Saturday, June 30

Balancing the plot

Eighteen pages today. It reads well but I'm unsure about it. The book is oddly structured. On one hand it is Jason's book and we're going home to see where he grew up and his old friends. But it's also a mystery, and I'm trying to balance the old home week with the mystery. I'm left today wondering if I've strayed down memory lane too much, or just about right. Jon's volunteered to read it and see what he thinks, and we may do that, or I may just push through. I know there is only about another short chapter before we hit the mystery harder. I mean it's been fun seeing some of Jason's old friends, old girlfriends, and such. It's left Anita not knowing how to behave. I mean they are lovers, but they aren't really girlfriend and boyfriend, so are you jealous, or is it okay. An interesting dilemma.

I guess part of the problem is I can't figure out how I would feel, so it's hard to put myself in Anita's place. She and I are both looking forward to shooting something and leaving the awkward social sitations behind. Yea, violence!

Silence

Saturday morning, everyone else still up stairs. This is like my only hour of no one but me all week. Funny, I spent most of my life very isolated just me and my grandmother. When we went back to visit once when Trinity was small she turned to me after an hour and said, "It's so quiet, and there's nothing to do." I said two things, "Welcome to my childhood." And something she'd heard before, "Do you have an imagination?" "Yes." "Then use it. If you have an imagination you can never be bored." It's always worked for me. The inside of my head has always been a carnival of fun.

I was a very hard kid to punish. Sit me in a corner, I made up stories. Send me to my room, yay, I could read. Spanking or hitting always worked, I mean corporal punishment is corporal punishment. Though, that waned in my grandmother's repertoire when I would do something I knew I shouldn't, then turn myself in for the spanking immediately with a detailed list of what I'd done. At least once I even cut the switch off the honeysuckle bush so it was at hand. Punishment over and I could get on with my day. One memorable summer day I got three spankings. One for plotting to runaway because she was so mean. My grandmother was definitely of the old school. If you think that was mean, I'll show you mean. Or the battle cry of my childhood, "You want something to cry about, I'll give you something to cry about." I learned not to cry.

She finally found a punishment when I was in double digits that was truly punishment. Send me outside, and frisk me at the door for a book. Send me outside where I felt on display for the neighborhood children. Who were not my friends. At least two of them had stolen things when they came over, so I ceased wanting them to play with me. Funny that. I was puzzled by most of the kids I grew up with, and them with me, I think. I was painfully shy at that point in my life. Those of you who have seen me at signings may find that hard to credit, but trust me, I was terrified of people well into my early teens. It's why I joined speech team and drama so I could get over it. Deep end of the pool and all that.

I'm going to get another cup of tea, and enjoy this rare silence, just me and the dogs. Have a good Saturday, guys, be safe, have fun.

Friday, June 29

miscelanious

Fourteen pages for the day on the new book. The mystery deepens. Anita's getting to see Jason meet up with some good friends from high school. People who knew Jason when.

I'm waiting for an interview to phone, I won't say who, or where, until I know when it will run, so you guys don't ask Darla and the mods when it will be out, because they won't know.

I'm glad you guys are enjoying the video from THE HARLEQUIN signing at the Science Center. Jon and all of us here are learning lots about doing video for the computer. Ah, another new technology to fear or embrace. But wait, I tend to embrace them and still be nervous about them. Interesting.

I'm actually a little stiff today from the run yesterday. Cool. But I need newer running shoes, different running shorts, and a way to keep my phone from flying out of my pocket. I'd never tried to run with a phone before. Now I remember why.

I'm either going to do light weights today, or just a low treadmill, something so I won't be so stiff tomorrow it will be uncomfortable. Though, frankly, lazy sounds good, and a hot bath sounds better than any of the above. But, wait, if I do the treadmill then I can do the bath afterwards. It's not like it's mutually exclusive, right?

Phone's ringing, gotta catch the interview. Tell you about when I can.

Thursday, June 28

We're number 5

In all the spider invasion stuff I sort of forgot that THE HARLEQUIN is number five on the New York Times list. Two weeks in the top five with a hardback with the summer line up at it's toughest is pretty damn good. The fact that it slipped my mind to blog about it says just how much the whole creepie-crawlie situation is preying on my mind. I'm trying to be big and brave, but apparently my subconscious is not fooled.

So, two weeks in the top five, very cool.

I've finished eight pages on the new book. Notice I'm not calling it a novel-lite anymore, it's a novel. I'm closing in on 250 pages and no end in sight, so it's a book-book.

I did something this morning that I hadn't done in months. I ran. I took our big puppy, Pippin, and we went for a walk. When our muscles were warmed up (the air was warm from the beginning, it's like breathing soup) we ran. I do mean run. I ran like hell then had to stop. My asthma does not like summer, or fall, or spring. It's one of the reasons I gave up jogging, because I can only run for a little while then I have to stop and control my breathing. I've found that what I can do is more like sprint, walk, sprint, walk. Run until I think my ability to breath is about to stop, then get it under control, then run a little more. My asthma is not going away, so if I'm ever going back to jogging, this is the only compromise I can figure out. It works; though, God, knows what the neighbors think hearing me fight for breath at the end of each sprint. It felt good to sweat. It felt good to run full out, even if only for a little while.

Back in college when I could do a six minute mile, I did not have asthma. I remember what it feels like to be able to run and breath at the same time. Oh, I did the stupid crap and ran while I threw up to the side from heat and dehydration, but not being able to breath, you just can't push through that. It is incredibly frustrating. But since my body isn't going to get any better except through exercise, I'm going to work with what I have, and see how it goes. Wish me good luck. I actually tired the puppy out. (By the way he's either going to be four or five this year so he's grown up enough to run with me without danger of injuring growing bones and ligaments. Apparently we're going to call him the big puppy until he's old and grey. Those crazy nicknames, you never know what will stick.)

Wednesday, June 27

Darla and the spider day 2

Darla and the spider day 2
Still not sure what kind of spider it was. Without my glasses I couldn't see it well enough to tell. And one reason I may be having no problems is I think it was on the cable and when I felt the sting I jerked my hand back before it got me good.

I want to say thanks for all the kind thoughts and prayers! And all the remedies! But looking around I did find that reaction can vary and that there is more than one type of recluse spider around. So no telling which is responsible for the lack of problems I am having. Wrong spider, wrong type, didn't sting me very much, just doesn't affect me. All of the above?

Laurell is almost postive that it was a recluse. As I said, no one at the hospital seemed willing to look once they found out it was alive in there. The mark still looks more like a mosquito bite today and just a wee bit itchy. But it seems I am fortunately, no worse for wear. But given how hard this month has been, I am really looking forward to July. (Need a run down? My computer blew up and I am still reloading software, I got about 20 chigger bites at the wolf howl, had a wisdom tooth pulled and then the spider bit me). All of which is putting me behind again. No more missed work for me darn it!

Hopefully, the spider it is enjoying its new home outdoors and away from me. With any luck, that will be my last negative spider encounter and things will go smoother from here on out. So is it July yet?

Darla

Note From Darla

I am fine. No, the hospital wouldn't look in the containter. Watching the nurse slam the tupperware container when I told her it was still alive was rather amusing. Hey, I needed the laugh at that point. They weren't happy I brought it with me alive either. But no matter the doctor says the treatment is the same irregardless of the spider, though some others have told me different. And that my immediately washing it with hot water and soap was perfect thing to do. The swelling has gone down and it looks more like a mosquito bite than anything else. And I turned the spider loose outdoors. I couldn't bring myself to squash it. I guess I startled it as badly as it scared me.

