I am now reviewing romance novels at BellaOnline.com, which is the second largest information site for women on the worldwide web. So this is a big platform with a LOT of monthly traffic! I will write weekly reviews and promote them via a forum and a newsletter.
The exciting thing about this is that the Romance Novels site has only had one other host since the site first went live 15 years ago, and she only reviewed traditional male-female romance fiction. But now I can change that policy. I will be reviewing all types: traditional MF romances and romances with LGBT characters, which of course means lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered characters along with all the gay romance that I have always reviewed in the past. I'm not picky and all types of romance are welcome.
I'm excited about the opportunity to help bring LGBT romance fiction to the attention of a big mainstream audience of romance readers that might not have otherwise been aware of it. I recently posted two reviews: one for the very excellent Mind Games by Carolyn Crane (traditional MF romance) and one for the equally excellent Out in the Field by Kate McMurray (gay romance) and to my surprise, the gay romance review is now doing better in terms of traffic than the traditional romance review! And this is with a mainstream romance readership!
I am open to receiving review copies from authors of traditional (male-female), gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered romances. Authors and readers, please look here for an in-depth explanation of my review policy for the Bellaonline.com Romance Novels site.
Also, if anybody would like to promote his or her book blurb in the Romance Novels forum, please feel free to do so on the following PROMO threads:
PROMO thread for LGBT romances
PROMO thread for Traditional romances
You will have to establish a free forum account, but it's worth it. Then I think you have to make a small number of posts first before you are allowed to include a buy link (or any link) with your blurb, but you can email the link to me and I'll put it in for you. :)
Showing posts with label z-boring personal stuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label z-boring personal stuff. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Pet weirdness – bringing in mice
The other night we let in Little Gray because it was way too cold to keep him outside even in his little heated doghouse.
To our shock and dismay, he trotted inside with a mouse in his mouth before we could notice and block his way. I don’t know what he was thinking. That he had to pay a cover charge to get in?
Or maybe he just wanted to give us a gift? Or, more likely, he had just caught the mouse when he saw the back door open and didn’t want to give up either opportunity.
Anyway, he dropped the mouse, which scurried off into my husband’s study, which is heaped with papers and clutter to hide in. For the rest of the evening, the cat sat in the back hallway and attempted to keep an eye on the entire house.
Finally, the mouse showed up around midnight, scampering along the living room. The cat was on him like white on rice (to work in a cliché), but ran into the kitchen with his prize as soon as I came out of the bedroom to see what was going on.
For some reason, Little Gray dropped the mouse in the kitchen, and my husband and I were able to shoo it out the front door while keeping the cat indoors. The mouse looked unharmed but obviously shaken up. I guess it now had a story to tell its dozens of grandchildren.
Do you ever have your cat try to bring prey into the house? If so, what does he bring?
Copyright © Obsidian Bookshelf. I don't allow my content to be copied and reposted in full. You may use an excerpt (a few sentences) with a return link, but not the entire post.
Links:
To our shock and dismay, he trotted inside with a mouse in his mouth before we could notice and block his way. I don’t know what he was thinking. That he had to pay a cover charge to get in?
Or maybe he just wanted to give us a gift? Or, more likely, he had just caught the mouse when he saw the back door open and didn’t want to give up either opportunity.
Anyway, he dropped the mouse, which scurried off into my husband’s study, which is heaped with papers and clutter to hide in. For the rest of the evening, the cat sat in the back hallway and attempted to keep an eye on the entire house.
Finally, the mouse showed up around midnight, scampering along the living room. The cat was on him like white on rice (to work in a cliché), but ran into the kitchen with his prize as soon as I came out of the bedroom to see what was going on.
For some reason, Little Gray dropped the mouse in the kitchen, and my husband and I were able to shoo it out the front door while keeping the cat indoors. The mouse looked unharmed but obviously shaken up. I guess it now had a story to tell its dozens of grandchildren.
Do you ever have your cat try to bring prey into the house? If so, what does he bring?
Copyright © Obsidian Bookshelf. I don't allow my content to be copied and reposted in full. You may use an excerpt (a few sentences) with a return link, but not the entire post.
Links:
- My fiction list at Goodreads.com..
- My upcoming fiction.
- My published fiction.
- My how-to-write articles.
- As always, thank you for reading!
Monday, March 11, 2013
Pet weirdness – eating bugs
Okay, I know that Little Gray has some issues, having once been a stray cat. Even after five years in a good home, he remains fascinated by water as if remembering that a refreshing drink isn’t easy to find.
Whenever I water the plants on the back porch, he stares at the streams that trickle out of the bottom of the pots and run off the edge of the porch. He will even follow them and dab his paw into the wetness. He doesn’t trust the quality of the water he gets when I refill his bowl. He has to sniff it first and often will dip his paw in the water, sniff his paw, and then lick the water off to make sure of the taste.
Also, he has an urgent need to sniff everything that I have in my hand whether it’s a book or a turtle that I’m carrying from one part of the yard to the other. He’s not hungry per se, but he wants to know what I have.
The pet weirdness reached a new height the other evening when he was sitting on my lap in the kitchen and we both noticed a small cricket hopping along the tiled floor. (This was probably a leftover cricket from our pet toad, who recently passed on and went to toad heaven after five happy years here on earth with us.)
Anyway, the cat jumped off my lap and went to investigate the cricket. That wasn’t so weird because I know cats get curious about little moving things. But after sniffing the cricket, our cat licked it up in a matter-of-fact way, swallowed, and came back to my lap for more petting. I couldn’t believe what I’d seen. I mean, I've never seen a cat do this before.
And I hoped that he wasn’t about to spit it up. (He didn’t.) Does your cat eat bugs? If so, what kind of bugs? Was he or she ever a stray? Is this normal cat behavior?
Copyright © Obsidian Bookshelf. I don't allow my content to be copied and reposted in full. You may use an excerpt (a few sentences) with a return link, but not the entire post.
Links:
Whenever I water the plants on the back porch, he stares at the streams that trickle out of the bottom of the pots and run off the edge of the porch. He will even follow them and dab his paw into the wetness. He doesn’t trust the quality of the water he gets when I refill his bowl. He has to sniff it first and often will dip his paw in the water, sniff his paw, and then lick the water off to make sure of the taste.
Also, he has an urgent need to sniff everything that I have in my hand whether it’s a book or a turtle that I’m carrying from one part of the yard to the other. He’s not hungry per se, but he wants to know what I have.
