Saturday, September 4, 2010

September Digital Rummage Sale

The GLBT Bookshelf is holding another Rummage Sale to raise funds for the Wiki. The good news is that you, dear readers, are the winners. So much good fiction available for not a lot of money. In buying these yummy titles you keep the Bookshelf running, and it is an excellent source for GLBT literature.

Stop by to find titles by Mel Keegan, P.A. Brown, Nicole Gordon, Laura Baumbach, Sara Lansing, Gillibran Brown, Lydia Nyx, Sarah Black, Cecilia Tan, Fabian Black, DM Sands, Eden Winters, Jayne DeMarco, Neil Plakcy, Kal Cobalt,  and Rowena Sudbury! In all there are 29 titles. You can choose to purchase them individually, or there are a few bundles available.


A first affair gone disastrously wrong leaves Ryan in a pit of depression so deep, he finds himself hospitalized with pneumonia. His fever is blazing in the night when he's visited by a mysterious stranger who gives him a reason to live. The question is, did he imagine it -- or not?

GLBT Bookshelf September Rummage Sale

As if that wasn't enough good news, Dreamspinner Press is holding a Labor Day Sale this weekend, all titles are 20% off. Stop by and check them out!

Dreamspinner Press Labor Day Sale

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Testing out my RSS Feed

Amazon Author's Central informed me that I would no longer be able to post a blog directly on my page there and that I would have to make use of an RSS feed. I've opted to send the feed from this journal, testing to make sure everything connects, so this is a repeat of news for this journal, but all new for my Amazon page.

Toward the end of July my manuscript Promises and Lies was accepted for publication by Dreamspinner Press. This new book is a contemporary romance pieced together from a series of short stories I wrote nearly ten years ago. It is just a straight romance. Sean is a successful business man who turned his wild youth into a promising career. As he enters his 30s he decides it is time to settle down. One day he spots Jeff, a troubled young man in his early 20s, walking his dog in the park. A friendship is born between them, and eventually the friendship turns to love. The story follows them as they work their way through the ups and downs of Jeff's dyslexia, an attempt to adopt a child, and eventually everything comes to a head when Jeff's appendix ruptures. Both men change and mature and through it all their bond grows stronger.

The story needs some editing, and I'm working through that now. Good news for readers of The King's Tale is that I have six chapters written for the sequel entitled The King's Heart. I usually don't make outlines for my stories, I let them flow on their own, but The King's Heart seemed to form in my head during the past year as I struggled through a change in my teaching career. As such, I wrote a very detailed outline, so once I get the chance to start working on it again it should flow fairly quickly.

Thanks again for your support and positive comments. Each one means the world to me.

~Rowena

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Great News!

Promises and Lies has been accepted for publication by Dreamspinner Press and has a projected release date of November. I'm elated!

Also, please put your name in for the drawing for a free copy of The King's Tale here!

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Book Giveaway!

Next Tuesday July 27 is the one year anniversary of the release of The King's Tale!

I'm hosting a book giveaway in my LiveJournal, stop by and enter your name!

rowenasudbury@livejournal

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Wow

I haven't updated this blog in months! In truth, I haven't updated my primary blog all that often either. Why not? Let me tell you about my year of hell.

It started a year ago, July 2009. I teach elementary school for my day job, and typically when the end of June comes I'm looking forward to a 2 month vacation. But last year things changed. I lost my coveted position in the magnet section of my school, and for the first time in my relatively short teaching career I had to take an "out of the classroom" position. So, instead of a two month vacation, I got a 5 day vacation before jumping into the unknown.

Teaching is something I started a little later in life. I think they call it a Rennaisance person, I switched career focus at the ripe old age of 40. I told my students that losing my private industry job was the best thing that ever happened to me once I discovered the joys of reading to them. We burned through The Chronicles of Narnia every year, and discovered new joys such as The Series of Unfortunate Events, and recently the works of Andrew Clements. Life was good, but I was glad I discovered it later in life or I'm afraid I'd have burned out long ago.

This past year though was a trial by fire. I assumed an "intervention" role, and the first few weeks on the job were spent in trying to figure out what that meant. Once I got a handle on it then students started arriving, on group of six or seven at a time, fourth, fifith, and sixth graders. Between 8:30 and noon each day it was a never ending string of them. Our school was in its final year as a "year-round" school, so every two months there was a switch of schedules as one track departed and another arrived. Of couse, I never departed, in all I had a one week summer vacation, three weeks at Christmas, and Spring Break. My wonderful four months of vacation (wherein MOST of my writing used to occur) was whittled down to five weeks. Still, compared to most private industry jobs, five weeks is nothing to sneeze at, but with all the other drama it felt pathetically small.

Having one's own students is a joy. You bond with them, you watch them grow. Getting students from teachers who are afraid you will usurp their power is quite another thing. Most of the time I felt as though I wasn't doing anything at all to help them.