It isn't the bite that is the danger the doctor tells me. But secondary infection that can set in. So as long as it doesn't seem to be infected, I am to leave it alone. Though I will say them telling me my blood pressure was a bit high did get a response from me. You think? Gosh, not like I didn't have a reason. Okay, I am not the most graceful under pressure. But it is nice to know it wasn't nearly as bad as I have been led to think. Whoo!

Darla

Tuesday, June 26

Find your happy place

One of the things I'm most often asked is how do I keep the productivity and the quality of the ideas so constant. Well, I thought today was a good day to show how you work through a bad day. If you've read the first two blogs of today you know the spider crisis has upped it's anty. I also had allergy shots today; three shots every time I hit the door. Not my favorite thing. Then I had a second appointment in the early afternoon. My schedule was in tatters.

But the Jason book is going really well, and I know from past experience that if I take even a whole day off when the book is at this heat, that it will cool, then I'll spend days struggling to get back to where I am right now. So, I had to work today. God, I did not want to work, but I knew I'd regret it tomorrow if I didn't. So, how do you work when you don't want to? How do you write when you feel totally uninspired? How can you be creative when all you can think of is the mundane crap that has drowned your day?


First you have to go to your desk, put your butt in a chair, and try. You have to write first. Put your fingers on the keyboard and type. I was lucky this time I knew exactly the scene that I was doing, and the characters in that scene. Another plus was that it was neither a sex scene, nor a fight scene. Both of those are harder for me on days when the muse is not happy. Okay, sitting down, trying to type, now music. I have my ipod with it's music line up. Admittedly, today music that normally works for Anita, had me hitting the remote and passing up song after song. Somewhere between Seether and Strata the music started to work. Or, I started to work, and the music no longer irritated, but helped oil the gears as it's meant to do.

I also chose one of the cups we bought on our last trip to Disney World to drink tea out of. The cup is something that reminds me of a very relaxing day, where there was no pressure, and I needed to remember a day like that. I highly recommend that you have a few things in your office that remind you of relaxing moments. Whatever that means to you, so that on days when the pressure is freaking high, so high you feel buried in it, you can touch that object and go, ahh, I remember what it's like not to feel this tense. Some people call them comfort objects but it's more than that for me. It's literally that touching that piece of china, or whatever, brings back that memory. With the memory comes the peace, or joy, or happiness, that I associate with the memory, and I am back in that moment. It's not perfect. It's not exactly that moment, but it's a shadow of it, and a shadow of joy is enough sometimes to get you going again. By the way, don't let anyone talk you out of your object of joy. It doesn't have to make sense to anyone but you and your muse. In your imaginary world it's all about what works for the inside of your head, don't criticize it, embrace it. There is almost nowhere on the planet that you are more yourself than in that special piece of yourself where you create. Don't cheat yourself, enjoy it.

I hope this helps those of you who are struggling with your own avalanche of mundane problems, and helps get you to that happy place where the muse is waiting. She really is waiting; you just have to meet her half way.

Heard from Darla

Darla called. The hospital isn't sure it is a brown recluse bite. Which is good, but they wouldn't even look in the container once they found out the spider was alive. Darla explained, "But if we squished it flat you wouldn't be able to identify the spider." Apparently, the nurse was unimpressed with this reasoning. They've told her to put ice on the bite and rest. They say, that's all they do for any spider bite. If tomorrow the bite is more red, hot to the touch, or hard in the middle then they'll give her some antibiotics.

With all the near hysteria we've been getting from the exterminators and others, the hospital's attitude was interesting. And yes, interesting to me in this case means less effort than I would have wanted them to put out.

The first casualty

Darla got bit. Her husband, Jack, came and they are on the way to the emergency room with the live spider that she think was the culprit in a container. The bite is already red and swollen. Dammit. It may not even be a brown recluse bite, but there's just no way that we are waiting to find out. Everything has to be treated like it is until we know it's not. If the spider is a brown recluse it's much smaller and more house spider looking than the last two that were definitely identified as brown recluse.

Darla reached under, or behind her desk to check a cable and that was that. She'll be calling later from the hospital. Again, dammit.

The exterminator came yesterday and put out sticky traps, and sprayed the outside foundation, but, of course, I am allergic to anything that would work on these critters. I will need to be out of the house for five days and nights. When we get back from ComicCon, Jon and I, will have to spend at least one more night at a hotel rather than be able to sleep in our own bed. For most ordinary human beings six to twenty-four hours would be plenty to make the house safe for humans, but my reaction to it in college was severe enough that the exterminator didn't want to chance it. Me, either.

We thought we could wait until we were gone for the five days of comiccon. The only alternative is to leave the house for five days now in the middle of one of the most trip filled months I've had. Okay, short of a multi-city tour. But either way I'd really rather not leave the house for five extra days this month. But I'm beginning to wonder if I need to do it anyway. Crap.

Monday, June 25

Jason novel and comic books to come

Well, I guess the muse wasn't too tired today, after all. Thirteen pages of the Jason book. It's officially a novel not a novellite because I have now hit over two hundred pages and we are nowhere near done. On one hand, cool; on the other hand, damn. Done in two hundred pages or under was pretty cool with MICAH. I guess we'll have to wait for another book for another novellite.

This afternoon Jon and I are working on edits on the original comic script for the second half of 'THE FIRST DEATH', the prequel to GUILTY PLEASURES. Our artist needs to see if the edits will effect his end of the job.

The hardback collection of the first six comics of GUILTY PLEASURES will hit stores on July 5th. For those who don't already know there is a bonus story that is brand new Anita never before published anywhere. More of Brett Booths great artwork to look at.

Then the first comic of 'THE FIRST DEATH' will hit stores on July 11th. This comic is a prequel to the book or comic of GUILTY PLEASURES. But more than that this is a story where Anita truly is the rookie. Back in the day when Anita was still not sure how to do the police work, and Manny Rodriguez was a better vampire hunter than she was. This truly is Anita before the hard edges got carved into her flesh. You get to see where most of those scars came from. It's Anita's first serial killer case. One of the first times Edward shows up for Anita. The first time Anita meets Jean-Claude, or goes inside his club, Guilty Pleasures.

These are the firsts you, the fans, have been asking for. I couldn't figure out how to do them in a book. But the comic has opened up a wealth of possibilities to explore earlier things. They say a picture is worth a thousand words, they're wrong, it's worth about a million. At least, that's what I've found. So cool.

Sunday, June 24

The Frost scene is done, yay!

The Frost scene is finished. It took another ten pages to do it, plus some bits of transition work to smooth out the scene that followed after in the first draft of the book. God, I am tired.

When the muse is pushing, you can do thirty pages, and feel good afterwards. But when you're tired and you push because of deadlines, you just feel drained. I'm drained. But the scene works, and it's good, and it goes seamless into the next part. So, mission accomplished.

I fear me that I will be too wasted to work tomorrow at all, because of pushing, but that's okay. The exterminator comes tomorrow, and that probably would have distracted me from work anyway. I'm off to do something mindless, television or staring out a window is about the speed I'm left with for awhile. Man, I am beat.

I hope the next interviewer that asks me, if I only work when I'm inspired reads my blog. Of course, if they read the blog they'd know the answer to the question, wouldn't they?

Good work session, sort of

I meant to work on the rewrite of A LICK OF FROST, honest, I did. But, Jason was really loud in my head, so I thought well, I'll just do a few pages and get it out of my system. You know what happened, don't you?

I did twenty-one pages on the Jason book. I have yet to do a page on FROST, and that is the book that has the tightest deadline. Of course, when my editor asked for an extra scene she didn't really understand what she'd asked. By the time I'm done I think the book will be close to forty pages longer. You know, you make a change and that makes you think of another change. Way leads onto way. Anyway, so I still need to do some work on FROST today. Because I really, really need to turn that in finished, or at least ready for copyediting tomorrow, which is Monday. Eek.

