October 19, 2013

Kindle book buying binge

Filed under: Amazon Associate,things I read on the internet — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 8:08 am

Liz De Jager alerted me to a massive sale of Quercus books in Kindle format on Amazon and I picked up a bunch of books. It’s a curious experience scrolling through 8 pages of discounts. I’m sure there are some great books in there that I missed. Whether or not I clicked on something was based on thoughts like ‘good cover’ or ‘intriguing title’ – although several times I backed up and didn’t purchase because of a less inspiring blurb. In the end I went for seven titles.

Entangled by Cat Clarke
This was partly cover love because I’ve been interested in this book ever since it was first released because of the beautiful cover. But also I keep hearing great things about Cat’s work and each of her books has a really original and compelling idea. This one is introduced with the line “17-year-old Grace wakes up in a white room, with table, pens and paper – and no clue how she got there. “. I’m also fascinated by the idea of empty white rooms so I’m really looking forward to this one.

Dinner with a Vampire (The Dark Heroine, Book 1) by Abigail Gibbs
I met Abigail earlier this year at the Oxford Literary Festival where we were on the same panel about being published when young. She’s still at Oxford – which felt a bit weird looking back at when I was also at Oxford and writing my first few books. Anyway, my to read pile was so vast I didn’t buy the book then. The pile is still vast but kindle books count as a separate pile so now I have this. It will be the first vampire novel I’ve read in some time but I actually started writing a vampire story myself recently so they are back in my thoughts. I’m waiting for them to get really uncommercial and unsellable before writing about them – genius!

Hartslove by KM Grant
This sounds like a cross between I Capture the Castle and National Velvet – both great books. The cover is beautiful but if I’ve understood the book correctly, not actually quite right for it. It makes it look like a fantasy title.

Poisonheart by S.B. Hayes
A beautiful cover and an intriguing blurb attracted me to this one. The reviews are a bit mixed and several are from people who won it in a competition. But this book reminded me of one of my own ideas so I want to see how it’s executed. Again, the beautiful cover makes the book look like fantasy, when it’s actually contemporary. I think perhaps publishers have gone overboard with the lush covers. Any author would be happy to have this one – but is it right for the book?

The Runaway Princess by Helen Browe
This is a bit more chick lit than my usual reading but I liked the title and the reviews endorsed it as a light and witty read.

Tomorrow When the War Began: Book One, The Tomorrow Series by John Marsden
I already have a book by this author “Letters From the Inside” but this book is his most successful and the title is so incredibly strong. This is just the start of a series so I’m in danger of being sucked into this if it’s as good as I hope it is.

Torn by Cat Clarke
Another Cat Clarke title, again with an evocative description and good reviews. She’s the only author I bought more than one book from this time around. It’s interesting that the covers, while strong, and reminiscent of each other, seem much more contemporary (like the books) rather than fantastical or magical.

I’ll check back and post mini reviews once I’ve dived into this pile of electrons. Now my kindle books-to-read pile is as big as my physical one. Damn you, Liz De Jager!

October 14, 2013

Little Witches: coming soon

Filed under: book release,special offer — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 9:40 pm

Little Witches cover

The story of the little witches began on the night before Halloween, before Dulcie and Verity had even met. Although they didn’t know it they were going to become best friends. But that was just one of the many unexpected things that would happen to them.
Little Witches and the Trick-or-Treat-Trick, Rhiannon Lassiter

This Halloween look out for two little witches, coming soon to the Amazon Kindle store.

Little Witches Bewitched! is a junior fiction title containing short stories about modern school children who acquire magical powers by accident.

There will be a special reduced price on Halloweeen so check back then for your deeply discounted copy of Little Witches.

October 11, 2013

Be careful where you poke your nose

Filed under: things Rhiannon does not like — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 10:29 am

Yesterday I had a weird accident on a bus that resulting in me badly bruising (and hopefully not breaking) my nose and has now given it new character in the shape of a lightening bolt cut (perhaps future scar). Apart from my nose they only other thing harmed in the creation of this accident was a rather nice grey wool skirt that got rather a lot of blood on it. So I went to A&E with a bag of peas on my face – not for the stylishness although green is my colour – but for the frozenosity. It’s just as wel I did because I was there for four hours without any other treatment.

I am actually very lucky because in my 36 years on this planet I have never had to go to A&E before. All I knew about it is that it can take a long time so take a book. I am now a third of the way through What Lie Did I Tell by William Goldman.

