Monday, January 29, 2007

Things You Might Want To Know

  • Go watch the Nora Roberts movie Monday, January 29th on Lifetime at 9:00. It's Angels Fall and there will be three more, Montana Sky, Blue Smoke and Carolina Moon, for the next 3 Mondays! Though none of them are Silhouettes (sniff) they are all Nora's, so they are wonderful stories. We not only should support our very own national treasure, we need to show Lifetime there is a real audience for stories that deliver a feel-good experience. Consider it your job.
  • Angela Bassett and her husband Courtney B. Vance wrote a book, FRIENDS: A LOVE STORY, detailing the story of their lives, courtship, marriage and the recent birth of their twins. It's coming out this February--Black History month and Valentine's, is that perfect or what?
  • I got a chance to read the proposal and found it opened a window into a intriguing world I knew little about. Mavis Allen, their Kimani editor, found the final story "a fascinating and intimate look at two highly talented, complex artists' emotional, spiritual and romantic journey. It gave me a glimpse of two very public people's private world. I found it riveting."
  • The book will be published on Valentine’s Day, Feb 14th, 2007.
  • Yes, St. Valentine's Day is coming up--are you ready? I use the inspiration of sending a Valentine to send all the thank-you notes I haven't gotten around to sending yet (!) and as a way to say "I love you" to all the people in my life that are precious to me for so many reasons and in so many ways.
  • Intimate Moments becomes Silhouette Romantic Suspense.
    • Susan Wiggs has launched her own blog. Before you go and say hello, go to your bookstore and grab a copy of THE WINTER LODGE, Book two of Susan's Lakeshore Chronicles. But before you do that, click here for a $1.00 off coupon, Valid 1/30/07 to 2/4/07, also available on her website. You can check out the starred Publisher's weekly review, if you need convincing! Then check in to the lodge that was the inspiration for her novel--a wonderfully writer and reader friendly place to be.
    • There are some great bundles of eBook bundles, some delicious and sizzling ones from Susan Mallery!
    • Seth Godin talked about how cool MJ Rose's initiative for THRILLER--a collection of stories from fabulous thriller writers--is on his highly popular blog...how cool is that? He talks about her initiative: "MJ Rose points us to http://www.150thrillers.com/ and talks about the power of writers pooling their resources.
      • For those who don't bother to click:"There are some real insights here. The first is that having 'competitors' band together to gain attention is really smart and really rare...By using the Net to coordinate their audiences, they all win.
      • The second brilliancy is that the only people who want to win the prize are the people who'd like to get the newsletter... Instead, what they've done is created an easy way for one thriller reader to introduce the newsletter to another... "hey, I know you like Stuart Woods, check this out...
      • Wanna bet that newsletter subscribers end up buying more books?"
      • MJ is highly websavvy--check out her blog Buzz, Balls and Hype. I think she occasionally offers courses.

    • Linda Lael Miller's first in the exciting new McKettrick series, MCKETTRICK'S LUCK is out right now with a great PW review!
      • PW has starred review of MCKETTRICK'S PRIDE by Linda Lael Miller. HQN Books, coming out in March, 2007.
    • February launch of Everlasting Love, two books a month: check out DANCING ON SUNDAY AFTERNOONS by Linda Cardillo and FALL FROM GRACE by Kristi Gold.
    • In February, Harlequin Romance will combine the best of both the Harlequin and Silhouette Romance stories in a six title a month line.


          Friday, January 05, 2007

          Successful Storytelling in the Digital World

          Slide1

          Happy New Year! Here, at long last, is our presentation at the RWA on Successful Storytelling in the 21st Century. We wanted to review the evolution of storytelling over time, determining what the essential elements are, how they have changed and how they have remained the same over time.

          The goal of a story is to entertain or inform—sometimes it achieves both. That has remained true over the centuries, though the kinds of stories and the way those stories are shared have changed with the times.

          Our session at the RWA explored how the changes and opportunities that technologies have brought us as publishers and writers enhance and open up storytelling in new and different ways.

          The group also shared insights into how they were exploring this new frontier. With the advent of new formats, technologies and the rise of consumer controlled content, writers have the opportunity to think differently about connecting with their audience, sharing their stories, and they do....

