceeded to kick the new character around some, as we do; then went to bed.

At this point, I was still intending to write the story that had surfaced, oh, sometime in the next week.  Maybe working on the story in the morning, and the book in the evening.

But! On. . .Monday, it would be, as I was running errands, I bethought myself that the new character had quite the story, and! that this story and the surfaced story and, possibly, one more story that’s still hanging around at the edge of things, pretending like it doesn’t really want to be written, all hook together.  So, now instead of one story that I’m gonna get to realsoonnow, I have a triptych, the first section of which wants to be written right now.

After I’d finished up with the scene for the novel that I’d been working on, I outlined the first short story — thinking to buy some time, see?  Sometimes, if you give them an outline, they’ll hold off with the write me now!

Well, I found out that wasn’t going to work when, immediately upon finishing the outline, I opened a file and wrote the first 830 words.

And, yesterday, I wrote the other 5,167, which brings the entire first draft in at just a smidge under 6,000 words.

This is not a personal best, that remains the day I sat down and typed 25 pages — call it 6,250 words — of Agent of Change at one go.  Still, for me, it’s pretty quick.

So!  What happens now with the story is that it gets to rest until Saturday, when I’ll give it a cold read and  in the process find out what it’s about.  Steve and I will talk about it, and one of us will doubtless revise it.  Eventually — next week, or the week after — it will appear on Splinter Universe.

And this, boys and girls, is how stories are made.

Sometimes.

When you’re lucky.

PhilCon 2014 Flyer

Below is your link to the PhilCon 2014 flyer (in pdf), which includes pre-registration information.  You are invited to download it for your own use, and/or to make a bunch of copies to take with you to your next convention, or to give out at your local library, bookstore, or SFF club.

Thank you for your help and support!

Hope to see you at PhilCon!

Philcon 2014 flyer March

This is a catch-up post, including a Link of Interest

First of all, there’s been a scheduling change.  Due to my protracted and debilitating bout of depression, the delivery date for First of Five has been moved to September 2014.  (I’m telling the truth, here.  If the truth makes you uncomfortable, then please replace “depression” in the foregoing sentence with “illness,” and feel comfy again.  I had thought of using “illness,” but then I read this article in our local paper, and I realized all over again that mental health issues are never going to be dealt with on par with other serious illnesses as long as “depressed/bipolar=crazy, scary, and completely unreliable in every aspect of life, forever and always” is a convenient equation for lawyers, and that it falls to those of us who suffer from these illnesses to be truthful about it.)

Also!  I am behind on my email.  I think at this point it’s safe to say that I will never, ever in this lifetime catch up on my email.  If you have sent me something that I must deal with else Babies Will Die, please resend, and I will do my damnedest to cope.  If you have sent me something below that level of urgency, I thank you very much for your interest, and your care.

For those who have not seen the news, there is a new story up at Splinter Universe, “Roving Gambler.”  Here’s your link.  Also, “The Rifle’s First Wife” is still up, so read it while it’s free.  Here’s that link.

Fans of Jasmine Sprite, Princess of the Night, sometimes called both Bubbles and Boopsie, though she answers to nothing save the moople of the Trooper and the siren hiss of The String…Sprite went to see her fan club at the vet’s office yesterday.  She now weighs fifteen pounds, and enjoys robust good health.  The trip to the vet was necessitated by a drippy eye (she has had eye infections in the past, and we didn’t wish to Take a Chance).  An examination revealed that someone might have clocked her one (not impossible, given her. . .enthusiastic interest. . . in the lives and doings of all of her subjects, but most especially Scrabble, who is Endlessly Fascinating), or she came up against some other irritant.  There’s no scratch on the cornea, nor any infection.  She came home with Soothing Eye Drops, which she is astonishingly good about accepting, and the situation is improving already.

Fans of Mozart will wish to know that he continues to Take an Interest in the Daffodils, and will occasionally play a short game of Twizler from the comfort of his hammock, when he is awake, which isn’t very often.  He continues to require a regimen of Special Gooshy Food, which he is more than willing to share with Trooper, and which is kinda not the point of the exercise.  The grandcats continue to be very respectful of grandpa, checking in several times a day, and cleaning his ears and the top of his head for him, as required.

A Reader of Liad has undertaken to read all of the Liaden stories and novels extant to date, in order, and chat about them.  (Full disclosure:  Paul told me about his intention to pursue this project before he started and I was. . .appalled probably doesn’t overstate my reaction.  I have since taken a look at what he’s doing, now that the project is fully underway, and have adjusted my reaction from appalled to interested.)  If you are interested in reading along, or have insights to offer, or are just curious, the project is Reading LiadHere’s your link.

* * *

Progress on One of Five
57,004/100,000
OR
57% completed

He grinned, to show he got it, and offered a piece of street smart.
“Contracts’re made to be broken.”

