Conference Pictures

Pictures from the 2010 Malice Domestic conference held last weekend in Washington, DC. I had a fantastic time, met many online friends in person, spoke with some wonderful mystery readers, attended and sat on panels, ran my mouth a lot more than I usually do…and came home exhausted, but happy!

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Here I am hanging out with my Mystery Lovers’ Kitchen friends, Avery Aames and Krista Davis right before the Agatha banquet. Avery writes the Cheese Shop mysteries and Krista writes the Diva series for Berkley Prime Crime.

No, we didn’t plan on wearing the same color. :)

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These are all Midnight Ink authors (left to right): Vicki Doudera, G.M. Malliet, C.S. Challinor, Elizabeth Kane Buzzelli, Lisa Bork, me..hidden:) , Beth Groundwater , Deborah Sharp, Alan Orloff, Sue Ann Jaffarian, and Kathleen Ernst.

This picture was taken right before our Saturday panel: Senior Sleuths vs Middle-Aged Meddlers and Crime-Cracking Kids: How Age Impacts the Story. Bottom Row–Sarah Masters Buckey, me
Top Row–Maya Corrigan, JL Wilson, Nancy Glass West

imageSarah Masters Buckey with me, before our panel. Sarah writes the American Girl series. My daughter thought that was really cool.

025Alan Orloff, Sue Ann Jaffarian, Vicki Doudera, and me—on our way to grab a little lunch.

imageAuthors Cheryl Solimini and Elizabeth Zelvin and me

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Cozy mystery writers Lorna Barrett, Krista Davis, Ellery Adams, Sheila Connolly, Leann Sweeney, Wendy Lyn Watson, Heather Webber, Mary Jane Maffini, Avery Aames, and I had buttons made up for a button game where readers hunted down all our buttons at the conference. Whoever got all the buttons first, won. Our winner, Shirley, with our button collection!

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Berkley Prime Crime treated its authors to dinner at Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse on Friday evening. The staff at the restaurant really bent over backwards to make sure everything went well. :)

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Natalee Rosenstein,Vice President and Senior Executive Editor with Penguin Group, with Berkley author Casey Daniels. It’s not often you can hang out with Penguin editors (much less a VP), so this evening was a treat.

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The Malice banquet.

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Kathleen Ernst and Alan Orloff speak during their panel, Culture Clash: Race and Ethnicity in Mysteries.

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An aerial shot of the area where the authors signed books after panels.

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Goofing off time. :) With Beth Groundwater, Elizabeth Kane Buzzelli, Deb Sharp, Alan Orloff, and Lisa Bork

To everyone that I met and hung out with last weekend—it was wonderful meeting you all!

Twitterific

Twitter

Once again, I’m posting writing links that I previously posted to Twitter.

The idea of doing this isn’t to overwhelm anyone. But I thought that if I kept track of these writing links in a searchable database (you can search my blog on the top left of the page) then we can access some of these helpful links by topic, when we need to.

One author shares lessons he’s learned: http://bit.ly/aYUXsA

What makes a writer a professional? http://bit.ly/bfzoXo

A published author gives aspiring authors the benefit of her hindsight: http://bit.ly/bOaM3c

Eliminating vague pronouns: http://bit.ly/csi4ZS

Delegate your way to more writing time: http://bit.ly/brx70y

The Evolving World of Book Publicity (Huff Post): http://huff.to/9pILeo

Men don’t read books? Research Fail: http://bit.ly/9bcKIj

Is DRM More Costly Than Piracy? http://oreil.ly/bxzKoK

8 basic writing blunders (Writer’s Digest): http://bit.ly/dBiuok

Bringing your characters to life: http://bit.ly/c3pme8

A query and a rejection (snort): http://bit.ly/9nc5Bi @thmafi

What readers want: http://bit.ly/aqzWjj

Bowker to provide ISBNs for Google Editions– http://bit.ly/bPM769

Write, exercise, write: http://bit.ly/aiIofH

Brainstorming techniques: http://bit.ly/bClIDK

On Facebook and the Increasing Erosion of Digital Privacy– http://bit.ly/dAHIzA

Amazon—or Shamazon? inside customer reviews– http://bit.ly/a6dE0C

Literary Agent Steve Wasserman Delivers Digital Rights Advice for Authors @GalleyCat : http://bit.ly/bn2rj8

The art of choosing illustration (write picture books? Don’t try to pair the text w/ pictures): http://bit.ly/97cVGY