The pet weirdness reached a new height the other evening when he was sitting on my lap in the kitchen and we both noticed a small cricket hopping along the tiled floor. (This was probably a leftover cricket from our pet toad, who recently passed on and went to toad heaven after five happy years here on earth with us.)
Anyway, the cat jumped off my lap and went to investigate the cricket. That wasn’t so weird because I know cats get curious about little moving things. But after sniffing the cricket, our cat licked it up in a matter-of-fact way, swallowed, and came back to my lap for more petting. I couldn’t believe what I’d seen. I mean, I've never seen a cat do this before.
And I hoped that he wasn’t about to spit it up. (He didn’t.) Does your cat eat bugs? If so, what kind of bugs? Was he or she ever a stray? Is this normal cat behavior?
Copyright © Obsidian Bookshelf. I don't allow my content to be copied and reposted in full. You may use an excerpt (a few sentences) with a return link, but not the entire post.
Links:
- My fiction list at Goodreads.com..
- My upcoming fiction.
- My published fiction.
- My how-to-write articles.
- As always, thank you for reading!
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Pet weirdness - thinking of a name
We have a stray cat who adopted us about five years ago. I mean, what’s not to like about our back yard?
Plenty of water and moist dog-food chunks to eat. Of course, these things were intended for our turtles, but the cat had no problems with shouldering them aside and taking over their food.
Plenty of birds to hunt. We were also putting out birdseed for the hordes of pea-brained wild doves that seem to feel that it’s our duty to look after them along with the trees and other landscaping features in the back yard. No other cats or dogs.
So he settled in to stay in our back yard, and I didn’t catch on that he was ours until one rainy day (which almost never happens out here in the desert) in which he stayed on our back porch all day. Until then, I’d thought he was one of the neighborhood cats who frequently roamed across our property. But then I realized that he had no other place to go.
We bought him some dried cat-food and a heated doghouse, and the rest has been history. Except we couldn’t decide on a name for him. Which is funny because we’re usually good at names – at least for computers.
My husband has named computers on the network after ocean life (Mollusk, Oyster, Scallop) and cuts of meat (Sirloin, Ribeye, Porterhouse). I have named them after Confederate generals (Longstreet, Stuart, Beauregard) and Egyptian gods (Ptah, Isis, Horus).
But we couldn’t figure out a name for the cat until we went with the obvious, Little Gray. (He’s not so little now, being about 10 pounds.) How do you name your pets? After their appearance? Personality? After favorite characters in books or movies?
Copyright © Obsidian Bookshelf. I don't allow my content to be copied and reposted in full. You may use an excerpt (a few sentences) with a return link, but not the entire post.
Links:
Plenty of water and moist dog-food chunks to eat. Of course, these things were intended for our turtles, but the cat had no problems with shouldering them aside and taking over their food.
Plenty of birds to hunt. We were also putting out birdseed for the hordes of pea-brained wild doves that seem to feel that it’s our duty to look after them along with the trees and other landscaping features in the back yard. No other cats or dogs.
So he settled in to stay in our back yard, and I didn’t catch on that he was ours until one rainy day (which almost never happens out here in the desert) in which he stayed on our back porch all day. Until then, I’d thought he was one of the neighborhood cats who frequently roamed across our property. But then I realized that he had no other place to go.
We bought him some dried cat-food and a heated doghouse, and the rest has been history. Except we couldn’t decide on a name for him. Which is funny because we’re usually good at names – at least for computers.
My husband has named computers on the network after ocean life (Mollusk, Oyster, Scallop) and cuts of meat (Sirloin, Ribeye, Porterhouse). I have named them after Confederate generals (Longstreet, Stuart, Beauregard) and Egyptian gods (Ptah, Isis, Horus).
But we couldn’t figure out a name for the cat until we went with the obvious, Little Gray. (He’s not so little now, being about 10 pounds.) How do you name your pets? After their appearance? Personality? After favorite characters in books or movies?
Copyright © Obsidian Bookshelf. I don't allow my content to be copied and reposted in full. You may use an excerpt (a few sentences) with a return link, but not the entire post.
Links:
- My fiction list at Goodreads.com..
- My upcoming fiction.
- My published fiction.
- My how-to-write articles.
- As always, thank you for reading!
Sunday, February 17, 2013
More Geeking Out

All the details are correct. Look at the brown sorrel pony he's riding, which was smaller than most of the officers' horses. And the shape of his beard. And the weird little squashed-up forage cap he always wore.
Stonewall Jackson was very unusual, even for a military genius. There is some modern-day speculation that he had Asperger's Syndrome, a form of high functioning autism.
From what I've read about his pre-Civil War career as an instructor at Virginia Military Institute, I could believe it. He taught physics with a military application and would memorize the textbook and lecture directly from it. If students disturbed his routine with questions, then obviously they weren't grasping the information. To help them, he would repeat the exact same lecture the following day, word for word. There are some cadets' letters that have survived to today in which they whine about him being their least favorite instructor, ha, ha!
He was also deeply devout (maybe even a religious fanatic) and yet he loved battle. He didn't like to fight on Sundays, but he would if he had to. And he was a devoted father and husband. Definitely a person of contradictions.
Some historians think that if he hadn't fallen at Chancellorsville, he would have turned the tide at Gettysburg and perhaps helped the South to win the Civil War. I believe the part about Gettysburg, but I don't think the South could have won the war overall. Not against generals like Grant and Sherman, who had far more men and materials. However, it's fun to speculate.
Even more than the attention to detail in this miniature, I like the energy that the figure holds. You can see this best in General Jackson's hands where he's pulling the reins and pointing. I do a little sculpture (whittling on a very basic level) and I'm fascinated by sculptures that capture energy and look alive.
Copyright © Obsidian Bookshelf. I don't allow my content to be copied and reposted in full. You may use an excerpt (a few sentences) with a return link, but not the entire post.
Links:
- My fiction list at Goodreads.com..
- My upcoming fiction.
- My published fiction.
- My how-to-write articles.
- As always, thank you for reading!
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
A warning about Bookish.com
Just a quick warning. If you're thinking about signing up for the new social media site, Bookish.com, I'd advise against it. Once you've signed up, there is no way for you to delete your account. There is also no way for you to unsubscribe from their newsletter.
I'm emphasizing the word "YOU" because the power to change your involvement in this site does not lie in your hands. In order to do these things, you must petition their customer service department, which I have already done to no avail. How time consuming can it be to delete one person's account? Or better still, give their customer service department a break and put the power of account deletion into our hands where it belongs?
