BioBooksAwardsComing NextContactBlogFun StuffHome

Archive for October, 2011

Happy Halloween!

Monday, October 31st, 2011
Funny Pictures - Basement Cat Wishes You a Happy Halloween

see more Lolcats and funny pictures, and check out our Socially Awkward Penguin lolz!

Guilty Pleasure: Decoded

Sunday, October 30th, 2011

There’s a show on History Channel that I really enjoy watching. It’s called Decoded and features author Brad Meltzer. He mostly does some commenting through the show, but the main figures doing the investigating are an attorney, an engineer, and a journalist/historian. Every week they investigate some new historical rumor. Some of them are pretty out there, too, which is why I consider this show a guilty pleasure.

Some of the topics the show has covered that I found especially interesting were the Culper spy ring from the Revolutionary War. I’d never heard of them before, but apparently they had quite an impact on our victory in the war. Well, at least according to the show. I didn’t do any research on my own.

They also looked at Meriwether Lewis (of Lewis and Clark) really committed suicide or if his death was a murder. Again, after watching the show, it sure would be nice if the US Government would grant the Lewis family’s request to exhume the body and let a forensic anthropologist do some work. It sure sounded like he was murdered and the evidence for suicide was flimsy at best, fabricated at worst.

The show has also covered other topics like whether or not there’s still gold in Fort Knox, what happened to the corner stone of the White House, DB Cooper (the hijacker who parachuted from the 727 over the Pacific Northwest), and investigated if John Wilkes Booth really was shot after he assassinated Lincoln, or if it was another man who was killed instead.

I’ll admit to being skeptical about a lot of what they choose to cover in the show and some of the theories are out there. I still find it entertaining and even if some of it is ridiculous, it’s entertaining.

To Epilogue Or Not To Epilogue

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

When I first wrote Ravyn’s Flight there was no epilogue. My editor asked me to write one and what finally was published is the second version of it. Originally, I had the epilogue taking place on Earth and my editor wanted it on J9. She was right. In hindsight, the story did need to end on the planet where the story took place and I like this version best of the two.

Since then, I have almost always added an epilogue to my books. I’m pretty sure all my full-length books have epilogues, but I don’t think two of the short stories do. Anyway, the reason I’ve chosen to add an epilogue is because I write action/adventure romance, sometimes there’s so much going on in the story that I think the reader needs time with the couple when there aren’t shoot-outs going on to see that yes, it is true love and to have that ahh moment. But this isn’t something I’ve given a great deal of thought to in years. Until this week.

I’ve been reading on my lunch at work and the book had quite a bit of action going on. And then it ended and there wasn’t an epilogue. As a reader, I wanted that epilogue. I needed the epilogue. I wanted to see the hero and heroine together without assassins lurking, without bullets flying.

I’m pretty sure the author thought she’d wrapped the story up just fine and didn’t need an epilogue. I thought the same thing with Ravyn’s Flight, but I was wrong and this author was, too. I’m still irked a couple of days after finishing the story that I didn’t get to see the h/h six months in the future or a year or ten years. Anything would have made me happy.

The fact that I feel so cheated is interesting to me as a writer and it has me looking at this, analyzing it. I’m fairly confident that it does have to do with the amount of action in the story, that it nearly begs for a quiet, serene epilogue, but I’m mulling a little more, trying to figure out if there’s something else going on. Writers really do read differently than normal people.

Before I really dedicated myself to the writing, I wouldn’t have taken the time to think about this. I just would have complained about it and felt cheated for a while, until some other book pushed the memory of this one from my mind. Now, though, when something does or doesn’t work for me as a reader, I find myself turning it around, studying it, trying to come up with whys.

Random

Tuesday, October 25th, 2011

I couldn’t come up with a topic to blog about and so I thought, hey, I’ll do a random website generator and blog about whatever turns up. The first site I ended up on sold sex toys. I decided to try again. The second attempt was a bit more conducive to blogging.

Site two was Dubtown Urban Exploring. The site is in German, and while I did take that language in high school and college, I’ve lost a lot of my skills, so I had to rely on Google translator. Not the most accurate thing ever, but enough so that I could understand what I was looking at. This site has some hugely interesting photos of abandoned buildings. One of them is a sanatorium that was built in 1899 and its in great disrepair. It’s also hugely fascinating to me.

A lot of my stories take place in derelict buildings and warehouses. The images are wonderful for getting the imagination firing. I’ve also spent the past couple of days thinking about a story that I’d planned to work on months ago, but got sidetracked by other things. This site will definitely be perfect for inspiration on that front, too.

The other thing that struck me is that it would be pretty cool to take a camera and go out exploring like this person did. It just shows that anything can be art. I’ve bookmarked the site to return to in the future.

