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Meme. Because I'm just that lazy, oh yes I am.

You’re feeling…shredded by the wood-chipper of life.

To your left:
~two metal hair clips (one pink, one black)
~address book
~phone
~pile of DVDs and CDs (specifically: Dark Angel, Season 2; Brokeback Mountain, collector’s edition; KANE; and KANE: Acoustic Live in London)
~a sheet of scrap paper from my son’s math homework upon which I attempted – and failed – to explain ratios and how they might be used in real life.

On your mind: The deadline I’m fucking up even further by blogging instead of writing.

Last meal included: Bagel, cream cheese, coffee.

You sometimes find it hard to…breathe.

The weather: Chilly and bright.

Something you have a collection of: Children.

A smell that cheers you up: Clean laundry.

A smell that can ruin your mood: Dog poop.

How long since you last shaved: Um.

The current state of your hair: Knotted on top of my head to keep it out of my face.

The largest item on your desk/workspace (not computer): Big-ass sculpture of three maidens dancing in a circle around a fire – the fire is actually a place to put a candle. At the moment, it’s sandalwood. It was a Christmas gift from my mother. You wanna see pictures???

Your skill with chopsticks: Not bad.

Which section you head for first in a bookstore: New releases.

Something you’re craving: Peace of mind.

Your general thoughts on the presidential race: You know what? I’ve got enough people pissed off at me this week. Pass.

How many times have you been hospitalized this year: Nada, but I’m looking at three days in May.

Favorite place to go for a quiet moment: Define “quiet.” I seem to have misplaced that concept somewhere along the way.

You’ve always secretly thought you’d be a good…mother. Today, I’m not so sure.

Something that freaks you out a little: Insects of any kind.

Something you’ve eaten too much of lately: Antacids.

You have never…liked memes. They seem sort of self-absorbed. And yet.

You never want to…be so out of ideas for original blog content that I resort to stealing memes from Cindy Cruciger. AND YET.

You’re tagged, Caridad Ferrer, wherever you are.


Fruity!

Once upon a time, there stood an apple orchard on a nearby hilltop in the beautiful country of Romancelandia. It was a perfectly serviceable orchard as orchards went, providing good fruit to those who wanted apples. It was, naturally, plagued by a few of the problems to which all orchards and groves and berry patches fall victim — infestations and bad weather, including the occasional plagues of locusts and rains of frogs.

And then one day, after a particularly challenging growing season, along came an — at best — ill-informed Internet Tabloid Journalist.*

Tabloid Journalist: I’d like to see something in an orange, please.

Orchard: I’m so sorry, but I grow apples. Can I offer you a juicy MacIntosh? My Pink Ladies are lovely this year, as well. Not so much my Granny Smiths, though — a drought in the early summer made them mealy.

Tabloid Journalist: No, I want oranges. Why don’t you grow oranges?

Orchard: Because I’m an apple orchard, not an orange grove.

Tabloid Journalist: But if you grew oranges, you’d help more people. People in Romancelandia need the vitamin C in oranges to keep them from getting sick. You should grow oranges, and you should start immediately. If you don’t, it’s proof that you’re worthless and don’t care about the people who eat your fruit.

Orchard: Oranges are a wonderful kind of fruit, and I’m glad there are groves out there to supply them to the people who want and need them. But I’m an apple orchard. I suppose I could attempt to grow oranges, but since that’s not what I was created to do, I suspect it would be a failure.

Tabloid Journalist: You SUCK!

Orchard: I suppose we could employ some kind of genetic specialist to try grafting a few orange branches onto some trees. Maybe we could create a hybrid fruit of some kind. But I’d have to take this issue back and discuss it with the entire tree membership. Changes of this kind take time, after all, and since the trees here signed up to grow apples, it might be a challenge.

Tabloid Journalist: You suck so much that I’m going to make a public example of you, you worthless apple orchard, with your nasty apples that are nothing like oranges. And when the people who read my blog make unkind, similarly ill-informed comments of a personal nature, I’ll do nothing to stem the tide of poison. With any luck, it will seep into the ground and kill all your worthless, apple-producing trees. Because unless you grow oranges, and do it in just the way I suggest, you are dead to me, you worthless, apple-growing scum who clearly care nothing for the average Romancelandia eater of fruit. Do you hear me? Dead. To. Me.

