ANNOUNCEMENTS

VIRTUALLY HERS came out Oct. 2009. Get it at SAMHAIN Publishing. VIRTUALLY ONE coming soon.
VIRTUALLY HERS OUT IN PRINT AUG 2010.

I've also made available at Amazon BIG BAD WOLF a COS Commando book, an earlier manuscript about Killian Nicholas Langley. You can sample the first five chapters right here. EBOOK now available for KINDLE, NOOK, and at SMASHWORDS for $4.99.

I appreciate all your emails. If you'd like to buy Virtually His NEW, please contact me. Thank you.



CLICK:

Big Bad Wolf Author's Note/CH. 1

Big Bad Wolf CH. 2

Big Bad Wolf Ch. 3

(more chapters on left side bar below)



To read excerpts of VIRTUALLY HERS, scroll down & click on the links on the right.



EMAIL ME AT JENN AT GENNITA-LOW DOT COM


VIRTUALLY HERS UPDATE

VIRTUALLY HERS OUT IN PRINT AUG 2010! Discounted at Amazon!

To read & comment on the poll (left column), click HERE. Thank you for all the wonderful posts there!

UPDATE: I SOLD THE SERIES TO SAMHAIN!

Here's your UBER VIRTUALLY HERS YAK THREAD!


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Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Experience Changes Your View

Isn't it strange how new things make us look at the world differently? When I became self-employed as a roofer, my view of what manual labor changed, and certainly, my knowledge of tax laws and social security (because self-employment required a lot of keeping records) grew by leaps and bounds.

How many times have I walked into buildings and houses and never paid attention to rooflines and roofs before that? Gazillions. But my new career changed my life forever.  I never drive by houses and not look at roofs and the quality of work.  It's a part of my nature now.

When I became published, I started to look at book covers with new eyes, checking out placement of names and whether they were tin-foiled or not, whether the size of the font of the name takes up the whole book, and where they were shelved.  These were things I never really thought about before; all I did was write and all I really cared about was getting the story done.

The world of publishing and being published made me very aware of the money side of the book world, the good and bad, and the struggles and victories.  I learned what I always read about--that the writing isn't everything and that sometimes, the circumstances out of one's control could affect one's writing and career.

How many times have I walked by authors signing books in a corner of the mall book store? Dozens. Today, when I pass a table with a lonely author sitting behind a stack of books, I always make it a point to say hi and check out his/her books.  Why? Because I've been on that side and understand how it feels to sit there, all by oneself, smiling till one's face aches, with only the one or two people stopping by to ask for directions to the restroom.

How many times have I just ordered an author's book and not thought about his/her current publisher? Gazillions.  Now, when I browse books, I check the publisher, the imprint, things that don't matter to most readers.  I notice the changes and even if I stopped writing, it's part of my nature now.

Since late December, there's been an addition to my menagerie of mutants.  I've been taking care of an orphaned squirrel, which fell off a tree and too dehydrated to climb in, and being chased by a hawk who had been feasting on her siblings.  It has been an education, with a lot of prayers because I read about how hard it was to take care of a baby squirrel and the survival rate wasn't too hopeful.  Thankfully, MikiSquirrel is doing well and took a liking to sitting on my shoulder and head.

How many times have I walked under trees and not noticed the rustling sounds and the nuts crunching under my feet? Gazillions.  Not any more.  Now I see nuts and I think of squirrel food.  I actually look at the tree and catch sight of squirrels staring back, and I take note of what they were eating so I could collect some later for Miki.  For some reason, she still can't crack nuts open, so I spend time cracking acorns and other nuts so she could eat them.  I, who didn't even own a nutcracker ever in my old age.

These days, my friends and roofers laugh at me because I'm always scrounging around in the bushes looking for squirrel food.  I'm always looking up into the sky to make sure there aren't hawks around when I put Miki outside in the tree.  I've learned what Miki and squirrels do to stay alive.  One day, Miki might finally decide to venture back into the trees and I'll only of pictures of me and a squirrel on my head, but you know what? I'll always be looking up into leafy canopies, listening for squirrel chatter.  It's part of my nature now.

Do you have a similar story of an experience that has changed your life, that it too has become a part of you?

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Thursday, September 30, 2010

Iconic Reads In The Romance Genre

I was talking about my dream wall-shelves and that led to me playing with my older books.  I have many, most of them reissues, since I bought mine when I was in my early teens and the original ones are all probably lost in a drawer at my house in Malaysia (my mom is also a stasher).

Anyway, I thought I'd make a list of, IMO, the top  Iconic Books that changed/expanded/influenced the Romance genre. The list below is not in any particular order.

1) Sweet Savage Love by Rosemary Rogers
It changed everything.  Sweetness and light? Sorry. Here's the first taste of the Extreme Alpha Male, a hero that is thief, mercenary, bandido, everything a bad boy is.  I remember all my romance books afterwards changed direction in portraying the hero.

Today: No longer popular. Bodice-ripping and rape are considered politically incorrect, but I think it's making a comeback disguised as paranormal romance vampires and weres who could use supernatural strength and magic to bind the heroines.

2) Born In Fire by Nora Roberts
I think Nora's "Born In" trilogy made romance more mainstream. I've met readers who don't read romances who still read Nora today because of this book.  Also, this book made trilogies of connected characters popular.

Today: Nora is still the queen of trilogies ;-).

3) Naked In Death by J.D. Robbs
A modern futuristic with romance. Fast paced. Dark. Brutal. It's not your mama's romantic police procedural. I know truck drivers who read this series.

Today: So many tough heroines who carry the story. Some of them are too tough and their snarkitude grate.

4) Prince Joe by Suzanne Brockmann (actually tied with McKenzie's Pleasure by Linda Howard because they were both published in 1996)
Those of us who have never heard of SEALs and their speshulness would never be the same again. We don't need no mo cops. We want SEALs! A whole team, if possible, with one romance for each, with lots of heroic military action, please. We don't want the aftermath (war heros with PTSD).  We want them actively macho, waving weapons and making hot love.