Changing times for the promoting writer: http://bit.ly/9dLQ7P

5 articles on writing with voice: http://bit.ly/aC5MZP

Fantasy’s Top Ten Fight Scenes: The Duels– http://bit.ly/9h9bL1

An author discusses fanfic: http://bit.ly/92YBzA

Google to launch ebook store (Guardian): http://bit.ly/cJaomx

Literary novels don’t have to be plotless – Revolutionary Road– http://bit.ly/dcMs8j

It’s Time to Realize You’re a Talentless Hack– http://bit.ly/abXv8p

Know Your Characters – Part 1– http://bit.ly/aNXtk1 @jaysubject

3 Things Don Corleone Knows About Writing– http://bit.ly/alvp6i

Notes from the NY Times newsroom on grammar, usage and style: http://bit.ly/bnAJFy

Virtual Book Tours for Novelists: http://bit.ly/dtLrUC

Top 10 illustrated books for adults (Guardian): http://bit.ly/a1ijuX

Where’s the Future for Science Fiction? http://bit.ly/aGjS0I

One question an editor always hears: http://bit.ly/9esvyf

What should I write? http://bit.ly/dbgEbi

How To Organize Your Google Feed Reader: http://bit.ly/c9dK96 @TannaC

You don’t know jack about ISBNs: http://bit.ly/dxd9Ji @ereads

Writing characters–must we stick to what we know? http://bit.ly/bq9pxA

Setting up a critique group–think quality, not quantity: http://bit.ly/c9P3Bo

What Swiss transportation can teach us about writing: http://bit.ly/aXocAH @WriterAbroad

How a good scene is like a good joke: http://bit.ly/aquxLp @julie_bush

Showing vs. Telling: Subtexting — http://bit.ly/a5aNG1

Tips for writing success: http://bit.ly/ckSXW7

The worst things an agent has seen in contracts: http://bit.ly/c7PDFu

Ways the writing life can enrich our families: http://bit.ly/bVjfAY @JodyHedlund

Building a villain: http://bit.ly/dlyove @msforster

“Connect, Don’t Network”: Gaiman, Benet on Blogging– http://bit.ly/9vCyJH

10 Marketing Excuses That Can Kill Your Book and Career: http://bit.ly/bx2HtS

Why men don’t read (Salon): http://bit.ly/cZbvg7

An agent on keeping our facts straight with series bibles: http://bit.ly/d8ksnD

13 Things You Should Have Known About Your Characters Beforehand: http://bit.ly/9p7nUv

5 tips to survive an agent meeting or pitch session: http://bit.ly/c2EUp6

Handwriting analysis, part 2, for the crime writer: http://bit.ly/bkEH5Q

Margaret Atwood on why we must defend writers (Daily Beast): http://bit.ly/99SmiP

Quoting song lyrics in your fiction: http://bit.ly/bInVs7 @nickdaws

Writers and the internet (can authors survive it?) : http://bit.ly/dCKKfq

Formulating your workshop goals http://bit.ly/cy41mq

Advice for a Mystery-Hater: http://bit.ly/dbreJn

When did “beware” become a noun? http://bit.ly/bPCAkx

Cross-dressing characters: http://bit.ly/bRfxoc

Going to Paris? Events and news for writers: http://bit.ly/9wx8zs

Why Your Email Account May Be Getting You Rejected– http://bit.ly/d59aUo

Writing From the Incomprehensible– http://bit.ly/9RGTV0

Working with an editor– making it productive: http://bit.ly/aK4Okb @greyhausagency

Best last lines in books: http://bit.ly/byzlnc

The phrase-finder…another online site to help you procrastinate: http://bit.ly/9BxpVC

7 Secret Signs an Agent is Into You– http://bit.ly/94kYXe @thmafi

What’s Jodi Picoult looking for? Respect. (Telegraph): http://bit.ly/bfRBV4

Not Just Another Funny Forehead: Creating Alien Characters– http://bit.ly/dhc2DB

On writing acknowledgments: http://bit.ly/bB1fAU

The writer’s toolkit: Eavesdropping for dialogue– http://bit.ly/bDkcSN

He says/she says: What is creativity? http://bit.ly/b0IN1F @merrileefaber @cvaldezmiller

Workshop tips from the SCBWI Michigan Conference: http://bit.ly/b2Ja5w

Authors, do you look the part when doing TV promo? (Huff Post) http://dld.bz/cevW

Authors, do you look the part when doing TV promo? http://www.huffingtonpost.com/arielle-ford/do-you-look-the-part_b_559913.html

For book marketing research, authors can use TitleZ– http://dld.bz/cev9 @TheCounter