~flounces off to find an ant hill to kick over, because she can and because it’s perfectly legal, don’tcha know~

Have no idea what I’m babbling about? Consider yourself blessed.

Staring down a March 31 deadline. Will not be back to address comments anytime soon, but feel free to have at it.

* aka: Some Chick With A Blog.


Ow.

A word to the wise:

When your ObGyn tells you that you need an endometrial biopsy, you need it immediately, and yes, as a matter of fact, it’s going to hurt like hell?

BELIEVE HER. Take the nifty little pills she offers. Do NOT, under any circumstances, try to tough it out.

In other news, I didn’t burst into flames, but I did burn a batch of cupcakes meant for the fifth grade bake sale. I’m trying to convince myself this is not an omen of things to come.

I’m mostly failing.

"Been nice knowin' ya," said the little pile of ashes.

Our priest is coming this afternoon to bless the house. This yearly ritual is prefaced by a thorough cleaning (because he really shouldn’t be blessing the dust or the dog hair, although I doubt he’d mind it) and includes the kissing of crosses, the splashing of holy water into various nooks and crannies, and the chanting of prayers in first century Greek. House blessings take place before the start of the Orthodox Great Lent, which in this case is tomorrow, so we’re sort of getting it in just under the wire.

The other yearly ritual that accompanies the house blessing is the part where somebody – usually my husband, but this year my eldest son beat him to it – makes the joke about how I’m likely to burst into flames when my lips touch the big, golden cross. Or maybe the holy water will turn into steam as it lands on my skin. Because of my unrepentant smut-writing, you see.

“Yeah, yeah. Ha ha ha. You guys should take that routine on the road and make us all millionaires,” she says, looking surreptitiously to the left and right and sending up the same little prayer she says every year at about this time. “Lord, please forgive me for not being even a little bit sorry that I write dirty stories. Amen.”

I figure between that and the thirty-dollar chocolate torte I’m serving post-blessing, I’ve got my sinning ass covered. But if, on the off chance, this is the year I go up in flames? I offer a little snippet of one of my several works-in-progress as a final farewell.

* * *

From Chapter 5 of NIGHTSHADE:

Nikolai turned away and faced the gathering storm. When he spoke again, his voice held a note of regret Daniel hadn’t heard before. “I did not know of this shameful trickery.”

“And if you did know? What would you do? Doom me to a lifetime of obedience, poverty, and the Brotherhood’s special version of chastity?” Daniel shrugged. “It’s done now. I know my duty.”

Nikolai didn’t answer.

Daniel waited. The moon went into hiding behind the storm clouds, leaving only the tiny bulbs strung in the maze hedge to light the space around them. The wind picked up, blowing the scent of Masticha in his face, and he breathed it in as if it were pure oxygen.

Finally, Nikolai turned. “You say you know your duty. How much do you know, Daniel? What do you understand of a Champion’s needs?”

“I’m willing to learn, my lord.”

Nikolai stepped nearer and closed his fingers on the collar at Daniel’s throat. “Then learn this, my Squire. You will come to me of your own free will or not at all.”

Daniel heard the fabric tear as if made of paper. “My lord, Holy Protocol says—”

“There is nothing holy in the Brotherhood’s protocol. Do not speak of it again in my hearing.” He ripped at Daniel’s uniform once more, rending it to the waist. “You try my patience.”

“I’m sorry, my—”

“Call. Me. Nikolai.”

“Nikolai. I’m sorry. What do you want me to—”

“You must choose.” He fisted his hands in the torn garment. “Now, in this moment, before my appetites get the better of me and your chance is gone.”

“Choose? I don’t—”

“Hush.” He shook Daniel, pulling him off his feet. “I offer these options — live as my Squire in the chastity our friend Bastiaan considers such a burden, or live as my true companion. Mine in body and soul. Do you comprehend what that means? Do you?”

“I think so.”

Nikolai lifted him till the only toes of his boots touched the gravel. “Your choice, Daniel Nightshade. Tell me now.”

His choice? As if he could fathom life with Nikolai wrapped up in the blanket of his power, enduring the fever his touch and scent aroused, but never knowing any resolution to the tension between them?

