Tuesday, February 28, 2006

A quickie

Snagged this from Sharon's blog. I have a slightly more meaningful, writing-related post I'm planning to do a little later, but this morning I have to re-register my car and get an inspection sticker, and anyone who lives in the states knows how long that fun process takes.
You Are Thai Food
Trendy yet complex. People seek you out - though they're not sure why.

Sunday, February 26, 2006

No writing today...

I generally take Sundays off since the kids and I go to my parents' house for Sunday dinner. Tomorrow, I'll be very busy, though. I have edits to do on Betrayal, among a few other things. No phone calls today. Hopefully the silence will continue.

Saturday, February 25, 2006

Annoying phone calls

I should be writing today (I did get a lot done earlier this morning) but I've spent the past few hours online trying to figure out how to get these people to stop calling my cell phone. For the past week, I've been getting calls from an 800 number, and when I answer they say nothing. I called the number back and got a recorded message saying I'd reached the company (can't understand the company's name due to the woman's accent). She goes on to say that if I'm calling to have my name removed from their list (well, duh) I should stay on the line and speak to a representative, or leave my name and number and they'll remove me from the list. So I hang on the line, listen to the same recorded message a few times, and finally get another one telling me to leave my name and number after the beep. Only, there's no beep. I've waited as long as 5 minutes one time to see if a so-called representative would come on the line, but all I get is silence. Sigh. Has anyone dealt with something like this before? I filed a complaint with the FCC and emailed my cell phone company about this, but beyond that I don't know what more I can do. The calls come about 10 times a day, every day. I don't know how they got a hold of my number--only the SO, the kids and their schools, and my parents have it. I've only had the phone for a few months, so maybe they're calling for the person who had the number before me. Don't know...I just know it's driving me crazy. Any advice?

Friday, February 24, 2006

Quiet day

I've been sick on the couch for most of the day, so not much has been going on. This has been coming for a few days, and I hope it passes quickly since I really have no room in my schedule for sick days. lol I've been working on setting up a site at MySpace. Check it out if you get a chance. There's not much there now, but within a few weeks I'm hoping to have it all organized.

Thursday, February 23, 2006

Five Guilty Pleasures

I've been tagged by Karen. Guilty Pleasures (not necessarily in order of guilt/pleasure ratio): 1. Food. Not just any food, but really, really good food. I love to cook, spend most of my precious little TV time watching Food Network, and reading cookbooks. My oldest son jokes that his comfort foods are chicken marsala and macadamia-encrusted pork. 2. Senseo flavored coffees--especially the Vienna blend. There's something about hazelnut and mocha together that I just love. 3. Malcolm in the Middle. I love this show. Nothing else on TV makes me laugh so hard. I know, definitely not a show based in reality, but I live reality 24/7. I don't want to watch it on TV, too. 4. Video games. I love epic fantasy and roll playing games. My current obsession right now is the Geneforge series. I don't have a lot of time for this sort of thing, but every once in a while I take a day off to veg out in front of the computer screen. 5. Alternative rock ringtones for my cell phone. I've had a few strange looks at the kids' dance studio when Fallout Boy starts playing from the side pocket of my purse. Tagging: Sharon and Maria.

On Rejection...

Diana Peterfreund has an awesome post on the subject. Definitely worth a read. I've been thinking a lot about rejections lately. I'm in the process of submitting to agents right now, and I've had six rejections in the past two weeks alone. With the exception of one, I didn't let them bother me. This is a tough business and the only way to get by is to keep moving forward. To keep submitting, keep writing, and keep believing that it will eventually happen. When agents and editors reject, they aren't rejecting the writer, just the manuscript.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Some great links for writers

Allison Brennan's post on professionalism is really worth a read. Here's an interview with agents Elaine English, Donald Maass, Evan Marshall, and Anne Rittenberg. Morgan Hawke's blog has excellent advice for writers of erotica--and for everyone else, too. Michelle Pillow has a great page of research links on her website. Robert Gregory Browne's post on whether or not we should like our own writing is a cool one to read. Here's a list of unusual professions used in romance books. Paperback Writer's blog is a good one to read for industry information. Two agent blogs: Miss Snark and Kristin Nelson This last one has nothing to do with writing, but if you're looking for a good laugh--or a few--every day, this is the place to find it.

Monday, February 20, 2006

Quick post

I hadn't realized there was a problem viewing the new layout correctly with Internet Explorer until this morning. I need to remember to start checking on both Firefox and IE. It should be fixed now. If anyone has trouble viewing it, let me know and I'll make a few more adjustments. Thanks!

