Archive for March, 2011

31 Mar

Susan Speaks: The Attacking Laundry Basket

Sounds like something I’d put in my fiction, doesn’t it? Maybe a name for a new band? Laundry Basket Attacks.

It’s not. It’s real life.

It began a week ago. I’d gotten out of the shower, thrown on some older clothes I can wear to the animal shelter and get dirty while I play with the kitties, and then I went and did it.

I walked into my laundry room.

It’s not a huge room. Because of that, once I take the clothes out of the dryer, I slide the now-full basket along the floor, so it’s between me and the door.

Don’t do this. Don’t let an Attack Basket block your only means of escape.

When I’d partially dislocated my elbow almost a year ago, I got into the habit of kicking that evil thing down the hall. But that was almost a year ago, and kicking laundry baskets, even empty ones, is hard on the busted-up cartilage in my foot, not to mention the toll it takes on my bad hip.

So I bent over to pick up the basket. Didja catch that reference to my hip? That means I know how to bend and lift properly.

Didn’t matter last week. As soon as I wrapped my fingers around the Attack Basket’s handles, I was sunk. I actually screamed, me who’s had kidney stones, two natural childbirths, and who spent three months walking around with a rib out of joint.

And yet despite pain that had me screaming, I stretched out in bed with Only, Lonely Cat and thought that once the spasm subsided, I’d go play with the kitties at the shelter after all.

Yeah. Here we are, eight days later, and I’m still waiting for that initial spasm to subside. Oh, I went to my masseur on Friday and had him agree with my diagnosis: I’d managed to dislocate the left side of my pelvis, an area called the Sacroiliac Crest. He put it back in and warned me that the spams would get stuck in my shoulder and neck as they relaxed.

They’re still doing that, too.

Getting my medicine (muscle relaxant and anti-inflammatory) was a drama of epic proportions. First the message to deliver it had been lost, somewhere between when I watched my doctor write it on the prescription form and when the medicine wound up in the Will Pick Up pile. Then came the mistake made with the credit card on file.

I just got the medicine last night. It should have been here Monday. And throwing a monkey wrench into life is the fact that tomorrow, I’m headed out to our first Boy Scout campout. (Yes, I’m bringing the Boy Band and no, he’s not going to take care of me. He’s doing his thing and I get to sit and chill and just be outside, which you all know is one of my favorite things to do. If he and I don’t talk all weekend, it’ll be a good one.)

Would you believe this is only part of the saga? That I went to the Hoity Toity Health Club on Sunday and got some relief from biking five and a half miles? (A light ride for me these days) And that I then ruined it by spending an hour sitting in the bleachers at The Boy Band’s soccer game, and then — this is where I really did myself in — THREE hours at Panera, talking about a writer’s conference I’m helping organize. That the doctor told me my diagnosis was right, that my choices of medicine were right, and even my instinct to exercise was right. I know what to do, how to handle this stuff. But circumstances didn’t let me, as always seems to be the case.

That’s the story. Pass it along. And get ready to make this place hop while I’m off in the wilds of this particular Boy Scout camp we’re headed to. I’ll open the Weekend Hangout like usual — so if you haven’t left a comment yet, you’ll want to do that now.

Beware of laundry baskets, gang.

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29 Mar

Susan’s Promo Tales: Out and About

As soon as I can sit and concentrate long enough to tell you guys what’s going on with my back, I will.

In the meantime, yesterday I stopped in at Darcia Helle’s blog, A Word Please, with my good friend RJ McDonnell. Check out what we were up to.

And today, I return to an old stomping ground, the Working Stiffs, in search of my mojo. Seen it? Me, either.

In the meantime, I’m trying to heal. Slowly. And figure out why the pharmacy didn’t deliver my meds like they were supposed to…

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25 Mar

Weekend Hangout #2

I’m down today with … well, let’s just simplify things and say I threw my back out. So go visit! Make friends! Hang out and keep me company.

