Archive for the ‘Heroes’ Category

A Middle-of-the-Heart Cat

Saturday, September 24th, 2011

We love our pets.  They make our lives richer, better, more complicated at times (try finding a dog-sitter for Thanksgiving weekend at the last minute), and one of the worst things on earth is when we lose them.

It’s awful when it happens, when we lose one of our own. It’s not supposed to happen with other peoples’ pets.

SID306 002But it happened this past week to me when Sid died.

Most of you know Sid. He was the light of my dear friend Kate Walker’s life. He waltzed into her house one day and simply took over.  There was life Before Sid, and Life During Sid was totally different.

He was the cat who made sitting and writing for hours in an office worthwhile – because, quite simply, he was there.

He could be snoozing on the chair or lying in the window or studying the effects of batting the mouse. It didn’t matter.  He was endlessly entertaining – even when he slept. 

I ask myself why. I asked Kate why. 

sidinabasketOf all her cats, he was the most memorable.  Of the four who were there when I first visited, Sid was the one who interacted with us.  The others were lovely (well, Dylan, not so much. He was cantankerous and gruff, but he did have his soft spot).

Sid had a whole flabsack of soft spots. He tried to pretend he wasn’t interested in people, but he could never quite pull it off. He was too busy being in the center of things.

I read a book once that said that Maine Coon cats were “middle of the room” cats.  If so, Sid was a Maine Coon cat in disguise.  More than an Maine Coon cat actually because he wasn’t so much a middle of the room cat, as a “middle of the heart” cat. 

You couldn’t help but fall in love with Sid.

SID306 004I probably had half a dozen visits with Sid in my life. Each one was special.  I frequently offered him hospitality on this side of the pond. I told him that the d.o.g.s. would be happy to see him.  And they would.

But he’d done his wandering as a youth, and when he got to Kate’s, he made up his mind that that was where home was, and he wasn’t about to stray.  So he never visited in person (in cat).  But he frequently dropped into my email in-box.

He had a way with words, did Sid. He had Opinions and Views, and he didn’t hesitate to articulate them. He also had Standards – and he worked hard to bring Flora and Chaz (that’s Charlie) up to the mark.  He never bothered to try with Dylan.  Even Sid had his limits, and there are just some cats you know you can’t shape up.

I will miss his correspondence. There will be no more letters from Sir Sidney St John Willoughby Eamonn Portly-Lummox, DLitt Oxon, Bart., Earl of Blubberhouses and I forget what else (HE never forgot).

sidupsidedown

I will miss the new and wonderful photos that Kate would send when he was feeling photogenic. One year he sent me a calendar called A Year Of Sid – with a photo of Himself for each month. I still have it.  I cherish it.

I also have a t-shirt with his picture on it (Can you tell that Sid didn’t need a marketing department. He had self-promotion down pat – not that he needed it. He got plenty of ear rubs and head scratches just by being himself). I have been wearing Sid’s t-shirt a lot these last few weeks because it made me feel closer to him. 

He was, he used to tell me, A Cat of Superior Breeding. He even had an email address that was, in part, SidACOSB, cat print heartbecause, well, why wouldn’t he?

But the truth is, he wasn’t A Cat of Superior Breeding. He was THE Cat.  The one and only.

He’s left a Sid shaped hole in all parts of Kate’s life. 

He’s left a Sid-shaped hole in my heart. 

Layering

Friday, July 1st, 2011

I’m doing revisions, as I said the other day.  And I recall one thing my editor said when we discussed them was, “I didn’t think Yiannis had had a relationship with Cat when I read his part of the first chapter.”

And I said, “He didn’t think so, either!”

Which was pretty much true when I wrote it.  Things were just beginning to come together and neither he nor I had a clue about the backstory at that point. Well, we had a few clues, but not much more. And certainly we didn’t know that.

It was when Cat started talking that I realized all this emotion had to come from something more than, ‘He bought my grandmother’s house.’

And, indeed it did.

But in the hurry to get it sent in, I didn’t go back and layer in the necessary recollections on Yiannis’s part. Getting to do so now is actually fun.  I know him so much better now. I can hear his voice whereas in the beginning I was just getting to know him.

These are fun revisions because they don’t change the book; they deepen it. They layer in more feelings, more emotions, more nuance. But the emotional arc itself doesn’t change. 

annegracieI am hoping to get them finished this week.  But I’m having a visitor as of tomorrow.  As RWA is ending, my dear friend and middle-of-the-night-because-it’s-afternoon-in-Australia support, Anne Gracie, is coming to visit for a few days!

As much as I’m actually enjoying the revisions, I’m pretty sure I’ll enjoy Anne’s visit more!

Revisions, Revisions!

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

Mom Camp is over and revisions are underway.

Unlike the last batch, which took forever, these seem to be moving along rather quickly.  I’m hoping to get them finished within the week.

This is the book about Yiannis Savas, the youngest of the Savas brothers. When he first popped up in his sister, Tallie’s antonidesmarriagedeal_usbook, way back in The Antonides Marriage Deal, I wasn’t expecting to ever write about him.  So he was a forest ranger and no one seemed to know much about where he spent his time (other than, presumably, in a forest). I didn’t know much, either.

But it turned out I was right. That’s where he spent his time then. And there was a reason for it which I didn’t really know until I started writing his book.  Interesting to discover that he was having a life all the time I was writing about his siblings.

I actually thought my last book was going to be his.  I’d planned for it to be his. But when it came time to write it, he was nowhere to be found. Oh, well, he was at the same wedding his cousin Nick was at – the royal wedding of his brother Demetrios and Princess Adriana. 

But when I thought he’d step up and sweep Mona Tremayne’s oldest daughter away, he wasn’t the least bit interested.  Thank heavens, Nick was. Otherwise I’d never had had a book!

Turns out Yiannis knew best.

When I started writing this book, he stepped right up, did his bit, grabbed hold of the story and basically said, “Yes, this is my life.”

Whew.  I’d really have been up a creek if he’d walked away from this one!

So I hope the revisions go as well as they feel as if they will. And then I can start thinking about the next book.

I think I need another run at a Book-in-a-Week.  This one turned out rather well – though it did take longer than a week to pull it off.