Sandy Williams Q&A and Giveaway

Looking for something new to read? Last week Sandy William’s urban fantasy debut, The Shadow Reader, was released, and it’s garnering fabulous reviews. I recently asked Sandy a few burning questions about the book and the lovely author behind it, and here’s a peek into our tête-à-tête. Hope you enjoy her answers as much as I did. Sandy is smart, funny, and sweet, and I cannot wait to dive into her book!

I’ve already got The Shadow Reader lined up on my Kindle, but if you haven’t already picked it up, here’s your chance, because I’m giving away a paperback copy to one lucky commenter. If you want in on this action, just leave a comment below; make sure you leave your email (either privately in the email field or within your comment). I’ll pick one random commenter next Wed, November 9th. Giveaway is open to international readers (any country that Book Depository delivers to — click the link for a list if you’re unsure). Spread the word!

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Jenn: First, let me just say that I love your cover! In particular, I like two things about it: the sword and the curvy butt. What could be better? My Arcadia covers are great, but I’ve lamented at length on twitter about Cady and her lack of rendered booty. Who’s your cover artist, and did you demand that the sword and the backside be featured? (If so, I’m high-fiving you right now.)

Sandy: I feel like I completely lucked out on my cover. I love everything about it! Gene Mollica designed it and, damn, his work is awesome! He captured McKenzie perfectly. But I’ll let you and your readers in on a little secret. The sword? It’s not exactly in the book. The fae have and use them, but if I’m not mistaken, McKenzie picks up a sword once during the entire story – and it’s knocked out of her hands within seconds! I can still picture her as she is on the cover, though. She might not be so great at using a sword, but she sure as hell can fake it.

Jenn: I *love* Gene Mollica. He’s done a lot of great covers. And no worries: your sword secret is safe.

Your protagonist, McKenzie Lewis, is a human student (with an intriguing talent!). A student as an urban fantasy lead sounds so refreshing and different! I mean, not all UF heroines can—or should—be cops, bounty hunters, or PIs. Did you draw from your own college experiences when writing McKenzie?

Sandy: Heh. No, my college life was much more mundane than hers!

Sydney f/Alias

I honestly can’t remember why I chose to make McKenzie a college student. Maybe it’s because I knew it would be impossible for her to keep a day job with the fae always invading her life? I think the decision was at least partially influenced by the TV show, Alias. I liked watching Sydney Bristow try to balance her studies with her work as a super secret double agent spy!

Jenn: Loved Alias, too. And I have major troubles trying to keep Cady behind the bar, so I know exactly what you mean.
Your literary agent is Joanna Stampfel-Volpe. Lucky duck! I have this image of her as being really fun to work with and super-cool. Am I right?

 

Sandy: She is fabulous! I still sometimes have trouble believing I hooked her. When I was querying The Shadow Reader, she was one of the agents on my Dream List, a very short list that I didn’t think I’d be lucky enough to get any requests from. I just about died when she read my partial and requested the full within twenty-four hours! She’s been absolutely awesome to work with, and her editorial insight is spot on. I couldn’t imagine doing this writing thing without her!

Jenn: Is it true that you’re raising twins to ghostwrite for you when they turn 16?

Sandy: Who told you about my evil genius plan?! Yep. I have two minions in training. They’re just over three months old now and quite the time-suck, so they’re going to totally owe me when they turn 16.

Jenn: I might want to rent out their services myself, so keep me abreast of their schedule.

 

You’ve professed a love of board games. I’m a HUGE sucker for board games myself, but mine are mostly boring classics like Monopoly and Clue (and the highly addictive Bananagrams). You, however, play strange and wondrous things like Settlers of Catan. What is this, and when can we play?

 

Color me intrigued!

Sandy: Settlers of Catan is THE board game for beginning board game geeks! It’s a strategy game that is pretty easy to learn, but once you play it, it’s a slippery slope to all the other awesome games out there. There’s this whole genre of games sometimes referred to as Eurogames (many of them are created in Germany). I had no idea they existed until I met my husband. Now, we have a whole closet full of Eurogames.

Whenever you and I happen to show up at the same conference, I’ll be sure to pack a few geeky board games. What do you say, RWA in 2012?

Jenn: Deal! Anyone attending RWA in Anaheim next year is going to find us in a hotel lobby, engaged in a mad Eurogame battle!

 

One of my oldest friends is a librarian. Librarians rock! Do you still moonlight as a librarian yourself? Do you dream about the Dewey Decimal system? Does your husband make you don glasses and wear your hair in a bun so that he can act out his Sexy Librarian fantasies with you?

