End of the (tour) line
Just as a reminder, I have one final stop on my tour, this one local to me. If you are in the San Francisco Bay Area, I’ll be reading and signing at Borderlands Books starting at 3 p.m. I hope to see some of you there!
Just as a reminder, I have one final stop on my tour, this one local to me. If you are in the San Francisco Bay Area, I’ll be reading and signing at Borderlands Books starting at 3 p.m. I hope to see some of you there!
Where am I? What day is it? Friday? I guess I must be in San Diego, then. Wait, no, haven’t gotten on a plane yet today — I’m still in Portland.
(No really, when I woke up it took me an appallingly long time to figure that out, and also which direction to look in for the door.)
Updates! Giveaways first, since those are shiny: in addition to Jim Hines’ (which is still ongoing), you can try to win a copy from The Bookish Babes (which has an excerpt and a brief Q&A with me as well) or Book Chick City (also with a guest post and an excerpt).
Or, if you’d rather rely on a charitable donation rather than luck of the draw, I have a DOUBLE-SIGNED COPY up as an auction item for Con or Bust, the travel fund for fans and writers of color to attend conventions. What do I mean by “double-signed”? I mean it has my autograph, and it has Todd Lockwood’s — along with a sketch of a dragon Todd drew inside. So that one’s extra-shiny, and the money goes to a good cause.
Guest posts etc not mentioned above:
And finally, not directly related to ANHoD but live right now anyway, another SF Signal Mind Meld, wherein I discuss print and ebooks (luddite that I am) with a bunch of other people.
. . . I think that’s it, at least for now. And if you’ll pardon me, I have to go catch a plane!
This entry was also posted at http://swan-tower.dreamwidth.org/574242.html. Comment here or there.
Grrrrrrrrrreetings and salutations, O Internets. Today is a frabjous day for me, as it is the day that A Natural History of Dragons goes on sale in reputable bookshops everywhere!
(The ones who started selling it early are also probably reputable. They just jumped the gun a bit, is all.)
Don’t forget that I will be participating in the Month of Letters Challenge; check that link for details on how to get your own hand-written letter from Lady Trent. You have all month!
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There are going to be a lot of sightings of me around the Internet for the next month and more, as I undertake a blog tour for this book. Rather than spamming you with links every time an interview or guest post goes live, I’m going to collate them into round-ups. As of today, we have the following:
A giveaway at Jim Hines’ blog. He provided an excellent blurb for A Natural History of Dragons, so Tor sent him four finished copies of the book, of which he is giving away three. But wait, there’s more! He has signed the back of the book, under his blurb, and I am sending him stickers so they can be autographed by me, too. In fact, it’s possible that Daniel Fox (the blurber beneath him in that photo) will also be contributing. If you can snag one of these, and then track down Melanie Rawn and Todd Lockwood, you’ll have the most thoroughly signed copy of this novel in existence! To get a copy, head on over to Jim’s blog and write your own blurb for the fake book Mary’s Angels (previously featured in his Aicardi Foundation fundraiser).
“Why Do Dragons Look Like That?” A PW Tip Sheet, wherein you can see some of the interior sketches from the book, and read my thoughts on why I chose those parts of the story to be illustrated.
“An Interview with Lady Trent, Dragon Naturalist” From the Tor/Forge newsletter, an in-character interview of Lady Trent, by a muckraking journalist of her own world. 🙂
“The Pop Quiz at the End of the Universe” An entirely silly interview with me, featuring seventeenth-century profanity!
Blog Critics interview — and finally, a more serious and thorough interview, where I talk about academia and female protagonists.
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Finally, a quick reminder that tomorrow I embark on my book tour. If you’re in Seattle, Portland, San Diego, or San Francisco, please do stop by and say hi!
This entry was also posted at http://swan-tower.dreamwidth.org/574047.html. Comment here or there.
I also posted this to my site, but here it is for more noticeable access:
Wednesday, February 6, Seattle, WA
Thursday, February 7, Portland, OR
Friday, February 8, San Diego, CA
Sunday, February 10, San Francisco, CA
And then April 20-21, I’ll be at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books. As for my convention plans for the rest of the year, I need to sort those out . . . .