          Workshop presented by: Malle Vallik Editorial Director, New Business Development & Isabel Swift, VP, Author & Asset Development at the RWA National Conference, 2006. Workshop Notes, including Q & As are courtesy of Vicky Elabd with profound thanks! I would also like to credit Amy Wilkins for her brilliant selection of graphics to accompany our 10 points, and thank the amazing Maria Marfori for translating them so I could post them on the blog. Truly, it takes a village!

          Introduction

          In the storytelling world of the future, publishers and authors can leverage assets into new formats to reach a broader audience.

          Stories both entertain and inform. An attitude of New Vs Old, “us” Vs “them” has historically prevailed when new technology came along—the monks thought they had nothing to worry about with the appearance of the Gutenberg Press. They were secure that the superior quality of their workmanship with illustrated manuscripts would win! Do we see similar responses now as traditional publishers look at electronic publishing? Perhaps.

          Slide2

          Now we are seeing new ways of reaching an audience being layered upon the old, and the challenge is to get the story to the audience in some format—often more than one format. In fact often the more formats used, the more people can be reached.

          Additionally this is a “communal age” in which we can all participate and build on each other’s ideas to move storytelling to a new level.

          Slide3

          Top 10 things to remember when telling stories in the Digital Age:

          Slide4

          1. A great story is still the foundation. Humor, emotion, effective characters, a compelling situation, strong conflict are all key elements. A storyteller must deliver universal themes that connect with readers, making her laugh, cry—touching her. That has always been true. That will always be true. But a great story can be shared across many different formats as well.

          Slide5

          2. Bite-sized presentation reaches a larger audience, and more quickly. Examples are RSS feeds, cable news, computer news, Sesame Street, Headline News, making information or entertainment so 'easy to swallow' it's impossible not to access. Several examples of authors who write in this style are Sharon Sala (in her Mira books) and James Patterson. Harlequin On The Go (HOTGO) a mobile phone service providing Harlequin content: chapters, tips, trivia polls, book covers, etc., every day directly to cell phones.

          Q: How is this format different from an e-newsletter?
          A: this service comes directly from the cell phone provider (Verizon, etc.) and is the first such service geared towards women.

          Q: Is the content different from eHarlequin?
          A: The menu is new. We offer on-line reads from eHarlequin as well as original material, and in future we may be bringing in additional original content.

          Q: Is it going through the e-mail service on our cell phones, or does it hook up to a web page from Verizon?
          A: It is one of the entertainment menu options from Verizon. You do not require an e-mail hookup to view content.

          Slide6

          3.Re-purposed Content: The market has changed with the addition of these new formats. Now there are more ways to access stories that might never have been reissued in the past. eHarlequin reads, Harlequin Mini and Round Robin as 99cent eBook offers, backlist series romance in Retail and eBooks. Re-releases are now much more popular, and more readers are able to access back-list material. We can release them chapter by chapter, even by cell link. This is good for both readers and authors.

          Audio Books: Gives an added dimension of sound and the quality of the narrator's voice to the story experience. Additionally you can 'read with your ears' during times when you normally couldn't physically read.

          eBooks, the kind that you can download to a portable PC or reader are a small market right now, but give readers another option. Harlequin has increased to 40 new books per month and the backlist program is over 20 titles per month.You can add information to an e-book that is not available in print versions, i.e., back-story on characters for readers who want more information (in the same way a DVD contains “bonus material” on movie releases).

          Slide7

          4. Portability: phone downloads, TV shows on iTunes for IPOD; you can have access to so much material anytime, and there is more of everything.

          Audience suggestion: you can schedule what’s coming out so you can go buy new books when they are released, as well as utilize electronic contest entries and PR materials.

          Slide8

          5. Multiple layers: Back-story can help publishers/producers by soliciting reader/viewer response to storylines.

          Example: Lost used customer online response to create interest and also develop a richer, better story. Snakes on a Plane also used the audience to change elements of the film to improve the experience.

          Audience comments:
          • “I’ll often post scenes I’ve discarded, and get reader responses from them.”
          • “I include interviews with characters, character photos, and email addresses, so my readers can communicate with them directly. I have an opportunity to expand and do more with my story and characters, and interact more with readers.”
          • “Adding content makes the fictional worlds we create more real, so that the line between fiction and reality is blurred.”