 

Sandy: Librarians do rock! Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to work in months because of the twins and The Big Looming Deadline. I’m not sure if I’ll be able to go back to work any time soon, but I can’t wait until the boys are old enough to go to storytime! I definitely still support my local libraries and love going there to browse the shelves, read, or camp out for a few hours of writing.

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Visit Sandy’s website

Add her book to your TBR pile on Goodreads

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Blurb for The Shadow Reader:

Some humans can see the fae. McKenzie Lewis can track them, reading the shadows they leave behind. But some shadows lead to danger. Others lead to lies.

A Houston college student trying to finish her degree, McKenzie has been working for the fae king for years, tracking vicious rebels who would claim the Realm. Her job isn’t her only secret. For just as long, she’s been in love with Kyol, the king’s sword-master—and relationships between humans and fae are forbidden.

But any hope for a normal life is shattered when she’s captured by Aren, the fierce and uncompromising rebel leader. He teaches her the forbidden fae language and tells her dark truths about the Court, all to persuade her to turn against the king. Time is running out, and as the fight starts to claim human lives, McKenzie has no choice but to decide once and for all whom to trust and where she ultimately stands in the face of a cataclysmic civil war.

Leave a comment below for a chance to win a copy of this fab-sounding debut!

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Official cover unveil for Kindling the Moon!

Ta-da! It’s Arcadia standing in front of her bar, Tambuku Tiki Lounge. Everything is just so damn right about it! Pocket Books: I totally heart you. I also heart Tony Mauro, who is the talented cover artist. I’m in heaven.

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Real live urban fantasy author right here

It’s been an excruciatingly long week, but I’m pleased to announce that I have been acquired by Simon & Schuster/Pocket Books. More details to come about release dates and all that other good stuff.

I’m reeling, smiling, and glowing with glee. And I can’t wait to get started with my editor, Jennifer Heddle. Many thanks to the absolute best agent in the world, Laura Bradford!

My trajectory toward World Domination through urban fantasy starts…now!

XOXO,

Jenn

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Love Letter to Carolyn Crane

Not only do I write urban fantasy, but I read it…a lot of it, like, every stinkin’ day. Sometimes I hate the genre and all the boring tropes that define it, and sometimes I’m surprised and thrilled by how a talented author can put a new spin on said tropes.

But when an author comes along with a can of lighter fluid and a gleam in her eye, and throws a lit match on the whole genre, I’m starstruck. Enter MIND GAMES by Carolyn Crane, a psychological urban fantasy-comicbook-noir about a hypochondriac who joins an underground team of crime-fighters.

If you buy this book based on expectations delivered via the cover, you’ll be sorely disappointed; it’s one of the most deceptive covers I’ve seen in the genre. And you also might be alarmed by the present tense, or the fact that the heroine is neurotic and unreliable. You might even be worried that the lack of supernatural monsters might disappoint. But it won’t.

What’s more, this isn’t a book that will mildly surprise you. It’s a love-or-hate thing that will either have you deserting it early on (if you have terrible taste) or wanting to gild it and put it on a pedestal…or at least board and bag it and store it in a long box with all the other treasures that you would never-ever sell in a million years. That was me. I didn’t just like the damn book, I LOVED it. In fact, it rung ALL my reading bells:

–I carried it with me, room-to-room, fearful that someone would steal it from me when I wasn’t looking

–Both related to and was repelled by heroine; got angry at heroine’s choices, to the point of berating the character out loud (and angry with myself for secretly knowing I’d make the same choices)

–Kept thinking about minor characters and plot points days after finishing the book, trying to piece together things I wasn’t sure about

–Laughed, chuckled, and grinned many times when re-reading certain phrases and lines

–Charmed by the author’s ability to describe big things with simple, ordinary words

–Two weeks later tried to fight off need to read book again

–Three weeks later worried that the second book in the series couldn’t possibly live up to the first

–Four weeks later paralyzed with fear that I may not read anything else so engrossing this year

Easily my favorite book of 2010. Marry me, Carolyn Crane.

Buy it here: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0553592610/

Read her blog here: http://thethrillionthpage.blogspot.com/

XOXO,

Jenn

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First Chapter Turn-offs

My to-be-read fiction pile is fifteen books high. I read every day, and usually have no problem deciding what’s next, but lately it’s been like pulling teeth.

After a day of see-sawing, I decided to crack open the covers and see which one hooked me within the first chapter. A quick litmus test. Agents and editors do it all the time, so why couldn’t I? The results were surprising. Only four out of fifteen immediately compelled me enough to keep reading—four!

Why? What made them stand out? All followed the basic rules—no major info-dumping, good first lines, and the stories began where they should, with the “inciting incident.” So why didn’t I want to keep reading?

