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Tuesday, May 2, 2023

Book Review: Brine and Bone, by Kate Stradling

Well, it’s been a hot minute, hasn’t it. But I’m here again, with a book review! Try to contain your excitement, please.

Today’s book: Brine and Bone, by Kate Stradling

TL;DR: This is the Little Mermaid retelling that I never knew I always wanted. The book is short (I believe it’s novella length), sweet, and completely not what I expected. The author’s preface begins with “Stop. If you’re expecting a clone of a certain redhead underwater songstress... prepare for disappointment.” But if you’re interested in a Little Mermaid retelling that actually addresses the foot-knives, the seafoam, and the rather unsatisfying ending—read it.

Rating: 4.5

What I liked:

The outstanding part of the story is how the perspective switch makes everything just work so well. It seems like such a little change, but it just made me love it. Stradling’s writing is also lovely and spare and really fits the fairy tale tone.

I enjoyed getting to know the main character, Magdalena, and learning about her backstory and her future. I liked the prince. I liked the magic involved—just enough to add excitement and some pretty severe problems without feeling like it was also going to be a deus ex machina.

Also, let’s just admire that pretty pretty cover for a minute. It fulfills one of my reading bucket list items for the year (a book with a typographical cover), and it’s fancy, so I give it extra imaginary points.

What didn’t work for me:

Two minor things come to mind.

I wish I understood a bit more about the characters’ backgrounds. They come with some pretty frustrating baggage attached, and while we get to see bits and pieces of how it all happened, I just wanted more.

The POV switch from first to third to first. I’m not sure if this was done to stay in keeping with other books in this series (it was my first Kate Stradling, but it won’t be my last), or if there was some other reason that is unclear to me as a reader. But... well, it was unclear to me as a reader, and I found it distracting. Still, it was only the bookends, so my brain will just pretend that it didn’t exist at all, and that works for me.

Clean rating: PG. There’s some pain and stabby-stabby feelings, but there’s no gore, no sex, nada. It’s a light read. I’m subtly trying to convince my 15yo to read it.

Last thoughts: Enjoyed it, LOVED the perspective switch, bought another one.

 

 

 

Monday, August 9, 2021

Adventuring Again

Warning: Very mild spoilers for “Forged in Iron and Blood” herein. If you haven’t read it yet, you can find it in the Best of Deep Magic anthology 2, along with a bunch of other wonderful stories.

 


Ever since I wrote “Forged in Iron and Blood” a couple years back, I have had in my head this vision of fan art for the story. In my head, Lina and Seelah are setting off on another adventure.

But you can’t really force fan art, you know? So I just sat on that thought and hoped that magically someone would just create it (because I have totally realistic dreams). But last year, I turned forty, and as part of my celebrations, I decided I was going to go out and buy some lovely arts and crafts from my friends and seek out artwork that would bring even more beauty and joy into my household (we already have what I call my “wall of happy,” which is covered in bits of art and family photos and such—but I wanted to add to it!).

Around that same time, I saw someone in one of my Facebook groups asking for illustrator recommendations. I checked out the illustrators suggested and found just the person I was looking for: Bethany Crandall. I decided that it was silly to wait around for someone to create what I wanted; I was going to make it happen myself.

So I hired Bethany to make the picture I wanted. I told her about my characters,* their personalities and descriptions, and I gave her the overall idea that I was looking for. Then she just went to town.

And here it is! It’s not what I imagined, but to me it’s actually a lot better. I originally imagined a much more somber picture, to suit the original story, but I love the cheerier mood of this piece so much. As I think about it, this is what I hope for Lina going into the future—I want her to be off on buddy adventures with Seelah. They’ll go into an area where a dragon has been ravaging the hillsides, and they’ll have a chat with the dragon (and maybe a cup of tea) and settle things happily. They’ll visit a town with a bully mayor, and they’ll help the villagers rebel. Seelah will pull a giant ball of yarn out of her basket and knit a scarf for a troll with a cold.

I want them to have fun, exciting adventures without the fate of the world at stake. I want Lina to eventually stop having nightmares. I want them to keep making peace everywhere they go but not be burdened quite so heavily.

So I wanted to share this artwork with you. It’s going in a special place on my “wall of happy” (along with an epic family portrait that we also commissioned from Bethany—which we have turned into a huge canvas on our wall and it is soooo fantastic!), and maybe (I hope) someday it will inspire me to write up some of the continuing adventures of Lina and Seelah.

 

* Seelah has to have a basket!

** I love love LOVE the scarring on Lina’s arms, from all the blacksmithing work.

Monday, August 2, 2021

Lina and Seelah, On the Run


Warning: Major spoilers for “Forged in Iron and Blood” herein. If you haven’t read it yet, you can find it in the
Best of Deep Magicanthology 2, along with a bunch of other wonderful stories.

I wrote this micro-story in response to a prompt—500 words or less, a secret, and the word “serendipity.” It needed to stand alone, so it kind of rehashes a bit of what happens in “Forged in Iron and Blood.” But it also hints at the future for them.

I wish I could say that I have more stories written for Lina and Seelah; that’s always the first thing people ask after they read the story—what do they do next? I love that there’s so much interest in these two lovely aging women. I still want to write their stories, but for now, nothing has really resolved into a plot.

Next week I’ll be sharing some artwork I commissioned about them, and I’ll be talking about how I see them in the future. But for now, I hope you enjoy this little tidbit.

 

***

 

Seelah leaned over and lit the kindling, blowing on it gently as it caught the nearest twigs. In the last weeks of travel, they’d discovered that Seelah was the better campfire starter—ironic, given that Lina had spent the decades as a blacksmith and before that as a traveling soldier.

