Remember months ago when I said I would have the ebook for My Double Life up soon?
Soon is a relative term.
Anyway, here it is for 2.99 with the bonus scenes included:http://www.amazon.com/My-Double-Life-ebook/dp/B00CRW7VKG/ref=sr_1_2?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1369119673&sr=1-2&keywords=my+double+life
An Author Incognito
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
I've been at the LDStorymaker's conference this week. It's always super fun because I get to see so many writing friends and because people at Storymaker's actually think I'm cool. (My children refuse to believe this fact, but it's true.)
Here I am with Angela Morrison and international bestseller, Anne Perry. She was the keynote. Pretty much everything she said sounded amazing because she can quote Shakespeare, Dante, and speaks with a British accent. Memorizing large passages of classic literature is probably beyond my abilities, but I may start working on a British accent.
Every year at Storymakers, the Whitney Awards are given out. This year I was presenting the romance award with Sarah Eden. We were supposed to come up with a cute way to introduce the contestants. The problem with that was that Sarah and I spent two days joking around about all the bad and completely inappropriate ways we could present the award, so what we really did was come up with our introduction while we were getting dressed for the event. I'll put it in a future blog: Ways to tell you might be addicted to romance novels.
Every year, the funnest part of the Whitneys, (at least for me) is the after dinner drowning-your-sorrow-in-cheesecake because you didn't win pictures that Julie Wright, James Dashner, and I started years ago.
I didn't even get nominated for a Whitney this year. (The one book I had out in 2012 was disqualified because it was a rewrite of an earlier book.) So I figured that made me a double loser and I was completely qualified to crash the loser photos this year.
Here I am with the lovely Julie Wright, Melanie Jacobson, and Krista Jensen.Julie does despondent so well.
And here's the bitter group photo with awesome writers: Kelly Oram, Tanya Parker Mills, Julie Wright, Melanie Jacobson, Krista Jensen, Theresa Sneed, Gregg Luke, Marsha Ward, and Annette Lyon.
Every time I look at Gregg I laugh. He's got the concept down.
Even though I love the loser photos, it wasn't my favorite moment this year. Julie Donaldson won the romance category for her book Edenbrooke (and best novel by a new author), which was especially neat for me because she was one of the ladies in a week-long class I taught at BYU a few years ago. When she accepted her award she thanked me. I seriously nearly cried. I was so touched. It was way better than winning a Whitney.
Here I am with Angela Morrison and international bestseller, Anne Perry. She was the keynote. Pretty much everything she said sounded amazing because she can quote Shakespeare, Dante, and speaks with a British accent. Memorizing large passages of classic literature is probably beyond my abilities, but I may start working on a British accent.
Every year at Storymakers, the Whitney Awards are given out. This year I was presenting the romance award with Sarah Eden. We were supposed to come up with a cute way to introduce the contestants. The problem with that was that Sarah and I spent two days joking around about all the bad and completely inappropriate ways we could present the award, so what we really did was come up with our introduction while we were getting dressed for the event. I'll put it in a future blog: Ways to tell you might be addicted to romance novels.
Every year, the funnest part of the Whitneys, (at least for me) is the after dinner drowning-your-sorrow-in-cheesecake because you didn't win pictures that Julie Wright, James Dashner, and I started years ago.
I didn't even get nominated for a Whitney this year. (The one book I had out in 2012 was disqualified because it was a rewrite of an earlier book.) So I figured that made me a double loser and I was completely qualified to crash the loser photos this year.
Here I am with the lovely Julie Wright, Melanie Jacobson, and Krista Jensen.Julie does despondent so well.
And here's the bitter group photo with awesome writers: Kelly Oram, Tanya Parker Mills, Julie Wright, Melanie Jacobson, Krista Jensen, Theresa Sneed, Gregg Luke, Marsha Ward, and Annette Lyon.
Every time I look at Gregg I laugh. He's got the concept down.
Even though I love the loser photos, it wasn't my favorite moment this year. Julie Donaldson won the romance category for her book Edenbrooke (and best novel by a new author), which was especially neat for me because she was one of the ladies in a week-long class I taught at BYU a few years ago. When she accepted her award she thanked me. I seriously nearly cried. I was so touched. It was way better than winning a Whitney.
Monday, May 6, 2013
Researching the skydiving scene
I hate getting details wrong in my
books. This may not be entirely apparent since I have more than once gotten details
wrong in my books, but I really do a ton of research.
In Slayers: Friends and Traitors (due
out in October) I have characters jump out of a plane, and I decided it would
be a good idea if I went skydiving so I could write a more authentic scene. I
didn’t think it would be too frightening since a large amount of people skydive
every year. I figured, hey, people pay a lot of money to skydive so it’s
probably even fun.