When I tried to point out these things in a message uisng the Bookish "feedback" email address, I got a failure-to-deliver message from Gmail that reads, "Google tried to deliver your message, but it was rejected by the server for the recipient domain bookish.com [...] The error that the other server returned was: 550-5.1.1 The email account that you tried to reach does not exist."
In addition, the site lacks the flexibility and interactiveness of Goodreads.com in that you cannot easily add a book to their book database. If you're an author, you are supposed to contact your publisher and ask them to submit your book for you to Bookish. I'm sure authors and publishers alike would rather not have to jump through those hoops just to get that done. I'm also unclear on who Bookish would even recognize as a "legitimate" publisher.
Anyway, if I'd known that I'd have no power to cut loose from this site once my personal information was ensnared by them, I never would have got involved with Bookish. I hope I can save some other people the trouble. (Edited to add that the customer service department did delete my account about a week after I asked them to.)
Copyright © Obsidian Bookshelf. I don't allow my content to be copied and reposted in full. You may use an excerpt (a few sentences) with a return link, but not the entire post.
Links:
I'm emphasizing the word "YOU" because the power to change your involvement in this site does not lie in your hands. In order to do these things, you must petition their customer service department, which I have already done to no avail. How time consuming can it be to delete one person's account? Or better still, give their customer service department a break and put the power of account deletion into our hands where it belongs?
When I tried to point out these things in a message uisng the Bookish "feedback" email address, I got a failure-to-deliver message from Gmail that reads, "Google tried to deliver your message, but it was rejected by the server for the recipient domain bookish.com [...] The error that the other server returned was: 550-5.1.1 The email account that you tried to reach does not exist."
In addition, the site lacks the flexibility and interactiveness of Goodreads.com in that you cannot easily add a book to their book database. If you're an author, you are supposed to contact your publisher and ask them to submit your book for you to Bookish. I'm sure authors and publishers alike would rather not have to jump through those hoops just to get that done. I'm also unclear on who Bookish would even recognize as a "legitimate" publisher.
Anyway, if I'd known that I'd have no power to cut loose from this site once my personal information was ensnared by them, I never would have got involved with Bookish. I hope I can save some other people the trouble. (Edited to add that the customer service department did delete my account about a week after I asked them to.)
Copyright © Obsidian Bookshelf. I don't allow my content to be copied and reposted in full. You may use an excerpt (a few sentences) with a return link, but not the entire post.
Links:
- My fiction list at Goodreads.com..
- My upcoming fiction.
- My published fiction.
- My how-to-write articles.
- As always, thank you for reading!
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Okay I have to geek out about this...
I love miniatures. I have to restrain myself so they don't take over my house -- because, being miniatures, they don't seem to take up space. Anyway, I found this on eBay. It's a chess piece (the Knight) in the shape of Confederate cavalry officer J.E.B. Stuart from the American Civil War, and it looks just like him! (Hard to see from my photo, though). I just had to geek out about this.
Here is the real J.E.B. Stuart, courtesy of Wikipedia in a public domain photo:
Copyright © Obsidian Bookshelf. I don't allow my content to be copied and reposted in full. You may use an excerpt (a few sentences) with a return link, but not the entire post.
Links:
Here is the real J.E.B. Stuart, courtesy of Wikipedia in a public domain photo:
Copyright © Obsidian Bookshelf. I don't allow my content to be copied and reposted in full. You may use an excerpt (a few sentences) with a return link, but not the entire post.
Links:
- My fiction list at Goodreads.com..
- My upcoming fiction.
- My published fiction.
- My how-to-write articles.
- As always, thank you for reading!
Monday, October 22, 2012
GayRomLit2012 in excruciating detail with no photos
Yes, no photos because I had enough to coordinate without adding a camera. Also, you’ve been warned about the excruciating detail (almost 4,000 words in this post).
Two things to give you context: (1) I’m currently living in Albuquerque so I had a different experience than the hotel experience, and (2) I’m probably the most introverted person on the planet, so I was very pleased to find everyone so friendly and relaxed. Though, as a huge introvert, I had quite a few deer-in-the-headlights moments where I found myself staring intensely somebody while unable to think of a thing to say.
WEDNESDAY 10/17.
Chris showed up to stay with me and my husband during the conference, and we all went to dinner.
Summary impressions:
* Chris is the best conversationalist ever. We talked about everything from Asperger’s (very eye-opening!) to books and reading (very funny!) to the visual spectrum of reptiles (yes, very nerdy).
* Chris has real empathy with animals. I was so impressed at how well she interacted with my pets, who can be nervous around people they don’t know. Well, my toad is stoic and easy-going. :D
THURSDAY 10/17
I arrived at the Hard Rock Casino at 845am to put my swag in place in one of the ballrooms. I browsed the ballroom and picked up a sample of everyone else’s swag. Then I got to meet some authors.
First, Kate McMurray, one of my favorites. Her books are so authentic, deeply layered, and subtle that, without having seen her photo, I’d assumed that she must be my age to write so well. Surprise! She’s easily twenty years younger than I am. Very stylish, and tall. I wish I were five eight or five nine. I was thrilled to learn that her newest book is coming out in January. Here is her blog post about it. See point #4.
I also met Marie Sexton, and had my first deer-in-the-headlights moment where I wanted to tell her how much I’d enjoyed Promises, but I just couldn’t get the words out. She looked great, very elegant. She, Kate, Z.A. Maxfield, and Aleks Voinov were the probably the best-dressed authors at all the events.
Next I went to the GayRomLit Newbie orientation at 10am, which was an invaluable idea organized by Jay at Joyfully Jay blog. Thank you, Jay. I really appreciated the orientation. There, I got to meet attendees Candy, Dianne, and Wave from Reviews by Jessewave. I went on to have lunch with Wave, who also took me under her wing for the next hour and introduced me to several people. An introvert like me cannot even begin to express how helpful that is. Wave turned out to have an outrageous sense of humor, and was so much fun to hang around with!
At 1pm, I attended my first event, the Author Q&A with Geoffrey Knight, Heidi Cullinan, Trina Lane, and TC Blue. Afterward, I was delighted to meet Dolorianne from Mantastic Fiction blog, a truly gracious person with the ability to set me totally at ease in the conversation. I wish we’d had more time to hang out and talk.
Then I attended the next two blocks of author readings. That evening, my husband and I met up with Chris at the very end of the MLR Press opening reception where we got to chat with Kate McMurray again and … Clare London! I hadn’t known she was at GayRomLit, and was delighted to meet her. She turned out to have a dry and devilish sense of humor, very fun.