I've also forgotten to eat lunch. Damn, good work session. Trin is off with grandma seeing the Nancy Drew movie, and having lunch, so Jon and I can work. He's doing something techie in his office. Funny, I had Jason and Anita eating, but forgot to feed ourselves. Go figure.

Saturday, June 23

End of day

I just finished thirteen pages for the day, and Frost told Merry a story from his past. It made me cry. Every once in awhile a character will do something so romantic, so emotional that it will break my heart a little. I mean all the men in her life have centuries of background. There is so much story left untold about the men and their lives before Merry, that I despair. So much back ground, and I can only use a fraction of it in the books themselves. But I guess it's fitting that in the book that bears his name, that we get a glimpse into some of Frost's early life. I just didn't expect him to make me cry. I mean it's my imagination, right? So, did I make myself cry, or did my imaginary friend make me cry? Both? Neither? All the above? When you figure out how the magic works, let me know. Until then, let's just enjoy the results.

Of spiders, chiggers, and smoke

I managed six pages on the new Frost scene yesterday. Which was pretty darn good considering everything that's been going on here. I feel like I'm in one of those bad horror movies. You know, the ones where you have the main character try to be reasonable. "We've had these spiders here for awhile and nothing bad has happened. I mean we only have to hold out until Monday. On Monday we get help. What could possibly go wrong in less than three days?" Which is about the time the horde of flesh eating spiders come swarming out of the woodwork.

Again, I try to be funny and it just doesn't feel funny. EEEH! That sound comes complete with full body shiver, and not a good shiver. Thanks to everyone who has written in to let us know that they, too, would be totally freaked. It helps me feel less wimpy.

Though everyone who wrote in stories about brown recluse bites, well, I could have done without some of that. Wow. Thanks for sharing, but wow. Bad stuff.

I have a degree in biology, I'm a big believer in knowledge is better. So I I've been reading up on the spiders. I know more than I wanted to know about brown recluse. First, they are tough suckers. They can go six months without food or water. Impressive. We are in the middle of mating season for them. Oh, joy. They do build webs but don't necessarily spend a lot of time there. They are active hunters. The males hunt for the females, no site said the other way around. Some articles said they prefer carrion; already dead insects. Which is another reason not to let those old fly carcasses hang around. They like cardboard boxes, clothes that haven't been moved in awhile; in fact any undisturbed and dark place outside or inside. We're going to have to buy like a gross of large rubber maid containers, and get rid of every box in the house. That's a lot of boxes.

The females make an egg sac that contains about fifty young per. She can do around five egg sacs a season. We are in the middle of mate and make little spiders season, until the end of July or into August. How quickly the little spiders hatch and grow depends on temperature, weather conditions, and food (though I guess that's for the spiders on the outside of the sac not inside it.). It can take up to a year for a brown recluse to reach maturity. They are shy and most bites occurr because they've been touched, or accidentally squished. Again, check all clothes, shoes, gloves, anything that has been sitting around for awhile. Jon and I are going to get the plastic bags we take on tour to help pack, and put everything inside. Towels, clothes, you name it, it's going into plastic.

All this reading up on the spiders hasn't really made me feel any better. I mean it's nice that they aren't going to hunt us down and bite us on purpose. I even understand that to the spider biting us is a waste of time. We're too big to eat, and we probably don't' taste like the desiccated carcasses of insects which is yummy to them. I know that biting us is a last resort to protect themselves from being squashed. I understand that, but it makes no difference. I'm still freaked out.

Oh, and on the forum people asking if anyone else got chigger bites at the Wolf Howl, oh yeah. It seems to have hit Jon, Charles, and Richard hardest. Not sure how Darla has fared. I am almost unscathed. I think me sitting in the smoke and ash from the fire kept them off of me. Here I was sort of not liking smelling like wood smoke but after seeing my husband's legs and all those red spots, well, smoke me, baby, smoke me. The alternative is way too itchy.

Friday, June 22

We've been invaded

I've written two blogs and I can't post either of them. I over shared in both about different things. I'll hit the highlights.

First, we learned yesterday that we have an infestation of Brown Recluse spiders. They are in the walls according to our exterminator, who made an emergency trip to look at the spider we had caught. All right, our friend Richard had caught the spiders in the guest room. He was manning the camera at the wolf howl. For some reason I always seem to forget to introduce him at an event where he's working with us. Don't know why, and he doesn't mind. He's the photographer who took my latest pictures that are on the books. He's very good at what he does. Anyway, he had found several spiders in the house, and squished them. I could not identify anything from the remains. The last spider he bought intact was a wolf spider. Harmless, and okay to have in the house. But these two were not harmless, and not okay to have in the house.

We kept them for the exterminator to confirm, I mean spiders aren't my primary area of biology now or ever. He confirmed what we'd learned from on-line pictures. Brown Recluse. We'll be taking steps to do something with the problem, but I have to say I am unnerved by it.

I have an extra scene to put in A LICK OF FROST, that my editor and I both agree need to be there. I can't seem to concentrate on it. You know how if you see a spider crawling on you, or step through a web, that you have the sensation that it's still on you even when you know it's not? Well, it's sort of like that. I now know that we have all these dangerous spiders in the house, everywhere, and I feel like they are everywhere, even places I know they are not. I think I am seriously creeped. I feel like I'm wimping out. Jon says I'm not, that it's normal. Sherry, our Chief of Domestic Operations, says I'm reacting normally. She is one of the most practical people I know, so I guess I am, but it still feels weak. I don't' like to feel weak. It makes me feel, well, weak.

I had one day of doing nineteen pages on the Jason book, then I got sick, and now we have an infestation of spiders that can cause rotting flesh eating sores to appear where they bite. I had an uncle that got bitten years ago. The bite went deep into the meat of his leg until you could glimpse the faintest gleam of bone. That memory is probably not helping steady my nerves. No, probably not.

I'd rather work on the Jason book if I was going to sit down, but it seems like every time I get going, some other responsibility interjects itself, and derails me. I feel quite derailed today. Like derailed by some giant spider sitting across my tracks. Brown recluse, why did it have to be brown recluse. You know I tried to make that last sentence sound funny, but it doesn't sound funny. It just sounds like bad news.

Thursday, June 21

Wolf Howl summer 2007

The wolf howl was a howling success. (Sorry, I just couldn't fight it off.)

We sat in the clearing around a camp fire (atmospheric, but it was hot for a fire) and did our Q and A. Then I read from A LICK OF FROST as I said, I would. The uncorrected pages that I read from will be up on e-bay. I've signed and dated the front page, and I think it comes with a signed copy of THE HARLEQUIN, as well. All proceeds from the auction go The Wild Canid Survival Center. By the way, we just finished finalizing the plans yesterday that the release date for A LICK OF FROST has changed. It will hit the store shelves on October 23, 2007. So, you guys get it early.

The wolves started howling during the reading. I had to stop so we could all listen to them. It was amazing. This is the second time they've howled during the reading almost as if they're getting used to hearing me read. Sitting in a circle around a camp fire with a group of people reminded me so much of Bible camp, you know. With the wolves singing, I had these urge to say, "Let us pray." What is it about the sound of wolves that moves us in a way that other sounds do not? I don't know, but I love the fact that all of us there last night were helping take care of the very animals that were singing so beautifully.

On another religious note; today is Summer Solstice. It's a big holiday for our faith. We celebrate the coming of summer and the sun coming into his greatest warmth and power. This is the longest day of the year. From this point on the days will grow gradually shorter until Winter Solstice when the process is reversed.

It was great seeing everybody at the signing last night. We saw a lot of familiar faces, and a good number of new ones. To all of you who flew or drove from out of state thanks for making the effort. I think the farthest was Orlando, Florida. She's flown in twice this month, earlier for the Science Center signing.

