On-Line Auction for Diabetes Research

Okay, one of these days I really have to get into my style sheet and change my blog posts and titles to default to left align, because I’m constantly having to shorten the titles so they don’t s p a   c   e out with the default justification. You see, the title of this post is really supposed to be, BRENDA NOVAK’S 2008 ON-LINE AUCTION FOR DIABETES RESEARCH, but because it’s too long, it str e  tc  hes out with a  ll the  se spa  ces. Isn’t that annoying?

Now that we have that out of the way, yes, Brenda Novak’s annual on-line auction for diabetes research has begun! Talk about a lot of coolio thing-a-ma-jigs to bid on! How about a Weekend in Paradise in Susan Wiggs’ guest house? Here’s the blippy:

NYTimes Bestselling author Susan Wiggs invites you for a relaxing weekend (or any two nights) in her private garden guest cottage on Bainbridge Island, Washington. Enjoy spectacular views, walks on the beach, woodland hikes, a nearby day spa, shops and restaurants, all just a ferry ride from downtown Seattle. Susan loves to bake, so expect treats in the morning. This beautiful cottage sleeps six.

Here’s another item that catches my eye: Editor for a Day at Kensington Publishing. Blippy on the horizon…

Hang out with Editor Kate Duffy at Kensington Publishing for an entire day and see what goes on in a New York publishing house. Attend art meetings, discuss how she acquires what she acquires, walk through the process of having a book published, and meet all the folks that make Kensington the fabulous publishing house that it is. Talk about an opportunity to see how it all works first-hand. Don’t miss this amazing opportunity! (Airfare and hotel accommodations are not included.)

Having had “interactions” with Ms. Duffy, I can attest that while she tries to pretend she’s intimidating, she’s actually charming, generous, and funny. If I lived closer to New York, I’d be all over this baby.

Several editors and agents are offering evaluations of proposals (three chapters and a synopsis), and Ms. Duffy is offering an evaluation of a complete manuscript. Honestly, there are too many items to go into. But have fun browsing. And visit the Auction website often. Because some items are only listed for a day or two, while others will remain listed for the entire month.

Ready…Set…Bid!

Another Bond Girl Sells!

My fellow 2007 Golden Heart “Licensed to Sell” finalist sister, Marilyn Brant, just sold her first two books to Kensington! Marilyn won the Golden Heart for Best Novel with Strong Romantic Elements in Dallas last summer with her manuscript, ACCORDING TO JANE. Way to go, Marilyn! To check out Marilyn’s first sale story (and who wouldn’t want to?), please visit her blog.

Why do I keep mentioning when another Bond Girl sells? To rub salt into the wounds of non-finalists? Uh, no. To give unpublished writers hope. And to show that finaling and/or winning the Golden Heart can help propel a writer on her way to that first sale. Sure, there are of those of us (not looking at anyone in particular…) who haven’t sold our GH finalist manuscripts. Finaling and/or winning the Golden Heart does not mean you will without-a-doubt, 100% sell that manuscript. But your finalist status definitely gets you a foot in the door in terms of marketing or re-marketing that manuscript. And who wouldn’t want some of that?

 

What a Difference a Week Makes…

View from our front deck, Saturday, April 19th:

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Same view, Saturday, April 26th:

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Don’t worry, it was a freak snowstorm. We don’t usually get snow in the middle of April.

 

Tell Me Tuesday-Good News Galore!

I’ve had two excellent pieces of news this week. On Friday, I learned that one of my WIPs, SEX, P.I.s & PACKING TAPE, is a finalist in The Lories Best Proposal by Published Author contest. This necessitated a mad afternoon of printing seven copies of the proposal for the final round and zipping them to the post office, so they’d make it to the contest coordinator in time for the deadline. There are no categories in the Best Proposal contest, so the six finalists are all lumped together (there were only supposed to be five finalists, but there was a tie). Seven industry judges are participating in the final round: two editors, two agents, a bookseller, a book reviewer, and a publisher reader (for non-writers, a “publisher reader” usually freelances, reading and giving her or his opinions on the suitability of a manuscript for a particular publishing house’s needs, and then the editor decides whether she (or he) reads the manu, dependant on the reader’s report.