Teaming up with another writer for offline promo: http://dld.bz/cevv @TonyEldridge

107 Things You Should Know About Being a Published Author– http://dld.bz/cevs

Lessons learned–my first writing conference: http://dld.bz/cevn @bluemaven

Editors on agents: http://dld.bz/cetG

Reading around the world–in photos. (LA Times): http://dld.bz/cenK @LATimesbooks

An agent on synopses: http://dld.bz/cenC

POV tips– http://dld.bz/cen8

Reading a publishing contract–part 9: http://dld.bz/cem8

On using coincidences when we write: http://bit.ly/bo1YnS

An agent throws a little cold water on agents fighting over the same client: http://bit.ly/c30bcH

Do libraries help or hurt book sales? http://dld.bz/cemv

Book Marketing–experience & options — thoughts on different approaches: http://dld.bz/cewz

Posting Your Unpubbed Concepts On Your Website: Yes or No? http://dld.bz/cekB @jkcoi

Know your children’s lit category: http://dld.bz/ceww

Content farms: http://dld.bz/cebU @Personanondata

Writer @JulieHyzy reminds us it’s prom season–and gives us a recipe for a spinach quiche to serve. http://bit.ly/cvwony

An agent on how to write the breakout novel: Part 2 – Larger-than-life characters: http://bit.ly/bq9b9y @JuliaChurchill

Storytelling is Motion: http://dld.bz/ceaR @gwenbell

Top 10 Greatest Science Fiction Detective Novels Of All Time: http://dld.bz/cend

Fiction Magazines Worth Reading: 2010 http://dld.bz/cenw @ericrosenfield

Powerful WordPress Forms Made Simple– http://dld.bz/cemY

Kindle pros and cons: http://dld.bz/cecq

The best book I ever edited: http://dld.bz/cebw @jevonbolden

Quidditch–fictional? Think again: (Guardian)– http://dld.bz/cemB

The Trials and Triumphs of Turning a Print Novel into an eBook: http://dld.bz/cec3

The Facebook writer’s challenge: http://dld.bz/ceaP

Steve Wasserman on the Qualities of a Good Literary Agent– http://dld.bz/cemq @GalleyCat

A few rules for romances–and what’s hot and not: http://dld.bz/cewf

Factors that influence character names: http://dld.bz/cayz

Why do editors edit? http://dld.bz/ced9

Great tips here– A Writer’s First Year: “Do Not Snort on NPR” and Other Tips for Flogging Your Book http://dld.bz/cefy

What’s your intent or objective for being on Twitter? http://dld.bz/cecM

Writer Jeff Cohen comes up with “The English/GPS–GPS/English Dictionary” while on the road: http://dld.bz/cayu

Starting a novel in the wrong place: http://dld.bz/cdYq

What every fiction writer can learn from Starlighter: http://dld.bz/cdYm

Conference etiquette–be a class act: http://dld.bz/caxZ

No idea is wasted when we write: http://dld.bz/caxX

10 writing tools you can have for free: http://dld.bz/cawj

Poetry is for rich kids: http://dld.bz/caxQ

A good writer is a good writer–whether it’s genre fic or lit fic: http://dld.bz/cax2

10 Handy Travel Gadgets for Geeky Business Travelers– http://dld.bz/cawm @marcandangel

What you should do with every guest post you write: http://dld.bz/cawe

Science Fiction and Romance: Fraternal Twins– http://dld.bz/cavQ

Monday Markets/Jobs/Opportunities — http://dld.bz/cau5

How To Get Your Book Mentioned In A Newspaper: http://dld.bz/cau3

Distractions–how they hold us back. http://dld.bz/cauw @joannapaterson

An agent on what’s in a publishing contract: http://dld.bz/catk @RachelleGardner

What you’re entitled to, as a writer: http://dld.bz/casQ @julie_bush

When to start your agent search: http://dld.bz/casK

Maid as Muse: How Servants Changed Emily Dickinson’s Life & Language: http://dld.bz/cavN

Comparative overkill–how to compare and contrast in our writing: http://dld.bz/cas6

Writing conversations– how many people should converse at once? http://dld.bz/caYK

Skype is not quite ready for prime time: http://dld.bz/bYpm

Romantic Times conference wrap up: http://dld.bz/bYpk

How to use mysteries in your novel: keep the reader guessing – but not too much http://dld.bz/bYph