Next was the Gentleman’s Juke Join Wild West Party, featuring loud music and three strippers, dressed in skimpy costumes. They didn’t exactly strip further, but enthusiastically danced for us. The hottest point of the night occurred when Damon Suede danced with the strippers, and he was an even better dancer than they were.
Very briefly, I got to meet Amy Lane. I was trying to scream over the music and tell her how much I loved her book Keeping Promise Rock, not just for its great story and characters, but also for having one of the most complex and three-dimensional settings I’ve ever read in our genre. More than two years after reading it, I’m still haunted by the vivid northern California location. It reminds me of the sense of place in Joan Didion’s nonfiction (also specific to the Sacramento area). I don’t think I managed to get all this across past the dance music, but I want to go on record here as a big fan of the book.
I got to meet PD Singer, who is absolutely gorgeous. She had some very encouraging information about self-publishing to share.
I also was thrilled to meet Lauraadriana, also gorgeous, tall, and with a truly sexy accent. She gave me a compliment I will never forget – that, after reading my novella FALL INTO THE SUN, she had thought I was Hispanic like my characters. To have a Latina reader think that I am Latina is the ultimate compliment to the authenticity of my work. In real life, despite my Ukrainian pen name, I’m about as Anglo-Saxon as someone can possibly be. Thank you, Lauraadriana. I think that was the best moment for me in the entire GayRomLit.
Summary impressions:
* Never put your swag out all as I did. My minimum order had been 500 magnets (which featured the gorgeous cover art by Jordan Castillo Price for REACH FOR THE MOON, my upcoming book featuring Alejo and Bobby from FALL INTO THE SUN. Unfortunately, 500 magnets was still 100 more than the 400 total attendees. And I was trying to fit it all into a designated space measuring about size of my laptop, maybe 15 inches by 10 inches. If I could do it again, I would bring only one-fourth of my swag and replenish as needed.
* Most common swag? (1) Pens, (2) paper items like bookmarks, and (3) magnets. Also beauty products such as tubes of lip balm, and edibles such as chocolates.
* The funniest swag I saw? A tape measure from Joyee Flynn, labeled the Pecker Checker.
* The most interactive swag? Kiernan Kelly’s playing cards featuring naked cowboys. Amy Lane’s tote bag containing crayons and an activity book with puzzles connected to her books.
* The most original swag? Eden Winters’s calculator and ZA Maxfield’s bandage dispenser with the slogan “When love hurts, a book makes it better.” Also, Damon Suede had purse hooks, a concept I’d never encountered until then. Very cool!
FRIDAY 10/18. Arrived at 9am to do my author reading in the 505 Fusion bar with ZA Maxfield, Ellis Carrington, and Eden Winters. I got very lucky to be included with these three because I was guaranteed an audience. Ellis’s reading was my first introduction to her work, and now I want to buy her books. I think I’ll start with Amor Prohibito, which is an awesome title.
ZA Maxfield’s excerpt from E-Pistols at Dawn, was hilarious. Between the material and her delivery, we audience members were laughing out loud.
Eden Winters read from Diversion, and I was immediately hooked, and not just by her appealing Southern accent. The scene had really hot chemistry between the two main characters. I’m buying the book today (now that I have time now that GayRomLit is done).
My reading went fine, even though it was the only author reading to feature a violent action scene. Later, I learned from reader John (tall John from Texas whom I know from Reviews by Jessewave) that the most violent part of my scene made all the audience members around him flinch. :D Thank you, John. I was very pleased to hear this because it proves people were involved and listening!
I stuck around for the next two blocks of author readings. Damon Suede had the best actor-type training at reading aloud (and this is saying something because several of the authors -- including Cherie Noel, ZA Maxfield, Anel Viz, Ethan Day, and Hank Edwards -- were very good at it), and was especially good with dialog. He read from a work-in-progress, featuring zombies in Central Park, which I hope we get to see in published form soon.
Hank Edwards had the most entertaining reading of all, which again is saying something because there were several readings that bordered on comedic genius. He read from Plus Ones and added some improvised lines that had us audience members almost rolling on the floor, delirious from laughing. I love comedy. I enjoyed his reading so much that I bought his book at the Saturday booksigning, the only paperback I picked up at the conference, and this is from someone who is trying to get replace all my paperbacks with ebooks!
Next, I browsed the swag room (yeah, my swag still wasn’t moving). I was thrilled to meet Laddie, whom I feel I know very well through Goodreads. Laddie is one of my Goodreads friends whom I’d really wanted to meet in person (of course without having any idea what she looked like or where she would be) so it was random good luck that we met in the swag room and had a chance to talk. Laddie, I’m so glad I got to meet you!
I also had my biggest fangirl moment (which fortunately did not coincide with one of my deer-in-the-headlights moments) when I ran across Abigail Roux in the swag room. I was very lucky to catch her momentarily alone without the hordes of Ty-and-Zane fans, and I begged her for a sequel to her amazing novel According to Hoyle, which I’d snapped up way back on its release date because of its awesome blurb.
People, this is one of my favorite books in the entire gay romance genre. I’d been hoping for the sequel, and fearing that she might have put aside the idea indefinitely to focus on other things. I was happy to find that she has maybe two more books planned in the series for the near future! I kid you not, people – whole sections of the book stand out vividly in my mind. The two U.S, Marshall characters had distinctly three-dimensional personalities that really caught my imagination, and not just because they were Civil War veterans and I’m turning into a big Civil War buff.
I remember reading that Eli and Wash fought together at the Battle of Antietam for the Union, which was a surrealistically nightmarish conflict in the Civil War, right up there with the Battle of Shiloh, and I’ve been dying to have that story written so I can read it. So, in the swag room, I tried to talk Abigail into writing it. I think even a short story would be awesome, and I know I’d be promoting the heck out of it in my reviews. *hint* *hint* :D
That afternoon featured the Old Town shopping expedition, but I skipped all that because, as an Albuquerque native, I am way too familiar with Old Town.
The evening event centered on karaoke, but I skipped that, too, because Chris had found another event for us – the Big, Gay Undead Wedding, a musical Halloween type event put on at Effex gay bar in downtown Albuquerque by the Albuquerque Gay Men’s Chorus. I expected something like the Rocky Horror Picture Show (and they did sing one of the songs from it), but it was very different. A completely musical narrative with breathtaking singing and an amazing range of popular music.
Actually, Chris and I and several other conference attendees who were there have Snowtulip to thank for discovering this event for us. I was very pleased to have a chance to meet Snowtulip at this event – she’s a real sweetheart, very fun to talk to, and she even came by to say hi to me during the booksigning on Saturday and picked up some of my swag (for which I’m very grateful!).