Here’s how to play:

1. Leave a comment here, on this post. Say hello to me, tell me what you’re reading, what song you’re jamming to. You pick it. Leave your link (I can’t get Comment Luv to work regularly) to your blog.

2. Go visit the blog link in the comment above you. Tell them “I’m from West of Mars” and hopefully something nice about their post.

3. When three people have left a comment since your last one, you may play again. If no one’s commented for two hours, you may play again. This is the ONLY time you may visit someone other than the person above you.

4. If you’re new here, your comment will go into moderation. I’m going to try to keep on top of that, but do check back to make sure no one missed you. If you were skipped, leave another comment — even if you break the three-person rule.

5. Be nice. Have fun. Make new friends — that’s what this is all about. And, of course, I operate on the Commutative Principle of Friendships, whereby any friend of yours is a friend of mine. Which means anyone and everyone is welcome to play.

6. Game ends Sunday night.

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21 Mar

Featured New Release: The Demon is in the Details by Harris Channing

It’s a blog swap of sorts today, as I’ve written a guest blog post for my friend Harris Channing.

She’s here, answering the famed one-question interview: What song makes you think of your book?

Her pick? Devil Went Down to Georgia

As for why:

Stella has returned to Silverton Georgia to bury her dead aunt…who happens to be a witch. While she’s cleaning the old bat’s house house to sell it, she realizes that with the death of the nasty piece, the devil must have come to Georgia to claim her soul….WHooo Ohhhh Ohhhhh!

Okay. Look at some of these words and phrases Harris uses: “the old bat’s house” and “the death of the nasty piece…”

Are we in for some fun with this read, or what?

Here are your buy links. As always, I suggest picking the book up at Smashwords. Not only do I get the affiliate money (whee!) but Harris gets a bigger royalty. You can get it in ALL formats. And c’mon. It’s 99 cents. How can you go wrong? And what do you mean, you want it in print? That’s between you and Harris.

The Demon is in the Details at Smashwords

The Demon is in the Details at B&N’s Nook store

The Demon is in the Details at Amazon

Wait! I almost forgot! The blurb!

Returning to Silverton, Georgia, thirteen years after a brutal attack, Stella is determined to bury her past alongside her evil Aunt Lou. As if that’s not hard enough, she must face not only what happened all those years ago, but the new evil that is brewing in the small town.

In an answer to her prayers, immortal protector, Zane Weathers appears at her door. He offers her more than just his protection. He offers his glorious face, strong hands and able body.

Together they must not only overcome obstacles from their pasts, but a hellish horror that could very well take over the world.

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18 Mar

Weekend Hangout #1

A couple of years ago, I used to hang around this site. It was devoted to blog party games (and here you didn’t think your blog knew how to party…), and one of the most popular games was the weekend visiting game, we’ll call it.

I’ve decided that, with my blogroll hopelessly out of date and traffic down, this would be a good time to try to revive it.

Here’s how to play:

1. Leave a comment here, on this post. Say hello to me, tell me what you’re reading, what song you’re jamming to. You pick it. Leave your link (I can’t get Comment Luv to work regularly) to your blog.

2. Go visit the blog link in the comment above you. Tell them “I’m from West of Mars” and hopefully something nice about their post.

3. When three people have left a comment since your last one, you may play again. If no one’s commented for two hours, you may play again. This is the ONLY time you may visit someone other than the person above you.

4. If you’re new here, your comment will go into moderation. I’m going to try to keep on top of that, but do check back to make sure no one missed you. If you were skipped, leave another comment — even if you break the three-person rule.

5. Be nice. Have fun. Make new friends — that’s what this is all about. And, of course, I operate on the Commutative Principle of Friendships, whereby any friend of yours is a friend of mine. Which means anyone and everyone is welcome to play.

6. Game ends Sunday night.

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16 Mar

Susan’s Book Talk: Dara Horn’s All Other Nights

Okay, I’ve got to start talking about Dara Horn’s All Other Nights now, while it’s still fresh in my mind.

