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December 12, 2007
 Okay, okay, I’m not really a Tairen Soul. It would be wicked cool if I was, though!
I’m halfway through my friend C. L. Wilson’s series (because only 2 of 4 have hit the shelves) and firmly in love with the hero’s right hand man Bel. (If you also love him, back off. He’s mine.)
 I finally got around to updating my Books Read in 2007 list on the right. I think. It’s been so long since my last update, I’m sure I missed some of them.
But I couldn’t miss hanging out with C. L. Wilson in person this weekend at the TARA holiday party! Here’s the Tairen queen and myself:
 I had a blast hanging out with all my TARA sisters and brothers. You can read more about our party shenanigans over at Karen Lingefelt’s blog, or about our gift exchange over at Vicki Lane’s blog.
YOUR TURN: What did you do this weekend? Are you gearing up for the holiday season or do you wish it would pass you by? If you exchange presents this time of year, how are you doing on your list?
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September 21, 2007
I am thrilled, thrilled, thrilled to announce that my friend Karen Rose just hit the New York Times best seller list with her latest release, Die For Me.

Die For Me totally rocked (as does Karen!) and in honor of her success, I’d like to give away an autographed copy on Good Karma Tuesday.
Just comment on this post, and you will be entered to win!
P.S. I’m over at Romantic Inks today–come say hi!
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August 3, 2007
Right after the new year, my agent Lauren Abramo posted a blog called 10 Things Every Aspiring Author Should Try This Year over on the Dystel & Goderich blog site.
She had some great advice, and I decided to run through her top 10 list to see how I compared. In case you’d like to do the same, please check out the link where she goes into detail on each of the line items I mention below.
1. Write an amazing query letter. PASS
I did, I did! *g
Getting agent representation was one of my top career goals for this year (we can peek at the rest of them some other time) and I pursued it with single-minded determination. (*pause while I see if anyone buys the latter portion of that statement*) Okay, maybe not single-minded. I also had to work and read and write and angst over various aspects of my life.
But getting an agent was a top goal and I made it a point to do my best to see that happen. (In case you missed it, my post on how I rose from the slush is over on the Manuscript Mavens blog.)
2. Read Publisher’s Weekly, industry blogs, and the New York Times Book Review. FAIL
But, I bookmarked those sites this very day, and will make a concerted effort to hit them at least once in a while.
I maybe didn’t *completely* fail this item, as I do read other industry blogs, such as the D&G blog, Miss Snark, various other agent/editor/library/bookseller blogs, and of course the blogs of my writer pals, whether published or not. (Does that get me half a point?)
3. Head down to a bookstore or surf over to one online and check out what’s going on in your category. PASS
I actually do pay close attention to this. Not just in browsing, but I regularly quiz my friends on things they’ve read or new titles/authors they’ve heard of. I discovered Stephanie Rowe thanks to Maven Darcy, Sherry Thomas thanks to my CP Kel, Scott Westerfeld thanks to my pal Diana, Elizabeth Hoyt thanks to Maven Lacey, Orson Scott Card thanks to my brother Rob, Stephanie Meyer thanks to Dionne Galace, Colleen Gleason thanks to her t-shirt at last year’s national, and so on.
Not all of those are representative of my genre per se, but every time I read a popular and/or well written and/or good book, I learn something, either about craft, or about what readers want. (Or what publishers think readers want.)
4. Attend a writers’ conference. PASS
In fact, I attended not one but three writers’ conferences. The Miami Fun in the Sun conference in February, the STAR Super Saturday conference in May, and the RWA National conference in July.
My primary goal at all three of these conferences was pitching to agents (see line item #1 above) and scored a request from almost every agent I pitched to. How ironic that I actually ended up scoring representation via slush pile???
5. Stop over thinking. FAIL
I freaked out so many times this year. I don’t know why. I am usually a ridiculously calm, easy going person (and still am, even in the bizarrest or most dangerous of situations) but for some reason, this year I was hyper-sensitive about my writing career, or lack thereof.