“I’m truly the only other person who knows who you are?” Seelah asked, leaning back slowly, her back creaking. “Too old to sleep on the ground like this,” she muttered to herself, and Lina agreed. Her every muscle protested every morning.

Then she shrugged. They’d already covered this ground, multiple times. “It wasn’t safe.” She gestured back the way they’d come, back to the village they’d been forced to flee. “You already saw what happens when someone comes too close to the truth.”

Seelah nodded. Lina was on the run, and Seelah had willingly joined in to protect her—and that was before Lina had revealed who she was. Now she seemed even more determined to help keep Lina safe, in whatever small, grandmotherly ways she could. “I suppose you’re right.”

For what seemed like the thousandth time, Lina whispered thank you. It had been pure serendipity that Seelah had been in Lina’s blacksmith shop when the men arrived. And then it had been Seelah’s sheer brilliance and bravery that had helped Lina escape, right under their noses. Lina owed Seelah her life, of that there was little doubt.

Seelah waved the thanks away. “Couldn’t let them hurt my dearest friend, could I? Even if I didn’t know how important you are to the kingdom.” She shook her head. “There’s still part of me that can’t believe I didn’t guess it years ago.”

Lina smiled. “To be fair, you guessed most of my other secrets.”

Seelah laughed and poked at the fire with a long stick. “True.”

They both went quiet again, each counting down the days to an unknown future when they’d have to stop running and somehow get Lina back into hiding, in a new life, safe again from the men who would kill her so they could start a war. For now, though, there was a friendly silence in listening to the crackle of the fire as darkness descended around them. They were as safe as they could manage, Seelah’s basket was filled with delicious pastries they’d bought in the last town, and the future would have to wait.

“Lina?” Seelah finally said into the quiet.

“Yes?”

“Can I tell you a secret?”

Lina released a short bark of laughter. “Please. I’m pretty sure I can keep it.”

“I feel so silly about it. I’ve loved my life, you know. My dear Himleh—he was the best husband a woman could ask. And the children and grandchildren have made may days so full...”

“But?” Lina prompted.

“Well, I’ve always wanted to travel. See the world. Experience new things...”

Lina sat in stunned silence for a minute. “Your secret is that you wish to travel?”

Seelah chuckled. “Well, yes.”

Lina looked around. The campfire warming them, the open road waiting before them, the skies above them. She’d thought she’d need to settle somewhere again, build up a life where she hid her connections to the war like she had before. But maybe she didn’t need that. They had the money, and a moving target was always harder to find. Maybe they’d just stay two silly old women, traveling the world, nothing at all to hide. “Seelah, I think we can accommodate that. Where should we go next?”

 

 


Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Big Announcement!

I’ve been sitting on this announcement for a while now, for various reasons, but I am so very pleased to announce that I have joined the Board of Deep Magic Ezine! You can see it looking all official right here.

via GIPHY

I have been so pleased to work with Deep Magic, their first readers, and their Board members for the last couple of years. It’s solidified even more for me something that I relish participating in—finding and bringing to light stories that are filled with awesomeness, joy, good people, and wonderful writing. I feel especially passionate about this place where I can almost always happily share the stories with my voracious 13yo and where I myself end up loving the majority of our publications. As a slush reader, I always waited with anxious excitement to see what stories the Board would choose from those that I had loved in the slush pile, and I always cheered when something I adored got published.

I love getting to work with all the people I’ve met through this process—the fun, funny, and helpful first readers, and the brilliant, hardworking, and encouraging Board members that I now get to work even more closely with. And of course the authors, who put their art into the world in the hopes that it will find a home.

It’s also been humbling to see this business from behind the scenes. I continue to be amazed by how many wonderful writers are out there. How many great stories get written. How many beautiful new worlds come to life through these words. The lovely stories—sometimes silly, sometimes bittersweet, sometimes joyful—that we get to accept! And sadly, how many fantastic stories we have to reject.

I have loved being part of the slush process, and I’m even more excited as I settle into my Board member duties. I look forward to finding more incredible stories and more authors to publish. I look forward to helping shape this magazine that I love. This is a place where I know I belong right now, and I see a thousand little steps that brought me here. I’m looking forward to seeing what happens next.


Sunday, November 15, 2020

Turning Forty

This is the year I turn forty.

via GIPHY

I’m rather excited, and I have plans that I need your help with. But first, the explanation:

***

On the way home from another woman’s fortieth birthday bash recently, my husband turned to me and asked, “What do you want for your fortieth birthday?”

And I wasn’t sure what to answer.

I can usually buy for myself most of the “stuff” that I want. And the things that I can’t buy—time, patience, sleep, etc.—can be carefully worked in to life but can’t really be given as gifts. (Though my husband, Brice, is always excellent at working in extra time for naps and alone time around my birthday.)

Parties? Gifts? What did I really want?

***

A couple years back on Twitter (I think) I saw someone make a comment about how women turning forty come into their powers and should celebrate by running wild with the wolves, that sort of thing. And for a while I kind of envisioned doing something immense and wacky for my fortieth. But to be honest, I’m not a run-naked-in-the-moonlight kind of gal (plus, egad, all the prickles here! and the summertime snakes! no running naked in the bush, thankyouverymuch).

I spent a lot of time wondering what I really did want to do. What would make me the happiest? I have lots of swirling thoughts, but I have condensed some of them down to a few actionable items, and I need your help to make them happen.

 

So what do I want?