That was my first stupid
assumption. People are idiots and you should never do something just because a
lot of people pay large amounts of money to do it. Case in point: golf.
So I booked an appointment, went
to the airport, and signed the twelve page waiver that detailed all the hideous
ways I might die. This was my favorite
part:
Basically it says I may be struck by passing aircraft, hit by vehicles on the ground, or may run into trees, buildings, or poisonous snakes.
I still wasn’t all that nervous because I knew I was going to be strapped to an experienced instructor. He was not likely to skimp on parachute inspection or whatever, because he didn’t want to die any more than I did.
I still wasn’t all that nervous because I knew I was going to be strapped to an experienced instructor. He was not likely to skimp on parachute inspection or whatever, because he didn’t want to die any more than I did.
Then I met my instructor. He was a
twenty-three year old guy who I suspect had no sense of his own mortality. I
became a little nervous.
He took me to a small plane that sounded
like a lawn mower and seemed to be held together with duct tape, super glue,
and erector set pieces. I was a little more nervous, but I was still okay because I
figured the pilot had been flying the plane for quite some time so he had a lot of experience doing important things, like not dying.
We took off, gained altitude, and
putted around in the sky for several minutes. I was now more nervous and cursing myself for ever switching from writing romantic comedies to action novels. Really, when you come right down to it, it would be fine to write a book about boring people who never do anything dangerous.
And then the plane door opened.
At that point a spike of terror
hit me. I realized that people are born with several strong survival instincts
and one of them screams: DO NOT JUMP OUT OF A PLANE! IT WILL KILL YOU!
I said many things at that point,
all of which my twenty-three year old instructor ignored as he dragged me out
of the plane.
And then we were falling through
the sky.
Falling at around 130 miles an
hour was like standing in a wind tunnel. All I heard was the wind screaming by.
I couldn’t even tell I was falling because nothing around me was moving. Then
the parachute came out and I glided through the air at a gentle 15 miles an
hour. It did feel like flying then and was really fun—especially when we did spins.
Spins are the best.
I landed and felt great.
This would normally be the end of
the blog except for one thing. Later that
day I got a call from the skydiving company telling me that their computer
crashed. (I guess this is better than hear that their plane crashed.) They had unfortunately lost all the pictures of me but they would let
me skydive again for free if I wanted to reschedule.
Well, at that point I was still
thinking about how fun the last part of skydiving had been and not the terror of the ominous
open-plane-door-moment, so I not only rescheduled, I decided to take my teenage
son with me. (Yep, these are all pictures from the second jump.)
This dear readers just proves that there
is no cure for stupidity. Because there is only one thing more terrifying than
being in a plane when the door opens and you know you’re going to plunge out of
it. And that is: being in a plane when the door opens and you know your child is going to plunge out of it.
I do not recommend this as an after
school activity.
When I went out of the plane the
second time, I wasn’t looking for sensory details to use in my novel. I was
searching the horizon to make sure my son’s parachute had opened.
It had.
And when you all read the
skydiving scene in Slayers: Friends and Traitors I hope you appreciate my
diligent research.
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
The Cruising Life, part two
For those of you who have never been on a cruise, the experience is pretty much like being aboard a floating buffet. Seriously, the ship had 24 hour pizza and ice cream. Which means that at some point, you feel obligated to eat pizza at 2:00 in the morning. And at 2:00 in the afternoon.
For some reason that isn't clear to me, Carnival decorated their dining room so that it looked like Ursula from the Little Mermaid was attacking the ship. Nothing says, "Dig in and eat!" like big purple plastic tubes. And if that's not classy enough for you, they added orange spiderweb designs to the end of the tubes. Maybe if you're really drunk, this all makes sense.
Here's a hugely gigantic Mexican flag that stands at one port. If you ask me, it's too large. It almost seems like they're compensating for something else.
But while you sleep, it's a different story.
There were all sorts of these signs on the ship. I'm assuming there were no words on them because the sign makers wanted to add to the general confusion the signs communicated. Here you can see two different signs, side by side. The first is clearly warning you that ninjas may drop from the ceiling and surround your family.
The second is telling you to run like heck--which is the normal response if you are being attacked by ninjas.
And here you can see a cruise ship taking a wrong turn somewhere on the Mississippi River. By the way, it took us nine hours to get to the sea. This is probably why Huckleberry Fin was such a long book.
And lastly, here I am with a pirate. I think it is pretty clear--judging from the position of his gun--what happened to his leg. Which is why you should never drink and be a pirate at the same time.