When the year finally drew to a close there was another wrench thrown into the plans. Our year-round school was going traditional, and a brand new school was opening right around the block. At first I was glad, the principal I like was moving to the new school, and even though I was low enough on the seniority list that I was guaranteed of being bumped out, I thought I was high enough to be accepted to the new school. Wrong. My year spent out of the classroom rendered me ineligible based on some ridiculousness between the school district and the union. After much biting of nails, jumping through of hoops, and pulling of strings on her behalf I was indeed allowed to move to the new school. There were only two catches. First, I was not able to secure the grade level I am the most comfortable in, and second, the new school year starts a full month before the rest of the district. Thus, I have less summer vacation to dread the upcoming year with a grade below what I'm comfortable with.

And, that wasn't all. The final straw, the salt in the wound so to speak, was that I was hit with a monster virus/bacterial infection combination during the moth of June. For a whole week I suffered with a fever and could barely drag myself out of bed each day. My doctor went on vacation, and urged me to call his office and speak to one of his associates about my chest x-ray. When I did I was given the dire news that I have TB. Aghast, I told this new doctor that I was exposed to TB when I was two, took medication for an entire year, and as a result I have a TB scar on my lung, but that does not mean that I currently had TB. He didn't believe me, and ordered a battery of tests, my equilibrium was sorely tested.

The long and short of it was that I did not have TB, my own doctor returned from vacation in time to save me from the tests, and I am slowly on the mend. The illness is gone, but I'm left with a draining tiredness that I can't seem to shake.

All of that should be enough for one person, but alas, that's not all.

In my last post I talked about Promises and Lies, what I had deemed a sweet contemporary romance. I had submitted part of it to my publisher in August 2009 as a short story. It was rejected because that part of the story did not have a happy ending. That was the spark I needed to really work it into a longer story, because I knew if I "finished it" it would be great.

Turns out, I was wrong.

I don't typically use beta-readers. I guess it's whatever portion of "ego" that I have, but I don't write solely for the purpose of getting published. With that in mind, I'm not going to craft a manuscript just to get it published. When I want opinions I get them from people I know well. This doesn't mean that they spew out how great my work is, trust me when I say they criticisize. A lot. They nit-pick and quibble, and I dutifully make the changes. Finally mid-April I was satisfied with the story and sent it off.

Mid-May it was rejected. This made the 2nd time. Daunted, I sat on it for a few days and then went to work re-writing. Unfortunately, this all came about as things were really un-raveling at work and I felt doubly devastated. By the end of May I sent the "revised for the 3rd time" work to my beta group, but there was some divine hoky poky going on, and they never received it. Annoyed that they weren't getting back to me, I picked through it again, and satisfied it was good, sent it off in early June.

Well, here it is early July and I've heard nothing beyond "we'll put it on the stack". Honestly, I think that means rejection number three, and with all I've been through I think that will be devastating.

I'll bounce back, because I'm not the kind to stay down, but right now the anticipation is killing me.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Promises and Lies

It took me three years to write The King's Tale primarily because I wasn't writing it with the intent to get it published. I was writing it for myself, so I didn't have a huge push to get it done. I submitted it fully expecting it to be rejected, and was overjoyed to find it wasn't. My own name for it is TKT, that's what I refer to it as when I talk with my dear friend Danyel.

So, TKT took me three years, and the new novel, Promises and Lies, I'm working on is nearing completion of the first rough draft after only 6 months. I'm midway through chapter twenty five, and have finally decided there will be one additional chapter and an epilogue. With editing and rewriting, I figure at least another two to three months before it's ready to submit.

I'm excited about it, it's pretty much a straight romance, imo a very sweet story.

The Ides of March conquered me today, so I had to give up on writing, but I'm feeling very hopeful and optimistic.

Monday, March 1, 2010

March 2010 GLBT Bookshelf Fundraiser

Visit the GLBT Bookshelf's March Fundraiser

Mel Keegan has worked tirelessly to make the GLBT Bookshelf a fantastic place. Please drop by to support the wiki and check out some new and discounted works by seven Bookshelf members, including a new short story by me.

 

Sam O'Brien and Mason Jackson are long time friends and roommates with benefits. Passionate martial artists they earn a living criss crossing the country putting on exhibitions with an elite team from their dojo. One snowy night in Atlanta Mason makes a startling revelation about his habits when he and Sam are parted, and a bitter argument ensues. Sam leaves Mason reeling in a drunken stupor and finds solace with the rest of the dojo at a party. Although Sam is morose about the argument he strikes up a conversation with Shan, another martial artist. Although the encounter is one-sided on Shan's part, when Sam returns home later Mason accuses him of the worst and kicks Sam out of their shared apartment.

Uncertainty lingers, and even though Sam feels betrayed he can't get Mason out of his head. Sam stays late in the dojo craving the solitude it provides, and the release from worry that working out brings. After weeks of separation Mason finds him there one night and promises things will change. Admissions are made on both sides, and the lovers turn a corner and agree to give things another chance.


Thanks!