Daniel grabbed at the sleeves of Nikolai’s coat and strained upward in his grip till his lips were just a hairsbreadth from the Champion’s. He held there a second, sharing breath with Nikolai as the wind blew around them and the thunder’s complaint grew from a grumble to a shout. Then, ignoring training and Protocol and following only base instinct, he nipped at Nikolai’s bottom lip hard enough to draw blood.

Nikolai gasped and shoved him away. He ran his thumb over his lip and stared at the red smear. “This is your answer?”

Daniel stopped just short of rolling his eyes. “You need me to say the words?”

Nikolai’s face darkened. “Before this night is through, you will say those words and more. I promise you that.” He lifted his head and sniffed the air. Then he smiled, slow and wicked. “Choose a number. Choose wisely, my Squire.”

“Fifty.”

Nikolai nodded. “There is a fountain at the center of the maze. Listen — you will hear it above the wind.”

Daniel strained his ears. There… Yes, he could hear the muffled burble and splash.

“I will count to fifty. Then I will give chase.”

“Is this what you call foreplay?”

Nikolai shrugged. “Call it an ancient rite — the hunter and his virgin prey.”

Daniel felt heat rise in his face. “Sorry I asked.”

“You must reach the fountain before I lay my hands on you.”

“And if I don’t?”

Nikolai’s grin deepened. “Run. Now.”

* * *

Give Me Liberty (and a really nice Camembert) or Give Me Death.

Thanks again to Kerry Allen for pointing me to this recent post on Romancing the Blog.

While I appreciate where the “quality over quantity” folks are coming from, I have to say that their approach – cutting the number of books published in order to somehow cull what they consider “unworthy” entries into the marketplace – makes the kind of sense to me that pretty much doesn’t.

First, of course, comes the logical query regarding the subjectivity of the entire endeavor: Who decides what constitutes “quality” romance fiction? I wouldn’t want that responsibility. Nor am I comfortable giving it to any one individual or group of individuals. Free enterprise dictates that the marketplace decides what gets published, and while the marketplace does tend to lag behind public taste at times, I’m pretty comfortable with that model. It’s slow and unwieldy – and yes, sometimes excellent work is overlooked – but it’s got to be better than the alternative.

In our little village (population: 1593…saaaaLUTE!) we have one grocery store. It’s not very big in terms of square feet and shelf-space. And guess what? The selection sucks. Not a huge variety of goods, and not much depth within each category.

I shop there because it’s less than a mile from my house, and I’m a lazy beeyotch who can’t be bothered to drive ten miles into what passes for the nearest “city” and hit the mega-market. But when I do happen to meander out of the village and choose to do my shopping in a store five times the size as my local market, what do I find? People driving from all over the county – and in many cases, from outside the county – to buy their foodstuffs there.

Why? Not because they enjoy fighting downtown traffic or the amazing (and often confounding) crowds that block the aisles of this grocery store, but because of the SELECTION.

Not just Philly cream cheese and Kraft American and Helluva Good cheddar in every imaginable degree of sharpness…but hunks of Stilton studded with cranberries or apricots or sometimes – but not always – dates and walnuts. Not just chicken and beef and pork, but lamb and duck and fish that doesn’t come breaded and frozen. Not just strawberries in season, but papayas out of season.

You get the idea.

If this mega-market ever opens a satellite location in our tiny village – which is unlikely to the point of impossibility, but a lazy beeyotch can dream – I don’t imagine I’ll hear too many folks complaining that they can’t find what they like because the selection is too damned overwhelming.

I’m sure the counter-argument for this would be that groceries are one thing, and art is another. Granted. But art is only experienced as “art” in its creation and its consumption. The middle part of the process is marketing and sales. Fiction – even romance fiction – is a product, and as Kerry says, if the publishers are going to start limiting selection, they’re not going to cut the Philly cream cheese and the Kraft…their biggest sellers. It’s the dates-and-walnuts-studded Stilton that’s going to go first.

And as a lazy beeyotch with an abiding love for well-made cheese, I think that would be a damned shame.


Scenes from Casa de Crazypants

Me: Sit down. Seriously, take a load off. You’re making me dizzy with the pacing.

Him: You know what Tolkien said? In that poem? Remember?