At the Big, Gay Undead Wedding, I also got to meet Cole, someone else I’d really hoped to talk with. Cole and I have in common a background in singing for school choirs. We’ve both even had the same experiences having to sing across tenor and alto ranges (not the easiest thing in the world to do!).
Summary Impressions:
* Everyone I spoke to had nothing but praise for the GayRomLit organizers. They all said that this year’s GayRomLit was better organized and more fun than last year’s.
* For the author readings, the trend tended toward (1) romantic comedy with dialog, (2) sex scenes. Very brave! Author Jackie Nacht did an outstanding job of moderating and organizing the readings.
SATURDAY 10/19.
I arrived in time for the first block of author readings (and got to see Wave again and sit with her in the audience!). Anel Viz’s reading about an alien abduction fantasy was hilarious. He had great comedic timing. JP Bowie did a very funny reading from a William Neale short story told from a terrier’s viewpoint.
I went on to the Mexican bingo event sponsored by the Fiction with Friction blog, where I got to meet James Buchanan! I was very pleased to find out that there will soon be some Deputy Joe books published. The bingo event itself was so popular that we didn’t have enough Mexican bingo boards, so the authors had ticket drawings for prizes.
I was sitting at a table between author Kendall McKenna and another of my Goodreads friends Leaundra and everyone on every side was winning a prize but me and Leandra. :D We were joking about being the vortex of bad luck at an otherwise lucky table.
Afterwards, I had the good luck to run into another Goodreads friend in the hallway – Anke! I’d been looking for her with my only appearance clue being that she would be dressed in navy blue like me. Anke and I went on to the barbecue lunch sponsored by Silver Publishing.
Anke speaks English better than I do (yes, and I’m American), and has a slight German accent that I found very appealing (precisely enunciated and with a lilting quality). She was the best possible lunch companion with a great sense of humor and filled me in on the Old Town excursion that I had missed. Anke, I’m so glad I got to meet you!
Through Anke, I met MLR Press author Lynley Wayne, who has the most striking green eyes. (I’m fascinated by accents and eye color.) She had her husband with her, whose name was Brian, I think (my apologies if I got that wrong). He had the best Mississippi accent ever. I wanted to keep both him and Anke talking so I could enjoy their immensely appealing (though very different) accents.
Lynley’s husband does amazing cover art. Look at this awesome cover he did for her novel Scars. Normally, I don’t like too many different elements in cover art, but he does it perfectly here and gets the lighting exactly right. Here is a bigger photo. I believe he is a freelance cover artist, so definitely contact Lynley if you’d like him to do a cover for you.
From here, Anke, Lynley, and Lynley’s husband went to the MLR Press spotlight event and I went to the Kinky Craft Fair sponsored by authors Damon Suede, LC Chase, Taylor Donovan, and Anne Tenino. Here, I painted an e-reader cover, but had to abandon it because the paint wasn’t drying fast enough.
This was another event that had massive attendance (as you might imagine), and I was delighted to run across Lauraadriana, Laddie, Chris, Leaundra, Clare London, and others. Also, I’m not sure if they were at this particular event, but I did have the good fortune to repeatedly meet two Goodreads friends of mine Sadonna and MsMiz (Tina). Both were great conversationalists. I got to meet Nikyta, who is the best person and so cute, exactly the way I pictured her!
On to the massive booksigning event in one of the ballrooms. While I’d been lining up my free lunch earlier, the wiser authors had been securing a good spot for the booksigning. I’d thought we authors were going to be placed in alphabetical order, but it turned it to be entirely random.
Coming in late, I was allowed to sit wherever I could find a spot so I sat at the same table as Jambrea Jo Jones, who turned out to be a very pleasant table companion, and I put out my swag since I didn’t have any paper books to sign.
Alas, no one but some friends I’d previously met came over to my table to take some swag (thank you, Snowtulip!). I did get to sign a photo frame and two iPads from three enterprising readers who were collecting autographs from every attending author.
I wandered around and had a wonderful conversation with Kathy from Book Reviews and More by Kathy. We talked about blogging and living in different regions of the U.S. Being part of an Air Force family, she has lived in a lot of different places, and had some great descriptions of Alaska and South Dakota, both of which I now want to visit. Thank you, Kathy. I’m so glad I got a chance to have an extended conversation with you!
In addition, I got to compliment Hank Edwards on his reading and buy his book Plus Ones, which he inscribed for me.
I had the great good luck to run across Abigail Roux, again momentarily without the hordes of Ty-and-Zane fans, and asked for the one and only autograph I had the nerve to ask for during the GayRomLit event. She wrote, “For Val, thank you for loving Hoyle”! I’m keeping it forever. :D
I had a deer-in-the-headlights near-encounter with Aleks Voinov, where I couldn’t quite get the nerve to step forward and say how much I enjoyed the Dark Soul series and especially Counterpunch. Part of it was my surprise at seeing him in that I hadn’t expected him (or Clare London) to come to the GayRomLit so soon after they had done the UK Meet.
He looked great in a pinstriped suit and tie, and was just about the only author present who looked exactly like my mental picture of him (except his hair was darker blond than I’d pictured).
Back at my table, no swag had moved, so I sat one row over with Lori Torland, who had a slide show on her tablet of her cats. Gorgeous cats – a big calico cat (probably my favorite type of cat), and a big white cat with very cute black markings. Lori was great to talk to, and we kicked back and watched videos on her tablet of her cats. :D
[Jeez, this blog post is getting long!] Okay, from there, my husband and I took Chris out for dinner and all three of us showed up in time for the Dreamspinner Press event at 9pm, the Cosmo Cabaret Lounge.
The piano guy they hired to do the event was worth every penny of whatever they paid him. Not only could this guy play ANYTHING on the piano, however far-fetched, he was also great at getting the audience to participate in sing-alongs and interactive stuff that he fashioned from song requests from the audience.
For example, Angel Martinez and her friend Freddie requested “Roxanne” by the Police, which he turned into a competitive drinking game with them having to drink every time they heard the words ‘Roxanne’ or ‘put-on-the-red-light’, respectively. Or, do you remember that God-awful Kenny Rogers song “Lucille”? Our piano guy played it in a very sprightly double-time tempo with the audience divided into thirds, screaming out insults to poor Lucille upon command. All this sounds weird, but trust me. If you were there, you know how much fun the evening was.