This entry was also posted at http://swan-tower.dreamwidth.org/572931.html. Comment here or there.
First off, SF Signal is currently doing a Book Cover Smackdown!, Dragon Edition. Head over there to see the four covers A Natural History of Dragons is competing against, and vote for your favorite. (Hint, hint . . . not that I’m biased or anything.)
This and the reviews that have started popping up are the leading edge of the flood. ANHoD comes out February 5th, and starting then, I am going to be ALL OVER THE INTERNET. I’m not kidding; this blog tour we’ve got planned is srs bsns. I’ve done what I can to make sure I’m not horribly repeating myself, though, so at least you won’t be seeing the same guest post in seventeen places.
But wait! There’s more!
I am going to be traveling the weekend after the book’s release, doing signings in Seattle (2/6), Portland (2/7), San Diego (2/8), and San Francisco (2/10). I’ll post pretty soon with the details of those events, i.e. times and locations. If you’re local to any of the four, please do stop by!
And, last but not least, I will be repeating the Month of Letters experiment from last year, this time with Isabella as your correpondant. So in February, you can write to her and receive a handwritten, wax-sealed letter in return. (I’d better start practicing my cursive again . . .)
Oh yeah, and I’m finishing the second book right now and will be revising it some time in the middle of all that stuff. Because I am not a sensible person. Whee!
This entry was also posted at http://swan-tower.dreamwidth.org/570958.html. Comment here or there.
As with the Kirkus review I mentioned before, I can’t quote the whole Publishers Weekly review at you, and it’s behind a paywall. But I can give you a snippet:
Brennan’s stand-alone novel […], written as Isabella’s memoir of her youthful adventures, and beautifully illustrated by Todd Lockwood, is saturated with the joy and urgency of discovery and scientific curiosity. […] Brennan’s world-building is wonderfully subtle, rendering a familiar land alien with casual details.
They pick up on several of the little things I am doing with the setting, which makes me bounce in my chair. Oh, and did I mention it’s a starred review?
Also, Nadine at Sci-Fi and Fantasy Book Reviews praises the book for “Whimsical language, funny remarks by the narrator, and a love for science and dragons that touches the reader as much as the heroine,” and also loves Todd Lockwood’s art. I have to say, getting him to do the illustrations might just be one of the best things that has happened to a book of mine in, um, ever. ^_^
I suspect the trickle of reviews will start to ramp up pretty quickly in the next month. Also, I am going to be freaking everywhere on the internet in February and March; there’s a blog tour scheduled that will have my typing the tips of my fingers off (right while I’m finishing the second book — not good planning on my part). I’ll try to keep the links collected so this doesn’t turn into me spamming LJ with “pay attention to meeeeeeeeeeeee!!!!!”
In the meantime, I’m off to write the bit of the novel that I have dubbed “Amateur Therapy Hour.” I think this might be meaner to my characters than any of the diseases I’ve inflicted on them . . . .
1) The first of teleidoplex‘s costume auctions are ending soon — like, in about six hours. (Others have a bit longer to run.) Take a look, bid while you can, help her go to Clarion West!
2) I’m reading at SF in SF tomorrow night, with Ysabeau Wilce and Erin Hoffman. Hope to see some of you there!
If you’re going to be in the San Francisco Bay Area on May 19th, come join me at SF in SF! I’ll be reading with Ysabeau Wilce and Erin Hoffman at 7 p.m. (the doors open at 6).
. . . no idea what I’ll be reading; I need to find out how much time I’ll have, and ponder options. But I promise to pick something cool. 🙂
My high-tech not-quite-randomization system (which excludes certain people, like those who are already getting an advance look at the book via other means, or my mother) has picked a winner for the first ARC: Janet, from Goodreads!