          Slide9

          6. World building: audience participation in the fictional worlds of the story, i.e., Lost,Lord of the Rings, Star Trek spin-off stories, fan-fic. If you ask for interaction, you let go of some of the control over your story. But you gain because you have more ideas to work with. One author is thinking about creating a virtual casino that exists only in her story, so readers can visit.

          Slide10

          7. Interactive, connectedness, participation: A collaborative business model in which everything comes together, and everyone is part of the whole (example: Wikipedia). A writing group does this, as does “TV Without Pity”, in which producers and writers will look at comments and respond to their audiences.

          Audience examples of interactive experiences: Choose-you-own-adventure; DVDs; kids are also writing their own stories online, since they are familiar and comfortable with the media. With virtual movies, you could throw out an ending you don’t like and replace it with one you like better. How can we make more of those things happen?

          Slide11

          8. The world we’re in now is full of discovery, uncertainty, and lack of control. We’re all in it together. In genre fiction, there is an element of predictability, but we should always ask ourselves how we could add more unpredictability, discovery and sense of adventure to our stories. Technology and interactivity can help make that happen.

          Slide12

          9. Voyeuristic: reality-show appeal. We relate, gain insight, feel superior to the people we see on “reality” TV. The lack of polish can make the experience seem more relevant to our own lives. What does this trend do to storytelling? What is the window into reality? How might that relate to the more grounded-in-fantasy storylines? Not at all? Or is there a spin?

          Slide13

          10. Freedom: to tell the story of your heart; new technological options allow you to create a deeper, more complex story. The audience can become involved in a much richer storytelling world, and can help create it too. The possibilities are virtually limitless!

          Two quotes very relevant to our time:

          Slide14

          “Omni mutantur, nuhil interit.”
          “Everything changes, nothing perishes.”
          Ovid, b 43 BC

          “Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.”
          “The more things change, the more they stay the same.”
          Alphonse Karr, b.1808

          These words are centuries old, but they are as relevant today as they were when they were spoken.

          Some things really don't change.

          As authors, always: Embrace change, and Evolve....

          Slide15

          Experiment and Entertain

          and never stop Engaging your reader with your story, no matter what the medium

          Change creates options--it's often not "instead of" but "as well as." Most of us will always enjoy reading a book. But when we are trying to travel light, isn't it great that we have an option to carry all of Proust--or far more appropriate, the entire works of Nora Roberts, Diana Palmer, Penny Jordan and Debbie Macomber in our Kate Spade purse?

          To have the option of accessing all my favorite keeper romances without having to build a second addition to my home? To listen to the latest while I'm walking the dog? It's appealing!

          General Q & A:

          Q: Yesterday at the digital fair, you talked about original content, what are you looking for?
          A: If you have a great idea for our cell phone content, we’re very open.

          Q: Are you doing wallpaper?
          A: The people we hired weren’t able to do that yet.

          Q: You could do wake up calls (like Target does on sale days)
          A: Great idea!

          Q: (from panel) How do authors respond to readers rewriting your story (as in fan-fiction)
          A: some like the idea, others feel that it would take away from their voice

          Panel comment: Your story moved them so much that they wanted to engage in it? Awesome!

          Thursday, November 30, 2006

          TAKE A HIKE

          “I’m going to take a hike” you say. You’re in the country and plan to head out for an hour or three to wander the countryside. You’ll be walking, a little climbing perhaps. You’ll look at the landscape, the flora and fauna—hills, valleys, trees, seasonal foliage, flowers, birds, maybe a squirrel, a cow, perhaps a deer.

          You return from your hike empty-handed. Or maybe carrying some flowers, a rock or a shell.

          Everyone applauds your ‘get up and go.’ They envy your exercise, your interest in the great outdoors, in health, in your environment.

          They don’t say, ‘What do you mean—you were gone for hours and you didn’t bring anything back? What on earth were you doing out there? Just walking around looking at stuff???”

          They don’t say that. They don’t even think it. You went for a hike—that’s what you do on a hike. You walk around and look at stuff.