Today: Oh man. Or rather, men in Spec. Ops. outfits. Cindy Gerard. Roxanne St. Claire. Marliss Melton. Cherry Adair. Many, many more.

5) Dark Prince by Christine Feehan
She started the whole trend of vampires that aren't really vampires. She made "mated" a religious incantation. She also made world-building a challenge for future authors of this sub-genre. How complicated can you make your blood-suckers universe? Umm. Sherrilyn Kenyon, anybody?

Today: Feehan's Carpathians are still going strong. Sherrilyn Kenyon. JR Ward. Kresley Cole.

6) The Ultimate Betrayal by Michelle Reid
This is the Harlequin Presents of Harlequin Presents.  It starts with the first two pages of the heroine finding out that her husband of seven years has cheated on her...and the whole book deals with the aftermath of this discovery. Although the heroine does come across as unbelievably naive and the very successful husband's ability to hide his family not probable in this day and age, this read packs an emotional wallop that still gets me today.  The confrontations were very realistic; the husband's guilt and angst very well done.  A classic read.  Haters of cheating in their romance will be surprised at the ending. It's not what you think.  I think this book gave permission to explore the heroine's position in a different light.

Today: I can't think of one Presents from then till now that equalled this one. A couple of Reids have come close. In spite of the "sameness," the Presents line has done different things through the years including a virgin hero. The authors of this line is also very long lived. I've been reading some of them since mid- to late 70s and they're still writing! I mean, wow. Reid. Graham. Bianchin. Thorpe. Donald. Mather. Forty years and counting, folks!

7) Bad to the Bone by Debra Dixon
A Loveswept that gave the heroine the power to kill.  The first assassin and not your namby-pamby virginal spy that you come across in your series romance these days. This heroine has angst in spades and her secret is not a baby. I loved this book. It gave me permission to write my kind of heroine.

Today: Many heroine-centric urban fantasies today. Many romantic spy thrillers.

8) Lord of the Storm by Justine Davies
Another classic that changed all futuristics, imho.  The heroine is the warrior commander.  The hero is a kept sex slave, with an electronic collar with which one could control his emotions.  He couldn't tell his feelings from the manipulated ones.  Space romance has never been the same. LotS opened doors for those who wanted more space SF instead of medieval-oriented planets with Conan/Fabio warlords who are into spanking.

9) Sinful by Susan Johnson
Her first book was Love Storm, but I think SJ hit her stride with this one. She started what is today known as romantica, a combination of erotic and romance. Her older books were meticulously researched, rich with historical flavor, and lush heroes and heroines.  Her sex scenes are epic and very, very naughty, and yes, being an erotic romance, her heroes are unconventional and...umm...long-lasting.  The historical genre has historically (heh) been hot reading, but Susan Johnson definitely upped it a notch. Several, actually.

I'll leave #10 for you to fill in.  I know many of you are long-time readers who have seen trends come and go.  Please add in the comments which of your reads would you consider an "iconic" book that changed/expanded the genre (creating over-saturation, but that's another topic!).

Also, if the past shaped our present genre, what do you think, looking at all the diversity, does the future hold?  I'd love to hear your thoughts on authors you've read that you think are different and made you rethink the romance genre.  This is a difficult one because we even have a Buffy the Vampire slayer mashed with Victorian era series!

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Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Write On

An interesting video made at the NBA (National Book Awards) ceremony by Galley Cat (http://www.mediabistro.com/) of finalists' giving advice on surviving the bad economy. Most of them say the same thing I do: "We're poor anyway!" ;-)



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Monday, November 02, 2009

Quick Announcements

After a whole month of struggling with moving the FYEO blog to a new server, EIGHT BALL and I can now post there again. Yay.

So, yes, we're back in the business of behind-the-scenes spy games and Eight Ball teasing. Sorry for the long delay since VHers came out. I'd wanted to have more fun stuff but since falling off the roof, I have been falling BEHIND in everything. Forgive me?

Also, I'm going to be on an internet talk radio show tomorrow! Will you join me? The show is called CANNED LAUGHTER AND COFFEE.

Readers can just go to http://www.blogtalkradio.com and log in to listen. A search for the show will bring them right to all that information. There is a call in number for listeners and also a live-chat message board so they can post comments.

I'll be on at 8.30pm for 15 minutes. I hope you can make it!

I'll update this post if there are any last minute changes, since I haven't done this before.

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Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Let's Say You Have 50 Million Bucks

Would you...

1) let someone write and sign your checks for you?

2) let someone pay stuff without your knowledge?

3) NOT noticed it until 40 million of it are gone?

Apparently, (1) and (2) are normal for wildly successful personalities who are too busy making too much money. Say, for example, Patricia Cornwell, who, according to this news article, lost said $40,000,000 because her investment company mismanaged her funds. By mismanagement, I mean, highly illegal stuff like the fund manager cutting a $5000 check for his daughter's Bar Mitzvah. From her account. Without asking her.

And here I was complaining about my bills this morning. I should've called Ms. Cornwell's fund manager to send me several signed checks to take care of my problem ;-P.

Anyway, I'm thinking that if I ever have 50 million dollars in the bank--heck, 10 million, I'm not greedy--please, God, give me the wisdom not to let someone sign my checks while I'm busy, busy, busy writing.



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Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Post #2: Quick Question

For those in the know, please tell me:

WHY must urban fantasies so often be in first person? Does it take away the flavor if it's in third?



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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

A Re-Rant: Virgins Really Should Get Penetrated First Before They Kill People For A Living.

Someone asked me to repost this, written two years ago, because she wanted to discuss it with my current blog readers and her comments in a past post wouldn't be seen by anyone. Want to chime in?