Saturday, February 18, 2006

Fear

Jordan Summers has an interesting post about the subject. I usually avoid writing about my personal fears and phobias in my books, but I've been editing Lost in Suburbia and came across a scene I'd forgotten was in there. A spider falls from the ceiling into the heroine's hair. One of my biggest fears is of spiders, second only to heights, (yeah, ridiculous, I know *g*) and the spider incident is something that actually happened to me. It's been years since it happened, and though I can laugh at the comical scene in the book, it still gives me the creeps just a little. Fear of heights is probably something I won't ever touch on in a book, since I can't really deal with it all that well myself. Just ask my family what I'm like on a plane. *bg* They get a kick out of it since my dad's an FAA inspector. Okay, more than enough about me. When you're reading, does it bother you if characters have fears similar to yours? Does it help you relate to them more? If you write, do you give your characters fears similar to your own or do you avoid doing so?

Friday, February 17, 2006

The best of intentions

It's 11:15 here and I have yet to write a single word. I'd planned on coming home from the bus stop and sitting right down to write, but things didn't work out that way. My oldest son lost his contact down the school bathroom drain and I had to run to the school to bring him another one. When I got there, he told me he was having a bad day and just wanted to come home. lol That might have worked...when he was in kindergarten, but since he's in middle school now I had to tell him to tough it out. They're on vacation next week. I think he can handle a few hours. The middle child, lately known as You're Grounded, is home sick today. He's not exactly sick, but he's tired. He snuck the video game upstairs last night and spent the_entire night_playing Animal Crossing. I'd wanted to send him to school tired to show him that he can't do things like that and still function at full capacity (anyone who's pulled an all-nighter writing or working knows what I mean), but when he started to doze off in his oatmeal I sent him back to bed.

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Kicking and Screaming

That was how I thought the switch to a dairy-free lifestyle would go for my uber-creative yet majorly change-resistant middle child (for a glimpse at his...creativity...see the post about sink surgery). I'm glad to say I was wrong. He wasn't happy about the doctor's request for a trial period of going without dairy, but it's been a week now and he's decided he likes soy milk better than regular milk anyway. And speaking of kicking and screaming, I've been doing a lot of that lately about my aging computer. It's well past time for a new one, but being as majorly change-resistant as the child, I'm dreading having to switch over to a new machine.

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

CAPA awards

Grave Silence has been nominated for a CAPA in the romantic suspense category! I'm in absolute shock right now. Happy Valentine's Day, everyone!

Monday, February 13, 2006

Sunday, February 12, 2006

Currently

I got this from Karen's blog: current clothing: black sweats and a gray t-shirt (pajamas...I've only been up an hour) current hair: sticking with the natural look right now--long, curly (IOW messy *g*) and strawberry blonde current mood: laid back current refreshment: hazelnut mocha coffee current annoyance: the show my son is watching on TV (it's much to early to stomach Dirty Jobs) current avoidance: shovelling snow current smell: Tahiti, Sweetie body lotion current thing you ought to be doing: laundry current thing or things on your wall: pictures of my kids, a clock, mirrors, sconces current IM/person you're talking to: my son current jewelry: none--I don't put the watch on unless I'm going out current book: Angels and Demons by Dan Brown current worry: nothing :) current favorite celebrity: None current obsession: organizing my working schedule current love: hazelnut mocha coffee current longing: Spring current disappointment: see current book current lyric in your head: the Vonage commercial that was just on TV current music: Red Hot Chili Peppers current favorite book: The Lion's Game by Nelson DeMille and Suzanne's Diary for Nicholas by James Patterson current favorite movie: The Others, The Scream trilogy current wish: I try not to make wishes since getting what you wish for would change something else in your life current happy thing: my MP3 player and my coffee maker current undergarments: not even going to answer that one. lol current desktop picture: Jessica Galbreth's Dark Angel current plans for tonight/weekend: shovelling snow. *g* What are you currently doing?

Saturday, February 11, 2006

How's your reputation?