          So is it anti-industrial backlash that vilifies the exact same actions and often similar results when they apply to an urban experience?

          “I’m going shopping,” you say. You’re in the city and plan to head out for an hour or three to wander the town, check out the stores. You’ll be walking, a little climbing perhaps. You’ll be looking at the landscape, the flora and fauna—streets, buildings, stores with their displays of seasonal garb and lifestyle choices, multi-faceted entertainment, food—often unique to the time of year and locale. You’ll see people of all sizes and shapes in a phenomenal variety of “plumage.”
          You return from your hike empty handed. Or maybe carrying a few things you found.

          Everyone says, “What do you mean—you were gone for hours and you didn’t bring anything back? What on earth were you doing out there? Just walking around for hours looking at stuff???”

          They don’t applaud your ‘get up and go.' They don’t admire your healthy exercise, your interest in the great outdoors, your curiosity about your environment.

          They don’t say that. They don’t even think it. But it’s just as true as a hike in the country. That’s what you do when you go shopping—you walk around and look at stuff.

          The only difference is that it’s an urban, not a rural world you are observing—but of no less interest in terms of things to observe and reflect on.

          My recommendation? Reject—summarily reject—the often pejoratively-used term “shopping.” From henceforth embrace the more accurate: Urban Hiking.

          Hike on!

          Sunday, November 19, 2006

          Thanksgiving

          It's my favorite Holiday!

          A holiday dedicated to celebrating food and eating together is pretty special. It also is non-religious and inclusive. I can sit in the back of any New York cab and wish my driver a "Happy Thanksgiving" no matter what. He or she doesn't even need to be an American: we all have something to be thankful for, don't we?

          I realized some years ago that we are never as happy as we are sad.

          What I mean is that when something bad happens, sadness is 24/7. You wake up sad, you go to sleep sad, sadness weighs on you.

          Happiness is more evanescent. It's wonderful, intense, but tends to be momentary. Yes! Wonderful! Now I have to fix dinner, or whatever. It can last, but never with the same depth and intensity as sadness.

          That doesn't seem right.

          So at times like Thanksgiving, I try to remember to be truly thankful every day. It sounds trite; perhaps cheesy. But you know how sad you feel when an element of your life goes away, even something small, even just momentarily. You twist your ankle and can't walk. You have a cast and can't take a shower. You have stitches and can't wash your hair. Not to mention big stuff like health issues or losing someone you love.

          Are you as appreciative as you could be for what you have while you have it? I decided that appreciation was something worth working on.

          I think keeping that sense of appreciation top of mind is one reason why we read romances--to remind us through the stories we read of how lucky we are. Lucky to value love and have people we love in our lives.

          Lucky to be capable of compromise, of learning from mistakes, of growing.

          Lucky to have the courage to risk relationships, to reach out and connect to another person. It's a beautiful thing.

          And when I read a great romance, I get that wonderful sense of satisfaction that no matter what might go on in the world, this works and it's good.

          Wishing you and yours and very Happy Thanksgiving!

          Friday, November 03, 2006

          A Note from THE WIDOW-maker... Carla Neggers

          New York Times bestselling author Carla Neggers has just come back from her tour for her first hardcover, THE WIDOW. I've known and enjoyed Carla's work for many years (we won't go into how many) so it is particularly delightful to see the success of her debut hardcover.

          You have to check out the contest on Carla's website: It's Adopt-A-Puffin to celebrate the Maine setting of THE WIDOW. Now I know some of you may be thinking Carla is just another celebrity adopter, like Angelina or Madonna, but that's just not true. She has already facilitated the adoption of a Loon and a Whale. It doesn't get any bigger or crazier than that! And the Puffin is really cute!

          She's also got some excellent Blueberry recipes contributed from readers on her website. An appropriate match for the moody blue cover of THE WIDOW. And just think of all the anti-oxidants. But let me let Carla share a piece of her life....

          "I'm back home on my hill in Vermont after getting out on the road for signing and media interviews for THE WIDOW. . I have only two rules for going on book tour. One, eat oatmeal for breakfast. Two, have fun. I blew the oatmeal rule on my second morning, in Baltimore, after my 4:15 AM wakeup call for a 5:15 AM pickup for a 6:45 TV interview. I was on after Elmo . He helped do the weather. The people in the studio were great, but when I arrived back to my hotel, I ordered pancakes.

