Posted on Leave a comment

Fess Up Monday

Originally published at Joely Sue Burkhart. You can comment here or there.

Yeah, I know it’s late. My schedule is all messed up now that summer school is out. Keeping the kids occupied with their various trips, etc. will be crazy for the next six weeks.

As far as writing, it’s not going so hot. I didn’t plan on June being a heavy month, so I guess that’s okay that I haven’t gotten much done this month. I do need to finish up the NSR revisions, though, just in case, and it needs a TON of work. Plus I’m getting a lot of pressure from That Man to move. Yeah. Needless to say, I’m a little bit crazy right now and none of it for a good reason.

I have been reading quite a bit, though. I’m working through Holly Lisle’s The Ruby Key, which I’m enjoying, and I also have Patti O’Shea’s latest book on my pile, as well as a sneak peak at S.L. Viehl’s Omega Games, which I’m dying to read but I’m sort of afraid to, if you know what I mean. (If I take one peek at it, I’ll have to read it straight through and nothing else will get done until I finish the book!!!) Also, her latest Darkyn book comes out in a few weeks, so stay tuned for another giveaway!

I have Thursday and Friday off (That Man’s having some minor out patient surgery) so I’m hoping to do a little mini challenge or something to spark my revisions. If anyone wants to participate with some kind of “revision hell” or whatever, shout it out!

Posted on Leave a comment

Exhausted

Originally published at Joely Sue Burkhart. You can comment here or there.

Today was a massive cleaning day. Let me tell you, I’ve never seen bigger slobs than my family. Gah. And spoiled!!! I went through several containers of toys that we’d put in the garage because we didn’t have room in the house. We ended up making two trips to the storage unit, and I’m ashamed to say how much junk we’ll be throwing out. Some of that stuff we hadn’t touched in the two years we’ve lived here, so it was time to toss or donate it, if I can find someone to take it.

Meanwhile, of course, the laundry’s going, and we went and got groceries and had to put them away, which meant I ended up cleaning the pantry too. I guess I’m just in the declutter mode, and I’d better do it while I’m in the mood!

e.g. I’m not neck-deep in writing!

I even took 5 grocery bags of books to the used book store this past week, and I’ve got another sack of DVDs to sell, if I can find a place to take them. Now if I could only declutter my brain at the same time…!

Posted on Leave a comment

Teaching a Butterfly to Fly

Originally published at Joely Sue Burkhart. You can comment here or there.

Continuing the story behind Beautiful Death

Have you ever wondered what it feels like to be a caterpillar wrapped tight in darkness? Trapped in that chrysalis, it must wonder if the dawn will ever come, or if darkness and death are all that’s left.

I found myself in a chrysalis with Beautiful Death, and I almost didn’t crawl out of it.

I’m nearly 5 years old as a writer. In the fall of 2003, I wrote two full-length novels that went on to become The Rose of Shanhasson and Road to Shanhasson. The first novels I completed after tinkering for years. Yet they were definitely freshman attempts: raw, silly, and immature. I started learning about the craft of writing, I entered some contests, and even sold two short stories in 2004. In the summer of 2004, I rewrote Rose from scratch again and it had some success in RWA contests that summer. Dorchester even requested the complete of it and I had such huge hopes.

Yet I was teetering on a dangerous slope and didn’t even know it. The waiting game is agonizing at the best of times, and I’d set such high expectations on that beloved story. In the months that followed, I day-dreamed while I began the rewrite of the next book, but month after month went by with no word from NY. I kept writing, but I hesitated to finish that second book until I had an answer on the first. Reading that beloved ms, I felt that something was still missing — but I had no idea how to fix it. My brain tried to reason that it must not be so bad if the full had been requested, but my heart insisted the story wasn’t RIGHT. Not yet.

I started an entirely new book and tried to apply all the theory of writing craft I’d been learning…and that book sucked bracken swamp water. Dismayed, I tried to return to my old beloved world and finish the rewrite of the second book in the series, but I was stalled, badly, with no idea how to proceed. How could I keep going with no answer? When I knew something was wrong?

Other than the first rewrite of Rose, I didn’t finish anything but short stories in 2004. In 2005, I started Beautiful Death. I decided to try my hand at erotica, but it just wasn’t working. It was forced and awkward. I can write sex, sure, and I have nothing against spice and even non-politically-correct Romancelandia topics, but that first 100 pages or so of the first draft was not working. At all.

So now in 2005 I’m sitting looking back at my path so far, with two recent failed novels in my hands and no answer from NY yet (by the way, no answer ever did come, and I withdrew it from consideration when Rose sold to Drollerie). I was crippled. I couldn’t fix Rose. I couldn’t finish BD. I was afraid to start yet another book when I’d failed on the last two attempts. In short, I’d lost all sense of myself as a writer. I had no confidence, no voice, no vision, no heart.

