Archive for July, 2009

Sol’s Contest Winner!

Friday, July 17th, 2009


Congratulations to Linda Henderson of Missouri who is the winner of Sol’s Contest!

Micah and Mitch went to town gobbling treats today and picked Linda’s name from among the entries. They were very grateful to everyone who entered — as was Sol (or he would be if he understood these things. He’s working on it. His other grandma assures me that he is getting smarter and more aware every day).

RWA is going on in Washington DC. Lots of partying and conferencing and whatnot going on.

Here we have finished sports camp and have a couple of winners here, as well.

Every year the kids get ‘brands’ on wooden paddles that symbolize the qualities they are striving for during the week.

This year grandson got LOVE and ENTHUSIASM, and granddaughter got ATTITUDE and DEDICATION. (Her mother says this means she’s dedicated — with Attitude).

I’m delighted for both of them. They worked really hard, had an ‘awesome’ time, and are both already figuring out what sports they want to major in next year. He’s got lacrosse on his mind. I’m not sure what she’s settled on yet.

He went home tonight. She’s going home tomorrow. It’s going to be very quiet here without them.

But I have plenty to do. I need to get Demetrios through his unexpected love scene — and start packing. The dog sitters are coming . . . the dog sitters are coming . . .

Again, congratulations to Linda from Micah and Mitch and me — and Sol.

Following the characters

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Over on Kate Walker‘s blog I think I have a post on Thursday. Kate is celebrating Presents this month and has asked a few of us to write about some aspect of Presents for her while she’s living it up in Washington DC at RWA.

This is very Tom Sawyerish of her. But even so I was happy to oblige.

There’s a lot to enjoy in writing for Presents. Our books go all over the world. We get to research amazing places — and we get to imagine whole worlds of fascinating people. As a day job, it’s hard to beat.

I would happily have written all my books for Presents but that’s not the way my mind works. I follow the characters wherever they go. They dictate the story — and sadly, marketing and editorial don’t think in broad enough terms for them all to be Presents.

That’s okay. I probably couldn’t write at all if I tried to specifically aim my books for external guidelines. I’m just glad 28 of them have fit there so far.

This is the weekend that PJ and Ally’s book, Antonides’ Forbidden Wife, is up for the RITA award in the short contemporary category. If ever a book didn’t seem to ‘fit’ the notion of a Presents, their book might be it.

PJ hadn’t even been on my radar as a Presents hero. I’d always known him as a surfer. Of course I also knew he was more than that. But surfing really formed a lot of who PJ was as a young man, and it is still a core element in the man he became.

He was a free spirit, a lone wolf, a man who didn’t march to his family’s drummer. As such he was very much a role model for the young Ally. At least he was a great support for her in those days. He gave her the means to do what she wanted to do with her life simply by marrying her.

When I followed them into and out of their back story I was fascinated by the people they were and the adults they became. I had no idea that they even had a story when Karin Stoecker, the editorial director at Harlequin Mills & Boon said she’d like to read Peter’s story after he’d been in his brother, Elias’s book.

“What about Peter?” she said expectantly.

I didn’t know anything about Peter when she asked. The first thing he told me was that as soon as he left New York, he began to go by his initials, PJ. He re-invented himself. He was very happy to tell me all about his life up til then.

But in order to write Antonides’ Forbidden Wife, I had to follow him and Ally for several months. I had to learn about them as they seemed to learn about themselves. I’m very happy they ended up being in Presents.

I wish them the best of luck on Saturday night. I’m going to be packing to head out for the grandchildren’s the next day.

But no matter what they do or don’t do on RITA night, I’ll always love having spent time with them, following them around, and helping them get to their happily ever after.

It’s a Presents with an M&B cover in the RITA version. The only version I had at the time of the contest.

Mom Camp III

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Here we are at Mom Camp.

Well, not this pic. This is the grandkids — and several hundred kids all at the same camp. But because they are, we have Mom Camp for the third year running.

It’s the week my daughter and I look forward to all year, when her daughter and whichever cousins are the right age (only one this year) go to our local university sports camp from 8:30 in the morning until 9:30 in the evening and she and I get to enjoy each other’s company.

This year Mom Camp has taken a slightly different spin because our side-kick and honorary member, my cousin’s 16 year old daughter, isn’t here to join us. She thought the Naval Academy at Annapolis was a better alternative. Some people really have no idea about what constitutes A Good Thing.

So it’s just been the two of us — and she had to give a final and do some preparation for fall classes, and I finally have my revision letter. So the mornings at Mom Camp are filled with WORK (and occasional breaks for tea and the Tour de France).

The afternoons, however, we’ve been doing fun stuff — and napping. As a rule I don’t nap. It usually makes me feel worse than I felt simply tired. But I’ve been fading in the afternoons so far this week, so I haven’t fought it off or ‘played through’ it.

Last year, you may remember that we had a crisis on the first day of sports camp when the elder child knocked out his teeth. This year — so far — no one has done anything untoward. At least no one we’re related to.

But the week is early yet. We are keeping our fingers crossed.

Hard to type that way, but I feel it’s safer.

The revision letter was very useful. I’m blessed with an editor who has both a grasp of what the book needs and what I do well. And she’s probably the only editor for Presents who has ever told ME to make my hero nicer.

Nicer?

Hard to imagine. McAllister heroes ARE nice. They could hardly be nicer.

And yet, I understand what she’s saying. When they brood they can get surly and annoying — and she wants Demetrios to stop being quite so surly.

No problem. I can do that. It’s the surly bit that I have trouble with (maybe that’s why it didn’t work).

I’m very glad she knows what I can do — what my voice requires — and encourages me to do it. Don’t know how much of it I’m going to be able to finish this week, but if I don’t get it all done (and that doesn’t seem likely), it will come along with me on our trip west.

I wish I could leave it here for Mitch and Micah and the dogsitters who are living with them, but I can’t expect them to do revisions for me, too.

People are beginning to gather in Washington, DC for the RWA National conference. I’ve had emails from a couple of friends who’ve arrived today and spoke with Anne Gracie who is in New York visiting her editor and agent before the conference. I envy them the trip, but I have plans of my own for NYC coming up in the autumn.

But more about that later. In the meantime, I’m off to revise chapter three.

Happy Anniversary to Kate Walker and Mr Kate Walker who are, even as I write this, winging their way to Washington. Hope you and the mister enjoy the conference, Kate.

If you were at RNA, did you have a good time? What was the best part? If you’re on your way to RWA, I don’t expect you’ll have time to comment, but I’d love to hear from you about the conference and what you learned.

Don’t forget, if you haven’t entered Sol’s contest, you have until July 16th to do so. Send entries from the contest webpage, please.