Okay, it was up quite a while ago, but it was not up before I left for school -- and I can't blog at school, so I'm late posting this.
At any rate, go check it out here at Indie Books Blog.
Monday, October 31, 2011
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Update
I've almost got the POD version of Half-Vampire ready to go, but, for some reason, Create Space won't accept my cover PDF. Max is going to have a look at it and see if he can figure it out.
Once I can get the POD up and running, I'll get the swag (tee shirts, buttons, and bookmarks) ready to roll.
I've finished re-formatting All in the Half-Vampire Family, and now I can begin the final edits. I hope to have this one out by next spring.
Our school librarian has all the pics and music for a trailer for Half-Vampire, but I haven't heard anything from him on the progress yet.....
And, I have lots of new and improved ideas for The (Dis)Appearance of Nerissa MacKay! I can't wait to start working on it again, but everything else has to be finished first!
Oh, and Indie Books should have a review of Half-Vampire up tomorrow!
Once I can get the POD up and running, I'll get the swag (tee shirts, buttons, and bookmarks) ready to roll.
I've finished re-formatting All in the Half-Vampire Family, and now I can begin the final edits. I hope to have this one out by next spring.
Our school librarian has all the pics and music for a trailer for Half-Vampire, but I haven't heard anything from him on the progress yet.....
And, I have lots of new and improved ideas for The (Dis)Appearance of Nerissa MacKay! I can't wait to start working on it again, but everything else has to be finished first!
Oh, and Indie Books should have a review of Half-Vampire up tomorrow!
Friday, October 28, 2011
Check Out My Author Interview At Surrounded By Books!
As she promised, Cherie Reich has posted about me again today, using an e-mail interview we did about a month ago.
Click here to read it and check out other fun stuff at her blog, Surrounded by Books.
Click here to read it and check out other fun stuff at her blog, Surrounded by Books.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Check Out My Review At Surrounded By Books!
Cherie Reich has posted a review of Half-Vampire on her blog. Click here to check it out.
I'm so excited! :D
I'm so excited! :D
Monday, October 24, 2011
What's Up With The Half-Vampire
Over the weekend, when I wasn't grading tests, I finished the formatting for the POD of Confessions of an Average Half-Vampire. I also wrote up the AR test for it so our librarian can use the book for school contests (The AR test is available for other teachers, too. Just click the "For Teachers" tab I added, and you'll see what to do if you want a quiz on the book.)
I also fixed up all the pics and chose the music for a book trailer. Today, our librarian told me he could easily match up the music and the photos, and we'll get one of the drama students (I have a couple in mind) to do the voice overs. So that's done. (I promise I'll get it up on this blog as soon as it's handed over to me and I figure out how to post a video on the blog!)
I even began formatting All in the Half-Vampire Family so that I can (I hope) release it sometime early in 2012.
What's next? Well, I'm just waiting for Max to have a chance to finish adjusting the sizes on the POD cover for me (of the first book, not the second), and then I can submit my PDFs for the POD. Very soon, I hope to have real paperbacks available. (I haven't heard back from Max yet, so I suspect he was off camping this weekend. :) )
I also fixed up all the pics and chose the music for a book trailer. Today, our librarian told me he could easily match up the music and the photos, and we'll get one of the drama students (I have a couple in mind) to do the voice overs. So that's done. (I promise I'll get it up on this blog as soon as it's handed over to me and I figure out how to post a video on the blog!)
I even began formatting All in the Half-Vampire Family so that I can (I hope) release it sometime early in 2012.
What's next? Well, I'm just waiting for Max to have a chance to finish adjusting the sizes on the POD cover for me (of the first book, not the second), and then I can submit my PDFs for the POD. Very soon, I hope to have real paperbacks available. (I haven't heard back from Max yet, so I suspect he was off camping this weekend. :) )
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Samhain: The Battle Of The Summer And Winter Kings
Yesterday's post gave you a taste of the Samhain celebration in Scotland. Today I'd like to continue that ancient Halloween theme to put you in the mood for our own modern holiday -- and also to get you curious about my upcoming book, Becoming Brigid, which has a lot to do with ancient Celtic festivals.
No one knows exactly what happened at those ancient ceremonies, of course. CNN wasn't there, and no one posted cellphone videos on YouTube. In fact, when I attended Samhain in 2004, no one posted cellphone videos on YouTube, either -- and that was only 7 years ago!
However, we know Samhain was the new year festival, and we know it was a time for summer to end and winter to begin. It is thought that this may have been portrayed in a ritual dance or skit that showed the transfer of power from summer to winter. (As similar dances/ceremonies/acts of the Beltane ritual of the re-birth of the Green Man through the help of the May Queen have lasted for millennia, this is probably a fairly good guess.)
The modern Samhain festivals generally include the acting out of the Winter King "killing" the Summer King, who will, of course, be brought back to life again in the spring. I use this idea heavily in Brigid. (Curious? Good. )
So, today, for your Halloween pleasure, I bring you photos of the Samhain parade in Edinburgh in 2004, with the two kings in their pre-battle state.
Here the Summer King is carried on his throne.
Here, he pulls grapes from his sporran and eats them. Yup, this is supposed to be rather sexually suggestive. Lugh, the Summer King, was a fertility god, after all. (In real life, it wasn't particularly gross; he was having a good time with the crude humor, and the crowd laughed a lot.)
But all good things must end. Here the Winter King waits solemnly, with his skull-headed staff of holly. A bit creepy, isn't he?