Saturday, July 02, 2005

Virgins Really Should Get Penetrated First Before They Kill People For A Living. LOL

So someone pointed me to a vent by an author who didn't like my "Virgins Really Should Live First Before They Kill For A Living" post. Notice the title of my post. She has gone and rewritten my post as: Virgins Really Should Live Before They Kick Ass, before venting about why a heroine should be able to kick-ass before "penetration" (her choice of word, not mine) by the male penis. Which is why we always disagree ;-) on this point. I have never said a heroine should need the magical male sperminator to suddenly turn kickass, but the fact remains that a virginal heroine who doesn't know how to turn a man on, yet can go out there and spy for a living just isn't believable, especially in a romance book.

All this is subjective, of course. Lots of readers love their virginal heroines who "kicks ass." Fine by me. I just beg to differ their status of being a kick-ass heroine. Being able to take care of oneself during a fight is cool. Being brave, bold, and strong are fine qualities, and all writers aspire to make their heroines that way...so why not just say every book has a kick-ass heroine then? You can't. You can't expect a virgin heroine to do certain kick-ass things because as a writer, you've chosen to make her a virgin. She can't cross certain lines (shrug). Sorry, she turns into a cockteaser to me in the type of spy intrigues I read. All she does is play with emotions and then magically, before penetration, she is saved by the author's deux-ex-machina, whether it's the bad guy showing, or the sudden honorable change of heart of the hero, or the appearance of a magical halo proclaiming to all and sundry that she is "super kick ass heroine" and can't....

Like I said before, I've enjoyed virginal heroines who are tough and smart. They are like "good" cartoon heroines to me...beautiful in their tight costumes, with an honorable core, and with rarely any bite that gets to the heart of darkness. You want a KICKASS cartoon heroine? Why, she's not really a heroine of course. It's Cat Woman.

And perhaps that's the zinger that I fail to emphasize. For me--and I'm going to continue saying that this is my ideal for kickasshood and no one else's--there is an edge that make kick-ass female characters a little un-"heroine-like." She has lost her innocence, just as the very scaredy-cat pre-catwoman character did, prior to her costume change ;-). I know Cat Woman will survive. I know my Marlena will survive if her Stash dies. She will do a lot of unpleasant things, but she will survive. After a lot of bloodshed, of course.

Virginal Super Heroine, out in the dark dark world? Nah...she will find her hero in her one big adventure and that's the end of the story. Her "kickass" abilities recede and she is back to her normal self, which is, a nice girl--strong and wonderful and a good person (and oh, no longer a virgin, bwahaha). Kickass? Hardly.

Those heroines aspire to kickass-hood. They want to have their virgin cake and eat it too. They are the oxymoronic shy killers, blushing furiously while they take off their clothes to change in front of the other operatives before switching mode to become terminators when the time comes. Oh wait. But they don't actually pull that trigger, do they? Do they?

And as for being told I'm being demeaning to women just because I don't think virgins make real kickass heroines...oh well, what can I say? It's equally demeaning to call experienced heroines "sluts" because they enjoy more than one man before the right one comes along. What I'm saying is--it's more believable to ME as a reader, when I'm reading a SPY or action heroine out on a mission, that she's a little more worldly, a little more cynical, a little more EXPERIENCED, and a whole lot more thick-skinned than a heroine who turns out to be virginal in all the senses of the word (hymenically, philosophically, mentally, and retardedly). And please, please, gods, don't make her a weapon-virgin (she doesn't believe killing is good for her. THEN WHY ARE YOU A DAMN SPY?!)

This is especially true if the author decides to make her virginal kickass girlie-spy partner with a dark and experienced, thoroughly, sinfully, deliciously wicked uber-spyMAN. In real life, when faced with such inadequacies, the latter will quietly eliminate the girl in question and tell his handler there has been an accident. But in some books, I have to suffer along with the hero as he overcome dangerous situations after dangerous situation while protecting his "partner." Lastly, if she's out to save the world, please let her understand how bad the world is...the last thing I need is an ending where an idealistic goodie-two-shoes heroine suddenly turning the bad guys to mush with just a fantastic speech straight from a summer movie.

(ed. today: EARLY) Anita Blake kicks ass. I might not agree with her choices, but there is no question in my mind that she will survive anything life throws at her. Buffy The Vampire Slayer kicks ass. She loses everything and yet she continues. They are both dark and edgy, with a macabre sense of humor coming through at the oddest moments. They know the dark side (of men, of sex, whatever) and they play with it, are attracted to it, and make choices about it. That's what makes them sexy and dangerous to me, as well, as their men.

And not to my surprise, the aforementioned author who vented against my post does not like either of these two heroines. Which is fine. But she doesn't get "kickass", for sure ;-).

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Monday, June 09, 2008

Literary Conversations Between Two Roofers

It's funny seeing it from a man's perspective, it really is. Take Ranger Buddy and his English Lit classes, for instance ;-). I listen to his moaning almost daily now. This, from a man who never moan about any kind of work. This, from a man who can work like a maniac eight days a week. This, from a man who can work out and look sculpted from sheer will. This, from a man who is going to run with the bulls in a month. But reading English lit and discussing the themes and meanings for three hours twice a week is sheer torture for this man.

It's funny because he tries and fails miserably. I have these accounts from eyewitnesses:

1) He smacks his head with the book when the teacher brings up "sexual connotations" or "the old south vs the new south" or "what the author really meant underneath the story."

2) He makes tortured noises when he hears assignments like "Is the woman behind the wallpaper?" or "When Kowalski raped Blanche, does it mean the new south 'raping' the old south?"

3) He turned the text upside down once when the teacher said, "Some people see a reference of the woman behind the wall paper as having a lesbian lover and the husband killed her for the betrayal" and shook it hard. When I asked him later why he did that, he explained that he thought he might had some hidden paragraphs that he'd somehow missed since there was no mention of a lesbian lover in his version of the book ;-). He'd hoped that by shaking it, those paragraphs would magically appear. Male sarcasm at its best.

