Posts Tagged ‘editing’

Of Dust Devils and Editors…

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

There’s a whirlwind in my life, kicking up the dust and scattering bits of notes and paper and paper cups and lunch wrappers everywhere.

Yeah, that’s the dust devil. He lives here now, I assume, since I heard him snoring in the closet on Friday night…or should I say, early Saturday morning. I’ve known drunks that can stumble through a house with less noise than that devil. Sure, there were things flying all over the living room and kitchen as he made his way to the closet, but damn… maybe it was all the beer bottles he’d picked up across the way.

Anyway, metaphorically speaking of course, my life has become barely constrained chaos in the last months and I want to apologize for the lack of postings about nothing, the lack of comments on others’ blogs (I miss ya’ll… :( ) and lack of twitter/facebook/myspace/yourspace/goodreads/meez/blah blah blah presence.

I’m currently formatting CM for e-book mode, wrapping up things on Church Street, doing business end (heehee I said end) work, promotions, and editing for two clients besides. I’ve picked up two other clients in the design/editing arenas but thankfully those are later in the year. Lastly, I’ve been reading the initial submissions for both Belfire Press and TNBP.

Somewhere in there I went to the bathroom and made another pot of coffee or fifty.

I have taken a few breaks lately to stop by Pogo, and the crazy guys from Skullvines Press’ new forum and occasionally stop by Choate Road and Graveside Tales as well. The problem is, I’m doing mostly promotions when I do, and missing out on whatever’s going on.

A blanket congratulations to everyone with accepted stories or novels in the last two months, and a blanket hug and better luck next time to those who had stories rejected. Big blanket thank-yous to people that bought Courting Morpheus from whatever venue you chose to do so, and thanks again to those who had ordered the hardcover but were disappointed because we canceled it. I still hope the offer was good enough to assuage some of the disappointment!

Speaking of Courting Morpheus – thank you to Amy Grech who gave us a five-star rating at Goodreads! *happydance*

Also, somewhere in there I became an official auntie, and I’m horrified to see I didn’t mention it here. Someday, Bella will have to forgive me… My youngest brother, Jordan (he of the masterful PR and marketing for Belfire/TNBP) and his friend Ashley had a baby girl, Isabella Marie, in February. While on his way to see his new daughter, Jordan was in a really, really bad car accident – but stubborn youngster that he is, he signed himself out of the hospital at the first opportunity, and continued on to see Bella. He’s doing physio-therapy twice a week and sees the neuro-doc in May. Hopefully his “hump” arm will get near-full function again, if not full. BTW – he’d meant to say gimp arm, not hump arm, and now it’s kinda stuck.

I am working through the mountain of slush reading, and edits for clients, so while all that is going on, I will be pretty quiet. Hope ya’ll understand, and I know you will – I caught up some on blogs and I know most of you are in just about the same situations! o_O

It must be spring…

Trip Like I Do

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

The last several weeks I’ve been falling into bed, mentally and physically exhausted, sometime around 4 AM. During the week, I get up at 7:15 to wake the girls up, but since mid-March, I’ve been heading back to the covers for another hour before starting the day.

I power nap sometime in the late afternoon or evening, depending on how involved I am with whatever my tasks are for the day. I figure that 20 minutes or so is what keeps me going until the early morning hours since I don’t generally drink caffeine after 8 PM anymore.

So, about 4 hours of sleep out of what I should be getting (8-ish). In those hours, I visit all kinds of strange places, mostly New Bedlam related, and see all kinds of strange things. No drugs I’ve ever taken have given me such amazing, vivid and totally trippy dreams like total exhaustion gives me. For instance, this past Tuesday, I dreamt (quiet, you – I know the more accepted form is dreamed) I was in the poolhouse in the town where my aunt and cousins used to live, and I was scrubbing my face for some reason. I was looking in the mirror, trying to take care of a blemish (ZIT!) and out popped a superworm, which then morphed into what looked like a near-skeletal cross between an amboin cleaner shrimp and an albino scorpion with buggy black eyes.

Thursday night I dreamt Care really did have a horde of zombies on hand to battle the world with, and she kept trying to feed the cats to them. They were eating them, yes, but it seemed our five cats kept re-spawning in a box next to Care’s legs.

Last night I dreamt I was in that house* again, trying to find someone. Someone kept calling from the room behind the panels and I wouldn’t make the trek through the secret door and across the scary people, so I was going room to room, trying to find another way. Someone needs to stay out of my dreams, or someone’s going to get his ass kicked next time I see him. x-P

In other words, I need to start scheduling time to go back to the house in New Bedlam and let the nightmares loose for a while. :-/ The block is shifting, so I expect I’ll soon be pounding the keys again. And of course, every time the block shifts, I want to go and catch up on forums and whatnot.