I want to support my friends in their creative endeavors.

I want to support the creation of things that bring beauty into the world.

I want to support things that bring joy into the world.

I want to be a creator of some of that joy—or at least contribute to its creation.

 

 

Here’s how you can help:

via GIPHY

 

1. Sell me something beautiful. Or charming. Or quirky and fun. Are you a maker of something? Crafts? Art? Photography? ... Something else? (Not books, we’ll get to books in a minute.) I want to know about things that you (or your children or spouse) make. Or I guess I’d also accept things that someone you know makes, if you think they’re wonderful (but I want to stick to people I’m closely connected to; don’t just tell me about a cool creator you ran across on Youtube).

Tell me about the thing you make. Give me a link (if you don’t have an online store, send me a picture!). I can’t buy everything, of course, but I can buy some things. So tell me so I have lots of options to choose from! As a sidenote, I’d especially love to hear about why you create what you do—this isn’t a sales pitch, I am just excited to hear your stories.

2. Author friends: Tell me about your favorite book by a different author friend. I have no doubt your books are amazing (and, given that I buy a LOT more books than I ever manage to read, I probably have already bought one of your books), but I want to hear you brag about books by your friends this time around.

3. Tell me about a mutual friend who could use a gift. In theory, I could be buying several items, and I may not be keeping them all. Who knows? (Not me. I have no idea if this idea is going to really explode or totally tank.) But, as my 13yo decided this year for her birthday, I want to at least sort of celebrate “hobbit style” (by giving gifts to other people). So who needs some extra love via a silly small gift? (Tell me this privately please, via messenger or email or something).

4. Make a video and share your love of simple things! Are you a pet rock enthusiast? Do you love telling people about your favorite dinosaur? Have you just been waiting for someone to ask you about how to ___________? Now’s your chance! Pretend I asked, and send me a short video (1–3 minutes) about something you adore, something that excites you, something you think is just plain wonderful.

It doesn’t have to be professional or fantastically edited or anything nifty. Just something you love. I really, really want to hear about it.

 

So, if you are inclined to help me celebrate my fortieth birthday in the way that would make me ever-so-happy (and will hopefully make you happy too), then help me out! I would appreciate it a lot.

via GIPHY

Sunday, May 31, 2020

Give Me Alice Springs


As of today, my family and I have been a year in Alice Springs, Australia. There are so many things I could say about this time so far. I could tell about the growth my kids have experienced, the walks through the bush behind our neighborhood, the different things I’ve noticed about life while living out of the US for my first time. So many things.

But in the end, what I did recently was write a poem, which is very much not my medium. I started it out as a kind of essay about my experience of the natural world here and how life here has forced me to change, but it didn’t feel right and it wasn’t working. So I condensed and altered, and this is what is left. It’s not complete. I actually kind of hate the idea of sharing it because it feels both too personal and not personal enough. Plus, it is poetry, which—I cannot stress this enough—is not my thing. But I’m trying to be brave. 

It doesn’t take into account a lot of the joys and wonder. It doesn’t tell you about the months when I thought, “I will never step out into cool weather and no flies again; I will never be cold again,” and then suddenly, within about a week, all the jumpers and long sleeves and jeans came out again and I remembered that there was cold in the world.

It doesn’t tell you about the hike we took one day that led us past a strange combination of objects—old tin cans, a whole lot of golf balls, little paddymelons, and a kangaroo carcass that had probably become food for dingoes or at least kites. How what might have been disgusting was merely fascinating—a part of the natural world, a part of real life. How we examined its bones and remains, appreciating a kangaroo’s incredible structure and adaptations for the life it leads.

This poem doesn’t explicitly mention that this experience is so very specific to my life, here, as a white woman transplanted into a world I have never lived in before. It doesn’t discuss what it would be like to actually live off this land, and it only skims the surface of some of the beauty here. It also only skims the surface of how I have changed in the last year—both so much and so little at the same time. And how there’s still so much to learn. So it feels so incomplete in some ways, but hopefully it captures at least a moment or a feeling or just a tiny bit of what life has been here for me.

And so, without further ado (because that was definitely plenty of ado already!):

“Give Me Alice Springs”

Some people love

the lush, bright greens,
the wet humidity,
of lands where rain is plentiful and gardens grow
a rainbow of color
even in neglect.

I have loved them too.

But for me, for now,
give me the granite, the gneiss,
the red rock rising in ridges and crags,
the dust and dirt,
the sand that stains every white
a perpetual pale rust.

Give me the greens of the desert,
a thousand shades of muted sage.
The restrained reds and softened yellows
in the grevillea, the bottlebrush, the wattle—
flowers that know
how to grow in drought.

Give me a land
stripped down.
Give me the sturdy strength that survives—
flourishes—
in the searing of a too-close sun.
Give me the sky as wide as eternity,
as sharp as certainty.

Let me search,
work,
dig deep to find
infinitesimal treasures
buried in the rubble
of broken rock and hard-packed earth.

And then,
after I’ve gathered piles of pebbles,
let me spend a day in the sun,
trickles of mud pouring down my arm
as I hold a sieve full of hope
to the sunlight,
seeking the tell-tale glint
of garnet red.

Here I have been forced to strip away
what would not grow.
Felt weak things wither painfully.
Felt myself held up to the
scorching sunlight,
searched desperately for value that came
not from trappings or titles or tasks
but from me—
the garnets of who I am among the dross
of what I thought I was meant to be.

Here,
when the rain comes,
it must come for days,
for weeks,
before the river flows.

