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Recharging the batteries

My last day in St. Louis -- still smiling, but looking worse for wear!
My last day in St. Louis -- still smiling, but looking worse for wear!

I’ve spoken before about how important I think it is to have support groups in our lives. We are drawn to people with common interests, and find inspiration and encouragement in our interactions with them. My husband belongs to two woodworking clubs, one for general woodworking and another specifically for wood turners; they understand his obsession with sharp tools and chunks of wood. My son seeks out other video game enthusiasts, an acquaintance is active in a knitting club. There are gardening clubs and book clubs and photography clubs and hiking clubs, clubs that meet every month, others that “meet” on-line. I’ve actually made a few friends through on-line interest groups that have been an important part of my life for several years, though we’ve never met IRL (in real life).

I’ve just returned from St. Louis, Missouri, where I participated in one of the best writers’ conferences I’ve ever attended (and there have been many). Novelists, Inc. is an organization for multi-published authors of popular fiction. We all share the joy of having seen our books in print, and the fears of the changing publishing landscape. We swapped stories about computer-related aches and pains, aging parents, writing with small children in the home, working with agents and editors, surviving creative dry spells, trying to find affordable health insurance, even exchanged a few recipes. Writing is a lonely and solitary job at times, and it’s nice to get together with friends I’ve made during the past twenty years and get to see so rarely.

Our workshops started at 8:45 each morning and concluded with informal “night owl” sessions from 8 until 10 each night. The “forensics day” workshops were fascinating, with presentations from police, FBI, coroner and trauma nurses. Other guests in the hotel were a bit curious about the “crime scene” set up in one of our rooms — a mannequin with a gun in hand and a knife in the chest lay among scattered furniture while bullet holes and bloody hand-prints were taped to surrounding walls. A detective walked us through that scene, showing us exactly what he would see as he studied it for the first time. Fascinating!

Industry professionals — agents, editors, publicists and publishers — presented workshops on the changing face of the business and tips on how to survive in this new electronic world. We also had several paranormal workshops from St. Louis’ Paranormal Task Force and noted “wizard” Dr. Michael Henry (if you’re ever in the St. Louis/St. Charles area, I highly recommend Dr. Henry’s ghost tour. We had a great time). I really enjoyed the paranormal activities, since I’ve been playing with some story ideas that include what I call “woo-woo elements.” The midnight to almost 3 a.m. ghost tour down Main Street in historic St. Charles, Missouri was one of the highlights of my week. What fun!

Now, I’m back at work, finishing the third book in my Doctors in Training series for Silhouette Special Edition. Interestingly enough, one of the themes for this series is the importance of support groups. Five medical students form a study group in book one and grow closer as they navigate the four years of medical school, finding romance along the way, of course. Each book covers one year of medical school, and it’s not a spoiler to reveal that book four will end with a big celebration! Book one, DIAGNOSIS: DADDY was published in August (and is still available by order from eHarlequin.com). Book two, PRIVATE PARTNERS, will be on the shelves in February, 2010.

Enter to Win! Though it’s early in the month, I can tell you that at this point if you enter my give-away contest for the two connected NASCAR romances, HEARTS UNDER CAUTION and ALMOST FAMOUS, you have a very good chance of winning! Click the Enter to Win! tab above for details.

Apparently, ghosts have been seen on the top balcony of this historic St. Charles building. Perhaps they were just being shy the night I was looking for them.
Apparently, ghosts have been seen on the top balcony of this historic St. Charles building. Perhaps they were just being shy the night I was looking for them. But is that an "orb" in the tree?
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A conference and a contest

View from the hotel window
View from the hotel window

As you might guess from the photo above, I’m in St. Louis, attending a Novelists, Inc. conference. I’ve got a full day planned today of forensics workshops — coroners, FBI, trauma nurses, police detectives, all here to talk to us about murder and crime for use in our books. In the following days, I’ll be attending workshops about various issues in the publishing industry, meeting quite a few published writers I haven’t yet had the chance to meet, and catching up with some long time writer friends. Though I’ve only been here a day, it’s been a lot of fun so far and I expect to come home tired and better educated about my career.

Contest winner! I’ve drawn the name for the winner of the latest contest. Karen Owens of my home state of Arkansas has won the two-in-one-volume ONCE A FAMILY. Congratulations, Karen.

