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Monthly Archives: January 2013

How is everyone this cold January week??  Around here things are going better–the illness seems to be fading (finally!) and the new book is moving (slowly) along.  Here is a little about what else is going on:

 

–Today is my birthday!!!  I will spend it much as someone might have in the Regency, quietly with a nice family dinner and (hopefully!) some new books as presents.  With Christmas/wedding/sicknesses just past, being nice and cozy with a bottle of wine and some cake sounds just right….

–Oklahoma finally has a JASNA chapter of our very own!  For years, in order to go to a chapter meeting I had to drive to Dallas, but now I just have to drive across town.  This month my mom and I did a program to celebrate Jane’s birthday by talking about Regency fashions (you can see pics at the website, http://jasnaokla.weebly.com/).  In June there is going to be a Netherfield Ball in Dallas, so I am also joining a country dancing group to get ready!  New dress time!

–Speaking of new dresses, did everyone watch the Golden Globes??  Thanks to Amy Poehler and Tina Fey, the show was actually funny and entertaining and I watched (almost) the whole thing.  Can I say how much I loved all the coral colored gowns and the sparkle??  I want one now.  Here are a couple of my favorites, Zooey Deschanel and Lucy Liu (a sort of modern day Marie Antoinette, with a side braid)

LucyGlobes

ZooeyCoral

–And this is also the 454th anniversary of Elizabeth I’s coronation!  I may do a whole post about it next week, because I’ve been researching it for my second Kate Haywood Elizabethan Mystery, Murder at Westminster Abbey.  I was watching Anne of the Thousand Days again just last weekend, and I always cry at that scene at the end when Henry comes to see Anne and she defiantly cries “My Elizabeth shall be queen!  And my blood will have been well spent”

ElizabethCoronation

What have you been doing this week??  Who were your favorites at the Golden Globes?  Any favorite Tudor movies??

I have resolved stuff because I am all 2013 that way.

Here’s a few of my resolutions for 2013

  1. Less refined sugar in my diet. I feel I am now well-positioned for this step as my diet over the last 2-3 weeks has been primarily sugar-based. Protein…proootein…..
  2. Have the first sequel to Lord Ruin on sale by June 30th
  3. Read more books by authors I know I’ll love but haven’t yet read.
  4. Less complaining about certain things and more actually doing something to remove the things I complain about.
  5. Invite some bloggers whose work I adore to guest blog here.
  6. More polls. They’re like cowbells. We just need more.
  7. When I read a really crappy eBook, I will return it THEN I will write scornful things about it.
  8. Ponder the role of zombies in literature.
  9. Write more.
  10. Write more risky stuff.

What am I missing? What are some of your resolutions?

Oh Hey! It’s the first poll of the New Year

[poll id=”2″]

Diana gives you the Coronation of George IV (don’t think I didn’t see what you did there!)  and Ammanda gives you Byron. And me? I was working on the WIP revisions and then I remembered it was Tuesday, not Monday and that means tomorrow (today when you read this) is Wednesday and, having spent too much time thinking about when to make Geneva Wafers again, I decided to Google Regency Hack.

Huh. Check this out about Ralph the Regency Hack. It’s an extract of an article and even that’s interesting, but hey. I confess I get pretty dang annoyed at all the amazing information locked up behind Academic paywalls. I guess that’s a rant for another day.

Poor Ralph Rylance. Some of the books he worked on. Also this one: “The Epicure’s Almanack, Or, Calendar of Good Living: Containing a Directory to the Taverns, Coffee-houses, Inns, Eating-houses, and Other Places of Alimentary Resort in the British Metropolis and Its Environs : a Review of Artists who Administer to the Wants and Enjoyments of the Table : a Survey of the Markets : and a Calendar of the Meats in Season During Each Month of the Year : to be Continued Annually” which, with a publication date of 1815 is well out of copyright and should therefore be available to read in Google Books and it’s not. The author of the article above seems to have republished the book, so all you get are links to that book.