Today I went to check in on the other WriYe participants, only to discover that my account has been deleted. When I dug into the reason, I found out they’d decided to start removing people that don’t appear on the forums at least once every two weeks, or at least often enough to know that they’re in danger of being deleted. I don’t go to the forums more than once every two months or so. I have a zillion other things going on, but I almost always make sure I send in my verification files on time. If I miss one period, I wait for the next. But now, actually doing the writing no longer counts as enough to participate, you need to be on the forums as well.

I just don’t have time to play those games. I have novels brewing, I have a company and magazine to run, I have family and friends. If that means I can’t officially participate in a NaNo off-shoot, oh well. I can have someone else verify my word count. I will miss touching base with some of the other folks, but I won’t miss the attitudes or the games. To be brutally honest, I think the solid friends I made there have already skipped off to greener pastures (at least, none of them have mentioned WriYe in two years), and I was basically just sticking around for the challenge, and the verification.

No big loss. If I add that fifteen minutes or so, every two months to my sleep schedule, I’ll actually get another hour and a half over the next year!

By the way, check out the new spotlight author and novel at Belfire Press!

* That house appears in a lot of my dreams, and has done for a good nine, ten years. I was once told it was me, working through issues to grow as a person. I’ve written about it here before, and it is a HUGE part of my story Days, Hours, Minutes, Seconds. I think there’s a room for every story, and a trip through the house to get there.

The Obligatory Whiplash Post

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

New Bedlam New Year

2009 had amazing ups and downs for me, like a giant roller-coaster. I know it was like that for many others in the publishing world as well, from writers to editors right down to the very publishers themselves.

It’s been a long work-filled year, sometimes enjoyable, definitely exciting and often troubling. The new friends I’ve made have been – for the most part – a solid bunch, letting me help when I could, helping me when they could and just being an all around great bunch of people. They’ve made my year as much as Belfire has.

I spent the first four months of the year trying to tell people something was wrong, very wrong, with (former employer) and the way it was being run. No one would listen until they experienced it themselves, which is how life is, I know. That’s fine. I left, most of them are still there, unfortunately. I’m much the happier now for it, and I’ve added all those experiences and bad practices into the list of things not to do with Belfire. And I hope, oh how I hope, those people still there can get out without too much damage to their talent, their names, and their careers.

To counter the unhappiness and helplessness I felt then, I worked with a close friend on getting The New Bedlam Project realized. When his financing was secured, I asked Louise Bohmer, Brandon Layng and Jeff Parish to come along and play in the dark streets and shadowy corners. We launched April 1st, and have been hopping ever since.

I was about to pack it in, except for TNBP, back then (thank you, former employer) when Doc Pus from Library of the Living Dead came along and accepted one of my stories, then hired me to do a cover for one of the books. The work kept coming, and has kept me busy ever since.

Freelancing, both design and editing, has been keeping me hopping as well. Sadly, I’ve learned one must always have a contract, either via email or better yet a signed and witnessed document – even amongst ‘friends.’ I’m less likely to help out on something if it means it’ll cut into my paying work, even to build a ‘name.’ Unfortunately two very stupid and irresponsible mistakes on my part have led to this decision.

I had all of my finished horror shorts accepted. All of them (trust me, you’re not as shocked as I am). I’ve regretted only one acceptance/contract since then, but I’m waiting it out. I re-edited and re-submitted my dark fantasy erotica tale, Fire & Ice, in hopes of having it placed with the publisher as the first in a series.

As I type this, I have four submissions out awaiting word. One of those has a hold on the story while final decisions are made. Only one of the acceptances of the year has been published so far – and that company folded and ran overnight, so no one can buy copies of the mag anyway. My Necrotic Tissue acceptance is about to land in the laps of a lot of people, as issue #9 is released. I am assured that the projects from Library of Horror/Library of the Living Dead are still viable, whereas I have just over two weeks for word on that other one, and once the contract has run out, I’ll tweak and get it out there again.

Courting Morpheus went out to a publisher who signed a contract with us, but let it run out due to…whatever. It was that and holding an amazing novel in my hands, one that I tingled over, squee’d over and had to have, that brought Belfire forward two months. I wasn’t going to make the announcement about the company until tonight, but I had to go with it. I was just far too excited to wait.

I finished NaNoWriYe. With almost 20k to spare on my goal, changed a while back (July I think?) from 150 to 100. I don’t know if I ever changed it with the WriYe bunch, officially, but for here at least, I’ve done it. I probably wouldn’t have changed it, had I known exactly how much I’d be writing etc. this past month.

It’s just been (insert sigh here) an amazing year, ups and downs and all.

Tonight, as I raise my glass to the New Year ahead, make my goals and vow as ever to keep them, I’ll be thinking of one young man I have had the privilege to share a ToC with, to work with, to be friends with. He is the strongest, most amazing guy… going through hell just to survive. Waiting for a liver transplant, at the top of the list now, WD Prescott has a flame that needs to keep burning. The talent he has in his little finger far surpasses that of so many others. He is meant for something bigger, something greater. Something wonderful. 2010 is going to be Will’s year.

We’re thinking of you, Will – fingers crossed and candles lit!