We saw a lot of people from the LKH Forum. We did a group shot at the end of the signing with all of them, and Darla, Charles, Jon, and me. It'll be up on-line somewhere soon.

We inducted two new members into THE ORDER OF THE PENGUIN. Pili and Carri were two of the people who made the Science Center Signing go so well. You can thank Pili, especially, for all the comic art work and memorabilia in the MARVEL SUPER HEROES exhibit that are from us. When the exhibit moves on, our stuff does not. It's not part of the main exhibit, but Pili really wanted a St. Louis connection and she got it.

To all of you who don't know what in the heck THE ORDER OF THE PENGUIN is, let me explain. It's an honor awarded to fans that have gone above and beyond the call of duty at some point at a public event, or done some other service for us, the fan club, or just been a good all round egg. I think we have twelve members so far. You get a certificate suitable for framing, though you don't have to frame it. You get a real medal with a penguin on it. Jon made the design and found a company that would make it for us. The medal even comes with ribbons which is the small bars that people wear on their uniform when they are not wearing the larger more conspicuous metal. We decided if we were going to do it, we'd do it right.

We actually had two fellow inductees at the wolf howl last night. Thanks again to Missy and Ann, you guys rock.

I'm going to go get breakfast now. Everybody be good, and enjoy the longest day of the year.

Wednesday, June 20

Food intolerences

Hey guys, sorry I missed a blog yesterday, but I got sick. I'm feeling better this morning, but let's just say that my digestive tract is not happy with me. Along with the many allergies that I have, I also have food intolerences. They aren't allergies, yet, but they make my body rebel. I'm going to have to go over everything I ate yesterday and find out what new food has been added to the list of things I cannot eat. Dammit, everything I had yesterday is like really good food.

All of you who are going to the Wolf Howl tonight at the Wild Canid Survival Center, never fear. I'll be there. I'm much better this morning, just a little tender. And wondering what of my favorite foods I'm going to have to give up this time. But, frankly, to avoid another evening like last evening I'll give up the food. It may be as simple as having fallen off the healthy food wagon and slid back into the not so healthy take-out stuff. I know better, but cooking from scratch and healthy takes more time and energy, it just does. Take-out is so . . . convenient. And, apparently, it's making me sick. My doc warned me that once you get off the bad stuff you can't really go back to junk, that just as getting off it makes your system go haywire so does back sliding to the junk. No more junk. But dinner wasn't junk. It wasn't. But lunch was. Sigh.

I'm going to go try and sip some hot tea and see if that helps revive me. See everybody tonight at the Wolf Howl. I'm reading from A LICK OF FROST. I promise to eat carefully and healthfully all day. Promise. See you there.

Monday, June 18

We're number two

THE HARLEQUIN is number two on the New York Times List. Yay! And drat.

This time what kept us out of the number one slot was Khaled Hosseini A THOUSAND SPLENDID SUNS. Khaled Hosseini can join the ranks of Stephen King, Nora Roberts, and Janet Evanovich, in the writers that have kept me just out of the hardback number one spot.

Thanks to all of you on-line that have wished me well, and a special thanks to everyone that said I, or THE HARLEQUIN, was number one to them. I really appreciate it, guys, thanks.

I am actually letting myself enjoy being on the list this time. Jon and I just went into a bookstore to pick up a few things, and there I was, my book, in the number two slot on the wall. There was a lovely display in the window and not only THE HARLEQUIN but also STRANGE CANDY in softback. Very cool. I actually allowed myself a few minutes of standing in front of the window display and revelling in it.

Normally, I sort of slink around bookstores when I have a book out. I actually started avoiding bookstores any time a new book hit the shelves. I think it began when we were still doing those four and six week tours. When we got back off the road we were so tired of seeing bookstores that it just ceased to be fun. Also, I began to associate a new book coming out with things like doing twenty-six cities in twenty-eight days. That trip was the NARCISSUS IN CHAINS tour, which was just after 9/11. To say that it was an adventure going through the airports is an understatement.

But tonight I stood in a bookstore and enjoyed seeing my books doing well. I let myself enjoy that we were number 2 instead of bemoaning that we were not number 1. Maybe next time.

Sunday, June 17

Happy Father's Day

To all those father's out there happy you day. This was a holiday that I always felt left out on. I had no father. Oh, I had one, of course. None of those Midi-chlorian moments or stars in the East. I am neither that good, nor that bad, nor quite that weird. But my parents were divorced by the time I was six months old, so, I never knew my father.

I saw him twice, maybe three times in my entire life. The first was when he came to visit my mother when I was about five or six. He was much more interested in her than in me. It was a grown-up thing that I didn't understand. My grandmother told the story for years that I played with his good ink pen and he took it back at the end of the visit. She knew how to hold onto a grudge and she hated my father. (No, I am not exaggerating. I was raised on horrible stories of my father. What my family failed to understand was that half of my genetics was my father's, and hearing how evil and awful he was, ended up making me feel badly about myself. Go figure.) The second time was when my family was off making funeral arrangements for my mother. I was six that summer. He came to the neighbors that were babysitting me.

I'll never forget how happy the neighbor was when she announced she had a surprise for me. She was smiling, then this man came in. This man I'd only seen once in my life. This stranger, who was tall and dark and no one I knew. Frankly, I was scared of him. Scared that he'd come to take me away. The neighbor didn't understand that a father is not just someone who deposits some sperm and makes a baby. A father is someone who raises a child. The man that she called my father had not done that. I refer to him as my biological father, but in truth, in my heart, I have no man who has that honorable title.

The third and last time was at my mother's funeral. I don't remember that much. It was a time of great hysteria. I mean hysteria. Weeping, wailing, the whole old-testament emotional roller coaster. To say that my grandmother did not take my mother's death well, is like calling the Titanic a boating accident. My male relatives saw the stranger away. They told him in no uncertain terms that there was no money to be had, and if he came back they would make him sorry. I believe they meant it, and apparently so did he.

He did try to write me some letters, but my grandmother either sent them back or destroyed them without telling me they had arrived. Years later she would apologize for that. She would make amends in the only way she knew how by giving me his social security and all the information she had on him. It took a great deal of soul searching for her to give me the information to find my father if I cared to look. I have some idea of how hard it was for her to admit that I had the right to look for him, if I chose. I didn't choose.

I have no father, and I never needed one. My grandmother and I didn't need a man around the house to tote and fetch and do the hard labor, that was my job as I got older. She raised me to be the man of the house because that's what she needed. She was woman enough for any household. If we needed repairs beyond simple ones done, we hired it done. Though one memorable summer I did help my Uncle Toots (Elbert) roof the house. I follow orders really well, but he quickly learned that you don't want me coming up with my own idea as to what to do with tools. I just don't think that way. In fact, Toots is pretty much the only person in our family that has a true gift for tools and fixing stuff, that I'm aware of. It's apparently not a common gene trait in our family.

I did pick an uncle when I was about 11 to give a father's day card to, and my aunt promptly divorced him. The lesson was clear, there were to be no father's in my life, not even borrowed ones.

Then I fell in love in college with a nice young man. To show you what flipped my switch at twenty in a serious way, here's the list. He was working four jobs and keeping a higher GPA than I was. He read science fiction, and fantasy. He played Dungeons and Dragons. We were willing to admit all this to each other on a Christian campus where reading the stuff or playing the game could get you accused of being a Satanist. I'm not kidding about that. It was pretty frightening.

He was a hard worker, and very serious. I needed that at twenty. He also had the most beautiful shoulder length chestnut brown hair. It had a lovely wave to it, and looked fabulous when he swam under water. He also had the most lovely brown eyes with great lashes. I've always been swayed by good hair and eyes.