Me: Yeah, I know. “Not all those who wander are lost.” But you? Are not wandering so much as walking back and forth over a ten-foot stretch of Linoleum. Now sit your ass down and eat a goddamn cookie.

Him: Are these raisins or chocolate chips?

Me: Where are your glasses?

Him: *looks at me blankly*

Me: Take a leap of faith and eat the cookie.

Him: I don’t know. Maybe you’re trying to poison me.

Me: Dude. Seriously. *brief pause* What would Gandalf do?


Deepish sorts of thinky-ness re: ATONEMENT.

WARNING: Spoilers ahead for the film version of Ian McEwan’s ATONEMENT.

Full disclosure: I haven’t yet read McEwan’s ATONEMENT, though it’s been on my TBR pile for some time. The following comments are applicable to the film version only.

I understand from conversations with others that the plot of the book and the movie are essentially the same: Brit Boy and Girl fall in love circa late 1930s, as the world slides into war; Girl’s Younger Sister, in a fit of jealousy and adolescent self-righteousness, tells a fairly horrible lie about Boy, sending him to prison and later to war; Girl and Boy suffer beautifully for one another as Younger Sister grows up and realizes the error of her ways; Girl and Boy die, separately, of the horrors of war; Younger Sister spends the rest of her days attempting to atone for her misdeed.

A sad story, though beautifully acted and filmed. I saw it as a Brit/WWII version of COLD MOUNTAIN (a book and movie roundly despised by contemporary lovers of romance) in some ways, as many of the same struggles were showcased: love, hope and faith in the face of the misery of war. Even the refrain of “come back to me” resonated in a very Nicole Kidman-struggling-with-a-Southern-accent kind of way. And, of course, the ending…painful, yet hopeful.

But I came away feeling slightly dissatisfied with ATONEMENT because the two lovers, Robbie and Cecelia, had so little screen time together – much like the old-fashioned historicals that often left the hero and heroine separated for huge chunks of the book – that I found it difficult to care very much about their doomed love.

What did leave a sharp impression on me was the last scene – Vanessa Redgrave, playing Younger Sister in her golden years, being interviewed regarding the release of her final novel. She had this to say:

“So, my sister and Robbie were never able to have the time together they both so longed for… and deserved. Which ever since I’ve… ever since I’ve always felt I prevented. But what sense of hope or satisfaction could a reader derive from an ending like that? So in the book, I wanted to give Robbie and Cecilia what they lost out on in life. I’d like to think this isn’t weakness or… evasion… but a final act of kindness. I gave them their happiness.”

I’ve been reading online message boards at various review sites, and posters appear to be of two moods regarding Briony’s atonement for the ruining of Cecelia and Robbie’s lives. Most folks seem convinced that Briony did nothing to make up for the suffering she caused as a jealous thirteen-year-old. The fictional happily-ever-after she gave Robbie and Cee could never be enough to atone for the truth of their last, miserable years apart. The film failed for a good number of people who viewed it this way.

While I understand that point of view, I’m more interested in looked at ATONEMENT as a work of metafiction (a type of fiction that self-consciously addresses the devices of fiction. It is the literary term describing fictional writing that self-consciously and systematically draws attention to its status as an artifact in posing questions about the relationship between fiction and reality, usually, irony and self-reflection. In a sense, it can be compared to presentational theatre, that does not let the audience forget they are viewing a play; metafiction does not let the reader forget he or she is reading a fictional work. ~ Wikipedia) that addresses the writer’s responsibility to her audience in terms of shedding light on “universal truths.”

In 1950, during the height of the Cold War, the author William Faulkner won a Nobel Prize for literature. In his acceptance speech, he had this to say:

Our tragedy today is a general and universal physical fear so long sustained by now that we can even bear it. There are no longer problems of the spirit. There is only one question: When will I be blown up? Because of this, the young man or woman writing today has forgotten the problems of the human heart in conflict with itself which alone can make good writing because only that is worth writing about, worth the agony and the sweat. He must learn them again. He must teach himself that the basest of all things is to be afraid: and, teaching himself that, forget it forever, leaving no room in his workshop for anything but the old verities and truths of the heart, the universal truths lacking which any story is ephemeral and doomed — love and honor and pity and pride and compassion and sacrifice. [emphasis mine] Until he does so, he labors under a curse. He writes not of love but of lust, of defeats in which nobody loses anything of value, and victories without hope and worst of all, without pity or compassion. His griefs grieve on no universal bones, leaving no scars. He writes not of the heart but of the glands.