Like a racehorse forced into a carriage harness, I’d kicked and fought my way free of the traces I imagined strangling me, destroying myself in the process. I felt trapped in Romancelandia, but couldn’t keep myself out of the genre no matter how hard I tried. Dismayed, I really thought about quitting. I couldn’t find my place, my voice, and I was tired of failing.

Yet a friend gave me a different perspective. She told me that I needed to find a way to stay — and color as vibrantly as I wanted — within the lines.

For some reason, this made me think of a stained glass butterfly. I’d taken a stained glass class in 2004 before Littlest Monster was born, and I’d enjoyed picking out the various colors of glass and framing each piece within lead to make the picture. My mother-in-law had taken the class with me, and she’d chosen a butterfly pattern. I was tempted to do the same, but pride drove me to do something different. Her finished project was lovely — and totally not what I would have done. I never would have selected those textures and colors of glass. She’d made the pattern her own with her choice of colors in a way I never would have done.

She’d colored within the lines and was thoroughly pleased with her project.

Although I didn’t finish a novel in 2005, I sat down with those 100 pages or so of Beautiful Death and tore it apart. I eliminated all the stuff that wasn’t working for me. I eliminated a few characters that I still miss (Phillip) and used all the craft I’d studied the past two years to start from the beginning. The butterfly metaphor was still with me, and somewhere along the way toward The End I stumbled across Wings of a Butterfly by H.I.M.

For your soul, my love, Rip off the wings of a butterfly.

Oh, how those words spoke to me. I’d ripped off the wings of my writer butterfly. I’d made a sacrifice of my blood and dreams. And only I could make that butterfly fly again.

I set that song on an endless loop and wrote the last chapters straight through, finishing in the middle of the night nearly a year after I’d started BD. One novel in a whole year, after writing 2 (big novels) in 4 months in 2003. Yet that novel was the turning point. It threw my butterfly back into the sky. I remembered why I loved to write. I colored within a lead pattern and found a way to fly again with stained glass wings of my own voice.

Bouyed with the high of finishing BD, I turned back to Rose late in 2006 and murdered my heroine. I mean, I really killed her in my mind and created her fresh. I threw out that entire second draft and started AGAIN from scratch. I finished that draft early in 2007. Moved on to Survive My Fire in Feb. 2007. Sold it in April to Drollerie Press. And the rest is history.

Remember the butterfly if you read Beautiful Death. It’s not just a cool design Icarus uses for inspiration. It’s not just a pin from Isabella’s childhood. When Isabella pulls herself out of the chrysalis, I was pulling myself out too. It’s a desperate, frightening, dangerous birth in which one wrong move can lead to death.

In the end, she learns to fly even with Hades’ silver piercing her wings, and I learned to color within the lines.

Posted on Leave a comment

Beautiful Death is Here!

Originally published at Joely Sue Burkhart. You can comment here or there.

Beautiful Death is now available at Drollerie Press here!

Some story behind the story…

I’ve always loved mythology (no surprise if you’ve been reading here long) and Hades in particular, but I never cared for the traditional stories involving Persephone. Whine whine whine. I want to go home. *rolls eyes*

I liked the idea of a “death story,” but I wanted more than the normal everyday Lord of the Underworld.

Some definite influences:

The movie Underworld, which quite honestly, I couldn’t finish. I loved the idea of it, though. The very dark, seductive tone of the movie was cool. I’ve never been much of a fan of werewolves, but vampires, yes, and the battle of the races I thought was very cool, with humans sort of caught between.

But I didn’t want another poor human vs. monster story. My mind sort of turned that around and asked: what if humans were the monsters, and the traditional monster–like vampires–were perhaps innocent or victims?

I certainly didn’t want to write a normal everyday vampire story, either, let alone the typical Alien movie. However, Alien and all its sequels laid a strong foundation for the story. At one time, I called this story an “Alien Underworld” referring to these two movies. Yet I didn’t want monster aliens, though. How about beautiful ones that valued perfection?

And the catalyst: a pandemic virus that obliterated the world as we know it.

I still didn’t have the Greek mythology angle pinned yet. I knew the theme. I knew the catalyst. But who was my protagonist? I was reading a ton of Laurell K. Hamilton at the time, but I didn’t want a whiny character like Anita Blake–she’d be no better than Peresphone who bitched about going home all the time. No, I wanted somebody strong and deadly. Somebody like…Edward, Anita’s friend who’s known as Death. He’s always been one of my favorite characters, and Obsidian Butterfly is still my favorite Anita Blake book.