My book club read it last week, and if you know my book club, you know this means the book we’ve read probably has a Jewish theme to it.

Dara Horn, having won the Edward Lewis Wallant Award, the Reform Judaism Prize for Jewish Fiction and the National Jewish Book Awards’ First Time Author Award, is clearly the sort of author my book club salivates over.

Now, saying that, we read her first novel, In the Image. We didn’t love it. We were initially leery of this book, but then one of the women in book club spoke up and said she’d listened to the audio version and loved it.

That was all the rest of us needed.

We weren’t disappointed. All Other Nights is way more than the story of a soldier in the Civil War who’s sent on spy missions. It’s more than a work of historical fiction, and it’s more than a strong entry in the canon called Jewish Literature.

It’s a story, at its heart, about love. About the power of love, about how sometimes familial love isn’t enough to compensate for personal destruction, about how sometimes, love for another person trumps all else — even that stupid familial love.

But you know what? If you don’t think about these themes, you might miss them. That’s another way of saying they were subtly, masterfully done.

Go read it. Let me know what you think.

Look. Here’s a buy link via Powell’s.

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13 Mar

Susan Speaks: Become a Rock Star

I have, from time to time, mentioned Sue Lange. She’s one of the forces behind the Book View Cafe, an “author cooperative bringing fiction for free and for sale to the web” as they put it.

They do a lot of science fiction, fantasy, and speculative fiction. But that doesn’t stop me from wanting to be part. There are some real powerhouse names involved there.

Sue’s not merely the Book View Cafe woman. She’s a music lover with a sense of humor.

That’s why I want you guys to check out this page she posted at Amazon. I am in awe of her ability, her humor, and her inspiration. Like, dude, I SO wish I’d thought to do this…

Be prepared to laugh. And bring your air guitar.

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11 Mar

Mitchell Fiction: Peanut Butter Cups (Trevor’s Song era)

If you follow me on Facebook (and, at this point in time, you really should), you’d have seen my link to Edittorrent.

I had seen editor Theresa Stevens making a plea on Twitter for submissions for her setting series. So I wrote her a scene with Mitchell in it.

After MUCH tweaking — some based on the comment trail, some not — I give you the full scene.

“The things I do for Kerri,” Mitchell muttered as he reached for the door. He winced as it flung open; weighing nothing, it had slipped out of his fingers. He could hear Ma’s disapproving voice, telling him to be more careful. It was glass, which did break.

With a lunge, he grabbed the door — after it finished banging into the metal chair rail running the distance around the full-length store windows.

He glanced around the sidewalk, but thanks to his security dudes, he had the general vicinity to himself. Good thing; the band hardly needed rumors that The Great Mitchell Voss was beating up unsuspecting storefronts.

Turning around to carefully close the door behind him, he tried to look through it, as if seeing where he’d just come from would teach him something profound. Weird how he could only see himself in a clear glass door.

So far, this trip was turning into a total mind fuck. And then he turned around to look at the interior of the store.

He’d expected it to be more like The Cocoa Bean at home: sterile rows of glass grocery-store cases, the ones with half-dome fronts. Instead of seafood, the Cocoa Bean cases were loaded with truffles and bon-bons and bark and all that shit girls craved.

And the peanut butter cups. The ones Kerri went so bonkers for, the ones he’d been on a quest for in practically every city he’d been in since she’d discovered the handmade ones at the Cocoa Bean.

If this place had peanut butter cups, they weren’t going to be easy to find. There weren’t any of those cases he’d anticipated seeing. Nope. The place was full of tables. Round ones that’d seat two in a restaurant. Each had been covered by a colored tablecloth so bright, he wanted his sunglasses, and each had been stacked with various forms of chocolate. Every table had a theme and a flower pot set on a pedestal — every bit as gaudy as the damn tablecloths — holding a hard-to-read, hand-lettered sign. In colors that complimented the tablecloths.