4) He takes out quotes from the plays and makes it his own. Like when he locked himself out of the truck and had to call me for the spare key, but as you know, he doesn't own a cell phone. He had to borrow one from his teacher and after using it, he said, "Thank you. I always depend on the kindness of strangers." I bet his teacher rolled her eyes.

5) He asks me for help with thematic references in the story and spends two hours arguing with me by retelling the plot over and over. I have to keep saying, "RB, no matter how many times you retell it, the story is still the same, you know." I know what he was trying to say, of course, because I've known the man for two decades; what I was telling him about subtext wasn't in the book.

6) "I'm turning into a sissy," he moaned to the woman next to him. "Quick, give me a hammer to hit my head with."

Another very unique point of view from most males: RB doesn't see any reason why he need to reread any book ever. Once read, it's done--why revisit the story? My book shelves are incomprehensible to him. Why do I reread my books? I already know the story. Read something else.

I know there are plenty of men who reread their books, don't get me wrong, but most of the time, in a conversation at a party/normal gathering with casual readers, most of the males would tend to agree that rereading a book/article is of no interest to them whereas most females would say they've reread a book/scenes once or twice. I find that interesting. Guys tend to say there is no "value" to the rereading experience. Women, on the other hand, says they enjoy revisiting the "journey" by the characters, which in turn makes the men gag.

Because he has to take these classes, RB and I have been having some really good conversations about reading and literary themes. For me, I enjoy it--both the opportunity to talk the kind of topics that I used to when I taught in college and also as entertainment because it's fun to watch him struggle a little. Hee. Me mean. For him, he doesn't enjoy it so much because he sees no reason why he should give the same opinion about "sexual connotations" as a million other writers from the past. He much prefers last quarter's English papers that had to do with fuel prices, the economy, and the Federal Reserve. You see, THAT stuff, he can talk off his head about ;-).

Why do you reread? If you don't, is it because you see no value in it?

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Thursday, May 29, 2008

OASIS-21: Where Having One Eyeball Wasn't Strange At All

Eye update: Stitches came out but the "abrasion" isn't healed, so I still find blinking a strange experience, as if one eye blinks a mili-sec slower than the other. On closer examination, the eye DOES look a tad smaller than the other eye, but the doctor said it's only been a week, give it time, so fingers-crossed for me, okay? I really don't want to smell that awful smell of eyelid burning again, yuk.
Anyway, I was very obedient and stayed off the computer as much as I could so I wouldn't strain the eyes, limiting my email and net fun to just an hour a day. Can't you tell? My blogging has suffered ;-).

Let me catch you up with a quick report of my first experience of a science fiction/fantasy convention. This one is held by OASIS-21, an Orlando area science fiction society. I went because I knew John Scalzi was a guest of honor and also, I was curious about the convention itself. So many of my writing friends are now in the fantasy/paranormal sub-genre and they tell me about the really huge conventions they've attended.

To my delight, the first author I bumped into was C.L. Wilson! You know how much I enjoyed her first two books of her fantasy-romance series, so I got to gush to tell her about my love. She was very gracious and talked to me about the possibility of joining her and a group of authors at an upcoming SF/F convention in Atlanta. They have a booth there, she said, and it would be a good mix of fantasy, supernatural, and techno ;-). It does sound tempting, even though I'll have to face the Limbo That Is Atlanta Hub.


I was leaving the signing/trade room when someone called my name. I turned, and yes, it was the great John Scalzi, internet blogging god ;-) and a pretty dang good SF writer too. After gushing (again) because after all, he is a god, he and I spent some time just chatting. He's a clown at heart, so you know that just warms the little cockles of my clownish heart. Of course, I was the first in line for his newest paperback, The Android's Dream.

By the way, if you're thinking, "Gennita, I thought you said you had only one working eyeball," you're right. One of my eyes was fuzzing up and the eyelid had tiny blue stitches on it. You just can't see it in the photo. I'll let you guess which eyeball was the misbehaving one.

After the signing, I walked around the trade room and talked to the vendors. I'm convinced a few of them would fit in nicely at the RT fair, especially the one that sold hand-made medieval tiaras. I bought one that had a teardrop that hung over the forehead. It'll be a cool piece for one of the ball costumes. Then, I just had to have the teeshirt that depicted a crazed werewolf and the slogan "Don't mind me, it's just that time of the month again." Perfect!

I wandered into the art room to see the fantasy art pieces being auctioned off. Wow, they were EXPENSIVE! Attendees get to vote for their favorite piece and I simply loved the one by Paul Vincenti, titled Spring. Spring was a beautiful maiden with two ribbons of waterfalls flowing out of her hands. I was just enthralled. Wish I had $7500 so I could buy it! You can see this piece here:

http://www.paulvincenti.com/Spring.htm

Isn't it gorgeous?

Walking around, I found that in a SF/F convention, there were what were called game rooms, where fans of the genre gathered to play fantasy games, like Dungeons and Dragons. They were really (and I mean REALLY) into it. One of the participants was later in tears because her character didn't make it. I watched as her husband comforted her. There were no real rowdiness because it was a pretty small convention, compared to the bigger romance conventions I usually attend, but everyone was really friendly and helpful.

At the trade fair, I was playing with these funny creatures on sale. They were the famous Star Trek "tribbles." If you clap your hands, they start to shiver and shake like those creatures on TV. I was laughing about it with the seller, joking about Star Trek stuff, which I was a fan of, but not really hard-core about. I found out fifteen minutes later that the vendor was...ahem...David Gerrold, the guy who wrote that very episode about tribbles and A LEGEND among Star Trek fans. Sigh. I hope I didn't say anything too stupid. I probably did.