I think I felt like I needed to achieve something that unequivocally proved forward momentum, in order to justify all the time and blood and heartache spent writing, critiquing, revising, plotstorming, driving/flying to conferences, mailing out 400 page manuscripts, etc.
This is not a cheap or easy process, and I came reeeeally close one time to making a Bad Mistake, for which I am now ever grateful I didn’t pursue. I’m not going to go into details on that, as I don’t want to burn any bridges and may pursue that particular path at some point in the future, but for now my current goals lie in agent representation (check!) and print publication (…still waiting.)
6. Write something, anything——daily or weekly or whenever you can fit it in your schedule. PASS
Well, pass mostly. (Another half point?)
I tumbled off the writing wagon about a month ago when I was in Costa Rica, and for one reason or another never got back on with that particular WIP. I have been blogging almost every day, and commenting regularly on other people’s blogs, and critiquing my CP’s fabulous manuscripts (shout out to Lacey and Carrie, whose stories rock, and to Darcy, whose story is in my Inbox as I type, and I simply can’t wait to dive in!) and attending the national conference, and pursuing agent representation, etc, so it’s not like I’ve been ignoring my career.
I’ll get my very first revision letter sometime next week, and from that moment on, it’ll be full steam ahead on that project until it’s polished enough to be shopped in NYC. Not sure that counts as “writing” per se, but I’m counting it as “being a writer”.
7. Be honest with yourself. PASS
Well, pass mostly. (Yet another half point. *sigh*)
Lauren’s main point with this was to be honest with yourself about the industry and your chances in it. If your book sucks, know this, shelve it, and write something else. If your book rocks, but is unsalable, know this, shelve it, and write something else. If your book is totally publishable, and you think you will retire on your advance money, check out Brenda Hiatt’s Show Me The Money breakdown and get thee a reality check.
I’ve been really honest about myself with all of these things (which is why I shelved my first two stories and they will soon be disappearing from my writer web site) but the thing I’ve maybe not been so honest with myself on is the amount of time all of this takes, and the fact that it may never happen, agent representation or not.
Although I’ve been writing off and on my whole life, I’ve been seriously pursuing publication for much less time than most of my writing pals, and yet I feel this horrendous pressure to hurry up and make something of myself already. Getting an agent totally took the edge off of that one, and I’m feeling myself again.
For now.
If years go by and I’m still in the same boat, no doubt those old ugly feelings will creep back in, and I’ll just have to remind myself yet again that there are no guarantees in this business, regardless of how well you may write or how awesome your story/characters/high concept may be. All we can do is do our best and keep trying.
8. Calm down. FAIL
As mentioned in line item #5, I went from Calm Erica to Roller Coaster Erica over the last 2-5 months. Thankfully, my CPs and writer pals have no problem with fish-slapping me back to normalcy whenever insanity creeps in. As mentioned before, I’m hoping I’m over that and can get back to my normal self very soon. (In my defense, my personal life has been less than calm between February and now, which no doubt leaked into my professional life.)
9. Find your place to write. PASS
I bought a new house (new to me, anyway *g) and converted a spare bedroom into an office. I had an office room in my apartment previously, but it was shared with my boyfriend, and was not All Mine. No more. I now have a room to call my own, with a computer and desk and bookshelves and filing cabinets and a love seat slash hide-a-bed and I can close the door and stow away inside any time I please. (Ah, bliss!)
10. Read. PASS
As exemplified in the thumbnail cover links to the right of this post, I have been reading like crazy. As of today, total book count for this year is 57, which means I’ve been reading almost two per week. The books range from 200 pages to 600+ pages, from non-fiction craft books to literary fiction to popular novels, from books read to better ground myself in a particular genre to books read for pleasure, but all in all, I’ve been reading, and plan to continue doing so.
Every book I read helps me to be a better writer. If I enjoy a book (or an aspect of a book), I ask myself why, and if I can identify that magic spark, perhaps I can put my own spin on it in my own writing. If I do not enjoy a book, I try to analyze where it went wrong for me, so that I don’t make that same mistake myself.
