This is the summer I finally get all the bits and pieces of writing up and out there. Joy Sillesen of Indie Author Services has created a great new cover for me as I collect all the L.A. Nocturne stories and add them to new ones as a "teaser" for my Misbegotten novel. (Urban Fantasy, set in L.A. There are vampires and werewolves and shapeshifters but no chicks with swords or tramp stamps.)
Saturday, May 30, 2015
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Tanith Lee 1947-2015
One of the people reviewing my book Bride of the Midnight King compared my prose to Tanith Lee's. I could not have asked for higher praise. I discovered her through the Science Fiction/Fantasy book club, picking up the two novella book--Sabella, or the Blood Stone and Companions on the Road as one of my freebie choices.
I LOVED her writing.
So I immediately went in search f other books she'd written. Even then, she had a slew of titles in her backlist and by the time I'd gone through them, she'd written about ten more. (With Stephen King and Tanith Lee on my list of go-to authors, I never had to worry about not having anything to read.)
Except, now she's dead at 67 and there won't ever be any more of her gorgeous dark fantasies, the words piled up on each other like oil pigments, so thick and luscious it was a multi-sensual experience reading her books.
RIP Tanith.
I LOVED her writing.
So I immediately went in search f other books she'd written. Even then, she had a slew of titles in her backlist and by the time I'd gone through them, she'd written about ten more. (With Stephen King and Tanith Lee on my list of go-to authors, I never had to worry about not having anything to read.)
Except, now she's dead at 67 and there won't ever be any more of her gorgeous dark fantasies, the words piled up on each other like oil pigments, so thick and luscious it was a multi-sensual experience reading her books.
RIP Tanith.
Labels:
Companions on the Road,
Sabella,
Stephen King,
Tanith Lee
Sunday, May 24, 2015
Introducing: Mickey Cozart--cozy sleuth
One of the reasons I moved from L.A. is that I wanted more time to write. Now that I've been herein Bellingham six months, I've been able to go through my pending projects and start getting them into shape. Joy Sillesen of Indie Author Services has been helping me with that--providing covers and formatting and other assistance. Check out Indie Author Services here.
I've been writing a lot of fantasy lately, which is fun, but my heart will always belong to mysteries. This is the first of what I envision as a three-book series about Mickey Cozart, a woman of a certain age whose best friend is an actress making the awkward transition from leading lady to character actress. (She keeps losing parts to Glenn Close.) She has a daughter whose best friend is a gay man who works as a production designer on a "pretty people" show on the CW. Mickey--which was my mother's nickname--is a no-nonsense type who was widowed early. She met her husband when she was waitressing at a pie place near JPL where he worked. He was 20 years older. He died when she was 37 and she still misses him, even though she has a full life. But there's this cop...
I have been working on this book on and off for a few years. Some of it even got written longhand during the hours I was sitting at the eye clinic waiting for the monthly shots of Lucentis to wear off. (And wasn't it a treat tramscribing those scribbles?) Unlike a LOT of the stuff I write, this is a book I think my mother would have enjoyed. I hope so anyway. It'll be out this summer. Finally.
I've been writing a lot of fantasy lately, which is fun, but my heart will always belong to mysteries. This is the first of what I envision as a three-book series about Mickey Cozart, a woman of a certain age whose best friend is an actress making the awkward transition from leading lady to character actress. (She keeps losing parts to Glenn Close.) She has a daughter whose best friend is a gay man who works as a production designer on a "pretty people" show on the CW. Mickey--which was my mother's nickname--is a no-nonsense type who was widowed early. She met her husband when she was waitressing at a pie place near JPL where he worked. He was 20 years older. He died when she was 37 and she still misses him, even though she has a full life. But there's this cop...
I have been working on this book on and off for a few years. Some of it even got written longhand during the hours I was sitting at the eye clinic waiting for the monthly shots of Lucentis to wear off. (And wasn't it a treat tramscribing those scribbles?) Unlike a LOT of the stuff I write, this is a book I think my mother would have enjoyed. I hope so anyway. It'll be out this summer. Finally.
Labels:
cozy mystery,
Indie Author Services,
JPL
Saturday, May 23, 2015
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Masterclass with James Patterson
As you know, I habitually cruise Craigslist looking for jobs and gigs. I'm on there enough that I've seen the same scams posted over and over ("Quick, fast writing gig") and noted the emergence of the phony Yelp rating business and marveled at the unbelievable gall of people who are trolling for people to exploit. But I've also made about 50 percent of my income from CL ads in the last eight years and among the gigs I scored was one beta-testing this MASTERCLASS WITH JAMES PATTERSON.
Yes, I was paid to take a class (complete iwth workbooks and assignments) that is being offered to the public for $90. the "lessons" are edited from a series of interviews and in them Patterson takes his "students" through his process--from getting ideas (one of the lessons I found most engaging) to marketing. Along the way he tells some engaging stories.
You might want to check it out. Here's more information on the people behind the Masterclass concept.
Yes, I was paid to take a class (complete iwth workbooks and assignments) that is being offered to the public for $90. the "lessons" are edited from a series of interviews and in them Patterson takes his "students" through his process--from getting ideas (one of the lessons I found most engaging) to marketing. Along the way he tells some engaging stories.
You might want to check it out. Here's more information on the people behind the Masterclass concept.
Labels:
James Patterson,
Masterclass,
writing lessons
Saturday, May 9, 2015
Blood Ties by Nicholas Gjuild
My review of Nicholas Guild's Blood Ties is live over at Criminal Element. In it I ponder sexism in crime fiction and note that in a book written by a guy, the women are strong and dimensional. And just saying that seems sexist to me. But I have gotten awfully tired of seeing women crime writers ignored or shuffled to the side or marginalized or dismissed or ignored. But I'm repeating myself. I enjoyed Blood Ties and wouldn't mind seeing more in the series.
Labels:
Blood Ties,
Criminal Element,
mystery fiction,
Nicholas Guild
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
REVIEW The Devil's Making by Sean Haldane
The Devil's Making by Sean Haldane--a review
Darwin and
the edge of the Empire
Amateur
naturalist Chad Hobbes—the atheist son of a preacher—has come to the colony of
British Columbia to learn a bit about life before he settles down to a life as
a lawyer. Unfortunately for Chad, he’s just missed the Gold Rush, which means
that nobody in Vancouver or nearby Victoria really needs a lawyer. But what
they do need is a policeman. The wilderness settlement has several police
officers but none with Hobbes’ particular set of skills. The idea of being a
“peeler” appeals to Hobbes and he’s soon thrust into the heart of a murder
mystery that has racial and colonial implications.
Hobbes is
fascinated by his duties and dutifully records everything he observes in a
leather-bound journal his mother gave him before he left home. There’s plenty
to observe. Elections are pending and one of the questions is whether B.C. will
become part of America. Passions run high on both sides of the question but not
as high as when an American “alienist” is found dead and the most likely
suspect is a medicine man.
Sean
Haldane’s novel transcends genre here with its literate (but never ponderously
literary) style and the sharp observations on everything from class to
vegetation. (Hobbes is fascinated by the quality of blue in the sky, so
different from the English sky back home.)
Fans of
historical mysteries are in for a treat with this book.
Labels:
historical mystery,
Sean Haldane,
The Devil's Making
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