Posts Tagged "RWA Nationals"

  • I volunteered to report on today’s happenings at the Romance Writers of America convention for the Ruby Slippered Sisterhood (my fellow 2009 Golden Heart finalists), so I’m not going to repeat myself; you can read it here.

    I will say that the post is slightly misleading because I didn’t attend most of the events that I reported on. I know, I’m terrible. But, I had lunch with Eloisa James and was too nervous beforehand to eat; then, I had a meeting with my agent, and was so hungry after that that I returned to my room, ordered room service, and talked to my parents before going out for dinner with some fellow writers.

    All said, though, it was another great day; I’m really questioning where I’m going with Madeleine and Ferguson (particularly Ferguson), but at the same time I’m really excited to see where I end up with them. Now, though, I must go to sleep. I’m pitching to an editor tomorrow morning, so I can’t oversleep. And then I get to get all dolled up for the awards ceremony tomorrow night — I can’t wait to see who wins the RITAs and Golden Hearts!


    | RWA Nationals | Thrilling |
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    Posted 30 July 2010, 7:18 pm

  • The 2010 RWA conference doesn’t kick into high gear until tomorrow, but I overscheduled myself as usual — rather than giving my poor California body clock a chance to catch up, I forced myself out of bed at 7:30am (4:30am at home, alas), into a dress AND makeup AND defrizzed hair (miracle of miracles), and downstairs in time to attend the Beau Monde retreat. The Beau Monde is a special-interest online chapter devoted to all things Regency; I joined a couple of months ago, and am consistently impressed by the quality and quantity of historical knowledge demonstrated on the loop.

    So, I was quite looking forward to the retreat, and it didn’t disappoint. The first panel I attended was about a Regency romance seminar taught at Yale last year, which thrilled me to no end because I’m glad to see romance start to get a teensy tinsy modicum of respect in academia. The second panel likely would have shredded that teensy tinsy modicum of respect — it was all about courtesans, whores, and the men who loved them (or, at least, paid them a farthing to toss their skirts up against the nearest available alley wall).

    After the Beau Monde lunch (with Gaelen Foley, acclaimed Regency writer, as the keynote speaker), I skipped over to the Golden Network retreat. The Golden Network is another special-interest online chapter, but this one is only open to current and former Golden Heart finalists. They had similar content as last year, but it was still eyeopening; in the most brutal display of sadomasochistic behavior I’ve seen since “Secretary” (or the Folsom Street Fair, perhaps), authors anonymously submitted first pages of their works, and then the moderator read those pages while a panel of editors and agents said ’stop’ at the point where they would stop reading. Only one entry made it all the way to the end of the first page without anyone saying stop; several of them lost every single agent/editor in the first paragraph. The bar for publication is so incredibly high that it can be scary and disheartening to hear this; but as I did not submit a page, I just sat back, drank my coffee (while wishing desperately that it was Diet Coke, my one true love) and enjoyed the show.

    After the Golden Network retreat was over, I hung out for a couple of hours with Grace and Tina, who are both part of the San Francisco chapter. Grace is up for a Golden Heart in Regency this year (which I am presenting at the awards ceremony on Saturday, since I won last year!), and Tina is doing some fascinating stuff with self-publishing on Amazon — and more importantly, we seem to click well, and Grace and I share a love for Catherine Coulter and some of the other “ew, gross, 80s” romance novels that gave romance a bad name, what with all the abductions, rapes, bodice rippings, forced marriages, etc.

    Tina, Grace and I then attended the Literacy Signing, at which published authors sell and sign their books, with the proceeds going to benefit literacy programs. I bought way too many books — on the first pass, I got books from Eloisa James, Courtney Milan, Elizabeth Hoyt, and Carolyn Jewel from the San Francisco chapter. I may have been utterly awkward with Eloisa James; I’m having lunch with her on Friday, which I won in an auction, but she now probably thinks that I’m a weird stalker fangirl because I a) knew that she had been in Paris, since I follow her on Twitter, and b) bought a paperback of the book she *just* released after saying that I already read it on the plane yesterday (but in my defense, I read it on my Kindle, and it was good enough that I want a paperback as a keeper). So, we’ll see if she shows up to lunch, and whether there are any hotel staff standing by in case I turn out to be rabid and crazy.

    I parted ways with Grace and Tina, came back to my room with the intention of taking a nap before dinner — then remembered that I had forgotten a couple of people whom I meant to get signatures from, because the room was huge and I failed to plan ahead. So I dashed downstairs again and got books from Tessa Dare (adore - she actually ran out of books, but signed a nameplate for me), Sabrina Darby (have been meaning to read her book for ages, and she was at the Beau Monde retreat this morning), Sarah MacLean (loved her “Nine Rules to Break When Romancing a Rake”), and Addison Fox (one of my Ruby Slipper sisters, who writes paranormal). I failed to track down the other Ruby Slippered Sister who was signing, but at that point, I was loaded down and late for dinner, so I ran upstairs…

    …and then as it turns out, dinner ended up being much, much later than anticipated. We left the hotel on time, got to the restaurant fifteen minutes early for our 8:15pm reservation — and then weren’t seated until almost 9pm. The food was outstanding (we ate at Kouzzina, owned by Cat Cora, whom I adore from ‘Iron Chef America’), and I had a Greek lasagna that smelled strongly of cinnamon and tasted divine. I also had two glasses of wine, which made me quite chatty, particularly on an almost empty stomach. But, my table had a v. good time, even if we didn’t eat until 10pm.