He groaned. Deciphering what was what would take all day. He only had an hour, and that included time to get back to wherever it was they were playing that night.

“Can I help you?” A woman practically bounced from a hidden spot in the store. Her dyed black hair made a great contrast with everything else in the place; it was the only soothing thing he’d seen yet. Not even the brown of the chocolate managed to produce that effect.

Mitchell bit back a smile. He’d have never noticed something like that before he’d found his artist wife. “I need peanut butter cups,” he said.

The woman, dressed in a bright green blouse and white pants that positively glowed, beamed, revealing teeth so blinding, Mitchell’s hand reached for his sunglasses all on their own. He sighed in relief.

If the woman was phased, she didn’t show it. “Dark chocolate, milk chocolate, or white? Organic? Shade grown? Fair harvested? Free range?”

“Free range?” he repeated, wanting to ask how fucking stupid she thought he was. He held up a hand when she opened her mouth to answer. “I know. It’s a joke. Where are the dark and milk? And do you have samples? She’s particular.”

“Oh, for a particular lady?” The woman actually batted her eyelashes at him.

“Yes.” He thought about turning to go, about leaving. After all, this wild goose chase was something Kerri didn’t even know he was going on. She thought he’d headed out early to give an interview, a last-minute addition to an afternoon of making nice to the press before a concert promoter-baked dinner.

“Well, then, only the best for your lady,” the woman said, leaning close.

Mitchell forced a simpering smile. He’d seen this sort of flirtation too many times — and that was just in getting from the hotel room to the car that’d been waiting for him. “Yes,” he said. “Only the best for my wife.”

The woman pretended to draw back, as if his words had stung. But she moved a little bit faster, producing peanut butter cups from who-knew-where and slicing them in half for him to taste and standing silently as he took a bite of each, all the wind out of her sails.

Either it was inevitable or a total shock, but the cups were good. Damn good. The peanut butter was perfect — peanutty, smooth, melt-on-your-tongue. The milk chocolate was a bit too milky for him, but the dark was bitter yet round. They were so good, he felt bad about standing there like a rude-assed rock star with his sunglasses on.

He didn’t take them off.

He bought a dozen of the dark chocolate cups and was more careful with the glass door as he left. “The things I do for Kerri,” he muttered to Tony, who’d been pressed into action, keeping a few girls from storming the store.

The guard kept the fan girls at bay as Mitchell slid into the car and headed off to meet his wife, peanut butter cups in hand. He couldn’t wait to tell her about the store; she’d love the place. Probably even want to come back and see it for herself.

Just so she left him behind.

It’d be a bonus if she left the chocolate, too.

He smiled as the driver headed for the arena. Yeah. Like he’d done this only for Kerri.

If you’re visiting as part of Sample Sunday, welcome and please leave a comment. I’ll return your visit. Mitchell is a character featured in both Demo Tapes anthologies, as well as in Trevor’s Song. This moment in time parallels Trevor’s Song but doesn’t intersect or spoil the novel. Go here for all the buy links you could possibly need.

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08 Mar

Susan Speaks: One of my heroes is at it. Again

Now, you guys know me. You know I’m a HUGE Metallica fan. You know I consider the band to have written the soundtrack to my life. Hetfield’s lyrics continue to be my own personal pacifier… not that I suck on them or anything. That’s sorta gross and I never really liked the taste of paper, anyway. And even I am not stupid or desperate or anything enough to suck on my monitor.

Then again, try singing some Metallica lyrics. That’s a form of pacifier, right there. Man, those words feel good in my mouth.

Know what else feels good?

An article I found a month ago, from the Marin Journal. It seems my hero frontman bought this HUGE ranch a bunch of years ago. He donated “330 acres of the ranch at higher elevations to the Marin County Open Space District” and then there’s another donation: “440 acres of his adjacent 500-acre property called Rocking H 1 Ranch in a conservation easement he donated to the Open Space District.”