I am still chewing on title thoughts, so feel free to go on suggesting things. In related news, Jim Hines’ fundraiser for rape crisis centers has raised more than $2500, which means another ARC of ANHoD and a copy of With Fate Conspire have both been added to the pool of prizes. If you chip in over there, you’ll have a chance at both of them, and also a host of other awesome things. (I should also note that donations to RAINN will be matched, so you get double money for your dollar, there.)
And now I shall ponder what to do with the remaining copies . . . .
My thanks to everyone who sent me a title suggestion for the second book of Isabella’s memoirs! I received comments here, on Twitter, on Goodreads, by e-mail . . . the whole gamut. Give me a little while to sort through them, and then I’ll announce a winner.
Speaking of winners, Jim Hines’ fundraiser for rape crisis centers is less than $200 away from hitting the benchmark that tosses a signed copy of With Fate Conspire and a signed ARC of A Natural History of Dragons into the prize pot. There are new rewards, too, at levels up to $4000, and some of them are very shiny.
And finally, we’re in the last days of the Urban Tarot Project. $375 dollars more there will mean embroidered bags for everyone receiving the deck! And there are still signed copies of With Fate Conspire available there, too, so if you want one of those (along with all the other parts of the reward package), you have 71 hours left in which to get it.
Excelsior!
Just laid this out piecemeal on Twitter; here it is in less truncated form.
I’m chewing over potential titles for the second book of Isabella’s memoirs. I want it to sound Victorian and travelogue-ish, and/or to potentially echo something having to do with sub-Saharan Africa (which is the region I’m taking as my model for this installment). My tongue-in-cheek placeholder is “Mrs. Camherst, I Presume,” but that’s not great as a title, hence looking for a replacement.
Right now I’m charmed by a pattern that showed up in Victorian travel-writing, exemplified by “Along the River Limpopo, With Gun and Camera.” The whole thing is unwieldy, but maybe a “With X and Y” phrase? If I can find suitable nouns to plug into it. (And if I can shut up the part of my brain that says I already have one published book whose title begins with With.) Or, y’know, something else.
Anyway, all that rambling is just to give you an idea of the flavor I’m looking for. The actual point of this post is to say that for the next week, I am opening the floor to title suggestions. In between now and noon PST on Monday, e-mail me, leave comments here, or post to Twitter with the hashtag #ANHODgiveaway. I can’t promise I’ll take any of the suggestions as a permanent winner, but I will pick someone as a contest winner, and send them one of these advance copies of A Natural History of Dragons.
If you don’t have any suggestions, don’t worry! I have four ARCs to give away, which means there will be three other opportunities to snag one. In the meanwhile, let the suggesting begin!
Clockwork Phoenix 2! Is now available as an e-book (like the first one a while ago). You can buy it from Weightless Books, or from Amazon US or UK. (More information here.)
For those who may not recall, this one has my short story “Once a Goddess.”
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InterGalactic Awards Anthology Vol. I! Will be FREE this weekend on Amazon, from Saturday through Monday. Apart from some seriously awesome people like Peter Beagle and Aliette de Bodard (aliettedb), it also includes stories from me and a personal friend, Von Carr. Mine is “A Heretic by Degrees” (which is a Driftwood story), and hers has the fabulous title of “Sister Jasmine Brings the Pain” — the best post-apocalypses story about a combat nun I’ve ever read. ^_^
It can be yours this weekend!
February is nearly over, and with it, the Month of Letters! You have a few days yet in which to write a letter to the Onyx Court; I promise to answer anything mailed to me before the end of the week (to give a few days’ grace period).
And then we’ll have the fun of seeing how long it takes the inkstains to fade from my fingers. 🙂 (No really, that trope of bookish types in fantasy having stained fingers? It’s totally true. I just wonder if there’s some trick I’m missing for not leaving little inky fingerprints on other parts of the page, because nobody every mentions that bit.)
One week (plus a leap day) left to get a letter from the Onyx Court! (I’m slightly behind on answering a few letters I’ve received, but vow not to let “slightly” become “a lot.”)