Into the Woods

Sunday, October 23rd, 2011

Of all the plays and musicals I’ve seen, Into the Woods remains one of my all-time favorites. It’s a threading together of a few different fairy tales—Cinderella, Rapunzel, Jack and the Beanstalk and Little Red Riding Hood primarily although a few others get mixed in.

Since everyone knows the fairy tales, I won’t go into too much detail about the play. All the different fairy tale people run into each other in the woods. The cow Jack needs to sell? He trades it to the baker for magic beans. The baker’s wife ends up with Cinderella’s slipper. And Rapunzel’s prince and Cinderella’s prince try to out-do each other with how difficult it is to woo their woman.

While the first half is all lighthearted and humorous, the second act is considerably darker. This gets into what happens after happily ever after. I have mixed emotions about the last half of the play. On the one hand, I can appreciate skewering the fairy tales, but on the other hand, I like happy endings. I did love the first act, though, without reserve.

The music and lyrics are outstanding. I love Agony, both versions of it with the two princes trying to top each other on how tough they have it. I also love the The Last Midnight when the witch talks about finding someone to blame being more important to the humans than dealing with the giantess. And I Know Things Now sung by Red Riding Hood who isn’t quite as naive as she was before meeting the wolf. "Isn’t it nice to know a lot…and a little bit not."

Into the Woods was recorded with the Broadway cast and is available on DVD, which means if you’re interested, you can rent it/buy it and not need to wait for the play to be staged in your city. I like the DVD version, but there’s always energy to watching a live performance that isn’t captured on disk.

Highly recommended

Why You Won’t See “What I’m Working On”

Thursday, October 20th, 2011

Tuesday on Twitter, people retweeted a link to what authors must have on their websites. The items I remember off the top of my head are: A printable book list. I have this. A list of all books. I have this. A coming next page and a works in progress page. I have the coming next page, but don’t have the work in progress page and I’m not sure it’s something I want to do.

For one thing, not every proposal for a book sells. If I talk about an idea and never write more than three chapters of it, will readers be disappointed? After all, if I talked about it, people should expect me to write it. If it doesn’t sell, I’ll be onto the next project.

The second thing is that I don’t necessarily sell my projects in the order I work on them. In 2004, I wrote the proposal for In the Midnight Hour and In Twilight’s Shadow. Then I wrote the proposal for Eternal Nights and finally the proposal for Through a Crimson Veil. I sold them in the reverse order. In fact, it took 18 months to sell Midnight Hour and by then I’d finished my Crimson story and was working on EN. It was another six months after that before I actually wrote Midnight.

In this set of circumstances, I can’t see where it’s beneficial to officially talk about my stories in progress. The coming next page, though, is a different case. Anything I post there is contracted work and will be released.

It was nice to know that I’m doing stuff mostly right. I do have all my books listed on one page, but with links that breaks them into either subgenre (in case someone wants paranormal romance, but not science fiction romance or vice versa) and also into series (so if you read one Light Warriors book and want more, they’re all available). I also saw in the comments that publication dates with the books is a good thing. I’ve done that as well, at least the year, if not the month and year.

Reading the comments to the blog post highlighted something interesting to me–there are still authors without websites or authors who don’t bother to update their websites for years. I knew a bunch of older authors didn’t have sites because I’ve tried to find them after I talked about their books, but I didn’t think authors publishing now didn’t have sites. Wow.

 

Crave the Night Is Available!

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

Crave the Night is now available! This is a paranormal romance anthology I was part of with Michele Hauf, Sharon Ashwood, and Lori Devoti.

My story is titled Enemy Embrace and it’s the latest story in the Blood Feud World. Here’s the description for my story:

Nicole Ruiz is an elite vampire hunter who can shadow her quarry anywhere. Daktan is an executioner assigned by the demon king to eliminate a rogue vampire who’s killing humans. When Nicole discovers the rogue is stronger than she expected, she offers Dak an alliance. She’d make a deal with the devil himself if that’s what it took to avenge her family.

The anthology was reviewed by Red Hot Books and here’s what was said about Dak and Nicole and Enemy Embrace:

This story was HOT. I was on the edge of my seat, waiting for these two to come together. Patti O’Shea… where have you been all my life?

The thing that’s so fun about writing in this world is that the hero and heroine can come from any group—vampire, demon, human, hunter, slayer, rogue vampire. And this is the story where the wizards are first mentioned. No one, not vampire or demon, likes them very much, but I’m working on a proposal now where the hero and heroine are both wizards. Heh! But I digressed. Again.

If you’d like to check out an excerpt, I have the first chapter up on my website.

 

Cover for Crave the Night Patti O'Shea, Michele Hauf, Sharon Ashwood, Lori Devoti

Buy for Kindle

Buy for Nook

Buy in Another Format

Buy In Paper

Evolutionary Biology and Such

Sunday, October 16th, 2011

Instead of doing a review about something specific, I thought I’d give my impressions in general about the evolutionary biology/cultural evolution books I’ve been listening to. I’m not quite sure how I bought so many, although the descriptions do make them sound very interesting. Some have been, some haven’t, but that’s the same as any book.