Until he learns these things, he will write as though he stood among and watched the end of man. I decline to accept the end of man. It is easy enough to say that man is immortal because he will endure: that when the last ding-dong of doom has clanged and faded from the last worthless rock hanging tideless in the last red and dying evening, that even then there will still be one more sound: that of his puny inexhaustible voice, still talking. I refuse to accept this. I believe that man will not merely endure: he will prevail. He is immortal, not because he alone among creatures has an inexhaustible voice, but because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance. The poet’s, the writer’s, duty is to write about these things. It is his privilege to help man endure by lifting his heart, by reminding him of the courage and honor and hope and pride and compassion and pity and sacrifice which have been the glory of his past. The poet’s voice need not merely be the record of man, it can be one of the props, the pillars to help him endure and prevail.” ~W. Faulkner, December 10, 1950, Stockholm.

For me, this is what Briony is talking about when she says “…what sense of hope or satisfaction could a reader derive from an ending like that?” She’s attempting to give some meaning – find some “universal truth” – the suffering of her sister and her lover. Her version of that truth would likely be “loyalty, faith and true love are rewarded by ultimate happiness.”

But are they? They certainly should be, but we know real life often doesn’t work that way. Which is maybe why we, as romance writers, create the stories we do, in which true love has its chance to overcome the odds.

Perhaps Briony’s atonement – which consisted of personal sacrifice in the form of nursing broken, dying men as well as her final “gift” to Cee and Robbie – can be seen as inadequate from a personal standpoint. Certainly, in the movie we’re given no indication of the state of Briony’s personal life. Did she meet her own true love? Did she find perfect fulfillment elsewhere, in her work perhaps? The film gives no clue, other than to picture her very much alone in the moment she gives her final interview.

But even this would not be enough to make up for the pain she caused, would it? Even if she spent her entire life in enforced solitude, would it be enough?

I think maybe that’s not the point. I think maybe only the effort to atone is the point. It’s in the effort we make to be worthy human beings that the beauty lies, just as the journey of life is the point of living, and not the destination at the end. And while “happily-ever-after” may give us that “God’s in his heaven, all’s right with the world” sense of satisfaction, is not the very struggle to find and preserve true love, however it ends up, a lovely reminder that we AREN’T just a collection of glands, after all?

So while ATONEMENT can’t possibly be called a “romance” in the sense of the current romance fiction tropes – girl meets boy, girl loves boy, girl loses boy, girl gets boy, HEA – the fact that it celebrates what Faulkner calls “universal truths” – means it succeeds. At least for me.

But then, I loved COLD MOUNTAIN, so maybe I’m just bent.

Pain is weakness leaving your body.

I appreciate the few little notes I’ve received asking where the hell I’ve gone and what the fuck do I mean by disappearing like this for days and days at a time. But while sharing my current difficulties would no doubt make ME feel better, it won’t do a thing for anyone else, except perhaps for those who take joy in others’ suffering, and they’re likely too busy parboiling puppies to notice. (Don’t roll your eyes like that, it’s unattractive. You know who you are.) Suffice to say I’m alive and writing, which isn’t the same thing as “alive and kicking,” but it’s close enough.

In the meantime, check out The Gruesome Origins of Five Popular Fairy Tales, courtesy of Cracked.com. Because what’s a little pederasty, ritual mutilation, and cannibalism among friends?


It's *not* dead, Jim.

I got green, and I got blues
And every day there’s a little less
Difference between the two

So I belly-up, and disappear
Well, I ain’t really drowning
‘Cause I see the beach from here.
~Drive-By Truckers, “Goddamn Lonely Love”

As it’s been noted (thank you, Ferfe) I’m not so much with the here-ness. Still trying to break through the block of a lifetime on a book with which I’ve fallen in love…but which most emphatically doesn’t love me back. Unrequited passion is a bitch. We’ll work it out, though, me and my muse. He’ll keep telling me I’m a hack, and I’ll keep trying to prove him wrong, and together we’ll force the words into their proper order.