Can Goodreads Ads Help Unknown Authors Find an Audience? http://dld.bz/carP

3 vital steps to writing a novel: http://dld.bz/bYpe

Action and intensity = 2 different things: http://dld.bz/bYnH

Why write? http://dld.bz/bW7f

Why I don’t say ‘science fiction’ or ‘fantasy’ to regular people: http://dld.bz/bW6X

When your story doesn’t turn out like you planned: http://dld.bz/bW6M

Dealing with scraping (plagiarism) from a blogger’s point of view: http://dld.bz/bW6E

Will sex save publishing? (MSNBC): http://dld.bz/bW6y via @AuthorScoop

Writing the hardboiled–keeping it edgy: http://dld.bz/bW5X

An agent answers a writer’s question–would she rather rep a writer with a deal on the table? http://dld.bz/bW5V

When you hate your book: http://bit.ly/d8A70e @kirstenhubbard

Handwriting analysis or graphology: http://bit.ly/a78mLZ

Can the Author Survive the Internet? (Daily Beast) http://bit.ly/cj33Io

Plot is presentation: http://bit.ly/a4gY6d

Links to Savvy Book Marketing Tips for Authors– http://bit.ly/cajYC9

How to read a publishing contract (part 8): http://bit.ly/dyqsVO

Some gun tips for the crime writer: http://bit.ly/bcD0cJ

Foreshadowing: http://bit.ly/968Mk5

Fiction’s talking animals (Guardian): http://bit.ly/a5L3Gc

I’m a writer–let me tell you a story: http://bit.ly/dixga8

Ten of the best visions of Heaven in literature (Guardian): http://bit.ly/aYy27G

What you should know about non-writers: http://bit.ly/cmtSeP

Blake Morrison on the cost of quoting lyrics (Guardian): http://bit.ly/cPXwNM

Author toolbox–the 3 hooks: http://bit.ly/9pM2z6

Traditional book retailers face trilogy of threats: http://dld.bz/brqt

How poetry, Google, and Craigslist helped me find the family I never knew I had– http://bit.ly/a2Rnj4

Meet the Telegraph’s cryptic crossword maestro: http://bit.ly/bwvMuB

Adding Extra Content When Republishing a Novel as an eBook: http://bit.ly/bZoWKp

Never give up–a probable possibility: http://bit.ly/9tuW3N

What to Do When They Hold Your Guest Post Hostage: http://bit.ly/bKt8LQ

What’s really preventing me from writing? http://bit.ly/b6G8jH

How do I choose which book to review? http://bit.ly/cFIYJw

7 deadly sins (if you’re a first chapter): http://bit.ly/a5NeQ4

Climbing Pyramids and Other Writing Exercises: http://bit.ly/cm76yc

The Eternal Questions: When, Where, How– http://bit.ly/92pfyc

How to travel lightly to literary events: http://bit.ly/bm29o1

What’s in a name? http://bit.ly/apXDHO

Should you query a first novel? http://bit.ly/a9k3Ht

The ‘do it now’ principle: http://bit.ly/8ZBuBU

Self-promo–starting too soon? http://bit.ly/9libJe

What booksellers want: http://bit.ly/9dTad0

How Transmedia Storytelling Becomes a Billion Dollar Business: http://bit.ly/d5Zx5p

Dramatic monologue (Guardian): http://bit.ly/dcQA9l

What’s in a Name? — http://bit.ly/apXDHO

Five Things Phishing And Literary Scams Have In Common– http://bit.ly/ab7HFN

Censorship–the ultimate ignorance: http://bit.ly/9Lz4om

Why branding yourself is important: http://dld.bz/bAFG

Changing Times

Deadlines When I was at the Malice Domestic conference last weekend, I had a chance to talk with an author who currently has a successful series with a major publisher.

When I was introduced to her, I immediately remembered a review I’d read about her last book in the series on one of the major book blogs.

“Oh, fantastic review on _____,” I said. (I don’t want to make it too clear which author this is, although I don’t think she’ll find out…and you’ll see why in a second.)

“Where?” she asked. She looked completely baffled.

“On ______,” I repeated.

“Is that a newspaper?”

I’m afraid at this point that my mouth may have gaped open and my eyes bugged out. Really?

“Um, well…no, but it’s a major book reviewing site online.”

There was some lost interest. I decided to change the subject since we’re locked into this conversation with each other.

“So, you’ve been doing really well,” I said mildly. That was an understatement.

“Yes, I decided to go on a 10-state tour of bookstores. I meet the staff, sign stock, get to know bookstore staff pretty well. Then I call on them when another book is released.”

