I was thrilled to be interviewed by Kelly Jensen at SFCrowsnest, who also reviewed Beautiful Death. Check it out, and sign up for their free fantasy magazine!
Thank you to everyon at SFCrowsnest!
I was thrilled to be interviewed by Kelly Jensen at SFCrowsnest, who also reviewed Beautiful Death. Check it out, and sign up for their free fantasy magazine!
Thank you to everyon at SFCrowsnest!
I decided to be a hard ass with myself. No blog feeds in the morning until I hit at least 500 words. (Once I make that consistently, I’ll bump it to 1K. I know that’s doable–it’s just a matter of making it happen.) I did better this morning, only opening my e-mail briefly to contact my accountability partner, Jenna. (We e-mail each other in the morning when we “meet” Dark and Early with mini “goals” and then report back in aftewards to see if we made it.)
Anyway, I was doing really good until I decided to check my website stats, and then I e-mailed Deena about something…and before I knew it, I’d wasted another 15 minutes.
So tomorrow, I get to e-mail Jenna and that’s IT. Nothing else until I hit 500 words.
I did make the minimum word count this morning. The scene’s at 1592 words and almost done. I’m not sure where it’s going — it sort of morphed on me today. I’ll explore it a bit tonight and hopefully wrap things up.
Goals tonight:
Dee Tenorio is blogging about her Agent Quest over at Romancing the Blog. It’s an interesting angle to the Great Agent Hunt. So many blog entries, articles, and workshops have been dedicated to writing the perfect query, the dreaded synopsis, or all the research that we should do before querying, but few down-to-earth commentaries about agents are really out there. Maybe because we’re all trying to be too careful?
You just never know who’s reading that blog entry bemoaning two rejections received on the same day, or Nathan Bransford’s lightning fast response (I read someone had a rejection in 9 minutes), or another form rejection from Dream Agent, or whatever woe is common in the Great Agent Hunt. I know some agents I’ve queried have at least visited my website. So I’m not going to flap too much about specifics, and I know most people probably feel the same way.
This isn’t the first time I’ve hunted for an agent. Technically, I suppose it’s the third time. I queried both Rose and Beautiful Death before they were contracted by Drollerie. I actually had much better luck as far as requests went on Rose (thanks in large part, I think, to finaling in the Molly contest). Yet even though this is my third round on a new book, I haven’t hit 50 queries. Not even close. I’d have to do some digging, but I’m probably between 20-30 agent queries on three books total.
I know all the advice out there says to hit many targets. Always have 5-10 out at a time. That’s just not my style. I’ve been watching and listening for five years now. I pay attention when authors talk about their agents. I’ve read many agency blogs for years, all wonderful sources of information.
But I don’t read for query to-dos any more, or rejection horror stories, or what’s hot. I know what I write. I know my style. The trick is finding the agent that matches that style, who loves what I love just as much.
I’m studying communication styles and interaction. Is the agent hands on or off? E-mail savvy or snail? Slow to respond? I know an agent’s personna in public is very different from the private side her clients see, but true professionalism and love for Story come shining through, whether in interviews or in a blog post.
We’ve all heard tales of the towering mountains of slush our stories must shine through, but I think we should look at our own “slush” and do a little careful weeding. There are thousands of literary agents out there. Many of them are solid, good, dependable agents. That doesn’t mean they’re right for me.
A writer’s time is just as precious as the agents’. I work full time, have three monsters, and a mountain of laundry calling my name. I’ve got so many stories I want to write and time’s a wastin’. Every minute I’m querying an agent is a minute I can’t write. I’m sorry, I’m not going to wait around for 6-8 months on a simple query response, or worse, the no response camp. I had two of them on the last round. I know accidents happen, black holes suck up mail (even snail mail — one contest packet came back to me nearly a year overdue) all the time, but those agents are crossed off my list. Sorry.
My list is small. I try really hard to target stories correctly. Letters is much different from my “brand,” but I’d like an agent who can handle both spicy contemporary and romantic sff, so that narrows the list even more. I’m not querying just agents with an online presence — but I do “know” someone online who has worked with these agents in the past. Every round of queries I send out, I learn something new. I see which “hooks” attracted which agents. I record response times.
That’s not to say I’m afraid to take risks. I have queried a few agents on a lark, just to test the waters, so to speak. I used to do the contest circuit, trying to final in the “right” contest to get in front of Dream Agent or Dream Editor, but after one story propped someone’s desk up for three years…I decided to go the more direct route.
If all of my current packages come back as “no thanks,” then I’ll punt and go to plan B. I’ve punted before. Hopefully each time, though, I’m getting a little closer to the goal line.
P.S. It’s not surprise at all that the Great Agent Hunt = GAH. That’s exactly how I feel each and every time I see a response in the mail box, whether snail or electronic. GAH!!!
Well, this Revision Xibalba is grinding my bones to dust. It’s been really slow going but I’m hanging tough.
Yesterday, I didn’t quite break 500 words, but I did make it up and started a new scene. Today, ditto, only even less words so far. My mind is just not in the game. But it’s crucial here that I not let myself make up excuses or let another pretty shiny project steal me away. I know, if I keep working and meet the story every morning, things will eventually click and it’ll be full steam ahead.