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Things you shouldn't put on brownies
I just got home from a cruise, which means I have a mountain of laundry, a thousand unanswered emails, and no one to shape my hand towels into cute little animal figures.
I had one of those Janette Rallison moments on my cruise. Although technically speaking, it wasn't my fault.
On the first day, the cruise held a welcome barbecue out by the pool. (Loud music, people chatting and laughing.) After I ate dinner, I went back for a brownie and noticed a tub of brown liquid by the brownie plate. Okay, in retrospect the tub of brown liquid was also by the ketchup and mustard, but I was only paying attention to the brownies at that point.
I put a brownie on my plate, pointed to the tub of brown liquid and asked Martino, the guy standing behind said objects, "Is that hot fudge?"
It was, after all, the logical conclusion. Brownies + hot fudge = joy.
Martino nodded and said, "Yes."
I didn't take into account that it was noisy outside and English probably wasn't Martino's first language. I happily ladled a spoonful of brown liquid onto my brownie.
Again in retrospect, Martino's startled expression probably should have tipped me off. But no, I walked back to my chair and took a big bite of my brownie. Which was completely covered in barbecue sauce. Then I spit the bite back onto my plate and did a really elegant gagging-wiping-my-tongue-off thing as I tried to get rid of the taste of barbecue and brownie.
So it turns out you can't mix chocolate with anything and make it taste better.
Martino walked by me a few minutes later, keeping an eye on me like I was clearly crazy.
It was a totally unfair reaction, since he was the one who told me it was hot fudge in the first place. I dub it a Martino moment.
More on the cruise life next blog.
I had one of those Janette Rallison moments on my cruise. Although technically speaking, it wasn't my fault.
On the first day, the cruise held a welcome barbecue out by the pool. (Loud music, people chatting and laughing.) After I ate dinner, I went back for a brownie and noticed a tub of brown liquid by the brownie plate. Okay, in retrospect the tub of brown liquid was also by the ketchup and mustard, but I was only paying attention to the brownies at that point.
I put a brownie on my plate, pointed to the tub of brown liquid and asked Martino, the guy standing behind said objects, "Is that hot fudge?"
It was, after all, the logical conclusion. Brownies + hot fudge = joy.
Martino nodded and said, "Yes."
I didn't take into account that it was noisy outside and English probably wasn't Martino's first language. I happily ladled a spoonful of brown liquid onto my brownie.
Again in retrospect, Martino's startled expression probably should have tipped me off. But no, I walked back to my chair and took a big bite of my brownie. Which was completely covered in barbecue sauce. Then I spit the bite back onto my plate and did a really elegant gagging-wiping-my-tongue-off thing as I tried to get rid of the taste of barbecue and brownie.
So it turns out you can't mix chocolate with anything and make it taste better.
Martino walked by me a few minutes later, keeping an eye on me like I was clearly crazy.
It was a totally unfair reaction, since he was the one who told me it was hot fudge in the first place. I dub it a Martino moment.
More on the cruise life next blog.
Sunday, April 14, 2013
As you may remember from your high school English class (you kept all of your notes on A Midsummer Night's Dream, didn’t you?) Shakespeare invented around 1700 words in his plays and poems.
Frankly, I think I should be allowed the same freedom, and I
get all snitty when copyeditors point out details like “Apexed isn’t a verb.”
(And right now Microsoft is insisting that 'snitty' isn’t a word either.)
Shakespeare never had to deal with such constraints.
Here are some words you probably didn't know he invented: eyeballs, puking, obscene, and skim milk.
Cool, huh?
Here are some words I wish he would have invented:
Another word for 'drop'. Oh sure, there’s plunge and plummet, but
you can’t use them interchangeably. You can’t have a character plunge her car
keys on the floor. No one has ever said,
“Hey, plummet the act. I know you’re lying.”
Nor has anyone’s mouth ever plunged open.
Another word for 'door.'
We use them all the time. Character’s are constantly coming in them,
stalking out them, walking toward them, and slamming them. It’s hard not to overuse the word. And don’t
tell me I could use portal—no one actually thinks of a door as a portal unless they
are in spaceship or a submarine.
And Shakespeare should have invented multiple words for 'turn'. In your novel, things will turn
colors, turn up, or turn from one thing into another. Your characters will take
turns, make right turns, turn over, turn back, turn their attention to things, see
how something turns out, and turn things down. They will also frequently turn
to each other. You can replace a few of those turns with spin, but that only
works if your characters are angry or ballerinas. If any word deserves a few synonyms,
it’s turn.