Well, this completely blew me away. She’s young and has a family. And—traveling is expensive. And bookstore staff turns over pretty quickly. And…

But it was working for her. She was really successful with it.

I have to wonder, though, how long that approach will work so well.

And…why not at least monitor the online world a little? How many more sales would you get? How much more exposure? And for just a fraction of the cost of getting hotel rooms and putting miles on your car.

How long is there going to be print reviewing?

How long before books go digital and there are no “stock signings” as a promo option?

How long before you do need to go courting and visit book bloggers, and spend time on Facebook and Twitter? How much catching up will you need to do?

When I hear stories like hers, I feel a real mixture of feelings. Some guilt, definitely, at choosing not to do the same thing. But also a sense of wonder at her completely ignoring such a vital component of book promotion.

What do you think (and I realize I’ve got a biased group here since we’re all online and networking)? How long will the old-fashioned book tour last and be successful? Do you think there’s an argument for doing a personal-appearance tour as opposed to a virtual one?

Where Are We Going With This?

blog60 Conferences are very good for making you think about your long-term plans.

There are writers there that have been published for the past 20 to 30 years…and there are writers who are just starting out, too, and thinking about where they want to go.

And there’s nothing like a talk with your agent to help you straighten out your long-term goals. :)

I’ve said before that one of the best things I’ve done for my writing career was decide what direction I wanted to take with my writing. What was my purpose? How many people did I want to write for?

It reminds me of journalism’s Five Ws (and one H) that are needed to get the full story on a subject:

Why are we doing this? Do we only want to share our work with family and friends? If so, then we could consider self-publishing. Or do we want to share a story with a wider audience?

What steps are we going to take to achieve our goals? Take online classes on writing topics we’re weak in? Attend workshops? Go to conferences that sponsor agent pitches?

Where would we like to see our novel or nonfiction published? Where would we like to go with all this…a long-term career or a one-time thing?

When is our self-imposed deadline for completing a first draft? For a submission-ready manuscript?

Who is our ideal agent? We can research agents on Agent Query and check the ones we find against Preditors and Editors and Writers Beware.

How are we going to achieve our goals if our efforts are met with continued failure? Do we have a plan B? Consider pitching to smaller or independent publishers? Try building up our name or resume by getting published in magazines? Enter contests? Consider writing a different genre– a more commercially viable one?

Sometimes I feel like I’m just responding to stimuli and not really reassessing my master plan. Talking to my agent helped refocus me and made me take a look at where I am now and where I want to be—and the steps I need to take to get there.

Do you know where you’re going?

Coincidentally…

Coffee by the Window, 1945--Konstantin Gorbatov (1876 - 1945) I felt a little out of touch with my North Carolina life while I was in DC at Malice Domestic.

My cell phone decided that it wouldn’t charge with either of my two chargers. I emailed my husband and told him what was up—and to call me only if there was something important. If he wanted to just shoot the breeze, then email me.

So I was one of the first people at the cell phone store when it opened Monday morning.

A young guy in his early twenties helped me out. “I think,” I said, “that it’s the port on the phone and not the charger.”

He looked unhappy because this meant I would have to get a new phone from them with no charge. They’d already told me that they couldn’t fix broken phone ports, at least on that model.

He took my phone off into the back of the shop.

“It’s your charger,” he said breezily when he came back in. “It started charging just fine when I plugged it into our charger in the back.

I opened my pocketbook and took out both of my chargers. “So,” I said slowly, “you’re saying that both my chargers went bad? Simultaneously?”

He swallowed. I raised my eyebrows at him.

“Yes ma’am. That’s what I’m saying.”

“It’s sort of coincidental, wouldn’t you say?” I asked him.

He nodded.

“Do you mind checking it again?” I asked. “Just to make sure?”

Because coincidences do happen. But not all that often.

As a reader, coincidences can be frustrating to read. They can make the story seem really contrived…and make the writer look lazy.

But sometimes—life does work that way. Despite my doubts, the cell phone rep found that my phone chargers were both defective. Suddenly. At the same time. And there haven’t been any lightning storms or anything.

I’ve found that, when I’m reading, I’m more accepting of coincidences in some circumstances.

I think I don’t find it too unbelievable when two people meet as the result of a coincidence. I think I’m more inclined to toss that up as fate.

I also don’t mind small coincidences at the start of a book. Later on, if a coincidence is used to wrap up a book in a tidy way, that annoys the stew out of me. It just reeks of deus ex machina.

What about you? Do you ever use little coincidences or twists of fate as a writer? Do they bother you as a reader or are you able to overlook them?

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