He also had four contestants, including one very brave man, doing a dance-off to various songs he played including Chubby Checker’s “Twist,” and the Macarena. I got to sit next to Ally Blue and sing along with her! I wish we’d had a quieter place to talk because she seemed like such a fun person. Chris thinks that I was tipsy that night, but I actually didn’t touch a drop through the whole GayRomLit. My silliness was coming out through the momentum of the event alone. :D
Did I mention this piano guy could play ANYTHING? Everybody in the audience was challenging him with some very far-out requests, but he handled them all, including songs by AC/DC (You Shook Me All Night Long), Guns and Roses (Sweet Child O’ Mine), and – I kid you not – Nine Inch Nails (Closer). And he could make the songs sound the way they were supposed to!
SUNDAY 10/20.
Chris and I got to the Hard Rock casino in time for the last part of the farewell brunch, which wrapped up early. I had my biggest deer-in-the-headlights moment in the hallway standing next to Chris when Heidi Cullinan came up to talk and I just stared at her and felt my mind completely evaporate until I couldn’t think of a thing to say. So, I want to go on record here as having loved her novel, Special Delivery. If you’re one of the few people on the planet who hasn’t read this book yet, and you like road trip novels, you’re in for a treat.
I also got to meet author EM Lynley, literally in the eleventh hour before Chris and I departed, and I’m glad we had a chance to talk and share cough drops. :D (Seriously, between the allergies and all the talking we all were doing, our voices were getting an unaccustomed workout.)
Summary impressions:
* The interactive group events such as bingo and crafts seemed to be more popular than the readings and QandA sessions by far.
* If you’re doing a booksigning event, you’re at a true advantage if you’re nearest to the main doors where they let the readers in.
* If you’re an author, do an author reading. It really does sell books. I bought a book based on every reading I attended.
* I want to thank the GayRomLit organizers, the authors I met, and the readers-bloggers-reviewers most especially. Thank you very much for reading!
Two things to give you context: (1) I’m currently living in Albuquerque so I had a different experience than the hotel experience, and (2) I’m probably the most introverted person on the planet, so I was very pleased to find everyone so friendly and relaxed. Though, as a huge introvert, I had quite a few deer-in-the-headlights moments where I found myself staring intensely somebody while unable to think of a thing to say.
WEDNESDAY 10/17.
Chris showed up to stay with me and my husband during the conference, and we all went to dinner.
Summary impressions:
* Chris is the best conversationalist ever. We talked about everything from Asperger’s (very eye-opening!) to books and reading (very funny!) to the visual spectrum of reptiles (yes, very nerdy).
* Chris has real empathy with animals. I was so impressed at how well she interacted with my pets, who can be nervous around people they don’t know. Well, my toad is stoic and easy-going. :D
THURSDAY 10/17
I arrived at the Hard Rock Casino at 845am to put my swag in place in one of the ballrooms. I browsed the ballroom and picked up a sample of everyone else’s swag. Then I got to meet some authors.
First, Kate McMurray, one of my favorites. Her books are so authentic, deeply layered, and subtle that, without having seen her photo, I’d assumed that she must be my age to write so well. Surprise! She’s easily twenty years younger than I am. Very stylish, and tall. I wish I were five eight or five nine. I was thrilled to learn that her newest book is coming out in January. Here is her blog post about it. See point #4.
I also met Marie Sexton, and had my first deer-in-the-headlights moment where I wanted to tell her how much I’d enjoyed Promises, but I just couldn’t get the words out. She looked great, very elegant. She, Kate, Z.A. Maxfield, and Aleks Voinov were the probably the best-dressed authors at all the events.
Next I went to the GayRomLit Newbie orientation at 10am, which was an invaluable idea organized by Jay at Joyfully Jay blog. Thank you, Jay. I really appreciated the orientation. There, I got to meet attendees Candy, Dianne, and Wave from Reviews by Jessewave. I went on to have lunch with Wave, who also took me under her wing for the next hour and introduced me to several people. An introvert like me cannot even begin to express how helpful that is. Wave turned out to have an outrageous sense of humor, and was so much fun to hang around with!
At 1pm, I attended my first event, the Author Q&A with Geoffrey Knight, Heidi Cullinan, Trina Lane, and TC Blue. Afterward, I was delighted to meet Dolorianne from Mantastic Fiction blog, a truly gracious person with the ability to set me totally at ease in the conversation. I wish we’d had more time to hang out and talk.
Then I attended the next two blocks of author readings. That evening, my husband and I met up with Chris at the very end of the MLR Press opening reception where we got to chat with Kate McMurray again and … Clare London! I hadn’t known she was at GayRomLit, and was delighted to meet her. She turned out to have a dry and devilish sense of humor, very fun.
Next was the Gentleman’s Juke Join Wild West Party, featuring loud music and three strippers, dressed in skimpy costumes. They didn’t exactly strip further, but enthusiastically danced for us. The hottest point of the night occurred when Damon Suede danced with the strippers, and he was an even better dancer than they were.
Very briefly, I got to meet Amy Lane. I was trying to scream over the music and tell her how much I loved her book Keeping Promise Rock, not just for its great story and characters, but also for having one of the most complex and three-dimensional settings I’ve ever read in our genre. More than two years after reading it, I’m still haunted by the vivid northern California location. It reminds me of the sense of place in Joan Didion’s nonfiction (also specific to the Sacramento area). I don’t think I managed to get all this across past the dance music, but I want to go on record here as a big fan of the book.
I got to meet PD Singer, who is absolutely gorgeous. She had some very encouraging information about self-publishing to share.
I also was thrilled to meet Lauraadriana, also gorgeous, tall, and with a truly sexy accent. She gave me a compliment I will never forget – that, after reading my novella FALL INTO THE SUN, she had thought I was Hispanic like my characters. To have a Latina reader think that I am Latina is the ultimate compliment to the authenticity of my work. In real life, despite my Ukrainian pen name, I’m about as Anglo-Saxon as someone can possibly be. Thank you, Lauraadriana. I think that was the best moment for me in the entire GayRomLit.
Summary impressions:
* Never put your swag out all as I did. My minimum order had been 500 magnets (which featured the gorgeous cover art by Jordan Castillo Price for REACH FOR THE MOON, my upcoming book featuring Alejo and Bobby from FALL INTO THE SUN. Unfortunately, 500 magnets was still 100 more than the 400 total attendees. And I was trying to fit it all into a designated space measuring about size of my laptop, maybe 15 inches by 10 inches. If I could do it again, I would bring only one-fourth of my swag and replenish as needed.