When it flows, the land wakes.
We flow to the water as the water flows into the land,
we come to splash
and wade
and expand.

The night silence is broken
by the croaking of frogs,
singing their mating songs, celebrating new life,
then burrowing and laying their eggs
once again
as the river shrinks and disappears.

The eggs will hatch
when the next rain comes.

Someday I will return to a land
of brilliant greens,
a land where I must ever work to weed
what is not wanted,
not carefully cultivate
what I wish to keep.

But for now, I am content
to be refined in the heat of this sun,
to let my chaff blow away in the searing desert wind,
to soak and splash in the water that heals, that makes everything live where it goes.

For now, I am content in Alice Springs.



Mormon Lit Blitz Semifinalist


A month or two ago, I went into a rather unusual productivity spike for me. The deadline for submitting to the Mormon Lit Blitz was approaching, and I really wanted to submit. Most years, I struggle to come up with even one idea for this competition, even though I love it—and even if I do get an idea, I struggle (more than just the usual) with how to put it into words. This year, I had about six ideas, and I found myself actually pulling some of them together and getting them into words.

The results: One story that started out as a tale of midwives and took a slight turn, requiring a lot of editing and revision to bring it a place that (to be honest) I’m still not entirely happy with. One story that popped into my head, almost fully formed based on a prompt from an episode of Writing Excuses. One poem. You read that right—a poem.

Pieces for the Lit Blitz are always excruciatingly difficult for me to have beta readers for. As I mention in this previous post, I can’t even let my husband read them—and he beta reads everything for me and is an incredible help. But somehow it’s too weird.

To make a long story short: I submitted all three pieces (three are allowed), and two of them were selected as semifinalists (interestingly, the two that I thought were weaker, but sometimes you just don’t know what’s going to work). However, when the finalist list came out, both were dropped. This honestly doesn’t surprise me. I pretty much expected it; they’re just not as good as I would have liked them to be (though they are the best I could make them for now). So while it was a bit sad, like I said, not surprising.

And then came the next tricky bit. Would I share them now? The nature of the Lit Blitz is such that my writing for it really won’t fit in any other market. There’s no point in keeping them locked up because they’re never going to sell anywhere else. It’s Lit Blitz or Bust! But if I couldn’t share them with my husband, how could I do it here? Well, to make another long story short, I’m just gonna do it. I’m going to post one now (for reasons you’ll see when you read it), and then I’ll take a break because the actual finalists for the Mormon Lit Blitz are going up, and I want to just pay attention to them. Then I’ll post the others later, provided I still have the courage.

Regardless of my pieces, though, I hope that some of you will take the time to read the finalists when they come out. So many of the stories are wonderful every year, and though many speak specifically to an LDS audience, a lot of them also transcend that border and speak to human experience in general.

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Book Review: Spinning Silver, by Naomi Novik

Spinning Silver: A Novel(Caveat: I read this a couple months back, so some of the details are going to be woefully wrong—like I can’t remember for sure if the rulers are tsars, but I think they are.)

Rating: 4.5 stars, maybe 5

Clean rating: 
PG-13, largely for thematic elements (it’s a harsh sort of life, there are demons and other evil beings, there’s a forced marriage in which the woman worries quite a bit over where the sex life is going to go, etc.). I didn’t find it unreasonable or gratuitous.

Overview: 
This book is an awesome, complex tale loosely based on Rumpelstiltskin, with nods to a number of other fairy tales (I caught Cinderella, Hansel and Gretel, a couple others that seemed like maybes). It’s set in an Eastern European feeling world.
The story follows three women in very different situations, starting first with Miryem, the daughter of a Jewish moneylender, dealing with a lot of the real prejudices a Jewish moneylender would have faced in this kind of a world. Next is Wanda, a poor daughter of an abusive and drunken father. Finally is Irina, a rich noble who, despite her better economic situation, has very little control over her life, just like the others. Their stories start separate but interweave until they all work together.

What I liked:
This story was exactly my cup of tea. The characters are highly flawed in a lot of ways, including being sometimes downright unlikable—but they’re all in untenable situations and doing the best they can. I loved the writing. I loved the nods to fairy tales but how much richness was added to the narrative beyond the basics of a fairy tale. I liked the worldbuilding with strange fae-like characters (called the Staryk) whose motivations seem incomprehensible but maybe aren’t really, once you get down to the details. 
Plus, no spoiler here, but I thought the very ending (we're talking about the last couple paragraphs) was spot-on perfect. Love love loved it. I think the story may have earned an extra half a star from me for that alone. It’s certainly what left me smiling goofily and telling my husband all about it after I finished.

What I didn’t like:
I’m sure there was something here, but it fades. I don’t really think the story was perfect, but I enjoyed so much and felt like it all came together—even the things I didn’t like about it as I was reading it came together in a way that I felt satisfied with. I will say that as I was going, I was not convinced the author would resolve the romantic storylines in ways I felt good about, given that so many of the characters were selfish, incomprehensible, or sometimes downright evil. And I’m sure that those resolutions didn’t work for many readers—but for me, they did.

Other notes: 
In looking at other people’s reviews of the book, I began to consider the POV issue. This book is written from three main POV characters, but then there are another 2-4 minor POV characters thrown in as well. I didn’t have a difficult time figuring out who was speaking, though some readers complained about that. But I do think some of the POVs seemed unnecessary, and I didn’t love having them jump in just when I’d gotten used to how many POV characters we had. So if you have difficulties with multiple narrators, this is likely to be distracting and unpleasant to you. 