What I didn't realize was that the hair was not a fashion statement. It was being a poor college student. The first chance he got to cut it, he did. His reasoning was that he couldn't get a job after college with long hair. I would spend the next sixteen years begging him to grow his hair long again. He would start to grow it out only in the sixteenth year, when we were separated.

He was the first man in my life. The first man I ever shared a home with. I had no map for it, so I borrowed his. He had a father he loved and who had been there for him like a father is supposed to be. It would take me over a decade to realize that his map wasn't working for me.

In my thirties, what I wanted in a man had changed. My job was very important to me and I needed a man who understood that. Strangely, Jon had cut his hair by the time we started dating even though he'd had it long most of the time we were friends. He started growing his hair out as soon as I requested it. He understood it was important to me. Jon and I both read science fiction, fantasy, and horror. That was still a must in a man for me. And yes, Jon has lovely eyes, though they are blue and very different from my ex-husbands. I don't have a preference on coloring in a man, just pretty eyes, nice hair, and I like my men a little delicate in appearance. I also prefer men who are not too tall. If a man was over 5' 9" he had to have other sterling qualities to recommend him.

I've digressed, or maybe I haven't. I never had a father. All my intimate relationships with men have been husbands. I have no other model for men. But Trinity, our daughter does. She has her father, and she has Daddy Jon. She truly does feel she has two fathers. She also has Three grandfathers. I had one who died when I was ten. Where I had no male role models she has many. Is it karma, or just ironic, that her childhood is so different from mine?

Trinity gave her father his gift early. I offered him a chance to have her on father's day, but they had made plans, and she's okay over here with us. Father's day isn't once a year it's every day. Every moment that they help the kid with homework. (Thank God, both my husbands have been better at math than I am. Trin would have been so out of luck there.) Every day that they help with some problem, tuck them in, read a story, answer one of those hard questions. Father's day, like mother's day, is every day.

Trinity gave Jon his gift early because she couldn't stand to wait. Very her mother's daughter, I'm afraid. She made a ceramic bird feeder, because Jon, like me, loves to feed the birds in our yard. But it's not just any ceramic bird feeder, it's red and has a dragon crouching in the middle of it. How cool is that, and how much does she know her dad? For her father, she made a bowl with his name in it. Something practical, something he might use. That speaks to her father, as well. Both gifts say that she's paying attention to the two men in her life. They say that a girl tries to date men like her father when she's old enough. It will be very interesting to see how these two very different men translate into Trinity's idea of what a man should be. There are so many different ways to be a father, and she is seeing some of that variety, and so am I. Being married to two good fathers has taught me some of what I missed. I guess I do finally get to celebrate father's day, after all.

Saturday, June 16

Cookies and cake in computer land

I tried to get on blogger this morning and it told me my cookie functionality was not working. I usually yell for Jon or Darla to help on that sort of thing. Well, Darla is at home, it being Saturday. Jon is still asnooze because he likes that last hour of sleep and I like an hour to myself in a people free house. But I'd just watched him fix the cookie problem late yesterday. I saw how he did it, so I thought, what's the worst that could happen? Don't answer that.

But the end result, you are reading. I fixed it myself. Yay, me.

I must say that working on the comic mostly via telecommuting with people around the country and out of the country has helped a great deal towards my technophobia. But also the MySpace page and the LKH forums and boards have helped as well. You guys and the comics have all help convince me that maybe tech isn't evil, it's just differently organized.

Jon and I did the one audio podcast and it went so well, and was relatively painless, we plan to do more. I've now done two video blogs, or is it v-casts? I'm not truly sure if there is a difference between the two terms, or perhaps the tech is moving fast enough that the term hasn't been settled yet. One video blog for Fanboy TV, and another for Marvel. The one for Fanboy TV is up, though there were technical difficulties, but it worked. The one for Marvel will be up soon, and that one was done in person with me sitting in front of the camera. It worked more smoothly. I guess in video interviews over the computer you need everyone's software to at least like each other. It's better when every one's computer stuff loves each other and talks in that fluid short hand of long established couples, but the software and hardware has to at least know everyone's language well enough not to fight about it.

Hmm, humanizing the computers. Maybe it's a way for me to cope and try and understand this brave new world. But my brave new world has cookies in it this morning. Cookies on the computer that I can't even taste, but they let me talk to you guys. Somehow I don't think cookies every thought they'd be part of the computer revolution. What's next? If we're naming stuff, I vote for chocolate cake next, or maybe just cake. The programmer who's naming stuff can pick their flavor.

Friday, June 15

Scene difficulities

Remember how the Jason book was going great guns a few days, or weeks, back? Well, not any more. As always when I do big signings and travel, the book that was hot is now cold ashes. I did four pages one day this week. Sigh. It wasn't unexpected that the book would suffer from the change in routine, but I had hoped with the tour being so short that it might not throw me off, nope, it did. Sigh, again.

I thought it was just my usual doldrums when the same scene had been two days under the computer with little progress. But I finally realized it was more than just a break in routine throwing me off. It was something else, something more. Sometimes the scene doesn't work in this book, or the characters aren't working in the scene, or the plot conflicts.

It's the first sex scene of the book, and I'd done everything I usually do to try and make the scene run smoothly. I'd decided what we were doing on paper and choreographed it out. You leave a little room for spontaneity but when doing sex on paper you want to know what you are striving to describe. It really is very like a dance routine.

The foreplay went very well and worked great, but when push came to shove (pun intended) it just did not work. I tried writing the scene in long hand because sometimes when I'm stuck the physical act of writing on paper will help shake something loose. But not this time. It was the perfect day for writing, too. I had a patch of sunlight right across my desk where I was sitting. The room was bright and cheery, and usually would make me want to get to work, but not today. (For those of you who think I work in a dungeon or in the Addams family mansion, sorry, but I like light, air, and pale blue walls for my working environment. Lots of windows, too. I really like a view. It just seems to give scope for the imagination.) Today no amount of lovely weather helped with the writing.

I must have sounded really forlorn on the intercom because Jon came over and told me to close up shop for now. He thought I needed to get out of the house for a few minutes. He was right. I would have come to that conclusion on my own in maybe another half hour or so. We did a quick trip out to get lunch and somewhere on the drive out or back I realized what was wrong with the scene. Jason wasn't happy.

I know a lot of people accuse me of putting my sexual fantasies on paper in my books, but actually I find that my imaginary friends have strong preferences in that area, and let's face it they are the ones having the sex not me. I thought Jason was okay with the scenario in the scene, but turns out it was something I liked better than he did, and until it was sex the way he preferred it, it wasn't going to work. I mean Jason is a good sport, but even he has his limits. I'd apparently crossed one of those limits without realizing it.

So tomorrow I'll be redoing the end part of that scene, and letting Jason have sex the way he wants it. In any good relationship you have to compromise. Sex is about compromise and knowing what everyone in the bed enjoys, and not pushing anyone outside their comfort zone. Even if that person happens to be make believe they need to feel that you care enough to give them what they need to be happy.

Thursday, June 14

USA Today List

The word for the day is . . . panic. Why? No idea.


Maybe it's that whole artistic temperament thing. I try never to use the excuse that I'm an artist to explain away bad behavior or weird behavior, but sometimes you wonder. I have friends that are not arty, and they seem calmer. They seem to glide through a world I have never known where possibilities are more limited and their imagination is a quieter thing. It looks peaceful, this other way of going through the world, but it is not my way.


Jon thinks that the funeral on Monday raised issues about my grandmother, and heck, my mother. Death does that, if you haven't worked your issues. One death reminds you of others.


Maybe that is it, or maybe some piece of a book, story, or character, is pushing too hard below the surface. Sometimes that can make me jumpy. I walk through the day with that nagging sensation that I've forgotten something, but it's right there on the tip of m mind, but I can't think what it is, so frustrating.


