2015

Yes, the blog was down for nearly a month. An update gone awry and a new more-than-fulltime job can do that. Over the next few months I’ll probably be redoing and streamlining this blog. What happened in 2015? I got to help a dear friend come back from a bad bicycling accident, and stand witness…

Read More 2015 in review

Hey writers, if you are creatively stuck and need some story prompts, here’s one resource: The Cool Bits Story Generator. It’s not as random as it appears, and some of its results can be…boggling. But it’s fun. I’ll have a link off to the left, too.

Read More if you need a story prompt

Because no project is truly done. Not as long as I can get my grubbies back on it to correct earlier mistakes. I posted these on my Tumblr first, so I thought I should do it here, too. I have more about these pieces here.

Read More Rebuilt Rain Gloves

Just completed the initial edit for Maestro. I can say this for NineStar Press: my editor is very good at catching my boneheaded mistakes. Far from hating the editing process, I loved it. It was like the final render on a difficult digital art project, or the polish of a gemstone or piece of silverwork.…

Read More Yay for edits

The short version is “To be a writer, you must write”, which I quote here from James D. MacDonald’s excellent ‘Uncle Jim’ posts on AbsoluteWrite. Also: “Rejection is nature’s way of telling you to write a better book.” For those of you starting out, or struggling along in the middle of something, it’s worth reading…

Read More More advice on how to be a writer…

Kate is both a friend of mine from AbsoluteWrite and a fellow Loose Id author…but I have to tell you, I’d plug this book even if those were not factors. First, there’s the blurb: Buy a whole body…or just the parts. Then, the cover, from Kate’s blog tour list: Then the jacket copy: Special Agent…

Read More Flesh Market, by Kate Lowell

My Twitter feed was all-abuzz today about a post from a rightfully angry YA editor, who’d just heard that certain agents were telling their author clients not to submit diverse books. (Books celebrating non-standard POVs, characters, and situations, regarding race, creed, gender identity or sexual preference.) Or to submit certain kinds of diversity, and not…

Read More Diverting diversity, and other dangers

I’ve had some writer’s block recently (okay, three years of it, off and on). I think I finally broke it this month. I turned a smutty little 5K short story into a smutty 16K novella, and got it delivered to its editor at a new publisher. When they announce it, I will share the happy…

Read More More (writing) happiness

…I did not plan for these shoes to go so well with these socks: Remainder Halloween socks, 2008, Tuesday morning, $2.00. Sketchers’ Shape-Ups, 2015, Goodwill, $6.00. Black crepe linen pants, 2010, Saver’s, $4.99. Black T-shirt with multicolored (orange, red, green, purple, and black Mandala embroidery), Goodwill, 2005, $4.00, similar to this Cafepress shirt but More…

Read More Happy Halloween, everybody

A debut novel from a fellow M/M writer over on AbsoluteWrite. I’ve been watching the seeds of Bad Magic develop for a little while, and I could tell early on it would be a fun read. When she sold it to Dreamspinner Press, I cheered. Here’s the blurb: Morality is relative. At least that’s what…

Read More Evelyn Elliott: Bad Magic

The next art-related thing I think I want to learn is henna application. Because of this. And this. And this. Because henna is an earning skill I can take with me anywhere, and I suspect I have some of the foundations already in my fiddly OCD drawing and painting.  

Read More Maybe Henna

(Random snippets of advice I’ve seen this week, and found useful.) Eat Cheese Puffs with chopsticks…no sticky orange fingerprints on keyboard! Know what your publisher’s contract actually says, and how it pertains to you. When your characters hit the ‘banter’ stage, you know you’ve built them properly. Now they can be trusted to get into…

Read More Gathered writerly wisdom #1

There’s this depressing song-and-dance routine that I keep seeing from so many writers, in several genres: “Oh, this crappy little publisher is treating me soooo badly. I think I’ll leave them and try to find another crappy little publisher.”

Or they decide, like Laura Harner did in 2011, to leave their CLP and self-publish. She’s not the only one to choose that route. Sometimes it works really well, without the author resorting to ghostwriters and plagiarism to keep up the publishing schedule.

There is nothing wrong with informed self-publishing, by someone committed to doing it right. That’s not what this post is about.

Nor are all small publishers CLPs. Some really do a great job, and are worth the business risk.

Choosing to try a bigger, better publisher may not even cross these authors’ minds. A lot of new(er) writers, or writers accustomed to small press business practices, are simply afraid of the Big Five. They think they might not be ‘good enough’ for a major publisher, and are not willing to work at improving their writing. Or they can’t or won’t try to get agent representation, which they need to get through the door of any publisher closed to public queries. Or they’re impatient with the slower-than-glaciers response time and publishing pace of many Big Five imprints.

For whatever reason, by continuing to go small, they are possibly cutting themselves out of much higher earnings and recognition in the long run.

Plus, they are annoying the shit out of those of us who keep watching them do it over and over…

So, over the last few days, a prolific M/M erotic romance writer has been outed as a multiple serial plagiarist. Since 2010, Laura Harner has self-published 75 books. That’s not unusual in itself, and not a surefire indicator of bad-quality, slammed-out-for-the-bucks writing. I know several legit writers who can keep that pace. But what Harner…

Read More Another day, another plagiarist

The accuracy of a writer’s or artist’s self-assessment on how new, original, and groundbreaking their work really is…is likely proportional to their skill and experiences in that field.

The new artist who thinks they’re invented a metalworking technique known for hundreds of years. The erotica author who wants to invent a ‘new’ form of erotic writing that is actually the oldest and most standard form. Anyone who excuses obvious flaws as a necessary part of process.

A form of the Dunning-Kruger Effect, folks.