Looks like I scored a 6.5 (for the record, Lauren said nothing about scoring your progress on her original blog post–I’m making it up because I grew up a Cosmo girl at heart and can’t resist a good quiz) out of a possible 10. But the year is not yet over! I still have time to ground myself more in the industry, calm my crazy butt down, and write, write, write!
YOUR TURN: Where you at? Have you done (or are you doing) any of the items on this list? Do you have suggestions of your own for other aspiring authors? Inquiring Ericas want to know!
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June 17, 2007
A big THANK YOU goes out to my recent guest bloggers!
Just in case you missed the fun, here are the links:
ROBERT WALKER Robert W Walker, a graduate of Northwestern University, is the author of forty-three novels, including the acclaimed Instinct Series with FBI Medical Examiner Dr. Jessica Coran, and the Edge Series featuring Texas Cherokee Detective Lucas Stonecoat and psychiatrist Meredyth Sanger. Click Here for the Interview Click Here for his Web Site Click Here for his Blog Site
JULIA BUCKLEY Julia Buckley made her imprint on the mystery scene last year with THE DARK BACKWARD. This summer she launches a new humorous mystery series with her first book, MADELINE MANN, which Kirkus Reviews calls a “bright debut.” Click Here for the Interview Click Here for her Web Site Click Here for her Blog Site
CYNTHIA REESE Author, mom, wife, and a full-time workin’ woman at her dayjob, Cynthia writes for Harlequin Superromance. Her first book, THE BABY WAIT, was on the shelves in April 2007. Click Here for the Interview Click Here for her Web Site Click Here for her Blog Site
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June 14, 2007
 I first “met” Rob when I won a critique on an auction. At the time when I bid on the auction, I was finishing Witness, had just joined Mystery Writers of America, and thought I’d be pursuing a career in the suspense genre. By the time the auction ended, I was on to greener pastures–namely Touched and subsequently Trevor & the Tooth Fairy–the latter of which I ended up sending him. Like Julia, Rob had some great feedback and didn’t bat an eye about receiving a wacky Nether-Netherland romp instead of a suspense plot. (Or, if he did bat an eye, he did so on the other side of the fiberoptics cable, so we’ll never know.)
Here is a more formal blurb about Rob: Robert W Walker, a graduate of Northwestern University, is the author of forty-three novels, including the acclaimed Instinct Series with FBI Medical Examiner Dr. Jessica Coran, and the Edge Series featuring Texas Cherokee Detective Lucas Stonecoat and psychiatrist Meredyth Sanger. He recently published the spontaneous combustion horror novel, Fire & Flesh, under the name Evan Kingsbury. City for Ransom is a historical thriller with all the atmosphere of turn of the century Chicago. Robert was born in Corinth, Mississippi, and currently resides in Chicago, IL. In between teaching, lecturing, and book touring, Robert is busy tackling his next novel. Web site
He has graciously agreed to come and answer all your burning questions (and, as always, one lucky question-asker will receive something fun and fabulous via USPS!) so here’s a chance to get some great answers.
Your Turn: Ask away! Questions about writing? Publishing? Promoting? Research? Tackling different angles of the same genre? The Call? Writing a series? Please post your questions in the comments!
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May 23, 2007
This past weekend, I went to the Super Saturday Writing Conference put on by the STAR chapter (Space coasT Authors of Romance) in Melbourne, FL. Here are 13 things I did/saw/learned/experienced:
- Melbourne is underrated. For a town few non-Floridians have ever heard of, there was all manner of food, shopping, hotels, etc. We (Kel, Jean, Cheryl, Elissa & I) breakfasted beforehand and ate lunch at the hotel. Kel and I hit Uno’s Pizzeria for dinner after the booksigning before we headed home.