My other piece of great news is that yesterday I received a phone call from RWA informing me that my name had been chosen in a draw as one of two recipients for the Rita Gallagher Memorial Conference Scholarship. I entered the draw through an ad in the Romance Writers’ Report a couple of months ago. As far as I know, one recipient is a PRO member, the second (moi!) an author with a sale in the past year newly qualifying her for PAN. (Note, if you’re not an RWA member, those designations won’t make sense, and they’re too complicated to go into now, but, rest assured, they make sense to me). When I saw the ad, I thought, “What the heck,” and now am I ever glad I entered the draw—because RWA is comping my San Francisco National Conference fee! This makes the conference a lot more affordable for an author on the…ahem…low end of the pay spectrum. I’m extremely grateful. Thank you, RWA!

Because of other commitments and recovery from the Devil of all Head Colds, I didn’t get as much writing done last week as I would have liked. The cold is still lingering, but I have my energy back, and I’m looking forward to diving into the WIP this week…and next week…and the week after that.

How about everyone else? Have good news to report? Experienced a bump on the road to publication and need a boost? Share your news, good or not-so-good. What are you working on?

Six Degrees of Running with Scissors

burroughs_scissors.jpgI read Augusten Burroughs’ RUNNING WITH SCISSORS last week. Or, should I say, I devoured it. Wickedly funny and intensely sad, this is a memoir that refuses to let you put it down. Anyone read it? Seen the movie? I’ve yet to see the movie, but now I want to. You know, so I can whine about how it fails in contrast.

I love funny writing, but the humor only carried me through the first half of the book. The “intensely sad” haunted me throughout the second half. Oh, the writing’s still funny in the second half, but the “intensely sad” lurks beneath, like a bog.

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Then I visited AB’s website. Great site, by the way. While visiting the website, I found out that Mr. Burroughs’ new memoir, which focuses on his father, WOLF AT THE TABLE, comes out, like, tomorrow. Okay, so it might not seem “woo-woo” to you that I inadvertently read RUNNING days before WOLF’s release, but it did feel “woo-woo” to me. Then, linking from his site to a New York Times article, I learned that Augusten Burroughs changed his name. The article makes it sound like he actually changed his name and didn’t just take a pen name. But maybe I read it wrong. Still recovering from the Devil of all Head Colds.

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At any rate, his birth surname is Robison. And his older brother with Asperger’s Syndrome described in RUNNING WITH SCISSORS is none other than John Elder Robison, who published his own memoir, about growing up with Asperger’s, in September 2007. It’s called LOOK ME IN THE EYE.

What’s my point, you ask? Just a bit more woo-woo. A (so far) unpublished (in novel form) writer I “know” (as in we’ve emailed each other privately every once in an indigo moon) from a Chick Lit writers listserv (that is now called Fiction That Sells, but that’s another story), named Kim Stagliano (gee, I hope someone out there can follow this sentence), just happens to be mother to three children with autism. Kim blogs about mothering kids with autism, she has an agent currently shopping a novel in which autism focuses hugely in the plot, and she contributes to The Huffington Post on the same subject. She knows and has met John Robison on several occasions. Now is there a weird sort of Six Degrees of Separation going on here? I know Kim. She knows John. John, I’m pretty sure, knows Augusten Burroughs. And Augusten Burroughs’ mother, as described in RUNNING WITH SCISSORS, reminds me a lot of Sylvia Plath (or, I should say, the Sylvia Plath I came to “know” through reading her published journals several years ago). I read Sylvia Plath’s THE BELL JAR when I was thirteen. That book belonged to Ma Mere, who recently returned from a winter in the sun, and one of the books she brought home for me to read was RUNNING WITH SCISSORS. A whole lot of co-inkidinks…a big bunch of woo-woo.

Do you have a literary woo-woo to share?

If You Like Dogs…

You’ll love this YouTube Video. Unfortunately, I can’t seem to embed it in this post. It works when I’m writing and previewing the post, but not when I’ve updated the blog. Then all I see is a big box with an X in it. There must be some trick to adding YouTube videos to WordPress blogs that I haven’t mastered. If anybody knows how to do it, let me know!

If you have some time, check out the Britain’s Got Talent clip of Gin the Dog. Even Simon Cowell was impressed.

Update—