So what I have learned in general? That there’s vast disagreement among the experts in these fields.

I’ll listen to one book that throws out a theory, offers supporting data, and data that refutes the other popular theories. The next book will have a proponent of one of the refuted theories as an author and I’ll get the same thing, only for that scientist’s pet thesis. It’s left me with my head spinning and not sure who the heck is right.

What I learned about myself is that no matter how interesting the theory might be, I want evidence to back it up and I have no patience for anecdotal or indirectly inferred conclusions. There was a book I stopped listening to because it never offered proof, just anecdotes that were supposed to be irrefutable evidence. No. I want facts. Also, none of the other books I’ve listened to in this field have remotely supported the book with theories and no real data. I feel safe in saying the authors were more interested in selling books than in advancing science as their controversial (and unsupported theory) was focused on sex.

There’s another book I downloaded from Audible in this field that I’d love to get through, but the narrator is really boring to listen to. This author takes the opposite opinion from the selfishness theory of evolution that many other experts in the field seem to assume is true.

When these other authors talk about generosity, it’s always something that animals (and people) do because they expect to be repaid later. That the person performing the act, let’s say sharing food when another family has none, expects the action to reciprocated later. We’ve all seen and heard stories of people risking themselves to save others. People donating generously to strangers. Good Samaritans who stop to help others. I don’t believe this is all done with the expectation of reciprocity at some later time. And because I feel this way, I’d love to make it through the book that sounds as if it deals with this facet of evolutionary biology and genetics. Narrators really can make or break the book.

My final thought is that I’m tired of this topic. :-) I need to use my Audible credits on a different non-fiction topic.

 

We Have a Winner

Thursday, October 13th, 2011

I’m almost afraid to write this post, but I think my hero finally has a name. I don’t like it that much either, but like I said on Tuesday, I’ll take anything and smile at this point. The final choice? Mason.

My poor Twitter followers have been trying to help me for at least a week, probably longer, by tweeting me links to naming sites. I swear I have them all bookmarked. Actually, I must have 50 naming sites bookmarked by now, but so many of them have the same names. I also have a pretty extensive collection of reference books on names. Nothing helped.

The frustrating thing is that the name isn’t uncommon. I ran across it pretty early on and kept running across it, but my darn hero remained mute. Since I don’t like the name and he didn’t speak up to claim it, I continued to look. And look. And look.

I need names before I can get story/plot because what they’re called affects their actions. A Mason is going to behave differently from a hero named Jack or one named Scott, so it was critically important to me to get the correct name before I moved forward. It did get frustrating because he’s the third hero in a trilogy and I don’t need more than a couple of paragraphs on his story, but the third book wraps up the series arc and that could impact the earlier books, too.

Now that I have this vital piece of information, I can move forward with the next problems. I need pictures of my characters–it also helps me connect to their personalities–and I need to work out the three book arc. After that is in place, then I can think about the individual stories.

I do have some information already, but it’s the barest of frameworks, a patchwork of pieces that need to be sewn together to form the whole fabric of the trilogy. All I can do is hope this goes more smoothly than the name game.

 

It’s Become an Endurance Test

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011

The name game continues with my hero. I talked about this last week and it’s ongoing. Every time I think I have the right name, I get pulled up short. The problem is the overnight test. Basically this means the name has to stick overnight. This includes some test scenes with the name as I’m lying in bed. This hero nixed one of the names I thought was his at this stage.

The second name made it through this run, but when I woke up the next day and tested it again, it failed. I knew it hadn’t worked when his father wouldn’t call him by that name. Not that his father provided the correct name, but I rarely get helpful characters who provide information willingly.

Stubbornly, I continued to use the second name a few more days, but I finally was forced to admit that it wasn’t going to work.

It was back to the drawing board. I spent hours searching over the weekend and I have a third contender. I haven’t had time yet to run too many scenes through my head with this latest name–I’ve been falling asleep too fast–so I’m not calling it a done deal yet, but it has made it a few days with it in place. Personally, I’m not in love with it and it’s a name that strikes me as being old fashioned. Old fashioned enough to be unusual.

If it’s the right one, though, I’m not going to argue with him. I’ll take anything at this point so I can move forward with figuring out stories and arcs for the trilogy. I can’t do anything without the right names for my characters–it actually can and does influence action/plot.

And in the few hours since I wrote this post, my hero has rejected the latest name. The search continues.

 


buy lasix online meloxicam generic buy xenical online after function improve lung sporanox using buy cipro online chloramphenicol in treatment of eye infections buy nolvadex online albendazole die off goat sheep buy clomid online crestor side effects neuropathy buy flagyl online flutamide affinity binding