Final thoughts:
I enjoyed it. I know not everyone did, but I thought it was a wonderful book and if the POV thing and some sometimes-unlikable characters don’t throw you off, and if you love fairy tale retellings, you should read it. The end.

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

"Forged in Iron and Blood," out today!


Deep Magic - Winter 2019 by [Wheeler, Jeff]I’m so pleased to finally be able to share “Forged in Iron and Blood.” It has been embarrassingly long in the works (like, most authors spend less time on full-length novels than I spent on this one), but I’m immensely happy with how it turned out,* and I hope you enjoy it! You can order it, along with a bunch of other great stories, here.

I figured that, now that this story is out in the world, I’d share a few bits and pieces about how it came about. No spoilers here.

A couple years ago (seriously), I saw an open call for short story submissions that really struck my fancy (I can’t remember it exactly, but it was something about iron and oak, I think—tales of the fae), and I started mulling over it. My husband and I were just about to leave for Italy for an anniversary vacation, and I remember standing in line to board our first plane (before we were so massively jetlagged that we could hardly string together complete sentences)** and explaining the theme to him and starting to brainstorm. At that point, if I recall, I had about one idea—I wanted an awesome older woman in my story.

Brice (the husband) is my most fantastic brainstorming partner. I bounce all my best ideas off him, and they get better. There are also about a million zany ideas that I immediately discard (he usually brings up dinosaurs or explosions at some point, or weird stuff like talking goats and such). But it’s so much fun that I don’t mind. 

By the end of our first brainstorming session, we had a character named Lina, who was a retired soldier, and she had an awesome berserker fairy friend, and there was going to be a kind of Wild West shootout sort of thing.

I took the ideas and ran away from that plotline, but I saved a few of my favorite parts (including bits of the early description of her berserker friend), and I came up with an ending that I was soooo excited about, and I wrote that. And then I stalled out. (I have an embarrassing number of stories that have an awesome beginning and ending written, with absolutely no way to get from one to the other.)

So it sat around for a while, while I worked on some stories inspired by our Italy trip (those are still drafting—one is a novel, one is a short, a couple are totally dead in the water) and the deadline for the submission call went whooshing by. And I finally wrote it and workshopped it and was still stuck on a couple of little elements. So I kept putting it off to work on other stuff. And/or avoid working on other stuff.
Finally, in August of this year, I had an awesome experience that kicked me back into gear. As you may know, I’m a slush reader for Deep Magic.*** Our fantastic board members (Jeff Wheeler and Charlie Holmberg in this case) occasionally offer us various opportunities to learn from them, and they gave us the chance to submit a first page to them for critique. I submitted the first page of “Forged in Iron and Blood.”

To make a long story short, Jeff especially liked it, and I made a commitment to submit it by the end of the current submission period. Now I had a deadline! And suddenly, just like that, I got back to work (I know there are these magical people who work better when they’re not on deadline, but I’m not one of them). There was more drafting, more critique, and an amazing editing cut by my husband. I was trying to drop the dross from 9000 words and struggling over a couple hundred. Brice got hold of it and somehow managed to delete about 3500 without even breaking a sweat! I ignored about a third of his changes and smooched him for the rest—he made the story so much clearer and lovelier—and it was ready to submit!

And that’s the story! One final note, though: The day I got my acceptance letter had been a bad day. I don’t even remember why, but it was blech. When I saw the email come in, the little preview of it on my phone made me think it was going to be a rejection—yuck. So then when I opened it and got the acceptance, I had to do a little happy dance. It definitely helped make the rest of the day a lot better.

If you read the story, I hope you enjoy it. If you haven’t bought it yet, you should! ;) It’s only $3 for my story and a whole bunch more! You know you want to.


* Except that one sentence that I just today realized how I would have liked to rewrite it! Sigh. The life of a writer—nothing is truly done, you just have to let it go.
** Little did I know how much worse jetlag could be, traveling with small, sick children literally to the other side of the planet—13.5-hour jetlag is crazy talk.
*** This means I get to read through tons of submissions that come in to the magazine, and I pass the stories that best suit Deep Magic up to other readers—it’s an awesome opportunity, and I’ll have to write about it more sometime!


Thursday, October 31, 2019

How NOT to Write a Short Story


Step 1. Have a short story idea for a submission call. Two years ago. It has one POV character and is, loosely, a romance.

Step 2. Start to brainstorm it. Run it by an agent, just for funsies, because you already paid for a pitch session and have nothing else to talk about.

Step 3. Hear these fateful words: “It sounds like a novel.” (Cue ominous music.)

Step 4. Yeah, it does sound like a novel. This would be pretty great.

Step 5. But it needs two POV characters.

Step 6. And an antagonist, obviously, who’s pretty awful. But he doesn’t need a POV.

Step 7. Enter the very important sister with a very detailed backstory—enough for her own short story at least.

Step 8. That villain is getting pretty loud. Definitely need to do some scenes from his POV.

Step 9. Some first chapter contests, some workhops.

Step 10. One round of NaNoWriMo (but only 30k words, because you’re working on other stuff at the same time).

Step 11. More brainstorming, more outlining. Because finally you’re really seriously going to finish up this story idea. No more sidetracks.

Step 12. Wait, what? That new character idea would really be super intriguing. She totally deserves her own sequel. But for now, she’ll just show up as a hint at the very end. Right?

Step 13. Wrong. She’s totally a POV character. Maybe?

Step 14. But at least I don’t have to write the sister’s POV! (Yet.)


And that, my friends, is how a 7k-word story idea I had a couple years ago has blossomed into today’s NaNoWriMo project, projected to end up probably somewhere around 80­-90k, with four POV characters.

