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    I love it when a plan comes together …

    So I hope everyone had a good Valentine’s Day this weekend. I did. Wheezley and I went out to dinner, ate way too much food, swapped presents, and watched bad movies on TV.

    As a result, I have several new books to read, including Graceling, The Stepsister Scheme, The Way of Shadows, and Blue-Eyed Devil (which I already started and am loving).

    Now, I love me some books. But Wheezley got me something even better — and cheesier. I am now the proud owner of – wait for it, wait for it – an A-Team T-shirt!

    Yes, I can now wear my T-shirt while I watch the DVDs of my favorite TV show. It’s really sad how happy this makes me. 😎

    What about you guys? Anyone get anything cool for Valentine’s? Share in the comments.

  • 927 and counting …

    Finished Dead Beat by Jim Butcher. This is the seventh book in his urban fantasy series about Chicago wizard and private investigator Harry Dresden.

    In this one, an old enemy of Harry’s orders him to find a rare book or else she’ll do bad things to Harry’s friend, Karrin Murphy. Harry agrees, but little does he know that there are several big, bad necromancers in town, all of whom want a) the book, b) to kill each other, and c) wouldn’t mind taking out Harry too. But Harry is determined to keep bad stuff from happening, even if it means his own death …

    I like this series a lot, especially the characters. Wise-cracking Harry, lovable Mouse, conflicted Thomas, funny Bob. I think the magic is believable and always interesting, and I enjoy the recurring characters who pop up.

    But I did have a few quibbles with this one. First of all, at the beginning, Harry lets Murphy (who, come on, we all know that he really loves) go off to Hawaii with another guy. That was dumb, Harry. Real dumb. This also meant that Murphy wasn’t in this book, which I thought was a real loss. Her tough-as-nails character is one of my favorites.

    There’s also a lot of action in this book. Now, I like action scenes probably more than most people do, but there were just so many and Harry got so beat up, it felt like we just went from one fight to another. I really would have liked to reach in the book and give Harry some aspirin and permission to take a shower and get some sleep.

    And I kind of lost track of which villain was which toward the end. There were a lot of bad guys in this one.

    But the book also featured all the things I love about the series. Wisecracks from Harry and others, a visit to the local wizard hangout, a run-in with the mob guy, and more.  

    So overall, not my favorite Dresden book, but still a solid read. Thumbs up.

    Up next: Something from the TBR pile.

    Books in my TBR pile: About 18.

    What about you guys? Anyone reading anything good right now? Share in the comments.

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    Two years too late …

    Today, I got a call from a local library wanting me to come and do a talk/book signing. This is funny, since when Karma Girl first came out in 2007, I went to said library, talked to the director, dropped off my info and some bookmarks, and asked to set up a signing. Oh yes, the director said, we’d love to have you.

    But nobody ever called me back. I even called and left a couple of messages for the woman who arranged the book signings — and still nobody ever called me back.

    So am I going to do the book signing now? After two years have passed? Sure. Because I love books and libraries and talking about books. People are busy, and stuff falls through the cracks all the time. It happens.

    But the weird thing is that it seems to happen to me more than other folks.

    When another one of my books came out (I can’t remember if it was Hot Mama or Jinx), I tried to set up a signing at my local Barnes & Noble. I dropped off some info and bookmarks for the community relations manager. I called, left messages, and even talked to her on the phone at one point. And she never called me back to see about setting up a time for a signing.

    But the strangest example is probably this one. A few years ago, I pitched a cozy murder mystery to an editor at a conference. I sent her the book and got a rejection letter about six months later. I thought that was strange because I knew the book was pretty good and it seemed to be what the editor was looking for. Still, that seemed to be the end of things, and I let it go and worked on other projects.

    Then, one day out of the blue, the editor calls me and says that she had some problems with her assistant (who left the company or something) and that she wants me to resubmit the manuscript. Which I do. A few months pass, and I don’t hear anything, so I assume that the editor didn’t like it any better than her assistant did.

    Then, one day out of the blue, the same editor calls me and offers me a contract for the murder mystery. Shocked the hell out of me because, at this point, something like two years had passed since I first pitched the manuscript to her at a conference. By this point, I had an agent and I think we’d sold Karma Girl. So the murder mystery never saw the light of day.

    Lots of folks think that when you get a book published that you’ve got it made. But the truth is that you don’t. Especially me, who always seems to get things two years too late. Hey, maybe this is my own special kind of Jinx … :rolleyes:

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    Ready, set, action …

    So I’m currently reading Dead Beat by Jim Butcher (one of his Dresden Files books). I’m enjoying it, but something keeps jumping out at me — all the action. The book takes places over a couple of days. I’m about halfway through, and our favorite Chicago wizard has already been attacked/threatened/injured half a dozen times — at least. And we’re not even up to the grand finale yet.

    Now, I love me some action scenes, but it’s almost to the point where I want to reach into the book and say, “Harry, man, take some aspirin and crash for a few hours. The apocalypse will still be there when you wake up.”

    The last book I read before this one, Show No Mercy by Cindy Gerard, was the same way — nonstop action from beginning to end, with attacks and counterattacks and narrow escapes.

    I’m wondering if this is new trend — authors ramping up the action in their books. If so, then I’m on the bandwagon already. There’s a lot of action in my new Assassin series — lots of blood and lots of death. Gin kills something like 15 people — and that’s just in the first book. 😈

    What about you guys? Do you like lots of action in your books? Or do you like the characters to take a breather every now and then? Share in the comments.

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    Titles, titles everywhere …

    So my editor, agent, and I have started talking about a formal title for the first Assassin book and the series as a whole.

    I’ve been pretty lucky with my titles so far in that all the titles I’ve suggested have been used. The only change was Karma (my original title for the first Bigtime book) to Karma Girl (the final title) — which I thought was much cooler.

    Anyway, here are some titles that we’re thinking about for the Assassin book:

    Gin on the Rocks (my title)

    Assassin, Interrupted

    Iced

    Spider’s Web

    Spider’s Bite

    I’d be happy with any of these titles, although I like Gin on the Rocks and Assassin, Interrupted the best so far. I’d love for the titles of all the books to be tied together, and I think it would be easy to do that using the word Gin. For example, I’m calling the second book Gin with a Twist and the third one Bitter Gin.

    But I also think using Assassin in all the titles would work too — and maybe we could use popular movie/book titles and just put Assassin in there. Like Assassin, Interrupted (Girl, Interrupted) or The Good, the Bad, and the Assassin (The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly).

    What do you guys think? Which of these titles do you like? Share in the comments.