The prize for the next contest will be two connected books again. With the chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Championship winding down (and Arkansas’s own Mark Martin currently in the lead in points — woohoo!), I thought I’d celebrate by offering my first two NASCAR stories as a prize for November 1. The books are titled HEARTS UNDER CAUTION and ALMOST FAMOUS. Even if you know nothing about the world of NASCAR, I think you’ll enjoy these stories, which focus on two good friends and associates, crew chief Wade McClellan and race car driver Jake Hinson. More details are available by clicking the Enter to Win! tab above. I hope to see a lot of entries this month. Good luck!

And now, off to learn about murder and mayhem!

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List makers anonymous

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I have to confess that I am a compulsive list maker. I’ve been accused of making lists of lists I need to make. There’s just something about seeing that long summary of things to do, then watching it all get checked off, one item at a time, that I find very satisfying.

Christmas lists? Oh, yes, I make them. Lists of people I need to buy for, lists of gift ideas, lists of purchases neatly cross-filed with the first list. Santa would be proud.

Lists of chores waiting to be done? Definitely. I’ll list the most mundane tasks, just to have the satisfaction of checking them off. It makes me feel as if I’ve accomplished something.

Any upcoming trip sends me into a frenzy of list-making. Things I need to do first. Things I need to take. Places I want to see. Itineraries and emergency contacts. I remind myself to pack jammies and meds and socks and safety pins. Extra camera batteries, phone chargers, umbrella and tip money.

I’ll be attending a writers’ conference later this week and I’m in full-out list making mode. Must remember to take pens and notebooks. Warm clothes, comfy shoes and a flashlight for the scheduled midnight ghost tour (cool!). Remind the hubs to feed the cat — buy cat food. I’m looking forward to the conference, but there’s so much to do first! My lists are dauntingly long. Will I manage to check off all the items? And does it really matter if I don’t?

Almost time for the drawing! There’s still time to enter if you want to win (click the Enter to Win! tab above for details). Can you believe it’s almost October already?

Wishing you all a great upcoming week.

And now I’m off to place a check mark beside an item on one of my lists: Update blog.

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Doors, windows and speed bumps

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My grandfather used to tell me when life closes a door, God opens a window. It’s a saying I’ve repeated many times during my life, often to myself — and one I try to keep in mind whenever I meet with disappointment.

After receiving a couple of form letter rejections for the first two books I ever sent out for publication (and well deserved rejections, I might add!), I sulked for a bit, then picked myself up and tried again. I studied everything I could get my hands on about romance writing. The next book I wrote was much better than those earlier attempts had been. Because of those early rejections, I signed with my agent, who has enriched both my life and career during the past 20-plus years.

I had high hopes for my next book, and there was some initial interest in it, which made it all the more disappointing when the editor who’d finally asked to see it turned it down. So, I tried yet again — and sold to Harlequin. Had the previous book sold, I might have been locked in with a romance line that no longer even exists. Harlequin has been a wonderful publishing home for me for all these years, and I’m thrilled to still be writing for them.

I used my grandfather’s quote often when my children were growing up. Whenever they encountered a rejection or a disappointment, we made a habit of watching for the good that came out of it — and something always did. When my oldest daughter didn’t make drill team in high school, she joined the school choir, instead — and loved it, making friends there she maintains to this day. When my second daughter suffered a similar disappointment, she became active in a club in which she excelled, and which led to many opportunities for her. Not getting their first choice on a list of options was almost always a blessing in disguise, though it sometimes took a while for that to become clear. Even major detours in their adult lives have led to rewarding paths they might never have discovered otherwise.

There are days when it’s hard to keep faith in my granddaddy’s adage. Times when it doesn’t seem anything good can come from the obstacles life throws in our way. And yet, there’s always something we can point to and say, “That’s it. There’s the bright spot in the darkness. The purpose for what we’ve been through.”

I hope your silver linings shine brightly through the upcoming week.

The month is slipping away! Don’t forget to enter the contest. Click the Enter to Win! tab above for details.

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Contest reminder

51GJRBBR5JL._SL500_AA240_Don’t forget to enter this month’s contest for the two-books-in-one-volume prize!

The first two books of the long-running Family Found series, FULL OF GRACE and HARDWORKING MAN (one of my own personal favorites) were originally published under the name Gina Ferris and are hard to find these days. They’re reprinted  in this paperback volume under the anthology title ONCE A FAMILY.

Remember, if your name was not drawn last month, you must enter again to be eligible for this month’s drawing on October 1. Click the Enter to Win! tab for details.