Later that evening, after dinner, I showed up at a live Internet radio show, with John Scalzi as one of the guests. I was just helping the host with the I-Phone, which he was using as a microphone for the guest, and then, somehow, I ended up getting interviewed live, LOL. John Scalzi came in and told the host that I was a published author too, so at the end of the 90 minute-long program, I was given almost ten minutes to talk about myself and my book. It was totally unexpected and so kind of JS to share the limelight. You can hear a recording of this interview (and how horrible my accent sounds on radio!) if you click below:

SYFY RADIO


I came on at the beginning but you can hear my pseudo-interview around the 80:25 mark. Not quite as scintillating as John Scalzi's interview, which came on at around the first half hour mark. If you're clicking, tell me whether you have any problems getting the radio link to work.

The last workshop was at 10pm! Man, these SF/F folks are some hardworking people! The topic was sex and the writing thereof, so I just had to stay to catch this one, even though that meant I would be driving home really, really late at night. I was interested to hear three male science fiction authors tackle this topic.

You guessed it. Somehow or other, John Scalzi managed to get me to sit on the panel because yeah...that's it...I write romance and sex scenes ;-). First of all, it was really quite a different experience talking about this topic when there were male writers on board. They were more shy than I'd thought! And quite cerebral about this thang called sexuality. Except for John's and my initial bantering about working on a scene together that covered, ahem, tentacle sex, the discussion was definitely for those who were familiar with the big names of the fifties and sixties and how sexuality was inserted as a theme in science fiction worlds. Very cool, but almost made me feel like I'm back in college ;-).

On a romance panel, authors tend to talk about the different lines within the genre and how sex/love scenes are depicted in them, for example, in extreme juxtaposition, an inspirational romance vs an erotica. I have the feeling that many of the readers attending that latenight chat wouldn't have guessed how many varieties there were when it came to the craft of writing a sex/love scene. I did hope that the little bits of contribution I gave opened a few minds that had been so vocally against romance crossing into fantasy and science-fiction. Because hey, underneath it all, we all want to tell a strong story about characters in search of meaning. We just focus on different ice-cream flavors, that's all.

Anyway, I really had a great time and will definitely go to another SF/F convention in the future. Actually, if I could afford it, I'd like to be at the Atlanta one, where there will be many of our favorite authors mixing with the SF/F TV shows and movie peeps!



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Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Post #2: Expansion Pros and Cons

I'm done with sawing and roof crapentry, yay. I hate replacing rotten wood. Coughing sawdust nightly reminds me of the Hilton Hotel nightmare. So now, it's back to normal shingle-laying and if the weather cooperates, I'll finish the job by Friday and get paid, yay again! One thing about being a self-employed roofer and writer--the pay days are few and precious these days.

Of course, if I were holding Yahoo shares, my payday would suck too, since it fell 15 percent today due to Microsoft walking away from a deal on the table. But hey, I'm sorta glad the merger didn't happen. I have enough problems with VISTA--do I really want to figure out how to do a search with MSNYahoo? It'd probably involved a lot of unneccesary clicking.

So, since the housing/roofing business is down, down, down (and I need income), my agent wants me to start writing some proposals that are non-thrillers so I could expand my writing career, become MSNGennita. Urban fantasy or paranormal, maybe? I have some cool Chinese legends in me that I might find interesting to explore. People are always asking me to write humor but I have no idea how to do that at 100,000 words. Anecdotes and short stories are easy, but a whole book? Scary. Maybe I'll write a book about a BAD PUPPY WHO BITES WHEN SOMEONE WASHES HIS BUTT. Is that title too long?

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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Post #2: How To Create Romantic Tension

Ladies,




1) He is a tease
2) He knows you're looking
3) He does it slowly
4) He makes sure you're watching
5) He likes long, slow strokes
6) And, well, he knows what to do with a pussy :-)

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Tuesday, October 30, 2007

TalkBack Tuesday With Uber Irrational Reader

I finished reading the most anticipated book of the year for me--Lilith Saintcrow's fourth book in her Danny Valentine series, Saint City Sinners. Once again, I was riveted by the sheer power of Saintcrow's writing. Once again, I mourned because she (to me, needlessly) killed off two familiar characters. Now, Danny Valentine's main men have this tendency to get killed and be resurrected in another later book, but I'm getting worried.

Book Five, the next book, is the final of the series. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that there will be a happy ending for Danny and her demon lover. Saintcrow likes to kill off whomever Danny cares for and loves and the next excerpt hints that Danny wants to go down the suicidal path in her quest to fight the Devil. It doesn't look good because Saintcrow has set up the demon lover on the side against Danny and so he might be sacrificed at the end. Argh. Cannot. Take. That.

Sigh. I hate unhappy endings. It makes me feel incomplete, especially when I've invested four books into the relationship. If the two friends who died in Book Four already made me so anxious for Japhrimel's safety, can you imagine how I'm going to feel in January, when the last book comes out? Argggh. If you know me, I'm the biggest spoiler ho in the universe. So I'll probably peek at the end to see if there is a good ending, and if the last chapter ends well, then I'll finish this series. If not....I don't know. It's a dilemma. I don't know whether I can read a bad ending for a hero I've been so into.

Sort of like killing Jed at the end of the Virtual series, you know? Helen would survive his death, but I don't think I would. LOL.

So the question is this, am I, wearing the author's hat, responsible for the reader's emotional well-being? I mean, if I killed off a minor, but quite popular, character in the universe, and without good reason (or even with...coughcoughCam andPattycoughcough) can I reasonably reason with unhappy readers with words like "Muse," "creative freedon," "character growth," and finally, "well, that's the way it had to go." Yes, I'm stressing on REASON.

Because I tell you, although I'm a very reasonable and logical businesswoman when I'm a roofer, I'm an emotional reader. You cannot reason with me where my heart is concerned. I'm strong enough to take the deaths of minor characters because as a writer, I understand the need for some room for 'pain and gain,' as I call it...coughcough- CamandPattycoughcough...but I'm not strong enough to take the death of a major character. Not after 500,000 words! It's an undesirable ending. And unreasonable.

You see the emotional mess I'm already in, and I don't even know what the real ending of the Danny Valentine series is?! I've descended into the Afraid To Find Out state of mind. Meaning, I've sort of made up my mind to avoid that last book if my demon and Danny V are going to be parted forever, in death or living hell.

