Categories
livejournal entry

Facebook facts, and just being in touch generally

As many of you know — just shy of 5000 of you, to be more exact — I have a Facebook account as Claudia Gray. But unfortunately, I have almost maxed out my friends there, so I am now unable to friend people back. šŸ™ However! I now have the Official Claudia Gray Fan Page, which you can like/follow/etc. Right now I am responding to comments on both the CG account and the fan page, but within a few weeks, I’ll transition to talking mostly on the fanpage. So stay in touch!

Also: While I try to respond to everything sent to me via my website and the address there (at least I do now — the first couple years while I had the day job were pretty short on time!, I don’t generally answer FB or MySpace private messages. There’s a LOT of mail to get through, so I stick to the stuff that comes through the website, particularly as the social networking sites are so spam-heavy. If you’ve been trying to get through some other way and gotten no response, try emailing via the website.

Right now, I’m in Sydney, visiting some friends and family here before I head back to the USA. Once I return and get over the jet lag — I had none on the way over, but that probably means I’m due for double on the other side, right? — we’ll have more author interviews, more US tour dates, and some awesome ARC giveaways. Which will include, oh yeah, AFTERLIFE. I’m so excited to finally start letting this book out into the world.

Categories
interviews

Interview with Nicole Murphy!

While I’m here in Australia (in Cairns right now, actually, though only on a tourist basis), I thought it would be great to talk to an Aussie author. Happily, I got a chance to talk with Nicole Murphy, the author of SECRET ONES, about the lines between fantasy, urban fantasy and romance; hot guys named Lucas; and whether e-readers will kill us all —

CG: Tell us about the Asarlai trilogy and the world you’ve built for it — and specifically how we learn about that world in SECRET ONES.

NM: The world revolves around the gadda – they look like us, live amongst us but come from different ancestry then humans and as a result can access the energy of the world around them and use that power in ways we’d describe as magical (they HATE human terms like that). For a variety of reasons, the gadda keep themselves secret from humans, however this means that their abilities are also kept secret. One person – Asarlai – has decided this isn’t such a good idea – what’s the use of having all this power if you aren’t the ones WITH all the power. So Asarlai has set out to change all that, and it’s up to the six guardians of the gadda to stop her.

In SECRET ONES, we’re introduced to the world of the gadda and Asarlai’s plans through the romance of Maggie Shaunessy and Lucas Valeroso. Maggie’s a troublemaker – she’s not all that happy about being gadda and tries to avoid it as much as she can. Lucas used to be a bad boy, but he’s turned his life around and is now a well renowned scientist. What Lucas doesn’t know is that a secret race lives on Earth, and that he’s one of them. Now he has to find a way to bring it all together and win the girl, while she’s struggling with finding her destiny is much more gadda then she’d like.

The great thing about Lucas not knowing he’s gadda is that I get to introduce the readers to the world through him – the infodumping is actually part of the story.

CG: So, I see you, too, have a male lead named Lucas. Why is that name so darned sexy?

NM: I’ve been thinking about this – notice that most male heroes names are quite short – one to two syllables? And there’s generally a hard sound in the middle of it somewhere. For me, there’s a feeling in my mouth as I say a name that works for the image I’m trying to project. Lucas is a strong, sharp name that can also be drawled in a very sexy way – perfect šŸ™‚

CG: I am all for sexy drawling of Lucas’ name. I want this on the record. Now, back to book talk: My personal experience with EVERNIGHT was that I knew from the start that I’d be writing a series — but not how long that series would be. Did you know the Asarlai books would be a trilogy from early on, or did you discover this as you worked?

NM: I knew they were three books almost from the start, but not that it would be an interlinked trilogy. Initially they were three romance novels and the world of the gadda was just a setting. They shared characters, followed each other chronologically but there was no shared storyline. It wasn’t until several years after the first drafts, when I went back to work on them, that a reader suggested an overarching storyline. It made it a more difficult task for me – covering a romance in each book plus the storyline of Asarlai – but I think it’s worked really well.

CG: Urban fantasy has been one of the most popular genres since it emerged about 15-20 years ago. Why do you think that is?

NM: I think there were a lot of women (like myself) who were reading fantasy but were getting heartily sick of not seeing strong female characters portrayed. So that’s what urban fantasy gives us – the fantasy escape that we love, but we’re also seeing women and we’re seeing them strong and sassy and sexy and everything that women can be in reality but weren’t being on the page. And there’s also men who aren’t afraid of seeing a strong women, so they joined the bandwagon too.

