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Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Do You Yahoo?

My godson has informed me that my failure to keep Yahoo active and make myself available on the messenger service is unacceptable. So I've caved and joined the club of people who have annoying screens pop up with instant messages inside them.

Rumor has it most of these messages will be sexual in nature, but so far they've all been frantic pleas for help with homework.

Anyway, my YAHOO id and status are now on your right in the sidebar. Sexual advances aren't welcome, since I have a really short list (err... is ONE still, technically, a list if you... ummm... list it??) of people allowed to advance upon me sexually.

No problem with homework advances, though. Those I can do.

Monday, May 29, 2006

Sparkly Stuff and More

Diamonds may be a girl's best friend, but I doubt anyone explained to Marilyn that they were icons of innocence and virtue. Garnets, on the other hand, while less pricey, increase sexual awareness and passion. So maybe true gemelogical friendship lies in the hands of the holder, so to speak.

If you have ever wondered about a paticular gemstone and/or its associated culturally significant myths, check out a page I have created as an at-a-glance resource for writers and other curious folk:

A Guide to Gemstones for Writers

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Check Out What WebSong is Offering!!

WebSong has had a complete make-over, and I felt it was time to ditch the old templates. Some of the blogger skins were my earliest attempts and had bugs. The good news is my newer templates are GORGEOUS!


Feast your eyes on small snapshots of these two new graphics-rich web templates:





Plus, four image-free but color-intense blog skins:









Check out all the changes... plus don't forget to check monthly on the blog for the Blog Skin of the Month

Saturday, May 20, 2006

WebSong Revamped -- FREE Fonts!

WebSong got a facelift and a new feature tonight. Some of the skin and template pages will be vanishing on and off while I rebuild. In the mean time, check out the new Freeware Font page:

FREE FONTS HERE

Friday, May 19, 2006

Check out the newest blog skin from WebSong Design's Monthly Blog Template, a gorgeous Art Deco template in rich plum, sage, indigo, and black with jewel-encrusted graphics.



I'ts YUMMY!

Saturday, May 13, 2006

The Best Romances... EVER

I have had my share of fun-poking this past week, but I do so love good romance. In that spirit, I am borrowing from some friends at Romantic Times, where this discussion about favorites got quite interesting. Here, in my professional and personal opinion, are the best:


Off the top of my head:

Jude Devereaux's Historicals... particularly the Velvet Series.

Everything Johanna Lindsay has ever written. Seriously.

The "War" series by Elizabeth Vaughan.

Julie Garwood's historicals... although the later ones not so much.

Everything Eloisa James has ever written. Seriously.

Whitney, My Love by Judith McNaught.

Everything Sherrilyn Kenyon/ Kinley MacGregor has ever written. Seriously.

Bride of the MacHugh, My Lord Monleigh, and My Enemy, My Love by Jan Cox Speas. (I had them rebound.)

Red Adam's Lady by Grace Ingram... GOOD LUCK FINDING IT!

Everything Julia Quinn has ever written. Seriously. Also the Whistledown collection books (I and II).

Ondine by Shannon Drake

Lynn Veihl's vampire novels.

Anne Rice's vampire novels*... though I find her erotica under both pen names painfully bad. (Non-romance/erotic note: her new series on the life of Christ is astonishing.)

Laurell K. Hamilton's Merry Gentry books.

The Kushiel series by Jacquelyn Carey.*

The Dragon Prince series by Melanie Rawn.*

The Tiger and Del series by Jennifer Roberson.*

*These are not, technically, romance, but probably the most romantic books I have ever read and AMAZINGLY well crafted... so I have included them.

Friday, May 12, 2006

More Romance Spoofing

Well the response to the silly romance cover was so great I decided to do a few more. I love romance. These covers are from a place of love... poking fun of a time when bodice-ripping was the thing.

Check them out:

ROMANCE COVERS

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

You're Writing WHAT?

Irecently had somebody who thinks she is smart (she isn't) make snide little comments about my current choice of literary endeavor. "You're writing romance? Oh titter, titter, haha! How funny! And you used to write such serious work!"

There is absolutely nothing wrong with writing for any genre. Good books are not created for mainstream fiction and non-fiction alone. Classics don't start out classic. Good writers tell great stories in masterful ways and voila!, you get a great book.

But people find romance silly. And sometimes it is. Not when I write it, of course... not when my brilliant colleagues at Romance Divas or Clan Destiny write it. Frankly, if you have read Elizabeth Vaughan's two "War" novels and can snort at romance you are probably an idiot and only semi-literate. Which, if we're being honest, is what most snobs tend to be in the end, hmm? Pseudo-intellectuals who say they've read everything from Machiavelli to Proust, but who were unable to finish the pablum they picked up on the Oprah's Book Club shelf down at the Borders on the corner. They did, however, leave that over-hyped hard cover on the corner of their desk where everyone could see it.