Things I have learned about A&E:

  • This is not a customer service environment. The receptionists will not greet you or even acknowledge you for some time. When they do it will be unsmilingly and without any expression of sympathy. They will tell you to sit.
  • A nurse will collect you after about half an hour. Do not, due to bags of peas obscuring your vision, miss the sign saying to tell them if you are in pain because this is your only chance to get meds. When the nurse has seen you, you will be sent back to your chair.
  • When you are told the wait is an hour and a half do not be cross it is so long or pleased it is so short. That time is an estimate. You will be there for 4 hours and when you comment on this with surprise your friends will tell you your were lucky not to be there all night.
  • There is not a crack team of plastic surgeons who look like Dr Mark Sloan racing up to deal tenderly with your nose. You will go home with two small surgical strips, a expressed hope that it is not broken (but if it is, come back) and what will become an interesting Harry Potter lightening bolt scar. Your injury is minor and this is the minor injuries department. They do not care about your nose. They cannot tell if it is broken – you must look in a mirror and judge that for yourself.

At A&E they did not care about my nose. But you, oh internet, you have already proved you care with your tweets and facebook good wishes for the fate of my nose. Keep your fingers crossed for it. It has served me well in the past and I hope it has many long years of functionality ahead of it.

October 8, 2013

Twisted Winter out now

Filed under: book release,publishing news,short stories — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 4:35 pm

On the 26th of September, Twisted Winter: Chilling Takes from the Darkest Nights was released. It’s a collection edited by Catherine Butler with stories from Susan Cooper, Katherine Langrish, Liz Williams, Frances Hardinge, Frances Thomas, Rhiannon Lassiter and Catherine Butler herself.

My story is about Persephone and it’s called Home for the Holidays. Lynn Huggins-Cooper, author of Walking with Witches, reviewed the collection on Amazon and said of my story:

‘Home for the Holidays’ by Rhiannon Lassiter blew me away. The lyrical descriptions and a reworking of the Demeter/Persephone myth left me wanting more. The exploration of Persephone’s feelings and motivations was gripping – and the final line is still echoing in my head. Wonderful!

You can buy Twisted Winter from Amazon in print for £6.99 and for Kindle for £4.68. You can also buy it from the iTunes US store for $8.99.

If you’ve read it, let me know what you think here!

October 3, 2013

National Poetry Day: “The Taxis” by Louis MacNeice

Filed under: events,things Rhiannon likes — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 8:54 am

Today is National Poetry Day. In honour of the day, I’m sharing a poem I learned when I was about ten. My father always keeps a book of poetry in the car and I read and learned by heart many poems this way.

The Taxis
Louis MacNeice

In the first taxi he was alone tra-la,
No extras on the clock. He tipped ninepence
But the cabby, while he thanked him, looked askance
As though to suggest someone had bummed a ride.

In the second taxi he was alone tra-la
But the clock showed sixpence extra; he tipped according
And the cabby from out his muffler said: ‘Make sure
You have left nothing behind tra-la between you’.

In the third taxi he was alone tra-la
But the tip-up seats were down and there was an extra
Charge of one-and-sixpence and an odd
Scent that reminded him of a trip to Cannes.

As for the fourth taxi, he was alone
Tra-la when he hailed it but the cabby looked
Through him and said: ‘I can’t tra-la well take
So many people, not to speak of the dog.’

April 3, 2013

Ask an author: How do you write a book?

Filed under: ask an author,how I write — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 12:10 pm

Galvis asked:

Working files on my computer

I have begun writing. I finished one 110k word story and am on my second. No matter how much I revise the first one, I do not think it will be published, being my first attempt and all. So now I am on my second and I went about creating the story differently this time, but am still not sure if it is best way. Which is what I am hoping you can help me with.

What do you do before you start writing a book? Do you create all the characters first? Do you write a summary of each chapter/event and follow it to the end? Do you write as you think? What is your process to writing a book once you have a story in your head- or the beginning of one?

The first story I wrote completely in my head- then had to go back and summarize each chapter to create the ending (last 20k words). Now I am 50k words into my second fiction piece and would rather start from scratch if doing it wrong than finishing it.

Rhiannon replies

There’s no one answer to this. When I started writing I just wrote what I was thinking. Sometimes I’d find myself writing things I hadn’t thought of yet. I’d get about half way through a book and then think about plotting so I could work out the final section. As I’ve got more experienced I have experimented with other approaches. Different ones have worked better for different books.

I do generally think of the main characters first. For me the idea tends to come with the main character attached and then the other characters fill in around the edges. For example Hex came with the character of Raven fully formed and then the characters of Wraith and Rachel created her back story. As the actual writing progress began the character of Kez joined them as a guide to the city of London. In Bad Blood the original idea was about a blended family. I thought of the characters of Roley and Catriona, Katherine and John and then realised that there were two K/Cats. I was going to rename one of them and then though “but in a blended family the children might have similar names” and that became a plot point for the book.

Scrivener files of my current work in progress

I try to keep my writing in the same document. My mother used to write different chapters as different documents – maybe still does. But I usually work in a single Microsoft Word doc and save it as a new version after each change or edit (usually with a note to say what has changed). Recently I’ve started working with Scrivener. I like this for checking word counts and reorganising text but I think the versioning is not as flexible as I’d like it to be. (See image on right for an example from my current novel of how the word counts work, click to expand.)

