May 17, 2007

Bologna

Filed under: Bad Blood,Bologna — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 7:03 pm

At the end of April I visited the Bologna Children’s Books Fair. This event if primarily for publishers to agree foreign rights with other companies. Not many authors attend but I’ve been going every now and then ever since I first started writing professionally – this was my fourth Bologna and my mother’s eighth.

We shared a room in a hotel convenient for the station and the bus to the fair and had meetings during the day with our various publishers, colleagues, agents and friends. The fair takes place in a convention centre on the outskirts of the city and occupies several large halls. In addition to stalls for every major publisher in Europe and the US there are exhibits of illustrations, talks, awards and parties.

During the fair I was hosted by various publishing companies including Frances Lincoln (publishers of Lines in the Sand and Arena (German publishers of Hex). I took a lot of photographs using my new digital camera – enough that I really think I should get some kind of Flicker account or similar photo uploading facility.

One of the most useful aspects of Bologna for me is the opportunity to see what publishers are promoting, how and why. Philip Pullman’s legend continues to loom large with the forthcoming film of His Dark Materials and although I didn’t see Philip at the fair we ran into him quite randomly on the train back from Florence. Random House were making a big thing of the sequel to Stargirl across their stand but, try as I might, I couldn’t determine what the title was. I saw a lot of interesting looking Gothic fantasies and an awful lot of princess-themed stories of one kind or another. My mother is promoting her new Grace title – Princess Grace, a subversive take on the idea of being a Princess – and was keen for us to spot all things pink and princessy. But spotting a stall without its pink princesses would have been a tougher challenge.

The greatest pleasure came from spotting the cover of Bad Blood prominently adorning the OUP stand (see left and on my photos page) and later attending the OUP party, to celebrate their centenary of children’s publishing, and having various people tell me how much they enjoyed the book. Everyone who’s read it so far has found it compelling and frightening in equal measure and we’re all looking forward to publication day.

After the fair a number of the attendees traditionally take a few days holiday in Venice or Florence – my father came to join my mother and me in Florence for a couple of days. We visited the Bargello museum, the Boboli gardens and various other impressive cultural edifices. But we also found time to stroll the streetmarkets and successively evaded a pair of thieves who targetted us while we bought shoes. Escaping with shoes and existing possessions intact, my parents treated me to several fine meals and I bought Italian flag pasta and Grisbi biscuits to take home for family and colleagues.

Sadly England has been dismally rainy ever since but Italy was in the high seventies when we visisted and I’m still carrying the high of the sunshine, fine company and enthusiastic publishers.

January 2, 2007

Happy new year

Filed under: Uncategorized — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 12:14 pm

Happy new year to everyone. I spent Christmas mostly with family and most of that time eating. Mmm, Christmas food. My mother makes the most fantastic hazelnut roast for us veggies and it wouldn’t be Christmas without it.

This year I plan to submit another contemporary novel, another horror novel and my first adult novel. I also want to try and get at least one book published through print-on-demand, because it’s an excellent way of getting something published that wouldn’t normally get seen. I even have something that never found a publisher although I was very proud of it and it would be nice to see it in print. I’m also planning to get other authors on board an edited collection I’d like to do (still very secret so I’m not announcing the title yet.)

Revisions to Bad Blood should be finished soon and that comes out this autumn. I also want to write another Super Zeroes book, so stay tuned for more news about that.

I am also determined to escape the clutches of uk2net and remove once and for all their banner over my website. That, I think, will be new years resolution number one.

December 1, 2006

It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas

Filed under: Uncategorized — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 4:30 pm

Years seem to go by faster as you get older and come February 2007 I will be passing the Rubicon of 30. But first there is Christmas and I must do all those Christmassy things like making lists, buying presents, putting up the decorations and planning parties.

I have less time than usual this year because in addition to writing I have a part-time job working at a local university. So I’m not sure when everything’s going to get done by. Not to mention the Armadillo that will need to be finished soon and some writing projects that need to be turned into official submissions. I’m actually not under contract at the moment for the first time in years, which is curiously liberating and yet makes me feel that the pressure is on to make sure that the next book I write is as good as the one I’ve just finished.

For those not yet in the know, that’s Bad Blood, forthcoming from OUP in 2007. I’m incredibly pleased with it and with myself. I feel as if my writing has reached a new level, but this makes it all the more difficult to decide where to direct my energy next.