On the other hand, there are also words I could happily axe
from the English language to make my life easier. Ask me how many times I mistyped the word
rifle in Slayers: Friends and Traitors and spelled it riffle. The problem is that riffle is a real word. Spell check doesn’t catch it. It
means: to form, flow over, or move in riffles.
How many times have we all written about our riffling habits?
Maybe someone should add a function to the computer so that
anytime someone grabs a riffle, a little warning pops up that says, “You amuse
our computer brain, silly mortal. And by
the way, you have lightening cuting through the sky while your character is waking to the car.
Then again, sometimes I could use a good lightening bolt.
Monday, April 8, 2013
Why I don't swear in my books
I don't swear in real life. Seriously.
Well, okay, there was this one time when my 18-month-old daughter was seriously hurt, and we had to take her to the ER and I was frantic. We had to get our oldest daughter from a party and figure out where to send her and her four year old brother (You don't want that many children in the ER). I was going to go to the ER and my husband was going to arrange for the other kids, and then we couldn't find the car keys, (Little children carry them off) and then one car's battery was dead. And right when we finally had overcome all of those things and were ready to go, my husband said, "Just a minute, I need to go to the bathroom first."
I snapped. For a reason that is still not clear to me, a string of swearwords issued forth from my mouth. I didn't even know they were there. They all just came out in between the words: "They have bathrooms at the ER!!! Now get in the car!!!"
Not too long ago I said something to my now teenage son about how I never swear, and he said, "You did once. You swore that time you went to the Emergency Room."
I was surprised he remembered that all these years later.
That's probably how swear words should be. If you use them, they're so rare people will remember them decades later.
I've heard people use the F-bomb so many times in a sentence, it was a noun, adjective, and verb. I always wonder what those people do when they're really mad. I mean, what is left to say? "I double-dog F-bomb you!" or "F-bomb times infinity!"
I've seen the same problem in books. If you have a character swear all the time, it loses potency, and at least to me, comes off crass.
My problem as an author is that I sometimes have characters who would swear in given situations. I still don't include swearwords. (I have used the word h word--don't want to write it here, lest my blog be blocked by some filters--but only to describe the actual place, which I don't consider swearing. Although some younger kids don't seem to realize this difference. I was a Sunday School teacher for 8-year-olds once and had to refer to it as that-place-the-devil-lives because otherwise they gasped every time I said the word. And yes, I did try to explain the difference between swearing and naming a location, but they never seemed to grasp this finer point.)
Anyway, I can't have my characters swear for one simple reason. At my house I long ago instituted the rule that anyone who swears will have to pay five dollars.
I have over a million books in print. I am not that wealthy. I will have to continue to be swear-free.
Well, okay, there was this one time when my 18-month-old daughter was seriously hurt, and we had to take her to the ER and I was frantic. We had to get our oldest daughter from a party and figure out where to send her and her four year old brother (You don't want that many children in the ER). I was going to go to the ER and my husband was going to arrange for the other kids, and then we couldn't find the car keys, (Little children carry them off) and then one car's battery was dead. And right when we finally had overcome all of those things and were ready to go, my husband said, "Just a minute, I need to go to the bathroom first."
I snapped. For a reason that is still not clear to me, a string of swearwords issued forth from my mouth. I didn't even know they were there. They all just came out in between the words: "They have bathrooms at the ER!!! Now get in the car!!!"
Not too long ago I said something to my now teenage son about how I never swear, and he said, "You did once. You swore that time you went to the Emergency Room."
I was surprised he remembered that all these years later.
That's probably how swear words should be. If you use them, they're so rare people will remember them decades later.
I've heard people use the F-bomb so many times in a sentence, it was a noun, adjective, and verb. I always wonder what those people do when they're really mad. I mean, what is left to say? "I double-dog F-bomb you!" or "F-bomb times infinity!"
I've seen the same problem in books. If you have a character swear all the time, it loses potency, and at least to me, comes off crass.
My problem as an author is that I sometimes have characters who would swear in given situations. I still don't include swearwords. (I have used the word h word--don't want to write it here, lest my blog be blocked by some filters--but only to describe the actual place, which I don't consider swearing. Although some younger kids don't seem to realize this difference. I was a Sunday School teacher for 8-year-olds once and had to refer to it as that-place-the-devil-lives because otherwise they gasped every time I said the word. And yes, I did try to explain the difference between swearing and naming a location, but they never seemed to grasp this finer point.)
Anyway, I can't have my characters swear for one simple reason. At my house I long ago instituted the rule that anyone who swears will have to pay five dollars.
I have over a million books in print. I am not that wealthy. I will have to continue to be swear-free.
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