I don’t think it’s a question of doing it ‘wrong’. It’s about what works for you. And, of course, what creates a compelling narrative. I think you do need a sense of the overall shape of your story. What’s the beginning, middle and end? How will the characters travel from where they are (physically and more importantly emotionally) to where they will be? (How will the events of the story change them? Will those changes be positive or negative?) Also, you should know the key events of your plot. What action or event starts the story? (What comes about as the result of the actions of the characters? What will happen if they do nothing? What will happen instead if they act? What if they act differently?)

You can think about this in your head or write notes. A lot of authors write long notes documents asking themselves questions and brainstorming the answers. I do this sometimes. I also talk to friends who also write or enjoy reading to ask them what they think. If you do this, be careful not to spend so long explaining the set up that your audience is bored, stick to the key question. (I was asked recently by a teenager at an event about how to get her character out of a place where she was trapped. I asked a few questions and then suggested that in the trap she finds a hint or clue left by an earlier prisoner.)

I would say don’t write too much in your head. Or get recording software and dictate if you are not going to be near a place where you can write. That’s so the ideas stay fresh to you as you get them on the page. Regurgitating ideas is not as enjoyable as writing down new ones as you think of them. It’s okay to keep a scene in your head until you get to the page but whole chapters sound like too much to me. That’s a personal opinion though. Every author writes differently.

I hope some of this is helpful to you! Good luck with your writing.

March 29, 2013

Are You Young Enough to Be Published

Filed under: book festival,talk — Tags: , , — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 12:05 pm

On Saturday 23 March I appeared at the Oxford Literary Festival alongside Abigail Gibbs and Bidisha on a panel composed of authors who’d all been published at a young age, chaired by Geraldine Brennan.

We met before the panel in the Green Room and were given bags of loot, pictured left, containing a bottle of wine, box of tea and packet of chocolate. And a book, of course.

The panel seemed to go very well. The audience was full of young people, each with a parent in tow, clearly planning their domination of publishing. We got good questions from the chair and from the audience. “How do I keep interested in what I’m writing?” “Should I look for an agent or a publisher first?” “Have you suffered from second book syndrome?” (I answered that one here on the blog last year.)

If you’re wondering about the panel title (I was) the reason why it’s “Are you young enough to be published?” is that there’s a theory that publishers and reviewers are more excited by authors in their teens or their 80s than by those who are somewhere in between: the mid-list middle-aged middle-children of the industry! So if you missed your window of publication as a teen, hold on for your second lease of life as a pensioner…

March 10, 2013

Twisted Winter

Filed under: publishing news,Rhiannon's books,short stories — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 1:14 pm

Earlier this year I write a short story for a new collection “Twisted Winter” due to come out in the Autumn of 2013 – in time to usher in another snowy winter.Twisted Winter

Its official blurb describes it as

“A chilling collection of terrifying winter tales. This sinister collection of short stories encapsulates everything human beings fear about the dark half of the year: from fiendish festive spirits to bloodthirsty beings who lurk in the freezing dark of night, waiting for you to let them in. Spine tingling, eye opening and genuinely horrifying: prepare to be scared! Contributors include Susan Cooper, Katherine Langrish, Liz Williams, Frances Hardinge, Frances Thomas, Rhiannon Lassiter and Catherine Butler.”

I’m really excited to be published alongside Susan Cooper and my writers group buddy Frances Hardinge and for all the other stories. The image on the right is actually not the final cover but the title is finalised.

My story is called Home for the Holidays and it’s about Persephone.

January 15, 2013

9081 library loans

Filed under: publishing news — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 6:25 pm

Last year my books were borrowed 9081 times from libraries.

Bad Blood: 2177
Ghost of a Chance: 2766
Hex: 80
Hex Shadows: 38
Hex Ghosts: 60
Roundabout: 1173
Rights of Passage Borderland: 164
Rights of Passage Outland: 52
Rights of Passage Shadowland: 49
Super Zeroes: 591
Super Zeroes on Planet X: 579
The Supernatural: 1197
Waking Dream: 151

November 14, 2012

New shop page and special offer

Filed under: shop,special offer — Rhiannon Lassiter @ 10:02 am

2 for 1 offer

I’ve launched a new website shop. It has links to eBooks, audio books and special offers. The current offer is to buy signed copies of the first three Rights of Passage books. Great as a Christmas gift for a friend, relative – or just for yourself.

It can’t just be me who goes looking for gifts for friends and finds lots of thing she would like herself, right? And companies keep sending me enticing catalogues. So now I’m doing the same to entice you with all the lovely Rhiannon Lassiter books you could buy. And if you find yourself drooling over them. how about two sets? One for you and one for a friend? Cunning sales plan? What do you mean? I’m just thinking of you here. 😉 I want you to have all the books you crave.

Look out for more goodies from the shop next year!

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