* Most common swag? (1) Pens, (2) paper items like bookmarks, and (3) magnets. Also beauty products such as tubes of lip balm, and edibles such as chocolates.
* The funniest swag I saw? A tape measure from Joyee Flynn, labeled the Pecker Checker.
* The most interactive swag? Kiernan Kelly’s playing cards featuring naked cowboys. Amy Lane’s tote bag containing crayons and an activity book with puzzles connected to her books.
* The most original swag? Eden Winters’s calculator and ZA Maxfield’s bandage dispenser with the slogan “When love hurts, a book makes it better.” Also, Damon Suede had purse hooks, a concept I’d never encountered until then. Very cool!
FRIDAY 10/18. Arrived at 9am to do my author reading in the 505 Fusion bar with ZA Maxfield, Ellis Carrington, and Eden Winters. I got very lucky to be included with these three because I was guaranteed an audience. Ellis’s reading was my first introduction to her work, and now I want to buy her books. I think I’ll start with Amor Prohibito, which is an awesome title.
ZA Maxfield’s excerpt from E-Pistols at Dawn, was hilarious. Between the material and her delivery, we audience members were laughing out loud.
Eden Winters read from Diversion, and I was immediately hooked, and not just by her appealing Southern accent. The scene had really hot chemistry between the two main characters. I’m buying the book today (now that I have time now that GayRomLit is done).
My reading went fine, even though it was the only author reading to feature a violent action scene. Later, I learned from reader John (tall John from Texas whom I know from Reviews by Jessewave) that the most violent part of my scene made all the audience members around him flinch. :D Thank you, John. I was very pleased to hear this because it proves people were involved and listening!
I stuck around for the next two blocks of author readings. Damon Suede had the best actor-type training at reading aloud (and this is saying something because several of the authors -- including Cherie Noel, ZA Maxfield, Anel Viz, Ethan Day, and Hank Edwards -- were very good at it), and was especially good with dialog. He read from a work-in-progress, featuring zombies in Central Park, which I hope we get to see in published form soon.
Hank Edwards had the most entertaining reading of all, which again is saying something because there were several readings that bordered on comedic genius. He read from Plus Ones and added some improvised lines that had us audience members almost rolling on the floor, delirious from laughing. I love comedy. I enjoyed his reading so much that I bought his book at the Saturday booksigning, the only paperback I picked up at the conference, and this is from someone who is trying to get replace all my paperbacks with ebooks!
Next, I browsed the swag room (yeah, my swag still wasn’t moving). I was thrilled to meet Laddie, whom I feel I know very well through Goodreads. Laddie is one of my Goodreads friends whom I’d really wanted to meet in person (of course without having any idea what she looked like or where she would be) so it was random good luck that we met in the swag room and had a chance to talk. Laddie, I’m so glad I got to meet you!
I also had my biggest fangirl moment (which fortunately did not coincide with one of my deer-in-the-headlights moments) when I ran across Abigail Roux in the swag room. I was very lucky to catch her momentarily alone without the hordes of Ty-and-Zane fans, and I begged her for a sequel to her amazing novel According to Hoyle, which I’d snapped up way back on its release date because of its awesome blurb.
People, this is one of my favorite books in the entire gay romance genre. I’d been hoping for the sequel, and fearing that she might have put aside the idea indefinitely to focus on other things. I was happy to find that she has maybe two more books planned in the series for the near future! I kid you not, people – whole sections of the book stand out vividly in my mind. The two U.S, Marshall characters had distinctly three-dimensional personalities that really caught my imagination, and not just because they were Civil War veterans and I’m turning into a big Civil War buff.
I remember reading that Eli and Wash fought together at the Battle of Antietam for the Union, which was a surrealistically nightmarish conflict in the Civil War, right up there with the Battle of Shiloh, and I’ve been dying to have that story written so I can read it. So, in the swag room, I tried to talk Abigail into writing it. I think even a short story would be awesome, and I know I’d be promoting the heck out of it in my reviews. *hint* *hint* :D
That afternoon featured the Old Town shopping expedition, but I skipped all that because, as an Albuquerque native, I am way too familiar with Old Town.
The evening event centered on karaoke, but I skipped that, too, because Chris had found another event for us – the Big, Gay Undead Wedding, a musical Halloween type event put on at Effex gay bar in downtown Albuquerque by the Albuquerque Gay Men’s Chorus. I expected something like the Rocky Horror Picture Show (and they did sing one of the songs from it), but it was very different. A completely musical narrative with breathtaking singing and an amazing range of popular music.
Actually, Chris and I and several other conference attendees who were there have Snowtulip to thank for discovering this event for us. I was very pleased to have a chance to meet Snowtulip at this event – she’s a real sweetheart, very fun to talk to, and she even came by to say hi to me during the booksigning on Saturday and picked up some of my swag (for which I’m very grateful!).
At the Big, Gay Undead Wedding, I also got to meet Cole, someone else I’d really hoped to talk with. Cole and I have in common a background in singing for school choirs. We’ve both even had the same experiences having to sing across tenor and alto ranges (not the easiest thing in the world to do!).
Summary Impressions:
* Everyone I spoke to had nothing but praise for the GayRomLit organizers. They all said that this year’s GayRomLit was better organized and more fun than last year’s.
* For the author readings, the trend tended toward (1) romantic comedy with dialog, (2) sex scenes. Very brave! Author Jackie Nacht did an outstanding job of moderating and organizing the readings.
SATURDAY 10/19.
I arrived in time for the first block of author readings (and got to see Wave again and sit with her in the audience!). Anel Viz’s reading about an alien abduction fantasy was hilarious. He had great comedic timing. JP Bowie did a very funny reading from a William Neale short story told from a terrier’s viewpoint.
I went on to the Mexican bingo event sponsored by the Fiction with Friction blog, where I got to meet James Buchanan! I was very pleased to find out that there will soon be some Deputy Joe books published. The bingo event itself was so popular that we didn’t have enough Mexican bingo boards, so the authors had ticket drawings for prizes.
I was sitting at a table between author Kendall McKenna and another of my Goodreads friends Leaundra and everyone on every side was winning a prize but me and Leandra. :D We were joking about being the vortex of bad luck at an otherwise lucky table.
Afterwards, I had the good luck to run into another Goodreads friend in the hallway – Anke! I’d been looking for her with my only appearance clue being that she would be dressed in navy blue like me. Anke and I went on to the barbecue lunch sponsored by Silver Publishing.