          "In Philadelphia, I ran into serious gridlock on the roads. George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton were there to receive the Liberty Medal. Fortunately, Art, my driver, knew the side streets and a good place to get a true Philadelphia cheese steak (I'd had oatmeal that morning). We're talking heavy security, which turned out okay, because it triggered story ideas, all involving the Secret Service.

          "In Maine, I stayed just down the road from the Kennebunkport home of--guess who? George H. W. Bush. No, I wasn't following him, but more stories involving the Secret Service started percolating. The housekeeper at my inn turned out to be a fan, which was nice, and they served a breakfast buffet that did not include oatmeal. I was off the hook. My big indulgence was a lavender martini, the bartender's own recipe...different.

          "A bookseller I met in suburban Philadelphia told me what she enjoys most about her job is talking with people who love to read. That sums up the best part about getting out on the road, too. It's not that easy to eat oatmeal every morning, but the people I get to meet make it is easy to have fun."

          Carla

          I asked Carla what's coming up in the future? She said look for:
          - CUT AND RUN in March 2007, a reissue, originally published as MINSTREL'S FIRE, a Rita Award finalist
          - ABANDON: June 2007, which she is wrapping up now....It continues her "U.S. Marshals" series.

          Carla also has a blog so you can keep an eye on what's going on in her life.

          There are also a couple of interesting online interviews. One with
          with Bill Thompson of Eye On Books and one with
          Judyth Piazza of The Student Operated Press

          Check it out!

          Monday, October 30, 2006

          iBOAS—you'll never guess what it stands for, but you may want to join when you find out!


          Far left: Malle & her pet dog. Center: Tamara & Mary (Tamara with Crown). Right: Me.

          First, the scene set. Yes, these are my colleagues. While we are all fascinating, and have unique and very different special powers, amazingly, we share certain reading tastes.

          We realized when we started working together we shared a passion for a particular author and decided to form a Club. Please note that the author in question knows nothing of our plans. We decided we needed a name. We needed presence. It all came together.

          We are the imaginary Buddies Of Anne Stuart. iBOAS. Please note the thematically linked and color coordinated boas! I assure you a feather boa is completely appropriate attire for any Buddy, imaginary or not, associated with Anne Stuart. We are here to alert you that she has a new book coming out in NOVEMBER, you can check out the fabulous Publishers Weekly review below. We also wanted to share some of our thoughts.

          Anne Stuart's previous title (there is a connection to this one) Black Ice got a starred review in PW and Cold as Ice got an excellent review from Publishers Weekly.

          Early (or whatever whenever you read this) breaking news: Cold as Ice will be #33 on the November 12th, 2006 New York Times Bestseller list! and #77 on the USA Today Bestseller List (also on the list are Nora Roberts' Silhouette First Impressions @ #10 in hardcover, and Dream Makers @ #9 in paperback, Debbie Macomber's MIRA, Christmas Letters, @ #20 in hardcover and Glad Tidings in paperback @ #5, Diana Palmer's HQN hardcover Heart of Winter and Sharon Sala's Nine Lives @ #24--iBOAS are equitable about sharing information. We just adore Anne Stuart.)

          Tamara: "Anne Stuart gave me a gift in the form of a special paradox: She created bad boys that I loved, who also made me glad to be married to such a good soul. I can escape into the world of Black Ice, and Cold as Ice whenever I choose and snap back to reality in a heartbeat.

          "As someone I know once said, I can enjoy exploring that world and lose myself 'between the covers, not between the sheets.'"

          Mary has these thoughts to add...
          How Anne Stuart has changed my life:
          "Ever had one of those weeks where you're just not sure you can make it through? I was having one when I realized that the new Anne Stuart would be available in time for the weekend. I remember that it was this ray of sunshine in the distance, knowing that maybe, just maybe, if I made it through the week I would be rewarded with a Saturday devoted to reading a great story.

          "OK. I'll be honest, half a Saturday because I just tear through her books. Anyway, thank you Anne. You made living through that tough week worthwhile.