Yes, yes, totally irrational and unreasonable, but there you have it as a reader. But as a writer, I'm in awe of Lilith Saintcrow. What a great urban fantasy series!

And before you send out cries of doom at me, I haven't actually killed off Cam and Patty yet. To be honest, as a writer, yes, my Muse has suggested it, in several different scenarios, how one or both of these characters dead would make a really strong story for one of the characters. It's all in my head. But as a reader, I totally get the love for Cam and Patty, and I totally understand that some readers already have a story in their heads about those two.

There needs to be a balance, of course. A writer has to be faithful to his/her vision, but that doesn't mean, to me anyway, that the vision is unchangeable. Vision, in the precognitive sense of the word, is a possible layout of a future, and in writing, as in living, that layout changes with every word/action.

Just as life has many choices, creating art does too. Just don't think to pleasure the reader with love, and then later, reason with her for killing that love. I'm just sayin'.

Your turn to talk back: What kills your love for a beloved series, whether the books are labeled romance or not? And you can mourn about Buffy and Angel. The pain...oh the bitter pain is still with me today, so years later.

Don't REASON with me that the books aren't romance. I don't care!!!!!!! Yup, I'm an irrational reader.

(If you like urban fantasy, do try Lilith Saintcrow's Danny Valentine series. The action is fantastic and the heroine is believably edgy, although a bit stubborn in the communication department. The sexual tension between Danny and her two men (especially the main guy, Japhrimel) is top-notch. Just don't blame me if you fall for Japh and then gets all scared about Saintcrow maybe ending this series sadly. Heh.)



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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

An One Armed Man Scratched My Car, Officer!

Nah. But I thought that would get you to read on. Heh heh. I figure if that was in the police report, I might have had a more interested response than the official "it's bad, bad, bad surfers" line. Surfing in the dead of night. Rrrrriggghht. A one-armed surfer, perhaps?

I did recently watch the movie version of The Fugitive, starring Harrison Ford, filmed in 1993. I remember watching the very successful TV show in Malaysia while growing up, but being young and English being my second language, I missed out on a lot of the nuances of the verbal play. Not that there were that many nuances in the movie version! :grin:

It's a classic suspense formula, isn't it:

1) smart man convicted of a murder
2) his need to prove his innocence
3) a chase
4) a shadowy figure that is always a little bit ahead

What made The Fugitive cool was The One-Armed Man. That's the killer, the guy who was always out of reach, making our hero suffer while he learns the truth a little at a time in a race against time.

To me, it's the same writing suspense. As a writer, I'm always looking for my One-Armed Dude (or Dudette) in my story, the element that would not only engage the readers into a mental chase in their mind, but also engage their emotions and ultimately, their championing of my hero/heroine's cause.

What made The One-Armed Man worked in The Fugitive is the story as told by the hero himself: (paraphrased) "I fought with the man and suddenly I pulled off one of his hands! A one-armed bandit killed my wife, I tell you!" In the wrong hands, this line could have gone into parody territory (as it has, in so many great comic spoofs) but here the writer and the actor pulled us in and we believed them.

As a writer, the most important thing is the balancing act as we juggle all our elements. The wrong step, and everything falls down, and the plot becomes a parody of a great performance as we weave around trying to keep the act going. After all, even a parody is done on purpose and the weaving and stumbling around are part of the act.

So, why am I bringing up watching The Fugitive all of a sudden when yesterday I was venting about, oh...a crime? ;-P I dunno. I guess I'm just processing my experience in the only way I know how, so that I can move on. Does that makes sense? Find meaning in a meaningless act?

*****
So. ACT II, juggling other items in life:

There has been a suggestion put forth in the Gennita Low Yahoogroup recently about a discussion board/forum. The reader says that she finds it frustrating that she can't continue commenting about certain blog posts because I've moved on to something new and most visiting readers might not read the comment area or add to the conversation because the post is a few days old.

So, the idea is that a "forum" is linked from the blog where a conversation of a past post can be "continued." For example, the reader might (God forbid) have found another article about smegma that she just have to share, but posting the link today means nobody, except me, will read it. With a forum, she can title the post More Smegma Stuff (and maybe put the date of the post to which she's referring) and then publish her link. Other interested readers can then access this link and make relevant comments, thus continuing the older "conversation."

Am I making sense? Is this something that would be of interest to you? Have you ever wanted to comment on an older post but decided not to because you think no one would read it? Just wondering.

Setting up a forum similar to the Romantic Times Book Club Forum is relatively easy, but I'm not looking to start another romance board, per se. It would be limited to posts relevant to topics from my blog, and that's really not such a huge limit at all, since I blog about everything under the sun, from roofing to veges to TV shows to bad boys to favorite books! Just make it relevant to a specific A Low Profile post, that's all. I'm sure, as time goes by, either the board will stand on its own or...dies a silent death ;-P, depending on your interest.

As a promotional tool, perhaps it would attract a few new readers who don't like blogs but enjoy a forum type atmosphere, and perhaps they will try some of my books. I know all those half-nekkid kilt pictures sure attract a great number of hits from somewhere! ;-) Perhaps I can put it to good use somehow, heh.

As usual, brain overworking. All your feedback enables me. Coz really, I'm just like Dr. Gregory House (oh, how wonderful to see my Sexy Grouchy Doctor back on my TV set again tonight!) and I'm just looking to bounce all my ideas off you, my ducklings.

And oh, yeah, I LURV my new LotR "Truth or Dare" gif!

So I dare ya...gimme some truths!

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Thursday, June 21, 2007

Why I Write And Love Stories

Interpret as you will:

TWINS

An unborn couple of twins' conversation in the womb of their mother...

"Say, do you actually believe in life after birth?" the one twin asks.

"Yes, definitely! Inside we grow and are prepared for what will come outside", answered the other twin.