In USA Today, the paper, THE HARLEQUIN is number five over every book in the country. Most people don't realize that the USA Today list is sales only. Not just of the new hardbacks, but of every book in the entire country. New, old, hardback, paperback, adults, children's, Fiction, non-fiction; it all goes into this list. Selling fifth over all is pretty damn good. Of course, MICAH was number one and that would have been nice. What, you expected me to lie or be humble and say five is good, that's great. It's five. I want number one. All of us do, that are honest.


But there are some heavy hitters on the list, many of them Oprah picks with either this book or the last one they wrote. Some of them had movie tie-ins with earlier books. I think one book that I'm ahead of actually has a movie coming out soon that ties in.

We'll find out in a few days how the New York Times list shapes up. Keep your fingers crossed, I am. Frankly, there are such huge books on this list that number two would be terrific. But, yeah, I want number one.


Books get on the bestseller lists in many different ways, including being chosen for the Oprah Book, having a film or tv adaptation made, an author appearance on the Today Show, The Late Show With David Letterman or Conan O’Brian. For better or worse, none of those things have happened to me or my books.


So how did it happen? If I could truly answer that, I could sell the secret to publishers and make a mint. Part is that I'm writing the books I want to read, which means I'm having a wonderful time and I think that shows on the page. But an even more important part is you guys reading this blog right now. Even with all the commercials and interviews I'm doing, what we hear most in line at a signing is that a co-worker, a family member, a friend, a bookseller, recommended my books to you. More than that, you had someone you trusted say, "You have to read these books." You guys tell me that once you read them, you're hooked, too, and you become another one of the readers that say to people, "You have to read these books."


So here's a BIG thank you to all of you. We've done this together. More than almost any other writer on the list, it is my readers and their enthusiasm that has made the difference. Your energy and love of my characters has helped me keep the faith, and keep working my butt off to get the books out there so you can read them. I really am writing as fast as I can, so we can share more adventures, and together can find out what happens next.

Tuesday, June 12

A few days home, and a funeral

I should write about THE HARLEQUIN, because it is the latest book and I want to encourage people to go out and buy more copies. But for the life of me, I'm stumped today on what to write about. This is one of the reasons I've never kept a journal or diary, because at some point I always come to a moment when I am trapped between too many personal things. Things that I don't think should be shared.

We got off tour for THE HARLEQUIN and had a funeral to go to. Jon's Aunt Kay had cancer, but she'd seemed to be improving, then suddenly there was a swift downhill slide. I believe with all my heart that she is resting now and no longer in pain. But her children, her husband of 44 years, her siblings, her father, and all the rest of the people that have known her for a lifetime mourn her.

That's it, that's all I'm comfortable with sharing. If she were my mum, then I'd feel more comfortable with sharing, but because I'm not certain how what I write here might effect those that are nearest and dearest to Kay, I feel that less is better.

Very tired today. Tired enough that I took a nap and felt a little better. I'm looking forward to going to bed tonight just for the sleep. G'night everyone. Hopefully tomorrow will be a little brighter.

Sunday, June 10

St. Louis signing continued

Because the Science Center was set up for it's own merchandise they were cool with us bringing ours. For the first time at a signing we had our shirts, the rubber duckies, and lots of the stuff that is usually only available on-line from us. I signed more ducks at this signing than ever before, because you guys could buy them while you were in line.

The two hottest items were the Jean-Claude tub toy duckies, and the Jean-Claude comic shirt, followed by Anita comic shirts. Several people remarked that is was like being at a concert with the merch. I guess it was, but we didn't do a tour shirt this time. We did one before and it just didn't sell that well, so if it doesn't sell we don't repeat it.

We are doing a special shirt for Comic Con in San Diego this year, to commemorate our first time there. I've seen the graphic from Brett Booth, and it is way cool.

Thanks to the Borders store that was at the signing with books to sell on the spot.

Though the St. Louis signing was smaller than the Atlanta signing we had a lot of people who had traveled quite a ways to get there. As I said in the blog yesterday we had a lot of Canadians. Thanks for coming down. We had people from all over the country, actually. Kansas, Illinois, Texas, Oklahoma, and Tennessee. If I missed some states, my apologies, but we get a little fuzzy some time before we get through nearly three hundred people. Thanks to all of you that put in the effort to drive all that way.

Thanks also to all you guys at the Atlanta signing that traveled from out of state and farther. We had some people that came in from out of country, but Jon and I cannot remember whether you guys came to Atlanta or St. Louis. I'm sorry. We remember you, but not exactly the room you were standing in at the time.

Darla tells me that there maybe a video of the Q and A. We'll at the very least have an audio of it so that the people that couldn't make the St. Louis event can hear the questions and my answers complete without having to read through someone else's posts. Keep your finger's crossed that the video works out. Then you guys who didn't get to see it in person, can at least see it in some form.

We're also going to try to do an audio, and, or video of the wolf howl later this month. We'll see how it goes. Tech is great when it works. When it doesn't, well, you figure out what went wrong and try again.

Signing Follow Up from Emails

Hi! Darla hijacking the blog once again. This time to address the four things that have been flowing through the email regarding the St. Louis signing.

First, I am hearing from some folks they didn’t know about it. Yes, St. Louis is usually the kick off on release Tuesday. But not this time. Atlanta got that honor so we could do The Saint Louis Science Center on Friday. It was in the blog, on the main website in the Sightings (http://www.laurellkhamilton.org/Laurell/LKHSightings.htm), we sent out a note via the free announce list (which you can sign up for on the Sighting page) and on the MySpace page including the calendar. It also appeared in the Get Out section of the St. Louis Post Dispatch.

I don’t know where else I could have put it for everyone to see. If you have suggestions please feel free to share those!

Second, the crowd in Atlanta was so large you thought there wouldn’t be enough line tickets. Laurell makes sure everyone gets through the line at least once. She doesn’t want you to come and go home disappointed any more than you do.

Third, long lines made you rethink coming. That is why we have line tickets. It is a way to shorten your time standing in line. No one likes standing in line except those folks who were there with friends who seemed to have a great time in line or those who were reading the book.

Fourth, the Science Center costs money. Only if you went in to any of the special features, like the Marvel Superhero exhibit, bought something from one of the shops or had anything besides the cake the publisher sent over. We were in the Exploradome outside the exhibit. When we said free, we meant free. Even the parking was free for this event.

So sorry so many missed it. We will really try and do a better job of disseminating information. But suggestions are always welcome!

Saturday, June 9

St. Louis signing

The Science Center pulled out all the stops last night. A big thanks to Pili and all her crew that helped everything work last night. Thanks to Al Wyman who did the Q and A with me in their lovely Center Stage. It was an hour long session. I don't think I've ever done an hour before. I think for future we'll keep it to the half hour we usually do to get us all out of the signing earlier.

It was a good question and answer session, don't get me wrong. They had a stage big enough for me to pace to my heart's content without danger of walking off the edge. I've done that before. Okay, not stepped off, but backed up and found no stage underneath my heel. I had room to move last night. It was good.

There were children in the audience, and I tried my best not to cuss, or say anything inappropriate. I failed. I didn't mean to, but once I get into the Anita mind set it's so hard not to let things slip. Worse yet, with most of the audience not having read THE HARLEQUIN all the way through yet, I said a spoiler. Dammit.

Someone asked me a question from one of the blogs, and I answered without thinking. If I'd just answered the question, I'd have been fine. Who was the scene stealer in the book that I mention in a blog, but couldn't discuss without giving things away? Answer: Peter, Edward's stepson. But it's me, and I'm like essay-question-answer-girl. I had to elaborate what I thought Peter would be doing in this book as opposed to what he ended up doing. Which was a spoiler for those who hadn't gotten to that point of the book. Not a huge spoiler, but a spoiler nonetheless. The fans in residence were so good about not letting anything slip, and I did it. Jeez.