Anke speaks English better than I do (yes, and I’m American), and has a slight German accent that I found very appealing (precisely enunciated and with a lilting quality). She was the best possible lunch companion with a great sense of humor and filled me in on the Old Town excursion that I had missed. Anke, I’m so glad I got to meet you!
Through Anke, I met MLR Press author Lynley Wayne, who has the most striking green eyes. (I’m fascinated by accents and eye color.) She had her husband with her, whose name was Brian, I think (my apologies if I got that wrong). He had the best Mississippi accent ever. I wanted to keep both him and Anke talking so I could enjoy their immensely appealing (though very different) accents.
Lynley’s husband does amazing cover art. Look at this awesome cover he did for her novel Scars. Normally, I don’t like too many different elements in cover art, but he does it perfectly here and gets the lighting exactly right. Here is a bigger photo. I believe he is a freelance cover artist, so definitely contact Lynley if you’d like him to do a cover for you.
From here, Anke, Lynley, and Lynley’s husband went to the MLR Press spotlight event and I went to the Kinky Craft Fair sponsored by authors Damon Suede, LC Chase, Taylor Donovan, and Anne Tenino. Here, I painted an e-reader cover, but had to abandon it because the paint wasn’t drying fast enough.
This was another event that had massive attendance (as you might imagine), and I was delighted to run across Lauraadriana, Laddie, Chris, Leaundra, Clare London, and others. Also, I’m not sure if they were at this particular event, but I did have the good fortune to repeatedly meet two Goodreads friends of mine Sadonna and MsMiz (Tina). Both were great conversationalists. I got to meet Nikyta, who is the best person and so cute, exactly the way I pictured her!
On to the massive booksigning event in one of the ballrooms. While I’d been lining up my free lunch earlier, the wiser authors had been securing a good spot for the booksigning. I’d thought we authors were going to be placed in alphabetical order, but it turned it to be entirely random.
Coming in late, I was allowed to sit wherever I could find a spot so I sat at the same table as Jambrea Jo Jones, who turned out to be a very pleasant table companion, and I put out my swag since I didn’t have any paper books to sign.
Alas, no one but some friends I’d previously met came over to my table to take some swag (thank you, Snowtulip!). I did get to sign a photo frame and two iPads from three enterprising readers who were collecting autographs from every attending author.
I wandered around and had a wonderful conversation with Kathy from Book Reviews and More by Kathy. We talked about blogging and living in different regions of the U.S. Being part of an Air Force family, she has lived in a lot of different places, and had some great descriptions of Alaska and South Dakota, both of which I now want to visit. Thank you, Kathy. I’m so glad I got a chance to have an extended conversation with you!
In addition, I got to compliment Hank Edwards on his reading and buy his book Plus Ones, which he inscribed for me.
I had the great good luck to run across Abigail Roux, again momentarily without the hordes of Ty-and-Zane fans, and asked for the one and only autograph I had the nerve to ask for during the GayRomLit event. She wrote, “For Val, thank you for loving Hoyle”! I’m keeping it forever. :D
I had a deer-in-the-headlights near-encounter with Aleks Voinov, where I couldn’t quite get the nerve to step forward and say how much I enjoyed the Dark Soul series and especially Counterpunch. Part of it was my surprise at seeing him in that I hadn’t expected him (or Clare London) to come to the GayRomLit so soon after they had done the UK Meet.
He looked great in a pinstriped suit and tie, and was just about the only author present who looked exactly like my mental picture of him (except his hair was darker blond than I’d pictured).
Back at my table, no swag had moved, so I sat one row over with Lori Torland, who had a slide show on her tablet of her cats. Gorgeous cats – a big calico cat (probably my favorite type of cat), and a big white cat with very cute black markings. Lori was great to talk to, and we kicked back and watched videos on her tablet of her cats. :D
[Jeez, this blog post is getting long!] Okay, from there, my husband and I took Chris out for dinner and all three of us showed up in time for the Dreamspinner Press event at 9pm, the Cosmo Cabaret Lounge.
The piano guy they hired to do the event was worth every penny of whatever they paid him. Not only could this guy play ANYTHING on the piano, however far-fetched, he was also great at getting the audience to participate in sing-alongs and interactive stuff that he fashioned from song requests from the audience.
For example, Angel Martinez and her friend Freddie requested “Roxanne” by the Police, which he turned into a competitive drinking game with them having to drink every time they heard the words ‘Roxanne’ or ‘put-on-the-red-light’, respectively. Or, do you remember that God-awful Kenny Rogers song “Lucille”? Our piano guy played it in a very sprightly double-time tempo with the audience divided into thirds, screaming out insults to poor Lucille upon command. All this sounds weird, but trust me. If you were there, you know how much fun the evening was.
He also had four contestants, including one very brave man, doing a dance-off to various songs he played including Chubby Checker’s “Twist,” and the Macarena. I got to sit next to Ally Blue and sing along with her! I wish we’d had a quieter place to talk because she seemed like such a fun person. Chris thinks that I was tipsy that night, but I actually didn’t touch a drop through the whole GayRomLit. My silliness was coming out through the momentum of the event alone. :D
Did I mention this piano guy could play ANYTHING? Everybody in the audience was challenging him with some very far-out requests, but he handled them all, including songs by AC/DC (You Shook Me All Night Long), Guns and Roses (Sweet Child O’ Mine), and – I kid you not – Nine Inch Nails (Closer). And he could make the songs sound the way they were supposed to!
SUNDAY 10/20.
Chris and I got to the Hard Rock casino in time for the last part of the farewell brunch, which wrapped up early. I had my biggest deer-in-the-headlights moment in the hallway standing next to Chris when Heidi Cullinan came up to talk and I just stared at her and felt my mind completely evaporate until I couldn’t think of a thing to say. So, I want to go on record here as having loved her novel, Special Delivery. If you’re one of the few people on the planet who hasn’t read this book yet, and you like road trip novels, you’re in for a treat.
I also got to meet author EM Lynley, literally in the eleventh hour before Chris and I departed, and I’m glad we had a chance to talk and share cough drops. :D (Seriously, between the allergies and all the talking we all were doing, our voices were getting an unaccustomed workout.)
Summary impressions:
* The interactive group events such as bingo and crafts seemed to be more popular than the readings and QandA sessions by far.
* If you’re doing a booksigning event, you’re at a true advantage if you’re nearest to the main doors where they let the readers in.
* If you’re an author, do an author reading. It really does sell books. I bought a book based on every reading I attended.
* I want to thank the GayRomLit organizers, the authors I met, and the readers-bloggers-reviewers most especially. Thank you very much for reading!
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