"I believe that’s nonsense!" says the first. "There can't be life after birth – what is that supposed to look like?"

"I don't exactly know either. But there will certainly be much more light than in here. And maybe we will be walking about and eat with our mouths?"

"I've never heard such nonsense! Eating with the mouth? What a crazy idea. There is the umbilical cord that nourishes us. And how do you want to walk about? The umbilical cord is much too short."

"I am sure it is possible. It’s just that everything will be a little bit different."

"You are crazy! Nobody ever came back after birth. Life is over with birth. That's it."

"I admit that nobody knows what life after birth will look like. But I do know that we will see our mother then, and that she will take care of us."

"Mother???? But you don't believe in a mother, do you? Where is she?"

"She is here, all around us. We are and we live within her and through her. Without her we couldn't exist at all!"

"Nonsense! I’ve never sensed a mother, consequently she doesn’t exist."

"Yes, sometimes, when we are very quiet you can hear her sing, or feel how she caresses our world."

- author unknown



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Thursday, May 17, 2007

What Are You Uber-Hungry For?

First, my reaction to Idol last night: Dammit. I knew it would happen. Split votes for the girls and the boy slips through. But I did like Blake over Jordan. Why? Well, even though Jordan can sing better, I never did enjoy her song choices. Nice old songs, but on a CD? Yawn. When she tried to rock out, she sounded very forced. Blake can have a CD out, just like that, no prob. Melinda is the ultimate performer and can sing almost anything, so she should have been in the final.

Ah well. My favorite never makes it. So prediction: Jordan will be American Idol.

;-P

*******************

Whew. I've caught up with most e-mails and have replied to the comments on this blog from the last few days. Yikes. I can't believe how exhausted I am! And I still have tons of chores to do, among which is finishing a book, ahem***. Real life, eh?

Someone emailed me asking me to post my speech here, but it's awfully long--half an hour's worth--and too personal, really, like tooting my own horn. Also, I might be able to reuse sections of it in my future career as closing speaker! LOL. Actually, I was advised that speakers do this all the time, so when I get invited for another speech, I'd be so ready this time.

Wow. Me, motivating people to write. How ironic...when, as you know, I'm the world's best (or worst?) procrastinator. But I do think writing that speech did help put things in perspective for me. What makes me write? Why do I enjoy it? And when I pinpointed that everything comes from a certain desperation in my life, I had to sit back and explain to myself and everyone what I meant. So I brought back a few memories about my childhood and my earlier years learning about writing and hanging on to a dream. About real desperation and real hunger. A surprise to me, everything tied together.

Which brought me to my second point: timing and serendipity. When event A was happening, it was years afterwards that I connected it to event B. And then event C. I mean, what has a childhood civil war memory has to do with being lost in the writing world, or being desperate and ending up as a roofer? But somehow, my writing the speech led to some sort of self-discovery, that yes, indeedy, my life has a roadmap to it! I even tied it up nicely with my name, Gennita. As some of you know, from earlier posts on this blog, the buying editor of Into Danger, my first book, turned out to have the SAME name as mine! We both didn't know this initially because I was Jenn and she was Gena to everyone. But it blew both our minds when we discovered this while we were discussing about using another name/pseudonym for my writing career. Timing and serendipity right there, huh?

So those were the themes in my speech in a nutshell. And I ended it by challenging the writers in the audience to pinpoint their "hungry friend."

OMG. ***smackingforehead*** I just realized where my use of "hungry ghosts" and "feeding them" in FACING FEAR came from!

You see? Writing is a constant state of self-discovery. What are you "hungry" for? And how do you "feed" it?

Too damn deep a topic? Oh, all right. I can be shallow too:



Trying out new background colors to get a darker font to PLEASE JORDAN SUMMERS. Kidding.... I don't think I like this blue either.


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Monday, March 26, 2007

Where Did All The Uber Cowboys Go?




I spent a few pleasant hours watching old cowboy TV shows during the weekend: Bonanza, Gunsmoke, and Rawhide. I grew up in Malaysia with lots of old Western shows and can pretty much hum the tunes from memory. Hokey as some of the sets and setting were, the stories still resonated and it was pretty amazing watching a plot unfold where no one took off their clothes or obsess about themselves. Of course, cowboys aren't talkative in the first place, so the dialogue was pretty sparse, LOL. I pointed this out to my friend and he said that was because things got solved so much easier in the old days--no nonsense, just shoot! LOL. But yeah, I get what he's saying.

So that gave me an idea about Hell and her commandos. I mean, being a GEM operative, she's just not used to working with all these guys so there's bound to be some kind of conflict.

Back on topic, though--at one time, there used to be a whole load of Western TV shows and historical romances set in the West. Not any more. Editors say that readers aren't interested in reading that period. I wonder how that came about.

I mean, there are still historicals set in that period, but they are very few compared to what we used to have. I wonder why readers suddenly stopped buying romances about the cowboy and the Western front? Is it because it's politically incorrect (Native American portrayals as well as depiction of black and Asian people)? That had never bothered me personally, even back in Malaysia, to watch Hup Seng run around with that funny accent. But I suppose I should be. And maybe that's why Western historical romances aren't so popular any more; too many "shoulds" and "shouldn't" dos to appease different groups of people.

Heck, look at my favorite movie, 300, at the moment. I truly enjoyed it for what it is: a great action epic done in comic book style, with lots of eye-candy. A touch of romance. Lots of male bravado. Nothing too deep, you know?

But already the intelligentsia and historical buffs are out in droves spitting and snarling about inaccuracies and political drivel mouthed by the characters. How dare they depict Spartans and Persians that way? Viewers might take that as the truth!

Seriously? I was twelve when I read Rosemary Roger's Sweet Savage Love, an epic historical romance that isn't in style any more. I was swept into that saga and was horrified at some of the things done to the heroine. So damn politically incorrect! Did I take it as the truth? Nah.