Image result for madness gif

Sunday, June 23, 2019

Podcastle Semifinalist, NYC Midnight Flash Fiction


Fun news! A story I submitted to Podcastle’s flash fiction contest (500 words or less) is now a semifinalist! The competition has gone from about 215 stories down to 51.

I finished a decent draft of this piece in March-ish at ~900 words, but it needed some tightening. So the challenge to drop down to 500 was the perfect boost to get cutting. The competition is strictly anonymous, so I won’t talk more about the piece itself, but I may post later, after names have been revealed.

If you are a SFF reader who loves very short fic, you’re welcome to read and participate in the voting. The forum where they hold the contest is currently down, unfortunately. They had some tech bugs at a very good-and-bad time. Good because they’d just finished up the first round of voting. Bad because those of us in the semifinals are now holding our breath. All my sympathies to their “tech barbarians” for having to get this sorted. When the forum is up again, I’ll share a link to show you how you can get involved.

As I mentioned, the competition is very anonymous, so please, if you are among the few who know which piece is mine, don’t vote in my semifinalist group! And obviously don’t say, “Oh, hey! This is Jeanna’s story!” Or do anything else nefarious, like creating multiple accounts at a single household, etc.—I really don’t want to succeed by cheating. (And I am up against some really fantastic stories, as well as a few I don’t particularly care for—but there are enough wonderful ones that it’s going to be hard.)


In other news, I’ll be doing NYC Midnight’s flash fiction contest again this year. It’s going to be weird doing it from an Australia time zone rather than New York’s. I’ll write for half a day on Saturday, take a break for Sunday, and finish my piece on Monday morning, so that’s a bit different.

In honor of preparing for this contest, and to dust off my rusty writing skills, I’m requesting some prompts! So if you’re still reading this post, I’d love to have you comment with the following: a genre, a location, and an object. Be as random as you want. Then I’ll pick a couple of these and write some flash fiction! If I choose your prompts, I’ll also send you my story to read (it may be great or it may be trash—it’s like a grab bag from the dollar store, where you have no idea what you’re going to get!).

That’s it for now! Thanks for reading.

Friday, June 22, 2018

My Favorite Fairy Tale, a Blog Hop Party


Greetings, fairy tale explorers! Welcome to my portion of the fairy tale blog hop. I hope you have a good time exploring different authors this week, and I hope you find something new to delight you (better yet if it’s me!).

Thirteen fairy tale authors have gotten together to talk about their favorite fairy tales. Follow the links at the bottom of each blog post to hop to the next author’s website. Collect our favorite numbers to total up at the end and enter to win a print collection of our books! (There are several anthologies, debuts, and even an ARC for a BLINK YA book you can’t buy in stores yet!)

Favorite fairy tale? That used to be an easy question. “Beauty and the Beast,” of course. In college, as part of graduating with university honors, you had to write a thesis paper. I wrote mine on—you guessed it—“Beauty and the Beast.” Oh, I ate, drank, slept, and read that story for several months. So many different versions, with lots of contemporary ones. And the picture books! So many picture books. (Despite all this, I sadly left some ridiculous gaps, so please don’t ask me about Villeneuve’s version. I’m still embarrassed that I didn’t read that.)

Which was my favorite retelling? Definitely not the Disney film. I like elements of the Disney, but I can’t escape feeling like Belle is stuck up and just really not the Beauty that I wanted her to be.* My favorite version was easily Robin McKinley’s Beauty. And then, when I wrote my own (currently shelved) novel-length version, that was my favorite.  

I love “Beauty and the Beast” for its story of redemption, which was in fact what I wrote about. Here’s the TL;DR: The story is about more than falling in love with a beast. It’s about the power of seeing people truly and how that changes them—and us. There you go, about 64 pages summed up in a sentence (64, by the way, is 2^6; I love powers of 2, which is why 16 is my favorite small-ish number).**

But to make another long story short, years have since intervened, and the luster has faded from dear Beauty, the Beast, and all their incarnations. Asked today, I would be much harder pressed to answer, but I’m leaning toward “The Six Swans” (so much angst! so much sacrifice!) or “Diamonds and Toads” (my favorite theme—how gifts can be curses, and vice versa!). I even have a flash version of “Diamonds and Toads” here on the blog, if you want to check it out.

Which probably explains how I’ve ended up starting a novel based on a character from each of these tales. I love these characters so much, and if I can do even a little justice to who they are, you will too (someday).

So that’s it! Thanks for coming by. Now go visit Alicia Gale and find out what she has to say. If you’ve already been to all 13 stops and collected everyone’s favorite number, then go enter to win the grand prize.

As an added bonus, if you’d like to be included in an additional drawing (for an individual copy of Unspun), go to my Facebook page, follow me, and leave a comment letting me know what your favorite fairy tale is and why.

For an additional entry to my individual drawing (only available after Sunday, the 24th), go to Timeless Tales magazine and read some of the Snow White issue, which features my super-fluffy (and somewhat out of character for me) “The Nanny Job,” then come back to Facebook and tell me what you think of Snow White stories (doesn’t have to be mine).

And finally, if you just can’t wait and want to make sure you get a copy of Unspun, it’s on sale just this weekend. Go forth and purchase and enjoy!

Happy reading, all!


* On the other hand, in junior high I used to walk home from school while reading a book, and a boy I had a crush on called me “Belle” one time (just after we almost collided), and that felt like a compliment, so... mixed feelings?
** Which may also have something to do with why I’m a geek. (And yes, 16 is the number you’re looking for in the blog hop.)