And I will be very honest here and say this is not the first time I’ve seen material that is not under copyright by a couple of hundred years be unavailable at Google search. And this is all too often tied to the availability of a reprint that someone is selling. Is it in this case? No way to know.

The other Regency Hack is a bizarre You Tube video of a video game, looks kind of like Super Mario Bros. It’s here if you want to look. It’s not in English. I don’t think. I watched a few seconds with the sound off because I was too lazy to reach for the headphones.

Anyway. I’m just sad that Ralph Rylance is isn’t available. I would like a Calendar of Good Living.

But at least now I have some vague ideas about a gentleman trying to support himself when he’s not filthy rich. Not so different from today, actually.

Poor Ralph.

Updated to add: The re-publisher of this book is the British Library. Ms. Ing of the article above has a forward in it and hey, go for it. There’s some new material in the forward I’m sure. But the whole point of allowing Google to scan books, even when they were in copyright, was to make them available for search. And in the case of material that is long out of copyright, to make that available for everyone. Not just information for academics whose institutions pay for journal access the rest of us can’t get.

I’m not in a good mood anymore.

An Often Terrifying Journey

I’m just about done with my next paranormal (Book 5 in the My Immortals series): My Darkest Passion. To the point where it’s time to start thinking about prepping for the next book, which will be the first of the sequels to Lord Ruin. For anyone who may have read LR, this first sequel will be about Lucy and Thrale. Unless I change my mind.

At least now I have enough knowledge about my writing self that, although it’s always daunting to start a new book, I have a process that’s gotten me through going on 20 books now. I also have a system, sort of. However, I wouldn’t go so far as to say I have a plan. That would be an insult to people who actually do plan.

The last several months, I’ve been immersed in the paranormal; the contemporary world, but with demons and witches and the like. I don’t have to worry about vocabulary much or clothes, or architecture. I’m always surprised at the things that crop up that need research. Part of the story takes place in San Diego, a city I have been two maybe three times, but always on business. Never for research or fun. Twitter to the rescue for my questions about San Diego– Tweeples who actually live in San Diego! And then, Google Maps, Street View, Google images to take a more targeted look at the terrain. Everything else takes place pretty much in my backyard. (Not literally, just figuratively.)

Actually, there ARE vocabulary issues. There some small but crucial differences in idiom between Northern California and Southern California, and they instantly identify someone as being from up north or down south. And, it gives away writers who put the wrong words in a Nor Cal person’s mouth. Or vice versa.

Whatever Works, Right?

For my historicals, I start with the same base set of computer files. My handy chronology of Regency Events, for example, the files I use when writing (chapter, cast of characters, chapter outline… except, I didn’t do an outline at all for the last three or four books…) I have a store of research books, analog and digital, and I’ll generally flip through my materials on fashion and architecture, just to get in the mood. Such swoony gowns! Mostly, I start mulling over my hero and heroine. What’s the deal with them? What draws them together and/or pulls them apart? What scenes will show that happening?

Since this one will be a sequel, I’ll re-read Lord Ruin and refresh my memory about the details of the story. What clues might there be in the book about where Lucy and Thrale are headed?

Confession

Actually, with Lucy and Thrale, I happen to know a fair amount, as it kept popping up while I was writing Lord Ruin. It’s odd how clearly I recall the things I ended up knowing about her that I also knew were about her story, not Anne and Ruan’s. Thrale, too.

Another Confession

I dislike starting out. My desk is never so tidy as when I am engaging in behavior that avoids this. The initial words are all so thin and wimpy. I know that eventually they won’t be, but still. So much of writing seems to be about fixing the not-good-parts.

So, in the next couple of weeks I’ll be jumping into writing The Next Historical. I know enough about my writing process that I know it’s a jump. Right into the deep end. I try to start in the middle as it tends to save me from having to delete the first five chapters. I figure I’ve done well if it turns out I actually need to add — or is that pre-add? Well, whatever. I guess we’ll see out it turns out!

Which is why the planning sort of writer probably feels a bit woozy right now.