Well, just for them, I am announcing the publication of my blockbuster-to-be... and here is a preview of the cover!

FRONT




BACK



And you thought all romance was SILLY!

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

In Praise of Good Hair Days (and GREAT Hair Dressers)

When I had several bouts with cancer I suffered some hair loss. I don't have a bald spot, but my hair is very thin and the top shows some scalp. It doesn't help that it's baby-fine and straight as a poker. Yeah, I know... none of my photos show a gal with straight hair.

That's because I go to Delia's salon in Hanover, Massachusetts every six months and have a genius named Lindsay (hope I spelled your name right, sweetie!) install my naturally curly locks with chemicals.

What I love about Delia's is not just that it's an old-fashioned salon with new-fashioned services. Donna, the owner, is a gem. She's funny, full of great stories, and does things with wigs that the best talent in Hollywood would kill to achieve. A good bulk of her clients are wig customers, and her discretion and respect of these people is astonishing.

Lindsay, and every other stylist I've encountered there, is at once warm, casual, and professional. When she says "y'okay, hon?" I know she actually wants to know... even if I'm just fidgeting a bit under the dryer while my straight hair has a change of heart and becomes naturally curly.

In an age of crappy 10-buck-a-head hair salons where you don't need (and can't get) an appointment with one, specific, special person, Delia's is a miracle in chrome, blue, and black leather. Ahmed has paid literally hundreds (plural, people) of dollars for me to have my hair done on Newbury Street in Boston. That's the fashion MECCA of New England, kids. Know what? The service I get, the results I get, and the feeling I get at Delia's is better. All for well under a hundred (singular, people) bucks.

It's like Steel Magnolias meets Sephora. Friends... I am having a GREAT hair day! Beat that with a stick.

Monday, May 08, 2006

Romance News for May

The May edition of Romance News is up, and I must say this is a very exciting month! We have two big prize winners, a great anthology for sports nerds, and seven terrific reviews, including some very outside-the-box choices.

Interestingly, three of the seven novels reviewed feature heros that are twins, and Gemini begins on the 21st.

Co-Inky-Dink?

Check us out!

Monday, May 01, 2006

How Kaavya Got Her Bitch Slap

Oh, how the mighty have fallen. Well, mighty is pushing it. Although I will not claim to have no pettiness in my nature, my reaction to the earlier celebration of Kaavya Viswanathan was suspicious. She was the subject of a rather sceptical discussion among the Clanswomen when news broke of her half-million dollar deal.


Now it seems our cattiness was less bitchy and more insightful. Viswathan's book, How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got A Life : A Novel, smacked of zealous borrowing tendencies from the very beginning. Almost every woman who reads fiction with gusto compared the title to Terry McMillan's How Stella Got Her Groove Back. It was not McMillan taking the hose, but Megan F. McCafferty, whose novels Sloppy Firsts and Second Helpings were mined for resources by the pseudo-prodigy. A fan emailed McCafferty, the heads-up brought attention to 29 (at last count) passages lifted from her books.


It seemed almost inevitable that other problems would arise. That Little, Brown, and Company didn't catch these issues prior to printing is, perhaps, more upsetting than the arrogance of a young woman wanting to be a star. It's also worth noting that the book never did sit right with readers. Generally the rushed feel was chalked up to "youthful eagerness" on Viswanathan's part. But let's be realistic, here, there have been better authors younger than 19 who went on to greatness without the accompanying scandal. Sally Hinton, anyone?

Wimps and Pollyannas everywhere are going to defend this kid. They will do it because she is a kid. But Ms. Wunderkind knew what plagiarism was; she was admitted to Harvard University last year. Virtually every college and university in the country-- indeed, most of the world-- has a no-tolerance policy for plagiarism. Granted, Harvard's record on this issue is terrible, but they at least threaten to do the right thing as incoming students pass through the doors each September.

There is no excuse. To her credit, Viswanathan appears to be taking her lumps. That her publisher would be so harsh in condemning her actions but immediately follow their public bitch-slap with a refusal to pull the book (at this writing they will only agree to edit for the next printing) is symptomatic of an industry problem.

Editors are letting too many of these slip through the cracks. And authors who rip off others are still making money. Every dime earned dishonestly should go to the author who was ripped off or charity.

As for our young author-- I hope she has learned something, and I do admire her willingness to admit her error, even if she hedged. It does make me wonder about my own chosen profession.