Our Group...

Brit Blaise, Cassie Ryan, Isabella Clayton, Judi Thoman, Kayce Lassiter, Kayla Janz, Lynne Logan, Tia Dani, Tina Gerow, Samantha Storm...

Butterscotch Martini

2 oz. ButterShots ... 2 oz. Baileys Carmel or Original ... 1 oz. Vanilla Vodka ... Shaken on ice...not stirred ... Coat glass with butterscotch, or drizzle on top, or both, "The first sip is to die for"

Archive: July 2007

Thanks to Cat and Romance Junkies!

Romance Junkies interviewed me and it’s now available. I want to thank BMG Samantha for her marvelous site and Brooke for the painless interview.

Check it out: My Romance Junkies Interview!

Brit

It takes a village…

Tina Connine said this on a couple of the loops this morning and she’s right. That’s why people flock to groups like RWA, Romance Writers of America and their local affiliations. In Phoenix, the Valley of the Sun and Desert Rose are the local chapters.


And if you’re aspiring to write…it’s the place to get what you’ll need. One size fits all…because the women (and some men) there will give you what you need if you reach out.  


I think if was ’99 when I first joined national RWA, but I didn’t join the local meetings until after I’d written a 114,000 word historical romance in 2001 and I needed to know what to do with it. (Side note…it’s been with a publisher for two years now and still not released) I learned I should enter contests and/or use the mentor program which I eventually did.


My sister died in Nov. of 2000 and things got fuzzy then. I didn’t write. By the end of ’01, I realized I needed to meet other writers. I started going to local meetings.  By 2003, I presided as president over Desert Rose, because I had established I was serious about writing.
My stint as president stunted my writing progress when I became too busy. My word count dropped to nil. By 2004, I was ready(again) to start writing seriously. I’d picked up a skill-set from attending meetings and workshops and wanted to put it to the test.


Back to my point…the village. I used the information from the RWA workshops, given by volunteer writers to help other writers. I used the friends I’d made at the local chapters as a valuable resource to help in my progress. I used manuals and texts. However, nothing did as much to help in my progression as a critique group.


When you have a critique group and you are serious about writing, it can help you to avoid procrastination. My first group was online. While it helped, the four of us who were involved didn’t mesh well. Our writing styles were dissimilar and our personalities clashed. Or so I thought.


What I didn’t realize is that the personal face-to-face interaction you can get with a group is the key to unlocking trust. Trust that your partners only want the best out of you. And there are so many rules to be learned…POV, grammer, plot holes, dialog, vivid compelling characters and so much more.


One of the first responses when I sent my work out into the world was that my worked lacked characterization.


What?


I didn’t have a clue what I needed to do to fix it…then. Now, my reviews often say characterization is my strong point.


This came with a lot of help from my “village” and persistence. The village of the original Butterscotch Martini Girls taught me so many valuable lessons. When we first met at Ray’s Pizza on Carefree Highway, it was the goal for all of us to have something new to submit for one another to critique. The learning curve was fast and furious at that point.


All four of us, Alexis, Pat, Tina and I had something to submit to the group every other week. This made us equals, no matter where we were in our skill-set. Two of the original women worked fulltime, I worked fulltime only during tax season, and one was retired.


These women had stories to be critiqued…almost always. I personally believe this is mark of someone who is serious about their writing. Why? Submitting every two weeks became a deadline of sorts. Deadlines are something that can’t be avoided in writing. I have eight deadlines coming over the next eight months. And I’ve promised a story I hope to start this week to a new publishing company. And I’ve promised chapters elsewhere. And I need to get serious about finding an agent, which I just can’t seem to do. I only think about it.


Doing submission deadlines for a group who expects it of you will show you if you can do it for an editor one day. Working a day job is not an excuse. Most writers can’t quit their day jobs right away. My biggest piece of advice is to write…just write. Anything can be fixed except a blank page.


I’m not saying you can’t do it on your own, but it’s definitely much harder. I’m in a small town in Ohio now and don’t have writers close…yet. I’ve joined a group about thirty miles away, but haven’t been regular. But I will…and I will make friends once this funk over moving away from Phoenix lifts. 


 
Brit Blaise - now working on #19 for Amber Quill in just over two years    

Kerfuffles…

I’m dragging myself out of deep deadline panic to blog today :)  I finally caught up with the word count I lost - yesterday.  So, as of late yesterday evening, I’m caught up to where I was two weeks ago.  But my deadline hasn’t moved.  Sigh. 