Book Review: Blackthorn and Grim series, by Juliet Marillier


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Note: This review is about book 1 (Dreamer’s Pool) and book 2 (Tower of Thorns), sort of combined. I haven’t read book 3 (Den of Wolves) yet, but I’m looking forward to it. While I think you could probably read book 2 on its own if you really wanted to, I don’t think it works well as a stand-alone.


TL;DR: Read the clean rating section. If that doesn’t stop you from wanting to read these books, read them. If you’ve read and liked Marillier before, read them. If you like complicated characters with horrific backstories who are nevertheless doing their best to live reasonably decent lives, read them. They’re great.

Rating: 4.5

Clean rating: PG-13 definitely. Largely for thematic elements (there’s some pretty majorly violent/awful backstory for both our main characters, including rape, torture, injustice, and various other horrible events). The backstory is neither glorified nor described in depth, but it’s pervasive in how these characters experience life. The books are not light, fluffy reads, though I also didn’t find them dark and depressing.

Book 1 also has some sexual content that I have mixed feelings about. On the one hand, I don’t like reading the sexual elements (though there was not a lot of detail, and it was all told in a very repressive tone by a character who clearly didn’t approve of his own behavior). On the other hand, whereas some sex scenes are just thrown in for fun, the couple of incidents in this book are absolutely integral to the storyline.

So while I can’t recommend the books to various of my friends and family who I know share similar values, I have loved them and will continue to read them.

Short summary: Blackthorn is a healer who is too angry to want to heal anyone anymore. When she’s given a chance to escape a terrible situation or die, she takes the deal that lets her escape, even with some conditions on her freedom that tend to ... chafe. Grim is big, strong, and loyal to Blackthorn. He’s got his own ugly past to deal with. Together they get drawn into complicated challenges to help people who may or may not deserve help.

Blackthorn and Grim’s characters and growth create the series arc, along with some mysteries from their pasts. The individual challenges create the individual book arcs.

What I liked: Oh, Marillier. It’s probably easier for me to just skip to what I didn’t like. But I’ll hit the highlights here.

Blackthorn. Grim. Although I think I like Grim a little better. He is not my usual kind of character; I tend to like witty, funny, clever—though not obnoxiously charming. But Grim is wonderful. He’s strong, determined, steady, kind, loyal. The revelations of his backstory throughout book 2 didn’t surprise me overmuch, but they gave such lovely depth to him as a person. I kind of want to hug him—except that would be super weird, because he’s also kind of this huge ogre sort of a fellow. It would be kind of like hugging a slightly friendly rock.

Blackthorn, for all her thorniness, is a lovely character too. Not the sort of person you want to sit and chat with (she would hate that anyway), but reliable and stronger than she thinks. I like how we see both of them slowing growing and changing and softening. Plus, without giving spoilers, I love what happens with the characters in the end of book 2. It made me happy and sad and yelling-at-the-characters-for-their-idiocy all at the same time.

As with the other Marillier I’ve read, the writing is exquisite. The storytelling is excellent. The twists worked—though I figured out what was likely to happen with large parts of the plot, there were plenty of surprises along the way. And the stuff that wasn’t surprising was still an enjoyable journey.

What didn’t work for me: Ummm... I’m thinking... Okay, I do admit I would have preferred some sort of workaround for the sexual content in Dreamer’s Pool (although I giggled just a little bit every time the character mentioned his “manhood”).

I was about to go on a bit about how I had no idea how to pronounce stuff. But then I saw that book 2 had a pronunciation guide that I just missed. Oops. I listened to the first one, so I got pronunciation of names like Flidais (Fliddiss) and Emer (eh-ver!) and Laois (leesh!) from that. But in Tower of Thorns, I spent the entire book wondering how I was supposed to pronounce Geilèis (ge-lace, apparently). So I guess I can’t complain about that now.

Last words: I recently had a friend do a critique for me on some stuff I’m working on, and she compared the writing to Marillier, and I kind of wanted to reach through the computer and hug my friend and then do a little happy dance. If my stories could one day be classed even remotely close to Juliet Marillier, I would feel like I had won at all the things.

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Book Review: A Bit of Magic, a fairy tale collection


A Bit of Magic: A Collection of Fairy Tale RetellingsOverall rating: 3.5­­ stars

In case you missed it, fairy tales are my thing, so I was already sold on the idea of another fairy tale collection. Because I’m not really sure there can ever be too many. Most of these stories were based on fairly well-known tales, but there were a few lesser-known as well. On the whole I really enjoyed this collection. There were a few stories that didn’t speak to me, as is always the case in a collection, and there were a few that I really loved.

The highlights, for me:

“Reed Girl, Fire Girl, Cloud Girl,” by Lynden Wade. Nothing truly unexpected happens here, but I just kind of loved watching these characters travel together and discover love. It had me from the get-go. This one had a really strong traditional fairy tale feeling too, which I loved.

“Bluebeard’s Wives,” by Mae Baum. Kind of the grittiest story, but that’s to be expected from a story that involves Bluebeard, am I right?* I loved setting this tale in the modern world and with a different explanation of the Bluebeard mythos. But really, it was the ending that sold me—it was so deeply satisfying to me. I just kind of cheered internally. “Take that!” However, this isn’t a story that I think most of my family and friends would appreciate quite so much. There was just something about it that made me happy.