So I started thinking about a female protagonist whose nickname was Death. Who was she? Hades came to mind first, obviously, but I didn’t want to make Hades a woman. Thanatos, though… The Greek god of Death hasn’t been used that many times, at least that I could remember. Once I settled on Thanatos, and Hades, the underlying mythology fell into place and defined the other characters: Charon, Zeus, Hera, Apollo, Icarus. All warped just a little, of course. For example, Icarus is obsessed with wings and flying, but for a very specific reason that’s central to his relationship with Isabella. Zeus is obviously the father of New Olympia, but to tie him to the virus, he became a famous hematologist who helped develop the vaccine. And more. *winks*

So that’s how the story world came to be. However, it was also a story that I almost quit. I almost quit writing entirely before I finished Beautiful Death. Yet that’ll be a story for another time: how the butterfly decided to fly again.

Posted on Leave a comment

Friday Snippet – Rhaekhar’s Hair

Originally published at Joely Sue Burkhart. You can comment here or there.

Laughingly, I’ll call this “Ode to Rhaekhar’s Hair.”

This is more of an outake of Road than a true “snippet”, hot off the press tonight. I’ve been struggling to paint Rhaekhar’s hair all week in Photoshop, and so I felt the need to return to words for my creation. I doubt this will ever go into Road itself, but if it did, it would go after the claiming, or wedding, in the first third of the story. Since there is sexual content, I’ll put it behind the cut.

Her barbarian sat with his back to her. Even in the early dawn barely filtering through the hole in the tent roof, his hair still managed to gleam like sheaves of sun-ripened wheat. Freed from the braids he typically wore at his temples, his hair hung down his back, thick and wild and untamed.

Shannari ran her fingers through the heavy strands and she couldn

Posted on Leave a comment

Photoshop for Dummies

Originally published at Joely Sue Burkhart. You can comment here or there.

I’ve been trying to give my Rhaekhar-model long (well past his shoulders) hair for two days. I’ve aggrevated my bad right wrist with too much mouse work. I’ve got bald patches on my own head from yanking my hair out.

On the bright side, I am learning more about brushes and smudging. Lots of smudging. And erasers. Cause you know I can’t draw a straight line to save my life.

From the very first moment I saw the Drollerie Press website I was attracted by Deena’s artwork. Every cover she creates is a work of art. (Except for the bobble-headed plastic Barbie one but whoa, that one led to the current The Fire Within cover, and it’s smoking HAWT.) Now that I know exactly what a nightmare…I mean challenge…it is to give characters life, I am in awe.

I bow to her masterful creative genius.

I mean, she put FIRE in Chanda’s EYES in the Survive My Fire cover. I tried to give Rhaekhar’s eyes a golden tint and he either looked like a werewolf with weird greenish glowing eyes (I mean, with that crazy hair I gave him, anything’s possible) or like he’d drunk some of that Dragon Piss from The Fire Within and it did really bad things to him.

*raising one hand–my left because my right arm’s in a sling–solemnly*

I hereby promise not to give any more characters weird hair or eyes.

*grinds teeth*

Um. Well, not too weird. I mean, Ruin is a werejaguar, so his eyes really will have to glow….

Posted on Leave a comment

Pass the Dunce Cap

Originally published at Joely Sue Burkhart. You can comment here or there.

I’m taking an incredible PhotoShop class (in which I’m woefully behind thanks to finishing Road and getting NSR out to the American Title contest) and I could really use a dunce cap.

I SUCK at graphics! It just doesn’t make sense to me. I must take even the most basic of instructions and dissect and study each component, and then try it a dozen times until it makes sense. I think I’ve finally figured out layers. A little. I played with the magic wand last night and just about turned myself into a frog. I wept over the hero’s nose. Okay, not really, but Zahak’s nose was definitely a challenge. A huge thank you to Deena for helping me! Hopefully her list of how she did it will make sense once I get a bit caught up with the class.

To give myself a break, I switched to reading Cindy Speer’s The Chocolatier’s Wife. Ohhhh, what a lovely read. I ended up staying up later than I planned so I could finish it. Absolutely sweet and touching romance, and I loved the letters back and forth between William and Tasmin. Watch for more on this book — Cindy and I are planning some kind of chat/interview to celebrate the releases of our stories on June 20th.

Posted on Leave a comment

Monsters Strike Again

Originally published at Joely Sue Burkhart. You can comment here or there.

[Today’s the last day of the Giveaway.]

Why do I call my daughters monsters?

A few years ago, I bought an AlphaSmart off eBay for $30. Then I underwent a grand search to find a cord that would work with my stupid laptop and spent way more than the original $30 trying to get a cord that would work. After weeks, I finally succeeded, but quite honestly, never used the Alphie that much. I much prefer my laptop.

Of course, the monsters loved it. They loved typing like mom. So I let them play with it. The Alphie was incredibly durable: they dropped it, carried it around to the car, and I think I even saw Middle Monster standing on it once.

Yesterday, they found my AlphaSmart outside. It’d been left outside several days ago. And it rained.

Little Alphie ain’t that durable.