Anyway, enough bellyaching.  And speaking of bellyaching, that’s the subject of my post today.  Or actually, not bellyaching, but slanderous bitching and slashing for lack of a better term. 

I’m usually kind of a go with the flow kind of girl.  I hear gossip through the writer’s grapevine, or on loops I lurk on or from friends.  And I’m so excited and happy to be doing this suicidal thing called full time writing, that I’m probably mistaken for a wide-eyed tourist most of the time.  And, in fact, the few times any gossip is about me, it’s usually straight forward stuff like my book is releasing etc.  Sorry, I tend to be boring…  I do my thing, I enjoy it, but I’m not streaking through the general session RWA meetings or having sit ins to protest editing practices somewhere. 

However, lately, I’ve noticed a distinct mood swing of the masses, which has begun to ruffle my feathers.  And for those of you who know me - feather ruffling is difficult to do unless you directly attack me or I feel you were out of line. 

So, what, you may ask, has started to get my panties in a twist, so much so that even in deadline full-press, brain-mush mode, I begin to notice? 

A whoooole lotta people have begun to be what I call evil busy bodies.  Don’t get me wrong, everyone is entitled to their opinion - hey, we live in America, right?  And I’m very proud of that.  But people seem to have forgotten that your freedoms stop when you start to encroach on other’s freedoms.  And let’s get out of the political realm and just into good professional business practices here - remember “don’t sweat the small stuff” and then there’s just plain common sense. 

But I digress - again.  (Remember, deadline=brain mush mode) 

First, is the kerfuffle (I love that word) over RWA’s decisions regarding the Golden Heart and RITA categories and the subsidy/vanity press stuff.  For the record, I think it’s a total and complete cop out to say that erotic romance is “not definable”  My first reaction to that statement was “Bull.”  There are many RWA members within the Passionate Ink chapter as well as others who would be glad to work with RWA to come up with a definition so they can institute a separate category for erotic romance within these contests.  And also for the record - my definition of a subsidy or vanity publisher is one where you have to pay them in any way to get your stuff published or distributed.  In my opinion - in a non vanity/non subsidy publisher - the money only goes one way - from said publisher to the author.  So, I do disagree  with RWA’s definition which includes publishers whose main distribution comes from their website, because many reputable epubs do distribute mainly from their website.  To me - in my own humble opinion - that sounds like a target against epubs.  And I do know that several authors like to paint all epubs with the same brush, which again - in my opinion - is unfair. 

Second - is the kerfuffle (it’s such a fun word, isn’t it?) about Sherrilyn Kenyon and the Shomi authors dressing up at RWA Nationals.  This has blown up on blogs all over the web.  People are blasting these authors for dressing up and “cheapening” the romance genre.  My opinion?  Sherrilyn Kenyon is one of the nicest and most professional and business savvy ladies I’ve ever met and if I could clone even a quarter of her career I’d kiss her boots.  I’m also a fan of her books since way before I tried my hand at writing.  Her readers LOVE her costumes and it is part of Sherrilyn’s persona and makes it fun to see her at book signings.  As for the Shomi authors.  I don’t know them personally, but they were promoting their books, and I say ‘go girls!’  Hell, if I had the body for it, I might dress up like my latest Cassie Ryan characters for my next book signing (yeah - I know, ice pick moment, sorry), but these ladies looked cute and pulled it off. 

Now, as you can see - I definitely have my own opinions, and I’m not extremely shy about them.  However, what I don’t do is blast people - aka slander.  Lately, the trend is to throw all common sense, business sense and even good plain manners to the wind and think because you have a keyboard and an opinion (remember what your mother told you about opinions and belly buttons!) that you can take aim and make mean spirited, personal and attacking comments about people that really have nothing to do with the original gripe or complaint. 

Maybe it’s my years spent in corporate America, maybe it was all those manners beaten into me as a child, dunno.  But taking pot shots at people isn’t (in my opinion) the right way to go. 

For the first kerfuffle listed above, I sent a very professionally worded, non threatening, and logical letter to RWA stating my opinion succinctly and thanking them for considering it.  By contrast, I’ve heard people slandering the members of the board, threatening to boycott their books and a thousand other things.  I think everyone is forgetting that this IS a volunteer organization and I’m sure it’s a tough job.  I know I don’t have time, inclination or the suicidal tendencies to step up and run for the National Board.  Hell, I had quite enough politics and all the rest just being pres of my local chapter for two years.  