Here’s why:

1) The WHO wasn’t clear. Within a few paragraphs, I want to be able to clearly identify with one main character. Is he/she flighty? Wry? Sneaky? It doesn’t really matter, I just need to connect with someone immediately. The worst offenders, in my opinion, are third-person over-the-shoulder stories where the viewpoint switches within the chapter. One sentence I’m in HER shoes, the next I’m in HIS, but what I’m left with as a reader is a muddled view of both. I’m looking at you, paranormal romance.

2) Generic settings. No need to info-dump, but give me something sharp right out of the gate. Just telling me your character is a waitress in a diner isn’t enough; it only takes a few words to evoke a late-night backwoods bar with three customers, mold on the ceiling tiles, and the lingering stink of stale cigarette smoke.

3) Bad writing. Overwrought “poetic” sentences end up sounding obnoxious if you aren’t smart enough to pull them off. Sure, it’s all about the verbs, but when your prose reads like you took a thesaurus and replaced every verb with something meatier, I’m turned off. Using two (or three) adjectives when one would suffice? I’m turned off. It takes you ten words to explain something that could’ve been said in five? Now I’m not only turned off, I’m probably not going to read much further. Keep it simple, avoid passive voice, and for the love of Pete, don’t fiddle with punctuation unless you know what you’re doing; if you’re not sure what a semi-colon does, either teach yourself or don’t use it.

That being said, I’m certainly not planning a backyard bonfire with the eleven books that didn’t pass my First-Chapter test. I’ve trudged through plenty of less-than-compelling openings to be rewarded by a late-blooming page-turner; I’ve also adored plenty of beginnings in books that petered out and died halfway through.

And hey, obviously someone—a lot of someones—felt differently about those eleven books or they wouldn’t be published. You can’t please everyone, right?

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RUN DEVIL RUN on Bradford Bunch Blog

Happy Monday!

For those of you who made your way over here from the Bradford Bunch Blog, you can find a key to the visual map below; for those who didn’t, you can check out that blog entry here (The Bradford Bunch is a blog featuring my agent’s author clients).

Since I’m a visual artist as well as a writer, I created a map of ten things that influenced my novel currently on submission, RUN DEVIL RUN—an urban fantasy about a Tiki bar owner/magickian in central California who must track down an elusive demon in order to exonerate her parents—two infamous ceremonial magickians accused of killing off rival occultists.

RUN DEVIL RUN, a visual map of influences

Just what is all this hoohah? Here’s the key:

1. Elsa Lanchester as the Bride (Bride of Frankenstein, 1935): my heroine, Cady Bell, has her hair bleached like this iconic movie character. Electricity and man-made monsters are also part of Cady’s story, and the movie provides a connection between Cady and her partner’s teenage son, Jupe

2. Big Sur, California shore: the setting in my book is loosely based on two cities bordering the Big Sur region, Carmel-by-the-sea and San Jose

3. Tiki Bars (pictured here: Tiki Ti, Los Angeles, CA): Cady owns a Tiki bar like this with her demon friend, Kar Yee, an ex-pat from Hong Kong

4. Demons: earthbound ones inhabiting human bodies, and Big Bad ones with nasty teeth and horns that live on another plane

5. Halos (from various religions): the earthbound demons—and anything non-human originating from another plane—have halos that most normal people can’t see; Cady can

6. The Lost Colony of Roanoke: theories abound regarding what happened to this colony. In my universe, earthbound demon origins in America started here

7. Aleister Crowley: Cady’s parents belong to an occult organization of ceremonial magickians inspired by some of those to which this infamous British occultist belonged. Moonchild (1917) is Crowley’s novel about magickians warring over a magickally engineered child; my heroine’s conception is loosely inspired by this. Jack Parsons, a rocket scientist turned occultist and student of Crowley’s, tried to conceive a real-live moonchild in an infamous Babalon Working in 1946 with L. Ron Hubbard, founder of the Scientology cult. Truth is always stranger than fiction, folks

8. Demon goetias: Cady seeks help from Lon Butler, owner of a library of arcane books and father to Jupe. Some of them are priceless, and were acquired through not-so-legal means

9. Hellfire Club tunnels in West Wycombe: Lon Butler belongs to a Hellfire Club in my book, but it’s a secret society for demons, not spoiled aristocrats

10. Der Struwwelpeter: a classic German book of gruesome Fairy Tales. I was born in Germany and still have a copy that my parents gave me as a child. In RUN DEVIL RUN, one of Cady’s friends, a retired Catholic priest, discovers an important clue in a similar gory Fairy Tale

XOXO,

Jenn

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