    And now, I really, really must go to bed — I’m not going to be foolish enough to get up at seven tomorrow morning, but I should get out of bed sometime. More to come tomorrow!


    | Delicious | My Favorite Things | RWA Nationals |
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    Posted 28 July 2010, 8:31 pm

  • Today was a fabulous day — at the RITA/Golden Heart Award Ceremony tonight, I won the Golden Heart in the Regency Historical category!

    This came as a huge shock, and my whole body was shaking for at least twenty minutes after the announcement. According to my friend Terry, who was my date to the event, I at least managed to sound coherent, so I consider that to be a great accomplishment. Obviously, I’m tremendously grateful for this honor, and I think it will still take a few days for it to sink in.

    I will blog again in the next couple of days with a recap of Nationals and, better yet, my plans for my next books. But, I wanted to take this opportunity to thank those of you who have stumbled across this site — publishing is a wild ride, and it’s always easier when you have supportive people cheering you on.

    Picture below, but I need to sleep if I’m going to get up in time to have fun before my flight back to San Francisco!

    Sara's GH Announcement

    | Accolades | RWA Nationals | Thrilling | Writing Career |
    7 Comments

    Posted 18 July 2009, 10:23 pm

  • The conference doesn’t officially start until tomorrow, but since many people arrived today, some chapters held private events, and the big annual book signing benefiting literacy programs occurred tonight, it felt like today was the starting point of the conference. So, I’m calling it “Day 0.”

    For me, it was a big switch, even though I came over from a hotel only a single metro stop away. My previous hotel seemed to cater to non-conference business clientele, and so the lobby was small and posh, and there were no lines for check-in/check-out. Contrast that with the Marriott in which the RWA conference is being held — the check-in and bell desk lines were so long that they started to merge into each other even though the desks were at opposite sides of the lobby. The situation was made more dire by the simultaneous departure of a big teachers’ conference that had previously occupied the hotel; this meant that most rooms weren’t ready to be turned over, hence the disaster at the bell desk.

    However, as I expected, everyone was quite friendly and on their best behavior, and so everything went smoothly despite the lines. I met some new people while eating a sandwich at the bar, including a virtual assistant for some authors, an editor for a small press in Texas, and a teacher who just happened to sit down and started asking me and the editor about the romance industry. The teacher promised to look for my book when it comes out; as that could be years away, I don’t expect that it will really yield a sale, but I gave her my card just in case :)

    The highlight of the day for me was the Golden Network retreat. I already wrote it up in a previous post, since I had a bit of free time after the discussion, but it was very useful to hear agent/editor perspectives on queries and wirting in general. Luckily (extremely luckily) I’ve already secured representation — but the advice is good regardless, particularly since I will need to continue honing my pitch/synopsis skills as I grow my career.

    After the Golden Network retreat, I took a break, swung briefly through the book signing, and met up with a college friend for dinner. But tonight I *vow* to go to bed earlier than I did the previous two nights — Janet Evanovich kicks things off tomorrow at the crack of dawn (well, not really the crack of dawn — but crack of dawn California time, which is what is relevant to me). So, no more blogging tonight! But, keep checking back for updates — if nothing else, I will be twittering from various sessions tomorrow. And if you’re at RWA and see a woman with dark, tinsel-filled hair and a pink iPhone, stop by and say hi!


    | RWA Nationals |
    1 Comment

    Posted 15 July 2009, 7:23 pm

  • I had the pleasure of attending the Golden Network retreat this afternoon. The Golden Network is an RWA group for current/former Golden Heart finalists, and the discussion was very focused on the industry and pursuing publication. They pulled in six highly respected editors/agents who gave their perspective on what works and what doesn’t work in the overall pursuit of publication and with queries in particular.

    The second half of the retreat was the most interesting — the chapter pulled together several real query letters in advance, and then the moderator read each query aloud until all panelists said “stop.” This is similar to the “Britain’s Got Talent” system of letting something continue until all judges have determined they’re no longer interested. At the very beginning, one of the panelists said they weren’t doing this for the “power trip,” but because it should be helpful — and that Simon Cowell’s feedback is often more useful than Paula Abdul’s on “American Idol,” even if he is seen as far harsher.

    She was right; while the agents/editors definitely weren’t mean/malicious and instead were quite instructive about what worked and didn’t work, my heart ached for some of the participants. Only one of the 8-10 queries was deemed strong enough that many of the panelists would have requested the manuscript. And for some of the queries, the author lost every single judge in the first sentence. The key advice was to make the query as clear as possible, don’t include small tidbits that might make someone lose interest if its not completely relevant to the story, and be brief. Also, don’t write about archaeologists (particularly those exploring the 2012 Mayan prophecy), maverick reporters, or rock-and-roll (although, as with everything in the business, that’s highly subjective guidance).

    So I’m all checked into the Marriott, and I’m going to take a moment to unpack before heading back into the madness. More later!


    | RWA Nationals | The Industry |
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    Posted 15 July 2009, 2:28 pm