I usually avoid controversy on the web, but once in a while a discussion catches my interest and I follow along with the conversation. The latest controversy in the romance writing community is one of those discussions that I've watched, and it's made me laugh. This book might be worth a read for a few of the posters. *g* The whole thing reminds me of being back in school, where one group of people thinks so highly of themselves that they have to put another entire group of people down just for being who they are. Some people read erotic romances. Some read inspirationals. But a big portion of them read both, and everything in between. The discussion started because a reader felt slighted that she wasn't included. The author who chose not to include certain readers, IMO, should have been prepared for questions as to why she made that decision. Professionalism probably should have dictated that the author keep the dialog with the reader private rather than posting sections of the reader's email to a public forum and asking her peers to agree with her decision. The entire situation could have been avoided if said author had done the professional thing rather than the emotional thing. Her behavior could very well have alienated many current and potential readers, and the fact that her words made it sound like she didn't care about gaining new readership or keeping her fans happy may have alienated even more. She may not have meant the comments the way they sounded, but that's the way they'll come across to a large group of readers. Readers don't like to have their intelligence called into question because they choose to read books in a certain genre, just as authors who write in that genre are going to take offense to comments made about their intelligence--especially when the discussion wasn't about genres to begin with. We're all humans, so why can't we all just be authors as well? Diversity is a good thing. There are books out their for all sorts of reading tastes. Why try to make someone feel bad because their reading tastes differs from yours? Just as it was back in high school, a person's reputation is everything. Once you destroy it, it's almost impossible to get it back again. Why go looking for arguments? And if you don't want a group of people (say, erotic romance authors and readers) to defend themselves, don't start picking on them in the first place. That genre may not be for you, but that's okay. They like it. They may not like the genre you write in, but they don't drag it into every little bit of controversy in the romance community just because their personal beliefs differ from yours. The romance community--and the world--would be a much better place if everyone could just play nice for a little while.

Friday, February 10, 2006

Comfort Zones

I'm currently working on them for LOST IN SUBURBIA, which is women's fiction rather than romance, and even though the book is finished and under contract, I still feel like I'm out of my element. It's written in the first person point of view, which I don't normally do, and though there's a romance it's definitely not a traditional one. I really stepped out of my comfort zone with this one. Doing the edits has me thinking today. For the writers, what do you do when a story outside your comfort zone nags at you? Do you write it the way it comes to you? Do you try to shape it to fit what you normally write? Ignore it altogether?

Thursday, February 09, 2006

Going to the eye doctor...again

Last week my kids and I all had eye doctor appointments--me because I desperately need a new pair of contacts, the boys because they both failed the eye test at the pediatrician's office, and the mini diva for a check up. She'd been pretending for weeks (ever since I made the appointments) that she couldn't see two inches in front of her. Turns out she didn't need glasses at all. *g* But both the boys did. Jay's right eye is weaker than the left and apparently if he doesn't wear corrective lenses all the time the weaker eye could turn in. Definitely not what I want for the poor kid, and being that he's in middle school, the doctor fit him for contacts. Frank (no, that's not his real name, but the name he's decided he would like to be called instead of the godawful one bestowed upon him at birth--see post below about the sink surgery) is a little luckier. He needs glasses for seeing the board at school, and that's it. The mini diva is a little upset and wondering why she's the only one in the family who doesn't need glasses. So yesterday we were back in the office for Jay's contact training session. Today I have to go back and pick up another pair of contacts since they can't find the ones that were set aside for him. On Friday or Saturday I'll be there picking up our glasses, and then on Monday Jay has a follow-up visit and I finally get to go in and pick up my new contacts. At this rate, I might as well just move in to the parking lot. *g* A little bit of cool news--NIGHT CREATURES placed 7th in the Preditors and Editors reader's poll, short story horror category!

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Reality Check

Is now available from Samhain Publishing. I know I'm posting this a little late. I thought I'd made the announcement about it, but I guess I hadn't. *g* It's gotten some great reviews, and yesterday I found out that it received a Perfect Ten from Romance Reviews Today. Here's some of what Vicki Turner had to say: "Elisa Adams brings all of the characters to life, giving this book that indefinable something that sets it apart and earns it a Perfect 10. In REALITY CHECK, Ms Adams takes her characters from laughter to tears to embarrassment and, finally, to love. The best part is that the reader gets to go along for the ride." Thanks, Vicky! In other news, the latest issue of my newsletter has been mailed, and it includes the prologue of a free story (romance, slightly modern gothic, very creepy) exclusive for newsletter subscribers. I'll be including a new chapter in every newsletter so be sure to subscribe if want to check it out. The newsletter has info on this month's contest, and you can view that info from my website as well.

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Sad news

I found out over the weekend that my grandparents' neighbor, Walter, passed away of lung cancer. A few years ago, when I was visiting my grandparents' summer place, he dropped off a bag full of romance novels for me since he knew I loved to read. I hadn't read romance before, so I was a little skeptical about the books, but eventually I read them all and they renewed my love for writing. It was that bag of books that led me to start writing romance novels, and I'll always be grateful to him for that.