- The STAR chapter opens their meetings with a critique circle. This was a neat idea. There is only one critique slot per meeting, and the member must sign up in advance (and be a member for at least 6 months to be eligible.) Once a member has secured a spot, they send one chapter to the group, who then prints a copy to bring to the meeting. At the meeting, the writer reads the chapter aloud (other members follow along on their printed document, making anonymous critiques as they go) and afterward anyone who so chooses can respond aloud with feedback. Not only is this good for critiquing, at least one member has taken advantage of this opportunity as a plotting session. (From what I understand, the Chicago chapter has an active critique group as well, although I believe that’s seperate from their meetings.)
- The Knight Agency has sold a gazillion books. (Okay, maybe the exact number was something like 700 and change, but it seemed like gazillion.)
- I met Deidre Knight, who is sharp and engaging. She did a workshop, a Q&A panel, took pitches, and signed her book at the booksigning afterward.
- She also answered my burning questions about how auctions work (irrelevant for me at this moment, as I’m not agented, nor are any editors looking at my work, but hey I was curious) and I learned that “auction” is actually a misnomer, as the author is not obligated to go with the highest bidder. The “whole package” is taken into account.
- I met Elaine Spencer, who is friendly, well put together, knowledgeable and confident. Although she is the newest agent at TKA, she impressed all of us with her bearing and forthrightness. (Those aren’t the words I meant to use, but I’ve been critting Regency all day, and “bearing” and “forthrightness” is what came out. If I think of more modern adjectives, I’ll rephrase. You get me, though. Elaine is cool.)
- Elaine did a workshop, a Q&A panel, took pitches, and chatted with me for a minute about our mutual friend Diana. She also did something neat: during her pitch sessions, she jotted down a note when a writer did something memorable (in a positive way *g) and then during her workshop, she went down the list and shared all her great feedback.
- I’ve experienced this myself, but I thought I’d pass this along in case you’ve never heard this: ’tis better to know your story well enough to go into a pitch session ready to chat, rather than to go into a pitch session clutching notecards and reading a pre-written blurb without making eye-contact, etc. There’s no way an agent can remember all the stories they hear pitched–but if you play your cards right (ar, ar, since you shouldn’t *have* any cards) they might remember YOU.
- Deidre has several books out, including: Parallel Seduction, Parallel Heat, and Parallel Attraction. While some have expressed concern that being an author and an agent might cause conflicts of interest, Deidre has learned so much from being on the author side of the fence that she is now an even more formidable agent than ever.
- Roxanne St. Clair was also at the booksigning (and my lunch table–Rocki is so fun!!) and has a gazillion books in print, two novellas of which are up for the RITAs: I’ll Be Home For Christmas: You Can Count On Me and Tis the Silly Season: A Nascar Holiday.
- Crap, three more things? This Thursday Thirteen thing is crazy. Okay. I can do it. Um… There’s no highway rest stops between Tampa and Melbourne. (What? TMI?)
- Books A Million (where the booksigning took place), like Barnes & Noble, charges customers for their rewards program. (Unlike my local Borders, who is constantly sending me coupons via email and prints one out on every receipt.) Naturally, almost every booksigning I’ve ever been to has been at either Barnes & Noble or Books A Million. *sigh*
- On that topic, here’s a thought: Couldn’t writers groups/chapters/conferences stage book signings at independent bookseller locations rather than national chains? Help support the little guys? What do you think? Is that idea good/bad/stupid/genius?
P.S. Can I get a squee for my pal Annie who made an awesome book deal?
P.P.S. Also, Barnes & Noble did away with their free online classes and replaced them with book clubs. I am not averse to book clubs, but I sorely miss the free online classes. Am I alone on this one? Or did any of you ever check out one or more?
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May 15, 2007
First, CONTEST WINNERS. Yes, plural! The commenters were split between those who wrote/read tortured heroes and those who did not. So, I am pleased to announce not one but two random winners today!
TORTURED WINNER: B.E. Sanderson NON-TORTURED WINNER: Kimber An
Congratulations! Please email me (erica [at] ericaridley.com) with your address and choice of free book. Keep the good karma rolling! =)
Next, to answer some burning questions.
Post: Impending Wedding Beverley asks: Why do you call your intended MONKEYBOY??