Birds singin’ in the sycamore tree

So, we let the cats sleep in bed with us, if they want to.  Scrabble, as a rule, does not want to, though sometimes she’ll sleep on the chest at the bottom of the bed.  Back in her youth, she used to overnight pretty often on top of the bookcase by the bed, but the bookcase has gotten much higher since we first planted it there, and now Sprite spends part of the night aloft.

For the last decade or so, Mozart has been our steady date.  His preferred position is tucked between me and Steve, or on my shoulder with his nose under my chin (and his whiskers in my face, but I try to bear it with the fortitude appropriate to my station).  The addition of two new, and active, younger cats has changed the nighttime geography somewhat.  Mozart is usually in on the action from the time we turn out the light.  Trooper comes in sometime during the night, and will sleep on Steve’s ankle or knee, or shoulder, whatever’s available, after expressing his undying devotion to myself.  Sprite will be in the cat nest, overlooking all, though later in the night, she’ll descend to sleep on Trooper’s rump, or his head, or across his belly.

Now, according to Household Mythology, the cats who sleep with us provide the night’s dreams.  Dreaming is the profession of cats, and this is also why so many writers have cats; proximity helps us in the waking dream of writing.

So, last night, I had two dreams.  I’m not sure who to blame them on, but I don’t remember my dreams often, and these were vivid.

The first dream — or the first half of a very long dream, I’m not sure which — involved Kat Kimbriel, who had, as writers do ask other writers in Real Life, asked me to look over a letter her publisher wanted her to send out with advance copies of her new book, and also to critique the Tandoori Rice that she would be serving at her book launch (so, OK, we don’t usually do the Tandoori Rice). She mailed both to me, in Maine, from Texas.

I went over the letter, made some suggestions, tasted the Tandoori Rice with the help of a friend, noted down my comments, packed the whole package up again and mailed it to Texas.

Then, I went to Boskone.

Only to discover that Kat had come to Boskone, too.

“Oh, no!” I said.  “I mailed the letter and the rice back to Texas!”

“Oh,” she said, frowning.  “Did you wrap the rice in tin foil and put a freezer block in the package?  It should be OK, if you did.”

“Well, I didn’t,” I confessed.  “I’ll buy you some more, fresh.  You don’t want to poison your guests.”

And I left the con to go order Tandoori Rice so that I could mail it to Texas properly.

Now, somewhere between the con and the closest Indian restaurant, I lost my shirt.  It didn’t seem to bother me, and I explained to the guy at the restaurant what I needed and why.  He listened intently, gave me a shirt, and took me back to the kitchen, where he tore off a piece of brown paper, asked me questions about how many guests, drew a bunch of squares on the paper, and filled in each with a kind of food.

“OK,” he said.  “You need this much.  Seventy-five dollars.”

“That’s great,” I said, “but you need to pack it so that I can mail it to Texas.”

He sighed. “I’ll mail to Texas.  You give me address.”

Ends here Part One.

Part Two begins with the realization that Daav and Er Thom are also at Boskone, which is perhaps terrifying only to myself.  I met them in the lobby on my return, and the three of us left the con to walk out.  It seems that, since Daav was stuck in Boston, he was working on his Master Gardener’s certifications.  We walked down to a long, narrow slope of land that ended at a stream.  The thing was covered in gravel, and Daav talked about the native plants he was going to reintroduce, and about holding the soil and purifying the stream.  And he talked a little about his other projects, including a recovered vineyard (in Boston, so I assumed in the dream, and out), which had just produced its first wines.

He then pulled a bottle of red wine and a glass out of …his hat, I guess, poured and offered me a taste.

It was terrible, and I said so.

Whereupon, he threw away the red wine, leaving a coating of red on the inside of the glass; produced a bottle of white wine and poured it into the same glass.  And I thought, this is a test, right?

Nonetheless, I sipped, expecting it to be doubly awful.

“This is good!” I exclaimed.  “It tastes like oranges.”

“Does it?”  He took the glass and had a sip.  Eyebrows went up.  “This is quite pleasant.  Here, brother,” he says to Er Thom, offering the glass.  “Try.”

Er Thom gives him a look that says, I cannot BELIEVE you’re asking me to do this, but he takes the glass and has a sip, and his eyebrows go up.

“It is good,” he said.

And here the dream ended, because the cats, who giveth the dreams and taketh them away — specifically Mozart and Trooper — were having a discussion about who got to sleep with me now, and woke me up in the process.

Trooper was sitting by my knee, apparently thinking he was going to settle down against my stomach, but he hesitated too long, and Mozart marched in front of him, plopped down on my shoulder, stuck his nose under my chin and commenced into purring.  Loudly.  Trooper sat there, then he began to purr, too, and curled up next to my knees.

The combined purring put me to sleep, but if I dreamed any more during the remainder of the night, I don’t remember.

. . .and how did you sleep last night?