It would help tremendously if I didn’t have any games on this computer! When the going is tough, it’s so much easier to let distractions rule. “Cooking Dash” is ever so much more fun than slogging through revisions!
I’ll report back tonight when I break 1K in this scene.
Update: squeaked up to 1050 words in this scene. I should be able to finish it tomorrow.
Our high speed cable is down again. The repairman is supposed to come by tomorrow morning (10-12). I keep hoping it’ll just magically come back up — no one else in our neighborhood is affected — but no luck. I’ve reset the #&*#& thing at least a dozen times.
Dial up for the Evil Day Job will not be fun!
Thanks to Dear Author, I stumbled across two new Science FIction Romance blogs.
They celebrated Science Fiction Romance Week with several great interviews and discussions. I especially enjoyed the Sound Off about SFR where they discussed various gripes and cliches. Amen for alien shapeshifters with super superpowers!!! (Sis, quit drooling over Charon.)
I hope you check them out!
I had two simple goals this morning.
Get up. (Don’t laugh.) Friday mornings are hard for me to do D&E. I made it, but only by going to bed before 10 last night. I didn’t watch Survivor because I was doing some stuff for the Evil Day Job. I didn’t watch the debate because I was putting the monsters to bed and then wrote a bit.
Write 500 words. (Again, don’t laugh.) I know 1K for a D&E session is more than doable, but for whatever reason, I’ve only been getting a few hundred words this week. New scene, new POV character, etc. all valid excuses, but come ON. I need some major wordage here.
I made both goals! Total scene length: 1676 and it’s finished.
I decided last night that I only get to do NaNoWriMo if I finish these revisions. I really don’t think I can get the whole book revised in a month. I need around 40K in new words and probably 15K of the existing draft needs some serious work. About 40K of it hasn’t even been edited once. *dies*
It sure would be lovely to participate again and get some nice wordage completed on Return to Shanhasson though… Dharman and Sal have begun to clamor along with Gregar now, which I suppose is only to be expected. After all, they really want to nag Shannari.
We’ll see. I really doubt it’s humanly possible to do a decent 2nd draft this month, but Sal is eagerly offering all sorts of assistance.
Up a bit earlier today. Combined with yesterday’s measly word count, I’ve got 847 words in the new scene. Just flying, I know.
However, this is the first scene in this new character’s POV and it’s also a new setting. I’ve had to figure out several things that I didn’t expect. Aspects of Laredo stymmied me until I decided to just wing it. Some interesting backstory came out for Quinn too that I didn’t expect. Some of it will likely get cut back in revision, but it’s good stuff to know.
I’ll update any additional progress on this entry.
Edited 9:19: You know, sometimes I’m not the sharpest tool in the shed. I had the most incredible backstory conflict screaming at me, just waiting for me to do something with it…and yet I almost missed it. Doh. I smoothed this morning’s scene and picked up this backstory undercurrent that totally drives this relationship up another notch.
Nothing like family betrayal to sweeten the pot.
I’m hoping to break 1K in this scene before heading to bed…
Oh, and I forgot to mention that I researched a bit more about the FBI and found an incredible news release from this past month that fits PERFECTLY with what I was hoping to build. I’m still a bit foggy on FBI procedure, especially involving international trafficking (e.g. from Mexico), but I think I can work my way around any technicalities.
Final word count today (total scene): 1144.
Not so much done for the Mayan Fantasy, unfortunately. I needed to research a good border town between Mexico/Texas and finally settled on Laredo because of I-35 heading straight to Dallas-Ft. Worth. I still don’t have a good picture in my head of Laredo. Has anyone been there? Can you tell me of a fairly disreputable area, perhaps along the Rio Grande? Warehouse district or something?
Other misc tasks accomplished tonight, in no particular order:
Here’s to an earlier rising tomorrow.
October is here and I’m in hell. Revision hell, that is, or since this is a Mayan Fantasy:
Revision Xibalba.
I’m not quite as prepared as I hoped, but the best laid plans, etc. etc. I have a pretty solid vision in my head for what I want to accomplish, although my daysheet is still incomplete. I do have all my hastily jotted note cards and my timelines. I plan to fill out the daysheet as I go, recording word count per scene.
I don’t know how much “new” blog content I can provide if I’m deep in ripping apart story, so I’ll try to plan a few easy things. I’ll scan Princess Monster’s illustrated story and put it up one page at a time. I’ve also got some oldies but goodies from the dead blog that I can repost.
I’ll also post RX updates here briefly but I doubt many will be interested in my little “400 words D&E – didn’t get up as early as I planned” sort of posts, but it keeps me honest. Those little notes also go to my accountability partner, Jenna, who meets me D&E.
My update today? Up but later than I planned and I did this blog entry, which cut into my time. (Note to self: set up blog entries the night before if possible.) I did edit the beginning of the new scene I started yesterday (340 words) and have some jotted notes from yesterday when I was waiting for the monsters at school. Hopefully I can sneak in some real words over lunch or tonight. I’ll post an end of the day count later.