Answer: Because he luuuurves monkeys, ever since he was a wee boy on his first visit to Busch Gardens and a cheeky little spider monkey reached out through the bars and slapped him on the face. To this day, even the mere image of a monkey will cause him to burst into uncontrollable laughter. He especially enjoyed Lancelot Link: Secret Chimp, as you might imagine.
Bill Clark asks: Why does one’s writing always look so much better when someone else quotes it in italics?
Answer: I don’t think it’s the italics so much as having something we write impact someone so much that they do quote it. How great of a feeling is that? (For the curious, I quoted a section of this post from Bill’s blog)
Post: Contests Rashenbo asks: I’ve got to admit.. it’s fun and exciting to win… well, anything – isn’t it?
Answer: I 100% agree! (Hence the wild winning going on this morning. I couldn’t seem to pick just one!)
Post: Dinner Party Vicki asks: So what is double secret probation??
Answer: Actually, I don’t know! I thought Kel would respond with something having to do with her vampire neighbors. (Ha! Bet you thought I was just being funny when I said she might’ve been bitten by the vampire neighbors–not so!)
Post: Poetry Monday Susan Helene Gottfried asks: I want to know the backstory to this!
Answer: That particular burst of teenage angst came from being in lurve with a boy who proclaimed his devotion, became my center of gravity for a heady year and a half, and then proceeded to casually mention he was picking up and leaving town (state, actually), which spawned a horrible clingy-denial moment, followed by me leaving state, albeit in the opposite direction. Angst, I tell you. Angst. *g
If you have any other questions (burning or otherwise) please leave ‘em in the comments… Also, if you noticed I added pix of the books I’ve read so far in 2007 and have comments on any of the titles or authors, please comment about that, too–I love to dish about books! =)
Your turn: Give a gift or do something nice lately? (If not, why not?! Maybe we should have Good Karma Tuesdays. *g) Win anything lately? Hear any good news? What are you reading right now? Have you read anything on my list or by those authors? Spill!
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May 14, 2007
Diana came to my local chapter meeting on Saturday to give two workshops: one on secondary characters and sub plots (and how not to let either take over your story) and one on writing for the YA (Young Adult) marketplace.
Your turn: Have you been to any workshops or chapter meetings lately or participated in any informative loops or message boards? I’m all ears! =)
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May 12, 2007
Just a short post to say an entertaining evening was had by all last night. It was great to see my friend Diana Peterfreund again.
My CPs Amanda and Kelly were also in attendance, although Kelly somehow managed to avoid being caught on film.
(Was she perhaps bitten by one of her vampire neighbors? Could she have become an immortal siren incapable of being captured by the camera?!)
Stay tuned for these and other fascinating musings…
Plus: I will be back Monday to regale you with my impressions of this weekend’s writer workshop on subplots, secondary characters, and Young Adult (YA) literature (by Diana for the TARA RWA meeting. Great stuff, people!
Photo 1: Diana and I (sorry it’s blurry–our combined beauty must be too powerful for the camera to behold *g)
Photo 2: Diana and I making strange faces. I blame the sangría.
Photo 3: ‘Manda and I (awww, aren’t we ‘dorable??)
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May 4, 2007
I promised you a confession, and so here it is: Until this morning, I have not written a single word since April 26th. Ack! How did this happen? I was so good about writing one scene every day!
Well, until April 26 when my creative juices sputtered and died a quarter of the way through Scene 22. The- villain- who- is- really- an- antagonist had just arrived to take the heroine out for dessert (I know, super-villainous, right? Just give him time–he has an Evil Plan) and she took one look at his car and said no way, I’m not getting in it. And then we both stalled out.
If I had her climb up into the passenger seat, I had to show the ride to the cafe. How would she react? How would he react? What would they talk about? Normally, these aren’t issues for me. Dialogue is typically my strong suit. I don’t even think about it–I just write down what the characters are saying in my head, as though I were eavesdropping. Sometimes I can’t even keep up with myself (that’s the excuse I give for first drafts without any hint of stage direction or scene setting) and fill the pages with screenplay-like conversation. Not today.