So… am I reading this right? My heavy metal hero has donated SEVEN HUNDRED SEVENTY ACRES to conservation???

Hot damn.

But wait. The man’s not done yet.

(do you believe this??? Hot damn.)

He now wants “to cluster 27 homes on acre lots” — and these aren’t mere shacks, either. Nope. “Aside from several larger lots, homes would be similar in size to those in the Westgate development, and would range from 3,100 to 4,900 square feet. The 1,800-square-foot moderate-income units, clustered in several buildings, would be built in an area near ranch housing and barns along Lucas Valley Road.”

WHEN CAN I MOVE???

I’ve long yearned to live out there, close to some family, away from others, but where bike riding is an everyday part of the culture (I adore my car but would gladly dump it for my Trek Pilot. Or my Specialized Hard Rock. Wish I could do that here, in fact.). I love the light in the Bay Area. Yes, the quality of the sunlight. I love that there’s no snow on the mountainous roads. I love that nights are cool and days are warm. I love that usually, you don’t need to have air conditioning and you can leave your windows open all the time. I love the vibe, the music, the artsy bohemian types, the history — Haight Ashbury, The Fillmore. I love that my amazingly talented high-tech husband could have his pick of high-tech jobs. I love Book Passage and brunch at the Dip Sea. I love, I love, I love…

(okay, I don’t love the weird taxes, the sky-high cost of gasoline, and some of the other nuts and bolts of living out there. I DO see bad and the good. I really do.)

Want something else to love? Check this, from the developer: “described the project as a “win-win for the community,” saying the bulk of the land would remain as open space, cutting valley development potential. Hetfield wants “to set the standard” for fossil-free development, Warner said, adding the rocker “takes the righteous approach.” ”

Read the whole thing for yourself.

Hot damn. I pick some good heroes.

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06 Mar

Susan’s Promo Tales! Read an E-book Week

Read an e-book Week 2011

Yep, it’s that time of year again.

Last year, I did pretty well. The end of the week was pre-empted by my leaving for the famed Writer’s Retreat at Confluence, PA. You guys may remember… we were flooded INTO a very lovely bed and breakfast, from which we watched the water rise. And then retreat again. What a way to watch a flood… it was phenomenal.

Last year, also, I only had two books out. I made both the Demo Tapes books free last year; I’m sure that made a difference in sales.

This year, they will be free again, if you’re looking to pick them up and add them to your e-book library.

However, Trevor’s Song, that novel of mine… I’m only discounting it 50%, to $1.50. I’ve got bills to pay, folks, and a website to support. I think spending $1.50 for up to three books is MORE than fair…

The only potential downer is that you’ll have to buy through Smashwords. If you don’t have an account there, what are you waiting for? There’s a TON of free stuff (most of which I can’t vouch for). I’ll be adding links to my friends as they report in with their links… be sure to check them out first. They are, after all, my friends. Which means that, due to the Commutative Property of Friends, any friend of mine is a friend of yours, too.

Susan’s Friends you should check out:
Thea Atkinson
KM Humphreys
Bitsy Bling Books
Sharon Cathcart
Darcia Helle
Libby Fischer Hillmann

Tania Tirraoro — Sweet Seduction
Allen Schatz — Game 7: Dead Ball

Al Boudreau decided to lower his price at Amazon, for you Kindle folk.

Stacy Juba decided to do it on her own terms:

Stacy Juba is offering a 99 cent special for her mystery/romantic suspense novel Twenty-Five Years Ago Today on Smashwords, where you can download the book into the format of your choice.Visit the book’s Smashwords page at http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/17652 and then type in this coupon code at checkout: BU97L.

Jason McIntyre is following my lead. Shed is free. On the Gathering Storm is half off. Two books for a buck fifty. NEW books, not used. Can’t beat that!

**You’ll notice that links to profile pages, not to the books themselves do not have the super-special affiliate code attached. The links to individual books, however, do. This means I may or may not make any money if you guys buy. Of course, I’d prefer to make a few cents…

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