julesjones: (A Kiss At Midnight cover art)
Loose Id authors are chatting all day on Thursday at the Coffee Time Romance Exotic group:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/karendevinkaren/

***

The blogging agents are getting very, very annoyed about the recent rash of queries that are obviously the result of people using some sort of query-writing service, whether human or software-powered. I've seen half a dozen of them griping about it in the last week or two. Not only that, but my fellow Loose Id author [livejournal.com profile] jjsass has received a couple as well -- addressed to her non-existent agency. She's a writer, not an agent, and yet she's had a couple of these things from people who are clearly shotgunning them out to anyone they can find who's remotely connected with publishing.

Just in case there's anyone out there who's tempted by one of these services or software packages -- don't. The Wylie Merrick Literary Agency's blog explains why here:
http://wyliemerrick.blogspot.com/2006/04/paying-for-query-services.html
The executive summary: "Our take on this is that if you need to pay someone to write for you, apparently you cannot do it yourself, and we would therefore have very little confidence in anything you write."

That doesn't mean that you have to do it all by yourself. It's no bad thing to get advice on what the well-formed query letter looks like, and to get your draft letter critiqued. Look back a couple of months and you'll find me asking for people to cast a beady editorial eye over one of mine. Look in rasfc and you'll find people doing the same thing, for both query letter and synopsis. Writing these things is a skill that needs practice, and probably some help the first few times. But in the end, you should write it.

***

I've been too hazy from the headache hangover for the last few days to write anything longer than rapid-fire usenet/blog posts, but I managed to scrape together enough attention span to get 700 words done on the WIP last night. I left them having foreplay. Another 1000 words today for a total so far of 14,000. We have achieved penetration, although the poor lad is probably going to have to wait until tomorrow for his orgasm, because I'm off down the pub now. I will worry tomorrow about the Great Pronoun Problem as applied to three cocks in one bed.

***

I've revised my user info to reflect my new friending policy. Perhaps that will be blunt enough on the subject of "It's a *reading* list, damn it!"

***

Gardening report: the cocoa shell mulch hasn't kept the snails off altogether, but it's definitely making them think twice about just how badly they want something. The general depredations have decreased, and I still have all my plants, even if some look a little nibbled. It's also acting as a mulch-mulch, and keeping the soil underneath moist, which is good. However, I think the squirrels have been frolicking, as predicted. I'm sure *I* didn't leave that much of it scattered around the patio, and the day after buying the bag I caught a squirrel chewing through it in an effort to get at the yummy-smelling substance inside. Stoned squirrels are not something I really want in my patio area. They come too damned close to lounging around, scratching their balls, and saying, "Man, that was good," for my peace of mind. And before anyone suggests it, I'm not writing were-squirrel porn, thank you.

There are seedlings in the big trough which I am fairly sure are self-sown tomatoes from the currant tomato that was in there last year. That was an attractive-looking plant as well as a productive one, and kept going through until January, so I'll be pleased if one or two of them survive.
julesjones: (Default)
Incoming:
Received my contract from Vision for my review of "Elements of Arousal". Not sure when it'll appear, but looks like next issue.
Received my postcard from my Distant Horizons submission, showing that it reached Greg Herren's slushpile safely.
Received bits and pieces from Broad Universe, including form for those wanting to sell books off the BU table at Wiscon. I'm tempted to try sending a couple of copies of The Syndicate, but I think I'll pass--as they note, it's easier to sell books when you're actually at the con.

***

Word count: around 1000 words on the travel tale. It's going to need serious tidying up, but developing nicely. And 1000 on the erotic romance novella.

***

[livejournal.com profile] alg has been doing a series of posts on demystifying publishing. Today's is the first in a two-parter on how books make (or don't make) money, and how that relates to deciding what size advance to pay the author. Excellent insight into the economics of fiction publishing, and well worth reading if you're an aspiring writer.
http://alg.livejournal.com/84032.html

And I showed my biases by hitting the term "hc/mm" and parsing it as "hurt/comfort slash" for a second before realising that in this context it was "hardcover/mass market". That was an... interesting... experience. My only excuse is that Anna was using fanfic names to make it clear that she was running a fictional example rather than an actual real live book published by Tor.

***

Writer Beware's 20 Worst Agents list has been getting a lot of coverage online in the last few days, not least in a thread at Making Light.

One of the agents on that list took exception to Teresa posting the list and tried to cause trouble for her at work, as duly reported in a further thread at Making Light. Much amusement all round, and posting of links on many, many more blogs...

I am reminded that I must add a subpage to my links section for useful links like this.

***

Warning: swallow what's in your mouth and put the mug down before reading the following LJ post. (Yes, I know that given what sort of fiction I write, that last sentence could be taken in a manner I didn't intend when I started writing it. Either way, it's good advice.)
http://azurelunatic.livejournal.com/4817217.html

***

rasfc is feeling cranky this week courtesy of an outbreak of Endless September. Public service announcement for people who don't know the difference between "the Web" and "online": when you go into a new online forum, try to read a couple of week's worth of posts before posting. If you go bouncing into a group on the assumption that you can post what you like, you may be frostily reminded that you are doing the equivalent of walking into someone's living room in muddy boots that you have neglected to wipe on the doormat. And whatever Google and sundry other web-based interfaces may try to imply, usenet is not their personal property, it existed long before the web did, and lots and lots of people read and post to newsgroups through systems that go nowhere near such web-based interfaces. If you're posting to a usenet newsgroup through Google Groups, you may be annoying a lot more people than Google Groups says are members of that "forum". This may not be a good move if your aim is to win friends and influence people.
julesjones: (Default)
There is a facinating thread in rec.arts.sf.composition that's turned into a detailed course on how to build details into your fiction - "Describing peoples"

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