Tor.com put out a call for novella-length stories about time travel this month and I desperately wanted to submit something. I love time travel stories and this "story bunny" has been drifting around for years. But as I started writing the story, I realized that it was just a story--that it had a finite beginnin and a finite ending and there was no way I could stretch the story out to 20K novella length.
At the same time, I saw this cover on Book Cover Designer and realized it would be a perfect cover for the story. And though I'm really, really trying to increase my output of longer work, I decided that sometimes a story is just a story. So by the Fourth of July, I'll have Picnic by the Lake of Time out in the world. The cover was designed by Ntasja Hellenthal of Beyond Book Covers. Find her here.
Tuesday, June 28, 2016
Monday, June 27, 2016
Butterly Bones by Savanna Redman, a review
Amanda
thinks her life is fine—or at least as fine as it can be when she’s not
following her dream of being an artist and is instead advising clients on what
to do with their money. She thinks that that her life is fine except that she
can’t seem to make her husband happy, and on top of that…she’s having
premonition dreams. Her life is fine but she doesn’t have those dreams unless
her life is a mess. And soon enough, real life catches up with her dreams.
BUTTERFLY
BONES is a terrific novel about dreams, both literal and metaphorical. It is
about a complicated woman living a complicated life. The genre straddles the
line between chick lit and lit fic with a dash of paranormal thrown in and
Savanna Redman makes it all work because her writing is just that good.
For one
thing, from the opening page as Amanda experiences a lucid dream, we’re thrown
into a multi-sensory world, seeing the shadow of black branches against a
violet sky, hearing the buzz of insects, smelling the scent of honeysuckle,
feeling the chill of cold dew om our bare feet. And from the first pages we
also know that Savanna may long for a normal life but she is ANYTHING but
normal.
A Shakespeare Mystery
This si the first in a series so if it's good, there are a few more where it came from. I look forward to reading this book and am also recommending it to my mystrey book club.
Sunday, June 26, 2016
Another Cover Reveal!
Over at the Book Cover Designer, they're' going into their last week of a fabulous 20 percent off sale. (A new coupon will generate tonight at midnight PDT.) I've bought a number of covers for upcoming projects and still have a pretty long "wish list."
I always try to steer my indie author clients toward BCD because they have a wide range of designers who offer covers for as low as $20. (They also have a few that are inexplicably in the $300 price range without, IMHO being worth it, but eye of the beholder and so forth.)
Later this year I have a whole series of novelettes coming out that are basically retellings of Shakespeare tales with a romantic/gothic gloss. Island of Magic (Tempest meets Beauty and the Beast), Cry, Little Sister (Hamlet), and two as-yet-untitled stories based on Othello and Macbeth.
This is the cover for Cry, Little Sister, my retelling of Hamlet from Ophelia's point of view. I liked the cover because I haven't seen the model, who is lovely, all over the stock photo libraries. The cover was designed by Serena Daphn.
I always try to steer my indie author clients toward BCD because they have a wide range of designers who offer covers for as low as $20. (They also have a few that are inexplicably in the $300 price range without, IMHO being worth it, but eye of the beholder and so forth.)
Later this year I have a whole series of novelettes coming out that are basically retellings of Shakespeare tales with a romantic/gothic gloss. Island of Magic (Tempest meets Beauty and the Beast), Cry, Little Sister (Hamlet), and two as-yet-untitled stories based on Othello and Macbeth.
This is the cover for Cry, Little Sister, my retelling of Hamlet from Ophelia's point of view. I liked the cover because I haven't seen the model, who is lovely, all over the stock photo libraries. The cover was designed by Serena Daphn.
Labels:
Book Cover Designer,
Hamlet,
Macbeth,
Othello,
Serena Daphn,
Shakespeare,
Tempest
Shakespeare Sunday quote
I've said before that the Taming of the Shrew is not my favorite Shakespeare play. And I was not much of a huge fan of the Heath Ledger, Julia Stiles version (10 Things I Hate About You) either. But I started thinking about it and realized that in many ways, the character of Petruchio was an outlier, a template for any number of "alpha-hole" romance novel heroes who are just nasty to the women who eventually come to love them. Sigh. It's all Will's fault!
Here's a Sunday quote from the play.
Here's a Sunday quote from the play.
Friday, June 24, 2016
A retelling of Swan Lake
I admit this book caught my eye when it came up in the "also boughts" section for Bride of the Midnight King. I'm always interested in fairy tale retellings, and especially interested when writers venture away from the same three or four stories that get told over and over. (Beauty and the Beast, I'm looking at you!)
I've never actually seen Swan Lake performend; probably the closest is watching Black Swan, but the story really does have all the elements. This one goes on the TBR pile.
I've never actually seen Swan Lake performend; probably the closest is watching Black Swan, but the story really does have all the elements. This one goes on the TBR pile.
Thursday, June 23, 2016
Another for the TBR list: Wake of Vultures
I don't usually read reviews when I'm deciding to read a book or not. Reviews are subjective and I know there are lots of books that I've loved that have not sold well. And I was not a big fan of Gone Girl, even though the book has thousands of reviews.
But I was reading a review of a friend's book and curious about the reviewer. This book came up in his "reviewed list" and he was SO enthusiastic about the urban fantasy that I have to check out Wake of Vultures.
But I was reading a review of a friend's book and curious about the reviewer. This book came up in his "reviewed list" and he was SO enthusiastic about the urban fantasy that I have to check out Wake of Vultures.
Labels:
Gone Girl,
Urban Fantasy,
Wake of Vultures
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