We had about three hundred, or a little over last night. Much less than the crowd in Atlanta. The Science Center had done their best to get the word out, I'm just beginning to think that St. Louis is not impressed with local talent. You know that whole not a prophet in your own land thing. Either that or it's the whole St. Louis being the buckle of the Bible belt. I don't know what it is, but the St. Louis crowds are starting to be smaller than the out of town crowds. I think St. Louis thinks they can catch me next time so why push?

Now to all the St. Louis area people who did come out, thank you. Many of you are people I've seen for years in signing after signing. I've got some people in line that I first met when they were in high school and now they're out of college, working, and into their first houses. How cool is it, to see people grow and change and their life progress in small slices of the signings? Very cool actually.

To all the new St. Louis area people, thank you, too. It's great to see new local faces. I'm tired this morning and don't mean to insult my home town, but it is an observable result that the crowds here are consistently smaller. Not dising, just truth.

We had a lot of people want pictures last night, which was cool. But it slowed us down for the actual signing. On our end we're going to try to think of a way to streamline the picture process. If any of you can come up with a way to streamline it let us know. We will take suggestions, because I'm sort of stumped. And none of you should write in and say, stop doing the pictures. The pictures are important to the people who want them. So, we need a solution that lets you guys get the snapshots you want, but makes a smoother or faster process of it. Suggestions welcome. Darla, Jon, Charles, and I are going to be thinking on what to do.

Maybe a dedicated person to take the camera from the fan in question and take the picture. Someone who has no other job in the event, but that. We have people that take the pictures for you guys, and sometimes a person who does just that, but they usually are a store employee and have other duties, as well. I don't know. We'll think upon it, you think upon, maybe we'll all come up with something.

I'm actually going to do something I rarely do, I'm going to end the blog here, and probably write a little more about the signing in St. Louis later. I want to talk about the fact that we had merchandise there for the first time in a big way. I want to talk about the out of town people who drove so far, or even flew. Canada was well represented last night. But I'm off to have breakfast and a second cup of tea. You guys have a good day. I hope the rest of you are not quite as tired as I am this morning.

Thursday, June 7

Waiting for the phone to ring

I'm sitting here in my office waiting for a phone call from a radio station. 'Two Johns, no Waiting," from KMOX 1120AM. Will be doing an interview tonight over the phone.

I've been interviewed by them before and they're great, nice guys, good interviewers. So, why am I anxious as I sit here and wait? I guess it's the kind of anxiety I always get before an interview. I'm usually fine once we begin, but the waiting is harder. The waiting is full of potential problems. Will the phone call get through on time? I've had it where it did not on other stations. Will I get asked something I can't answer? Sort of like that anxiety dream where you show up to school and there's a huge test you forgot to study for.

It's not this interview and these interviewers that I'm nervous about. It's general nervousness. General will I screw up royally this time. I guess it's the last vestiges of my early days of being painful shy.

I can almost hear anyone that's every seen me at a signing, say, "Shy, you're not shy."

I'm not shy now, but once I was. So shy that I nearly fainted when I had to get up in front of a class to make a speech. How did I get over it? I was invisible my freshman year of high school. I hid behind books and just tried to keep my head down. Then my sophomore year, I realized that this could be the way my life ran. Being invisible forever. Being unnoticed. Being too afraid to do anything that I wanted to do. At fifteen I decided that I didn't want to live my life that way. Which meant I had to change my fate, but how?

I was in a speech class that everyone had to take, and that was the beginning of me coming out of my shell. The teacher, Mr. Huber, was also the drama teacher for the school. I joined the Thespian Society and speech team. I forced myself to get up in front of people over and over again. It was terrifying at first, but each time I got up and did it, was a victory. Each victory gave me the courage to be a little less afraid. Until now you can put me in front of an audience of any size and I'm not the least bit scared. In fact I enjoy working the crowd. Enjoy everyone's reactions. I value getting that laughter, or that gasp, from an audience.

Now plays and speech team didn't cure me completely. That was continued with being a guest at Science Fiction conventions and being on panels. The first panel I ever sat on my knees shook so badly the table cloth in front of me trembled slightly. Debroah Millitello, a fellow writer and friend, was on that panel, too. I remember looking down that table and seeing her table cloth trembling just a little too. That early shared fear cemented our friendship. We've both gotten much braver.

Every panel I sat on; every reading I gave; every question I answered; helped me lose more of my fear. Most actors will tell you that playing a part on stage is much less scary than just being yourself on stage. Hiding behind a part means it's not really you that the audience hates if it all goes badly. But interviews are just you, being you, and if someone hates you, it's not a part they're hating it's just you.

The calls here. Finish this afterwards.

I'm back. The interview went well. They gave me a great intro, and talked wonderfully about the event tomorrow at the St. Louis Science Center. I'll be doing the Q and A from six to seven o'clock. Then we'll move over to the explorer dome to sign stuff. There will be line tickets available starting at 8:00 A. M. tomorrow. I don't know how many tickets they're giving out, so it is first come, first served. Once you get your line ticket you can wander off and come back that night. No need to wait around all day. I'm not worth that, though the Science Center is really cool. Marvel's Science of Super Heroes is very nice, and they have some of our stuff in one of the display rooms. Very cool.

There's also a Build-A-Dinosaur. It's from the people who brought you Build-A-Bear, but for the Science Center, it's dinosaurs. Again, too cool.

We'll see you guys tomorrow here in St. Louis.

Kids count for books

One thing I forgot to mention in yesterday's blog is our rule about kids in line. Everyone gets two items signed per person, right? Right. But kids are people, too. So if you, the grown-up, have kids with you, you can get two items per child signed, as well.

Did that make sense? We had one woman go through with a little baby in a carrier. I told her, that she could have brought two extra books for braving the line with the baby. She hadn't known that. So, I thought we'd make it clear. The family that brought five kids with them could have had all their books done. The kids were amazingly patient and good about the wait in line.

I can't promise you parents that the questions asked in the Q and A will be kid safe, though. I'll try to monitor my language, but there's only so much we can do. So be warned on that, but we try to keep it fairly family friendly. I am writing an Anita book currently, or will be back to it, once we finish up the publicity for THE HARLEQUIN. I tend to cuss more when I'm writing Anita. Fancy that.

Wednesday, June 6

Atlanta

The kick-off event in Atlanta was great. Thanks to everyone who came out to see us. There were a little over five hundred of you, which is an excellent crowd.

We signed a record number of birthday books, so happy birthday again to all you June babies.

We saw a lot of familiar faces, and a lot of new ones. Many of you said you'd never been to a signing of any kind before. Welcome to the experience. Glad you enjoyed yourselves.

Jon, Charles, and I had a wonderful time meeting everyone. For those who don't know, Charles is our security person, and he's with us. Jon added that when we introduced him, and I think that summed it up better than my ramblings.

We are safe home now. Tired, but happy. It really was an amazing event and you guys helped make it happen. The bookstore employees complimented us on how nice all the fans were, and I said that I have some of best fans in the world. You guys are great. Apparently some writers who will remain nameless do not have such fun-loving and cooperative fans.

Thanks again to all the people who manned, or womaned, the store in Atlanta for the signing. Thanks for keeping the store open late so everyone in line could get their books signed. We did two items a piece for over five hundred of you by 11:00 P. M. starting at around 6:40 or so. My arm not only did it, but I felt pretty good. I guess I've been hitting the gym more than I thought. Yea!

Our daughter is off with her grandparents to the Cardinal baseball game, so Jon and I are going to take it easy and get early to bed. You tired us out, but in a totally fun way.