No one knows exactly what happened at those ancient ceremonies, of course. CNN wasn't there, and no one posted cellphone videos on YouTube. In fact, when I attended Samhain in 2004, no one posted cellphone videos on YouTube, either -- and that was only 7 years ago!
However, we know Samhain was the new year festival, and we know it was a time for summer to end and winter to begin. It is thought that this may have been portrayed in a ritual dance or skit that showed the transfer of power from summer to winter. (As similar dances/ceremonies/acts of the Beltane ritual of the re-birth of the Green Man through the help of the May Queen have lasted for millennia, this is probably a fairly good guess.)
The modern Samhain festivals generally include the acting out of the Winter King "killing" the Summer King, who will, of course, be brought back to life again in the spring. I use this idea heavily in Brigid. (Curious? Good. )
So, today, for your Halloween pleasure, I bring you photos of the Samhain parade in Edinburgh in 2004, with the two kings in their pre-battle state.
Here the Summer King is carried on his throne.
Here, he pulls grapes from his sporran and eats them. Yup, this is supposed to be rather sexually suggestive. Lugh, the Summer King, was a fertility god, after all. (In real life, it wasn't particularly gross; he was having a good time with the crude humor, and the crowd laughed a lot.)
But all good things must end. Here the Winter King waits solemnly, with his skull-headed staff of holly. A bit creepy, isn't he?
Saturday, October 22, 2011
Of Ghoulies And Ghosties And Long-Leggedy Beasties And Things That Go Bump In The Night...
I love Halloween.
And you might think that I've put it in my Half-Vampire novels, since it would seem so appropriate with vampires and Halloween. But Eric isn't undead; he's got a genetic condition that makes him crave blood and have semi-translucent skin and nearly-clear retinas. So neither Confessions of an Average Half-Vampire, nor its sequel, All in the Half-Vampire Family, contains much to do with Halloween. (Okay, the prologue to Half-Vampire does take place at a Halloween party, but it's far from scary.)
That, of course, does not stop me from putting Halloween into my other YA novels. My WIP (very much on the back burner right now, since every moment of my spare time is spent formatting the POD version of Half-Vamp), The (Dis)Appearance of Nerissa MacKay, is set during the Halloween season and involves the coolest haunted house set up I could dream up (one I've never heard of before, so I'm going to be irritated if someone else comes up with this before I get the book published!). And my waiting-for-the-final-revision WIP, Becoming Brigid, most definitely involves Halloween. In fact, since Brigid is actually the Celtic goddess herself (but she doesn't know it), the original Halloween or the Celtic festival of Samhain plays a huge role in the story. (Got you interested yet? Good. Maybe you'll all want to read Brigid once I can get it published.)
My first experience with Samhain happened when I was living in Scotland in 2004. One of my programmates at the uni was a born-again pagan from New York, and she got me interested in the Beltane Fire Society and their festivals. Because of her, I went to both the Samhain and Beltane festivals that year, and my earliest research for Brigid was begun.
So, to put you in a bit of a Samhain mood, to prepare for the end of the year when the veil between the living and the spirit worlds is at its thinnest, let me share with you a few pics I took once upon a Samhain on the streets of Edinburgh, Scotland.
Here the drummers wait to begin the parade.
And what's a parade without horns?
And what's Scotland without a few kilts worn for special occasions?
A Samhain critter or two....
And a few ghosties.....
That's enough for this post. I'll share a few more tomorrow.
Special thanks to Max, who scanned these old prints for me so I could share them digitally with you.
(Remember to click on the pics to see them full-sized.)
And you might think that I've put it in my Half-Vampire novels, since it would seem so appropriate with vampires and Halloween. But Eric isn't undead; he's got a genetic condition that makes him crave blood and have semi-translucent skin and nearly-clear retinas. So neither Confessions of an Average Half-Vampire, nor its sequel, All in the Half-Vampire Family, contains much to do with Halloween. (Okay, the prologue to Half-Vampire does take place at a Halloween party, but it's far from scary.)
That, of course, does not stop me from putting Halloween into my other YA novels. My WIP (very much on the back burner right now, since every moment of my spare time is spent formatting the POD version of Half-Vamp), The (Dis)Appearance of Nerissa MacKay, is set during the Halloween season and involves the coolest haunted house set up I could dream up (one I've never heard of before, so I'm going to be irritated if someone else comes up with this before I get the book published!). And my waiting-for-the-final-revision WIP, Becoming Brigid, most definitely involves Halloween. In fact, since Brigid is actually the Celtic goddess herself (but she doesn't know it), the original Halloween or the Celtic festival of Samhain plays a huge role in the story. (Got you interested yet? Good. Maybe you'll all want to read Brigid once I can get it published.)
My first experience with Samhain happened when I was living in Scotland in 2004. One of my programmates at the uni was a born-again pagan from New York, and she got me interested in the Beltane Fire Society and their festivals. Because of her, I went to both the Samhain and Beltane festivals that year, and my earliest research for Brigid was begun.
So, to put you in a bit of a Samhain mood, to prepare for the end of the year when the veil between the living and the spirit worlds is at its thinnest, let me share with you a few pics I took once upon a Samhain on the streets of Edinburgh, Scotland.
Here the drummers wait to begin the parade.
And what's a parade without horns?
And what's Scotland without a few kilts worn for special occasions?
A Samhain critter or two....
And a few ghosties.....
That's enough for this post. I'll share a few more tomorrow.
Special thanks to Max, who scanned these old prints for me so I could share them digitally with you.
(Remember to click on the pics to see them full-sized.)
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