In the meantime, I read this essay over at Romancing the Blog, and walked away with a vague sense of…I dunno. Dissatisfaction? Confusion? Some juicy fast-food combo meal made from the two, with a supersized side of WTF?

But then I read THIS, and I felt better.

And hey, FANTASIES III (2007 EPPIE-nom’d homoerotic antho that includes my novella, “Hardcore“) is out in print, in case anyone’s interested.

REVIEWS for “Hardcore“/FANTASIES IIII:
4 Angels!
“As the longest story of this anthology, ‘Hardcore’ is just that – a hardcore story about revenge, sex and dealing with the unexpected. Jesse and Sean are spellbinding and disturbing all at once, but you will have a hard time moving away from this story.”
~Isabella for Fallen Angel Reviews

“The plot never slows down, and the interaction between Jesse and Sean is great to watch. This is March’s first foray into gay romance and I’m impressed at her characterizations. Sex scenes were beyond hot and tastefully done, with just the right bit of kink. They were also free of trite expressions. ‘Hardcore’ is a great read and I look forward to more from the author.”
~Ryes for Rainbow Reviews


The Book That Would Not Die: DAY 47

Fresh out of anything remotely interesting to say that doesn’t involve Greek mythology, Apocalyptic prophecy or kinky sex with toys — but fearing the threats of dire retribution from her brilliant and ever-stylish crit partner if she doesn’t update soon — the desperate blogger relies on pimping other folks’ posts, making note of a recent review, and blathering on about the difference between dark fantasy and horror.

~Lilith Saintcrow, author of the excellent Dante Valentine series (among others), talks about the “visual writer” over at The Midnight Hour. Nifty.

*

~Maura Frankman of the Romance Studio gives DIRTY SHAME four stars and a nice review:

“Joey Fiorello is an out of work actress desperate for a job; she also has the voice of her dead sister constantly nagging her in her head. She answers an ad for a personal assistant and finds herself employed by the notorious Hollywood bad boy Dare Daniels. His agent assures her that she isn’t his type, she is short, dark, and curvy and he likes them tall, thin, and blonde. He also has a stalker who wants to kill him, but he doesn’t know that yet. Advised by his therapist to go home to work out his issues, the two fly to rural Kansas where Dare is definitely not the most popular guy in town. Hopefully the two will both survive the trip.

Joey is one of the best characters that I have read about in a while. She is definitely not the Hollywood ingénue type and she definitely has a Brooklyn attitude. Dare needs someone to kick him in the butt. He spends most of his time drunk or passed out and needs someone like Joey to straighten him out. The stressful situation brings them together and causes conflict at the same time. Dare has a pretty terrible secret in his past and the tabloids would love to get hold of it, they could also have a field day with the pair’s pretty public couplings. The tabloid reporter already in town nearly gets a really big story but for the tough Joey. The would-be murderer was a complete surprise to me, though all the hints were there. This is a very well done romantic suspense story with hotter than average love scenes and two charismatic main characters who really need each other, and don’t forget the bossy ghost!”

(DIRTY SHAME is available in ebook form, and in trade paperback as part of my SIN STREET collection.)

*

~I’ve heard it said that true horror can’t be sexy. I’d beg to differ. One of the hottest scenes I’ve ever read happened in the first third of Uncle Stevie’s PET SEMATARY…the bathtub scene? Anybody else remember that?

Yeah, I know, that book ended VERY badly. Or very well, depending on how you feel about the wiping out of an entire family, including the cat. (Okay, the little girl lived, but I’m sure she ended up being raised by the grandparents who caused most of the tragedy by fucking up her mother in the first place.)

I’m writing a book — which started out as a novella and got away from me in the past week — that I thought could be called a dark fantasy, but as the story develops, I’m seeing a real edging toward horror in at least two scenes. And I’m not sure where I draw that line, but like porn, I know it when I read it.

What I want to know is this: Where is the line for you? When does dark fantasy become horror? Is it all about the gore? Is it a certain kind of monster or bad guy or supernatural-ity?

Is it about the ending? (Happy ending = fantasy, sad/bad ending = horror. If that’s the correct equation, I guess I’m writing dark erotic fantasy with elements of horror…maybe?)

And how do you feel about dark erotic fantasy versus erotic horror?

I’m askin’.

SelahMarch.com – Romance of Dubious Virtue

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