People often ask writers where their ideas come from. Seriously, the problem isn’t having the ideas – it’s deciding which will fly. I have something called my ideas file in which I keep draft submissions and draft chapters for ideas I’ve had but I’m nit yet sure I’m ready to write, really want to write, or feel as if they generally need a bit more time percolating before they’re ready to serve. The trouble I have at the moment is that my head is full of ideas that need to be unloaded into the file and I don’t have enough time to pour them out. Ah, if only we had neural nanonics and could just plug a USB pen drive into our brains…

November 10, 2006

It's alive!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 1:59 pm

It works, it works! Even in IE. Amazin’. I’ve got so used to the idea that this cranky old web browser will break every site it touches it’s amazing to discover that it’s actually worked, despite the css code tweaking I had to do.

Okay, time for some actual bone fide news. On the 25th of October I went to London to give a reading to the BSFA and to be interviewed by the lovely Farah Mendlesohn. I was accompanied by my friend Neal, who was supposed to protect me from the screaming hordes of sci-fi fans – but this turned out not to be necessary. Everyone was friendly and not frightening. I read an extract from Bad Blood, my forthcoming young adult horror novel with OUP, which seemed to successfully creep everyone out. Then Farah asked a series of insightful and interesting questions about my writing and inspirations, followed by questions from the audience. All of this was (scarily) taped, so I might be able to get hold of the audio file for this website – I’ll ask.

After a few drinks (all bought for me) I drew raffle tickets for the book auction and was taken out to dinner where I had even more interesting conversations (and slightly heated debates) with people from the BSFA.

A special shoutout to Kate who rescued me from wandering around and around Belgravia forever when I got lost on the way. It was also very cool to meet Meredith, who runs Diana Wynne Jones’ website – which brings me one step closer to the great woman herself.

November 9, 2006

*blink* Was that a year going by?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 11:23 pm

Err, yes. So this blog has become rather defunct. So defunct that I’d forgotten its very existence. But it has now been revived and brought into line with the current rhiannonlassiter.com style.

I’ve spent the last few hours tweaking the css to try to work around some issues with the sidebar. Left and right floats have caused immense problems – but it’s looking okay in Firefox and Safari. Tomorrow I will, no doubt, discover how hideously borken(tm) it is in IE.

This is merely a technical update. I have lots of writing news but anyone still reading will have to wait for it. Sorry about that. I will leave you with the news that I am reading David Brin for the first time. I’m not sure how this can be the case but somehow he was missed out of my sf education.

September 30, 2005

Words written on water

Filed under: Uncategorized — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 12:16 pm

Hmm, I am now a bit disgruntled. I had composed a post and published it and now it appears to have vanished into the ether. This is one I can’t be responsible for. It was there and now it isn’t. Other things that aren’t there include my current website (my web-diversion expired and uk2.net are taking an age to bring it back) and my new official website (not yet uploaded).

The post that vanished was mostly about Farah Mendlesohn and her Inter-Galactic playground blog. Despite extreme ineptitude on my part Farah has managed to get in touch with me, tracking me through publishers, across blog sites and even enlisting some of my friends. She is both patient and persistent and has also reviewed some of my books so favourably that I should blush to link you to them.

People often ask me who I write for. For myself? For a certain sort of reader? For posterity? I’m now of the opinion that I wrote the Rights of Passage series for Farah. Despite starting with the second of the three published books and not knowing how many more there would be, she seems to have found out all my secrets and is still keen for more…

September 19, 2005

Hello, World!

Filed under: Uncategorized — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 5:30 pm

This is my brand new weblog. I’ve decided to have a blog in addition to my fan forums so it will be easy to find information about what I’ve been doing recently.

Last weekend I was at ‘The Shock of the New’, a literary conference held at St Catherine’s college, Oxford. As well as talks given by such luminaries as Michael Morpurgo and David Fickling, I attended a session on ePublishing and another on secondary worlds given by my mother, Mary Hoffman. The whole experience was fantastically exciting and I’ll be sharing more information and web links I’ve gleaned from it in various parts of this site. I also met lots of great people and sketched out ideas for some exciting projects.

In the spirit of the shock of the new, I now resolve to get the new version of my website online by the end of this month!

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