A while ago I mentioned the Spencerian System of Practical Penmanship, which kniedzw had bought a while ago — a reproduction of an 1864 course in penmanship. I struggled with the conflicting impulses to doooooo iiiiiiiit and to run far, far away, and ended up falling partial victim to the former. Being a grown adult with fine motor control and experience in writing, I decided I didn’t need to fill out every workbook in its entirety . . . but it wouldn’t hurt me to do the first line of each page.
(This was mostly true. Hand cramps were, however, a genuine factor.)
So if you would like to follow me on my odyssey through the nineteenth century — including many illustrative photos — come behind the cut . . . .
In which the system is both too fascist, and not fascist enough.
First: it’s the sixteenth, and that means I’m over at SF Novelists again. This time I’m continuing my points from last month, with “Competence is hot, part two.”
Second: the same guy who does the Page 69 thing also had me contribute to My Book, the Movie (reposted over here). Long-time readers of this journal may recall that I’ve been on that blog previously, when I talked about my mental castings for Midnight Never Come and In Ashes Lie; this time I update it with A Star Shall Fall and With Fate Conspire.
And third: if you’re going to be at FOGcon, then a) so am I and b) I’m also going to be one of the critiquers in the writing workshop, along with David Levine and Cassie Alexander. I don’t know when signup for that closes, but I believe you still have time to join, if that’s your cup of tea.
Since I’m combining things here, I’ll leave comments open — but on the competence thing, please do go leave your thoughts over on the SF Novelists site, rather than here. No login required, but if you’re a first-time commenter please give me a little while to fish it out of the moderation queue.
First of all, I’m featured over at “The Page 69 Test” (here and here), talking about page 69 of With Fate Conspire, and whether it’s a good sample of what the book is like or not.
And second, the Intergalactic Awards Anthology is out, containing my Driftwood story “A Heretic by Degrees” — as well as stories by a couple of friends of mine, aliettedb‘s “Horus Ascending” and Von Carr’s absolutely fabulous “Sister Jasmine Brings the Pain.”
And now, back to cleaning my living room.
You have a little over two weeks left in which to get a letter from the Onyx Court, hand-written by yours truly, in the persona of a character of your choice. Get ’em while they’re hot, folks! (By which I mean, before I lose all ability to hold a pen, from concentrating so hard on not writing m when I mean n, and some weird many-humped scribble when I mean m.)
If I have time, I’ll post a report — with pictures, even — of my adventures with the Spencerian System of Practical Penmanship. Yes, I gave it a shot. The results were . . . interesting.
Trotting out the old Elizabeth icon for the occasion:
I had the wrong setting on my camera, so it’s unfortunately blurry, but you get the idea. I am so. doomed. I haven’t tried to write in cursive, except for that thing I laughably call my signature, for years.
Admittedly, my writing got better when I realized that a tiny notebook is a very bad choice for hand support and such. Practicing on better surfaces, and relaxing into it a bit, the result looks less awkward. Of course, if I relax into it, I’m prone to turning my n’s into m’s and my m’s into some alien thing with far too many little humps . . . which is only the most common of my errors. There are others, too. The letters I send may have more than a few things crossed out and corrected. (Which is part of the whole handwritten letter thing, right? Not everybody bothered to send perfect copy. I guess it all depends on which character I’m writing as. Dead Rick probably doesn’t worry much about errors. Delphia, however . . . .)
There has been enough interest expressed in the Month of Letters/Letters from the Onyx Court thing that I have decided to go ahead and do it. Full details are here.
Send me letters! (Or rather, send them to my characters!) I’ve rented out a P.O. Box for the duration; I hope to make extensive use of it.
The Library Journal‘s opinion of With Fate Conspire:
Brennan’s characters breathe life into a landscape rich in detail and vibrant with imagination. This title should please fans of Mercedes Lackey’s “Elemental Masters” series and Elizabeth Bear’s “Promethean Age” series.
And if you’re a Goodreads user, you can enter a giveaway there to win one of ten copies of A Star Shall Fall. It ends on the 22nd, so don’t forget!