          How much I enjoyed Black Ice:
          "I must confess that I re-read Black Ice. The confession is not that I re-read it because I re-read a lot of my favorite books. My confession is that I read it first on Saturday and then again on Sunday. And I totally loved it both times.

          "I loved Cold As Ice because after I read Black Ice I told someone that Peter Jensen would be a great hero for the next book. She explained to me why this wouldn't be possible. In fact she told me... "Didn't you notice? He's gay. He couldn't possibly be a romantic hero...or at least not for you.' I went back to the text and thought...Well, I guess she's right.

          "But I should have trusted that Anne Stuart, the queen of the baddest of the bad boys, would be able to make Peter Jensen a romantic hero for me. I don't know how she'll top Cold As Ice but I can hardly wait to see."

          Isabel said,"Years ago, when I found myself sneaking into the Harlequin side of the New York office to 'borrow' all the Anne Stuart titles, I knew I had discovered a special author. An author worth stealing—excuse me—borrowing (at least until the titles were reissued) was a keeper. Nothing has changed my opinion. No, I don't lend my Anne Stuarts. Sorry."

          Upcoming schedule in MIRA: Cold as Ice, November, 2006; Ice Blue, April, 2007; Ice Storm (tentative) November, 2007; and possibly Reno's story in spring of 2008.

          In addition to her own fabulous website where you can read excerpts, Anne also has a blogging site, Story Broads with Maggie Shayne, Tara Taylor Quinn, Patricia Potter, Lynn Kerstan and Suzanne Forster.

          Wednesday, October 25, 2006

          Karen Harper in recent NYT article on Book Fairs

          Check out Book Fairs: Reading Might Not Be Dead By Beth Greenfield in the New York Times, October 20, 2006. And just in case you don't click, here are the bits I think are relevant:

          Ms Greenfield starts by saying: "LESS than half of the adult American population now read books that can be defined as literary, the Census Bureau reported after a 2002 survey. Yet the number of book fairs appears to be growing, so perhaps not everyone is eager to replace hard covers with hard drives after all.

          "'There are now 35 statewide celebrations, and that has gone up tremendously in recent years,' said John Y. Cole, director of the Center for the Book at the Library of Congress. Mr. Cole arranges for authors to appear at the annual National Book Festival, which drew 100,000 literature lovers to the National Mall in Washington last month. The center also helps organizers put together local book fairs.

          "Several are scheduled next month, with the Miami Book Fair International the biggest and best known...

          "If it all seems like a highbrow disconnect to those who associate Miami with glitz and glamour, they may find an even bigger surprise in Las Vegas: the fifth annual Vegas Valley Book Festival, held in the shadows of the city’s casino theme parks."

          But the one I care about is (natch) the one that mentions MIRA's very own Karen Harper....

          "In Wooster, Ohio, the 19th annual Buckeye Book Fair aims at all ages. Participants will include Karen Harper, a best-selling mystery writer and the author of “Hurricane,” and Carl Sferrazza Anthony, who wrote “Nellie Taft: Unconventional First Lady of the Ragtime Era.”

          “'State festivals tend to focus, rightly, on local writers,' said Mr. Cole, who is happy for any excitement about reading that these events create. 'In the electronic age, books and reading and authors really need promotion more than ever. The real competition now is not the computer per se, but for a reader’s time.'"

          The Details

          MIAMI
          What: Miami Book Fair International, www.miamibookfair.com
          When: Nov. 12 to 19.

          LAS VEGAS
          What: Vegas Valley Book Festival, www.vegasvalleybookfest.org
          When: Nov. 3 and 4.

          CHICAGO
          What: Latino Book & Family Festival, www.latinobookfestival.com.
          When: Nov. 11 and 12.

          STORRS, CONN.
          What: Connecticut Children’s Book Fair, http://bookfair.uconn.edu
          When: Nov. 11 and 12.

          WOOSTER, OHIO
          What:
          Buckeye Book Fair www.buckeyebookfair.com
          When: Nov. 4.

          FRANKFORT, KY.
          What: Kentucky Book Fair www.kybookfair.org
          When: Nov. 11.