Part of it was because one of my CPs had looked at a prior scene (rife with fantabulous dialogue, if I do say so myself) and asked what the point of the scene was (outside of the fantabulous dialogue, which cannot exist merely to be fantabulous.) And then I had an anxiety attack, wherein I wondered what the point was of any of my scenes and began to doubt my entire plot in general. And then I stopped writing. None of this is my CP’s fault–she asked a perfectly valid question (after all, every scene should matter, or what’s the point?) and I allowed myself to use it as an excuse to procrastinate and wallow in a tequila bottle of depression. But not for long–I’m usually not very good at being depressed for more than a few hours. (I have this hideous, naturally sunny disposition. Sickening.)
And besides, the very next day, I was leaving on a jet plane to scope out sites for my wedding! Yay! No time to be depressed (or to write, I told myself) and I grabbed a book and sailed out the door for the airport.
The book I grabbed was Under The Rose, by Diana Peterfreund–the sequel to Secret Society Girl. I suppose I could’ve attempted to write a few words on the plane once we’d reached a high enough altitude that electronic devices were allowed, but by that point I’d devoured the first third of the book and didn’t put it down until we landed and I’d read the last page. Good stuff, people. Cue white font and cryptic acronyms, as this is an ARC and you have to wait until June to buy the real deal: Amy is as Amy-like and fun as ever! My two favorite characters who keep crossing her path continue to be GHP and P(J), the former of which is hot in an I’m- a- bad- boy- and- I- like- it- that- way sort of way (which gets me every time, *purr*) and the latter of which is so adamant about his antagonism that I spent both books on tenterhooks waiting for him to slam Miss A against a wall and kiss her senseless (and I’m not going to say whether or not this finally took place, just that it’s something I have secretly wanted to see him do from the moment he exploded on screen in the first book–what’s that say about me? That I am absolutely ridiculous over bad boys? I can’t help it! Bring on book 3!) [End white text.]
The wedding-planning weekend was a whirlwind of activity (and if you are truly interested in that, maybe I’ll dish more details in a seperate post?) and then I was back home late Monday night, to be greeted by a Priority Mail box stuffed with three books from my CP Darcy. The first was Must Love Dragons by Stephanie Rowe, which Darcy recommended, knowing how much I dig the paranormal romcom scene. (Exhibits A & B: TATTF and DATD.) This book was so unutterably fabulous that I was instantly reminded of my short-lived writing depression, and I picked right back up where I left off, this time with an inferiority complex to keep me company at night. Stephanie’s book was fun! silly! crazy! witty! hot! published! and full of zany Otherworld characters much like mine! How could I ever compare??? Well, I decided I couldn’t compare, and so I gave up trying to compare, and decided to spend the rest of my free time reading the other two books: The Raven Prince and The Leopard Prince, both by Elizabeth Hoyt.
These books were equally fabulous but luckily in a different genre (non-paranormal historical) so I didn’t suffer quite the same anxieties as with the Stephanie Rowe book. Actually, they made me feel a bit better about DATD, as one of the sticking points I was having was that my heroine, not being privy to the small detail of my hero being a demon from hell, had no strong external reason not to pursue him, provided that they keep the relationship on the downlow. Elizabeth Hoyt’s heroines, I am happy to say, had no compunctions about keeping their hands off the heroes, and their indulgence did not harm the storyline in any way. Last night in chat, Darcy pointed out (that Darcy! Chock full of good stuff, she is!) that although my heroine may not have a strong external reason not to knock boots with the hero, she has an exceptionally strong internal reason, and that it wouldn’t take much to play up that angle. (She also said, “Writing is useful.” Pithy, and to the point. Put it on a Post-it and stick it on your monitor.)
So armed with renewed self-confidence, I sat down at the keyboard this morning and finished that pesky Scene 22. Not only do I have my writing groove back, I cannot wait for Scene 23, in which our hero stumbles across the post-cheesecake duo and demon magic chaos ensues.
Enough about me… How was your week? Did you stay on the writing wagon? Make much progress in your WIP? Read any good books? Do tell!  
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