Tuesday, June 5

The Harlequin Excused Absence Note

For those who need it:

http://www.laurellkhamilton.org/HarlequinExcuse.jpg

If it works, let us know!

Darla

On sale today

Today is it. THE HARLEQUIN is on sale. Yea!



I'll see some of you guys tonight in Atlanta for the kick-off. Why are we doing Atlanta as the first signing and not St. Louis, like usual? Because we're having the St. Louis signing at the St. Louis Science Center and Tuesday didn't work for them, so we're doing it this Friday. So tonight in Atlanta where Jon and I have not been since 2001 when did Dragon Con.

6:00 PM Barnes & Noble, 2900 Peachtree Road N.E., Atlanta. 404-261-7747.



We will see you there tonight. Yes, I am freaking. Another plane ride. AAAHH!

Monday, June 4

One more day until THE HARLEQUIN

Just one more day until THE HARLEQUIN hits the shelves. One more day before all you guys that have been waiting can have a book in your hands. Then I have to give you guys a few days to actually read the book. I know, I know, some of you will have read it already, and some of you will devour it in line, or close to, but for all the rest of the fans I have to wait. I have to give them some time. What happens when I give you time to finish reading? I finally get to talk about the book.

I normally don't do that, but there's something about Edward being on stage after so long that has made me want to share. If I had been able to share without spoiling the book for everyone I would have blogged about how creepy Olaf was, and how this or that new character was more interesting than I'd planned. How this one character kept trying to steal scenes when they were in them.

Maybe it's the fact that it's book 15 that made me want to share. Some of you guys have been with me from the beginning. You remember when no one cared. You remember when you said my name, they said, Laurell Hamilton, who?

To those of you who are recent arrivals to my world, welcome. You guys have a lot of world to explore. Fifteen books, a novelette, a short story, or two, all set in Anita's world. I hear from more and more of you that you just found me. Just found Anita's world, or Merry's, or both.

I'd had people tell me that they had seen people reading my books on subways, trains, planes, in the park, but I had never seen it. Until the trip home from New York. I got on the plane and three rows in front of us a man was reading OBSIDIAN BUTTERFLY. Jon and I made no sign as we eased past him, but when we'd settled into our seats Jon asked, "Did you see the man reading O.B?" I said, "I saw."

It seemed right somehow, that the first time I see someone reading my books in public was now, just before book 15, and that it would be OBSIDIAN BUTTERFLY, Edward's last appearance, just seemed a good omen to me.

A woman at BEA said the loveliest thing to me. She said, "Your books make me feel less lonely."

I don't know if I've ever had a better compliment.

Sunday, June 3

Home

Home safe and sound. Yea! We had turbulence on the last leg of the flight home. Bad enough that the pilot had the crew ready us for landing twenty-five minutes early. I got my drink taken out of my hand in mid-sip. Nothing like watching your flight attendants get nervous to help us white knuckle fliers. It turned out not as bad as feared, so that was good.



We got to see hawks flying on the thermals in New York city. One young red-tail stooped a seagull the morning we left. It was very cool watching it from the same height that it was happening. The other hawk that seemed to like the buildings near us was a broad-winged hawk. We saw him in the evening mostly. The red-tail was the morning traffic. After seeing his reaction to the sea gull I understood why the broad-wing might not want to share the same air space.



We were in New York, but not for a regular event. It was one of those events that is closed to the public, so no need to tell you guys, since most of you couldn't go. It was BEA. Which stands, I'm pretty sure, for Book Expo of America. The last time I was at one of these Trinity was a baby.



Jon and I saw a lot of familiar faces, even with the low profile. I knew some of you that are regulars at signings are book sellers, librarians, and others involved in the business side of books, but I don't think I realized how many of you. Cool.



My understanding is that you have to be in the biz (Publishing Industry, Bookseller or Librarian) and it's like over two hundred dollars at the door to get in, there are one day passes, but they range from $75 to $115. I just didn't think that I was worth you guys spending that kind of money to see me. Also, the two signings I did were limited in the amount of people they allowed in line. I think they kept the comic line at sixty people, though a few more snuck in at the end of it all. That was okay, we were doing fine. The signing for the Harlequin was absolutely cut off at a hundred. It was first come, first served, for early copies, and personalization only, no just putting my name in it. My publisher thought that would keep people from putting it up on e-bay. Surprisingly none of those books have shown up, though other people who have gone to a great deal of trouble to get early copies are being bad and putting up early teasers.



Again, I couldn't imagine you guys shelling out that much money only to find out that you couldn't get in line and actually get a book. I'm never sure how to handle these kind of events.



I signed copies of GUILTY PLEASURES the comic, issue one, and posters of Jean-Claude. I really do like that poster. I like it enough that I've got it framed and matted, and mounted on my wall.



We also did a pod cast audio which is for "Upfront & Unscripted," one of the BEA podcasts, which should be available on their website, http://www.bookexpocast.com/. Same day we did a video pod cast thingie for Marvel. Not sure when that will be up, we'll let you know when we do.



Jon and I had like two hours before our flight so my agent, Merrilee, took us to the Museum of Natural History. It was very cool. We saw two of the traveling shows: Mythic Creatures and Frogs. The frogs alone were worth going, and the mythic creatures were cool, but it was pretty much stuff I already knew. But then, this is what I do, research and write about 'real' monsters.



There are some cool books in the bookstore outside the mythic creatures exhibit that I did not have, and I assume the books are designed to compliment the new exhibit, so get them while you can. I got one on cryptozoology, always fun, and one on water monsters. They both had good bibliographies, a must in a research book.



Also, since my publicist, Craig, was standing on the other side of me while we were doing THE HARLEQUIN hundred books, people got to talk directly to him about parts of the country they wished we would come and sign at, or would that be in?



We had a lot of New Yorkers and a lot of East Coasters because of the location, so maybe he'll hear you guys and next time out we might see you for a normal signing back on the East Coast again. We've done New York City once, Manhattan actually, and Boston once, oh, does Washington D. C. count as East Coast? I guess it does. We were doing D. C. on a fairly regular basis for awhile. I think when I started begging off of the really long tours that was when it got dropped. Maybe you guys getting to ask directly to Craig will get more attention.



Thanks to everyone who was so nice to Jon and myself at BEA.

Friday, June 1

A writer's trick and a little voyeurism

I woke up at about dawn. I've started doing that. I'm not sure why. But especially in hotels light seeps through the windows and I'm awake. I tried to cuddle back against my warm husband and sleep some more, but it wasn't happening. I thought about waking Jon up and seeing if he wanted to be awake for a fun reason, but after seven years of being a couple I can tell the difference between his breathing when he's a little bit asleep and when he's very asleep. Very asleep does not like being woken up unless I'm very enthusiastic. I never feel very enthusiastic at dawn. I just sort of feel sorry for myself that I'm awake and can't get back to sleep. Misery does not love company so I got up, quietly, fetched a hotel robe and went into the other room.

I got to watch dusk fall on the city, and now I got to see the first light of day blush and shine it's way over the same buildings. Last night Jon and I could see people turning on their lights, or off for the night in office buildings and apartments. This morning I got to see blinds come up for the first time today. A man fresh from his shower if the towel around his waist is any clue came to his window. I wonder if you live in a city where others can see your windows if you all pretend no one can see in, so you can do what you like, or if you are always aware that someone maybe watching? I think it would bug me.

I'm not much of a voyuer except for one area: windows. I like glimpsing inside people's houses. I also, if I would allow myself, like to go on open houses not to buy but just to see how people have lived in a house. I know it's cleaned up for viewing, but still it tells alot about a person what lamp they choose, or knick-knacks they keep. Unless you've had a decorator, and then, sometimes, it's all about your decorator. It maybe pretty, but I like to see a person's choices in their space. Most writers people watch, but I've always been a thing watcher, too.