Seriously? Today I still enjoy Harlequin's Presents line, with its billionaires and princes seducing the heroines. Do I REALLY take that world as the truth? Nah. I love Helen Bianchin, but come on. How many gabillionaires does Sydney, Australia have? :-)

Do I really think everyone parties like that during the Regency era?

Do I really think everyone is always bathing in a Medieval era romance?

Nah.

After watching those episodes, with the Cartwrights and their protecting their land, with the sheriff in Gunsmoke, with the Texan cowboys driving a herd of cattle to sell in Rawhide, I miss the archetypal Cowboy in our romances very much.

Sure you can still find him in the archetypal Warrior (SEAL, commando, cop, Spartan hero) but it's not the same without the Wild West to tame. Now I'm going to have to pull out my old historical Lowells. Didn't she write some great cowboys or what?


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Friday, February 16, 2007

Uber Author Plots...and Plots....

Your answers to my questions yesterday cracked me up! I knew y'all would have my twisted sense of humor! Love, love, love the alternatives you guys gave to naming your eldest child Gennita. LOL. Can I also give a shout-out to those who are giving me more information about the commandos, including the missing one! Wow! Do you know his "other" known name? *grin*

I wrote a 12 page synopsis/proposal of Book Three, which I titled Virtually One. What do you think of the title?

I'm very surprised at what I came up with as I outline the general plot. I'm including Russian remote-viewers in this book and will go into their experimentations with remote-viewing and mind control. As you know, I like to take something from another book and study it from another angle. Perhaps you might learn a bit more about a certain Greta, you never know. She's the double agent in Facing Fear and and Sleeping With The Agent, if you can't recall the name. I'm still fascinated by that character.

Anyway, I hope my editor likes it! Then I'm set to just write, write, write.

Have a good weekend, and if you haven't yet checked out the earlier blogs, I've posted an ARC contest for VIRTUALLY HIS yesterday (15 Feb. 2007).

By the way, did you see my visual of Number Eight, Kyle Chandler, in a cameo in Grey's Anatomy last night? He's the Hot Bomb Guy in the last scene. You know, the dude that became Red Mist. Sigh. He is so perfect for Number Eight.



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Monday, February 12, 2007

Uber Communication Problem

Most of you know that I am a student of Astrology. So anyway, Mercury Retrograde, which brings up problems with anything to do with communications (computers, writing, postal) starts on the 13th of Feb. Doesn't mean it STARTS exactly on the 13th because it's already affecting moi. I spent yesterday struggling with the wonderful puter because for some reason, my server was being rejected by Amazon.com. So of course, I had to try to solve it. 24 hours later...well, let's say I have less hair.

Hey, you can blame it on Astrology or evil computer demons. Take your pick.

Needless to add, I should have been writing.

Here is a problem for many romance writers. Once you have the ultimate money shot scene, what comes next? My monitor just seduced the heck out of Hell (it reads funny when I wrote the hell out of Hell)...in virtual reality...now what? Life just can't carry on...dadodododadada, that'sallIwannasaytoyou...you know. How does a writer UP the stakes?

That's what's on my mind, in case you're wondering. And my solution has to do with communication.

Dadodododadadada...did you see my Sting reunited with The Police on the Grammys last night? I used to love that band so. It was the first band that wasn't totally a boy-band (The Osmonds, ahem) that I girl-fan over. I was sweet sixteen when my first boyfriend introduced The Police to me.

Talking about my first boyfriend, I first "met" him while watching him do a play called Equus. Yeah, THAT Equus, the one with all that naked with a horse on stage scenes ;-P. Of course, in Malaysia, they didn't perform naked. Anyway, the new edition of Equus stars the kid from Harry Potter, Daniel Radcliffe. HARRY POTTER NAKED! Oh man, that's all kinds of wrong. No, my boyfriend didn't play the role of Alan Strang, the protag; he was the horse-god, Equus. Being a white boy, he was taller than the other actors, so was perfect for that role ;-). I have very fond memories of Equus.

Panic Note: My editor is asking me about Book Three. ***shriek*** I am officially in trouble.

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Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Uber Frozen Butt



I'm home!

Wow, I froze my butt off in DC. That was mighty cold for a heat-loving babe like me. I tried to take some long walks to walk off some of my mommie's fabulous cooking but, you know what? I just needed to stand outside without a jacket. The way I shivered, I should have shedded a few days' worth of calories ;-).

Airport adventure--well, do you doubt about having any? This is Gennita, you know, the magnet for airport delays of one sort or another. My flight home was delayed several times. What was so funny were the "excuses" that came over the air:

"We apologize but we don't have a crew for your plane."

Half an hour later: "The flight is going to be delayed another hour. We apologize but your plane has been moved, but the flight crew has been found."

Another hour later: "All right, we're boarding as soon as we find another plane."

Another half hour: "We are truly sorry, but we're changing planes, but the flight crew is here!"

It would have been funny if there had been more heat in the terminal. It was terribly hard to be patient when you're shivering AND sleepy.

Anyway, I got home really, really late and was so sad. I was told by a very hot friend that I missed the best Jack Bauer episode evah. Brotherly love! Fatherly bonding! Meaning, there were lots of Bauer family bloodshed. I was heartbroken. Priorities, you know. First, Jack Bauer, then Other Important Things, in that order. Even my hot friend understood this ;-).

On the writing front: I finally finished the virtual reality seduction scene. Oh my Lord. It's twenty pages long. And no, I don't feel like cutting it down because that scene took me forever to write--a whole month, with a lot of deletions and tears while doing it. It's going to be my most controversial sexy scene evah. Either you're going to love it or flay me alive. It took my hero a loooong time to seduce Hell slowly so that she would accept him inside her head, using her attraction to him to keep her "aware" of him during missions. Ooops, talking too much. Jet lag, jet lag. Pay no attention.

You guys are too quiet. Whatcha up to during Super Bowl weekend?

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DAILY DOSE OF CUTE PUPPINESS

Send My Publisher A Nudge