“The Thief and the Spy,” by Katelyn Barbee. For me, absolutely the highlight of the collection. The rich setting of the piece, the main characters and their personal quandaries and struggles, the magic woven into the story so seamlessly that it just feels like a part of their world rather than an additional afterthought. I also loved the variations from and similarities to the various versions of “Cinderella.” Like the slight change in the arrangement of Asha’s family (there’s only one evil stepsister; the other is on her side), the explanation for why Asha’s dresses keep getting prettier, why she sticks around, etc. Just a delightful romantic read with a lot of other stuff going on in it.

Clean rating: PG mostly, but some PG-13 stories, largely for fairy tale-ish violence or for thematic elements (you just can’t get away from Bluebeard, remember). “Bluebeard’s Wives” and “Goodbye, Gigi” had the most, as I recall.

I received an ARC from the publisher, but my opinions were not influenced in any way.

* Please note my utter inability to use slang, even in writing. Because I just couldn’t imagine myself typing “amirite?” without laughing at how I sounded so very not like me.

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

After the Excitement, Back to the Grind


- a post about writing

Well, in case you missed it, the anthology I am a part of came out last week. If you’re interested in all the gushing excitement, just read the last couple posts. It was a fun day/week for our little anthology, and its opening day was really amazing. So much excitement! So much checking of stats! So much fangirling when this happened:


Okay, sure, his book has been in that general area forever, and we only hit it for a little while. But still, it’s one of those little moments you just have to enjoy.

Now a week has passed, and we’re past all the first hoorahs. And suddenly it’s like my writing is in a vacuum. I’ve been spending the last several months on almost weekly deadlines—short story contests, submissions, materials to submit for the upcoming Storymakers conference, final proofs for Unspun, etc. Now I have this gigantic lull.

I think this is where writing is hard for some of us. Somehow I manage to pull out some impressive feats once in a while when I’m backed up against a deadline, but then in the in-between spaces it can be hard to feel properly motivated. But these in-between spaces are where a lot of the real work happens.

So we have to find ways to motivate ourselves. It’s different for everyone, but we have to find what works for us. One thing I’ve got right now is an amazing accountability partner—we check in with each other every week on goals and plans. It doesn’t keep me perfectly in line, but it helps me to remember, “Hey, if I spend five hours binge-watching reality cooking shows, I’ve got to go tell LaChelle I was a total spaz. Maybe I’ll just write for five minutes... and then binge watch.” (At least I wrote first!) I’m also trying to practice building in deadlines (like most short story markets have deadlines, so I’m trying to write to some of them). I have friends who create their own reward systems—new shoes, new books, a bowl of ice cream, etc. There are lots of options out there!

So if you’re like me and you need some extra motivation to keep writing past the really exciting moments (first ideas, first drafts, publications, etc.), go find it, implement it. Not every moment of writing has to be filled with joy and inspiration, but I think we can find a lot more lasting fulfillment as we practice writing through the grind as well.

P.S. Here is your subtle reminder that if you read and enjoyed Unspun (or even if you read it and didnt enjoy), we as authors would be thrilled if you would write a review on Amazon and Goodreads. 

Monday, April 9, 2018

The Cosmically Cool Katherine Cowley*

* Dorky alliterative title because I can.
Why, yes, I am really terrible at getting good photo lighting.


ONE DAY UNTIL THE OFFICIAL RELEASE! (Also, if you want to buy a copy and havent yet, tomorrow is the perfect day to do it and benefit us authors. Amazon likes it when there’s an uptick in purchases on a single day.)

Now let’s talk about how nifty Kathy Cowley is!

In the process of joining this project, I let Kathy know that I was willing to do some of the copyediting/proofing. I felt so privileged to be able to help with a little bit of this work, and it meant I got a preview of many of the stories along the way. In doing this, I also got to make friends with Kathy Cowley, and I consider that definitely one of the highlights of working on Unspun. I’d already read and loved some of her flash fiction. (“Celestial Accounting” in last year’s Mormon Lit Blitz was my favorite piece other than mine. It is so good! Also, The Last Bathroom is just the right level of weird-but-fun.) So getting to know her as a person was fantastic.

In looking at her blog again to find links to some of her stories, I made an amazing discovery. Kathy wrote “In Which Eve Names Everything Else,” one of my favorite pieces from a different year’s Mormon Lit Blitz too! I had no idea this one was hers, but people, it is beautiful. Kathy just keeps getting cooler and cooler the more I know about her.

We’d been working together for a few months when she emailed to let me know she would be visiting family in Arlington—and did I want to get together for dessert somewhere in between there and here? Yes! Of course! I will even brave my driving phobia about new places!

So we met up at a restaurant one night and sat and ate tremendous quantities of cheese (no dessert in the end, but the cheese was definitely worth skipping the cake). We talked writing, our latest projects, family, etc. As expected, Kathy is as fun and cool in person as via email and phone (and on the phone she sounds like one of my dearest friends, Sariah). She’s working right now on a book that just sounds so very fun (if I get permission, I’ll tell you what it is).

Kathy took on so much of this project. It absolutely wouldn’t be the lovely book that it is without her. She coordinated people, arranged multiple edits, and probably did about a thousand other things that I don’t know about. Oh, and did I mention she did all the interior design?

Since we met, she has also given me fantastic (and speedy) critiques of a ton of my short stories, and her suggestions have been invaluable in them all. Finding a great critique friend is awesome, and I’m so glad to add her as one of mine.

Anyway, I’ll stop fangirling now. Let’s just say she’s awesome, and when she publishes more books, you should go buy them. Immediately.

The End.

P.S. Her website is down at the moment (stinky hackers!), but as soon as it is back up, you should go check it out.