For the second kerfuffle, what did I do?  Uh, nothing.  As in, I don’t think it’s any of my business.  Now if someone shows up to one of the book signings butt naked, yes - I think that will be in poor taste, and probably not a great career move, and since it would be illegal (I’m pretty sure public nudity is illegal in most places) something RWA would probably want to rule against.  But we are talking about ladies dressed in costumes here - fully dressed, no tingly naughty parts showing - even the scantily clad Shomi girls weren’t flashing nipples, just a few inches of well-toned thigh (which definitely made me long for the days I could’ve worn that without people gagging).  Instead - there are public blogs out there making personal attacks on these ladies and blaming them for the entire reputation of the romance genre. 

Okay people, snap out of it here.  First - I think the adorable Shomi ladies, like all of us, haven’t been around long enough (aka alive long enough) to see the beginning of the movement of people poking fun at our genre - that I’m sure is a long and ancient art.  Second - Sherrilyn is one of the people who HELP the reputation of our genre.  She’s popular as hell and not just within romance, she’s a positive force for us, and I suspect a little twinge of jealousy was what attracted all these attacks.  I’ve got news for you - if we weren’t such a popular genre, if soooo many people hadn’t read romance, if so many talented writers hadn’t come before us - we wouldn’t be poked fun at.  Isn’t it funny how when anything becomes successful, it becomes a popular target?  One of those things that makes you think - or it should. 

So, again, in my opinion (which is all this is, so take it for that), those who are spending so much time and negative energy on tearing others down need to find something more constructive to do with their time.  I’m not talking to those of you who have stated your opinions and been done with it, but those who have moved on to personal attacks, boycott campaigns, smear campaigns and generally unsavory behavior.  

Remember, karma is a bitch. 

Okay - back to my writing cave…  I’m sure the fiery blasts will find there way here too…and I may see them, on a dinner break from my deadline :) 

Tina/Cassie

Nora and the bunny comment…

I read Nora occasionally, and one of her books is on my keeper shelf, where it will stay. But I don’t gush, just respect. I’ve seen her at RWA functions, mostly at the bar where the butterscotch martini girls like to hang. I’m not saying Nora hangs there, we do. So if she pops in for a quickie…  Anyway, I had no clue, as usual, that I missed something until I read JC Wilder’s blog http://jcwilder.blogspot.com/2007/07/as-stomach-churns.html  

After being directed to Smart Bitches, I caught up. http://www.smartbitchestrashybooks.com/index.php/C38 

And while my opinion is my own, I must say this: When Nora sicced a bunny on one of the bloggers, I cracked up. Way to go, Nora. And if you have a chance…go check out the Nora bobblehead. Her husband sells them at his online book store. I believe she’ll even sign it upon request.   

Turn the Page Online Book Store

http://www.ttpbooks.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=CTGY&Store_Code=TTPB&Category_Code=TNS

 

Nora Robert's Bobblehead doll

 

 

Balls of Steel

http://jcwilder.blogspot.com/2007/07/as-stomach-churns.html

JC Wilder has balls most men would envy. Check out her blog. And before you form an opinion, you may want to read the Smart Bitches blog. I think in the end, one anon-commenter took unprofessionalism to a whole new level…and obscured the point.

Then again, everyone is entitled to their opinion, and I’m entitled to mine.

The buzz is about some authors taking umbrage at SK’s costume at RWA. I didn’t see it. I wish I had. To generate this much buzz, it had to be great!

I’m a fan of creativity…and I like it when a particularly creative soul steps out of the box. It’s what separates the swans from the sweet little ducklings.


Brit Blaise 
Galaxy Gone Wild - now available - Amber Quill Press 

RECENTLYWRITTEN

MYTOPICS

MYARCHIVE

MYPAGES



LINKLOVE

READERCOMMENTS

  • Recent Comments

    • Tia Dani: Great story Kayce. You almost had me ready to buy some campi...
    • PhyllisC: I loved your story. I was laughing so hard, I nearly wet my...
    • Penny: Wow Tina. No wonder your books sell. Your gift of bringing a...
    • Brit: At Amber Quill... or at Fictionwise... www.fictionwise.com ...
    • MoviesGuy: sorry, where i can buy lady in a box?...
    • Tina: Tina - you may be right. I'm always ready to blog about wha...
    • Anitra Lynn McLeod: Sounds like a great trip! I have never been to NY but I'd l...

OURBOOKS

Close
E-mail It