CG The Asarlai books are categorized as urban fantasy, and yet they don’t follow all the conventions of the genre. In what ways do your novels fit in with the best of urban fantasy, and in what ways did you want to strike out on your own path?

NM: I didn’t see it as urban fantasy at all – I came at it from the romance angle, not the fantasy angle. As the fantasy got overlaid, it strengthened and became the frame within which the romance took place. So I think that’s why I’m not following all the conventions eg first person, the noir feel. My novels are definitely at the lighter end of urban fantasy – I can’t really do dark – and I think they really mix in well with the desire (particularly with as dark as our world has been lately) to believe that there’s more than what we’re seeing in our every day lives. I think they also showcase great female characters – not the kick-arse vampire-hunting type (which are FABULOUS) but strong women within their personality, their life – I want to celebrate all the ways in which women can be strong.

I think the difference is that I’ve got a strong fantasy storyline that melds strongly with the romance which was my aim in writing the trilogy. You can’t separate the two, so it’s not just a paranormal romance, but it has the happy ever after that isn’t always necessary in urban fantasy. I also enjoy some of the political intrigue that I’ve got working there – I grew up in Australia’s capital city so thinking of politics is ingrained in me šŸ™‚

CG: Will e-readers kill books or save us all — or something in-between?

NM: In-between. Reading habits will change – I’ve been reading electronically for a few months now and it doesn’t give a freedom books don’t have. I’m in New Zealand at the moment and was able to come with half a dozen books to read in something I hold in my palm – not possible normally. I think people will read more as it becomes easier to cart books around. I think paper books will become a specialised thing – it’s going to be a long time (if ever) before people give up books and bookshelves and the smell and the feel of books. You’ll have your favourite books in a physical form, and the rest on your e-reader. That’s my view at the moment. I’ll see what I’m thinking in a year or so šŸ™‚

**

Thanks to Nicole for talking with me! More Aussie travel reports as the great trek continues —

Categories
tour

post-Australian tour updates

So, my hotel here in Adelaide doesn’t have wireless — WHY DOES THE GOD OF WIRELESS HATE ME — and I’m now typing this in a 24-hour-convenience store, between the prepaid mobile phones and men’s socks. This update must be swift!

1) Australian tour

Was amazing! So many of you came to the events in Brisbane, Morayfield and Melbourne, and more to the stock signings in Sydney and here in Adelaide yesterday. It was great meeting/signing for/answering questions for/denying having tasted Vegemite to each and every last one of you. I’m afraid that this is it for signings on this trip — the rest of my time in Australia will be of a touristy bent — but hopefully I can come back sometime and do this again.

2) Writing updates

AFTERLIFE = done, already in ARC form, out in the world.
FATEFUL (aka WEREWOLVES ON THE TITANIC) = first draft complete, undergoing revision
BALTHAZAR = still being outlined, will be written this fall
SPELLCASTER = patiently waiting its turn, but not for too much longer!

3) Next appearances

No firm schedule yet, but I’ll be doing a few appearances in Chicagoland in late September, and I’m trying to set up something for Vancouver in October and New Orleans in November. And you guys in Jackson, MS, know I’ll be at Lemuria the Monday before Thanksgiving, right?

Now I must sign off — time is expensive here at the convenience store —

Categories
appearances tour

late-breaking Adelaide details!

OK, people in Adelaide and neighboring environs, here are the bookstores I’m signing stock in next Monday. There are some in after-school hours, so hopefully a few of you can make it. I’ll basically be around the first half-hour of each hour, and while there will be no public signing set-up, if you ask the bookstore staff for me, I’ll be able to say hello and sign your copies of the books. (And as the bookstores have been so good as to agree to this, consider picking up a new book or two while you’re there!)

The schedule:

1-00pm Dymocks Adelaide – Rundle Mall
2-00pm A&R Norwood
3-00pm Dymocks Burnside
4-00pm A&R Edwardstown
5-00pm A&R Glenelg

There’s a signing in Morayfield tomorrow, then some Melbourne events on Saturday and Sunday; check my older blog posts for more details there. Tonight’s event at Dymocks Brisbane was absolutely brilliant — it was so great to meet and talk with so many of you! — and I hope the rest will be just as fun.

The chances of any further events/signings being scheduled at this point are fairly remote, so if I haven’t gotten to your neck of the woods this time, I’m truly sorry. But already I am hoping to be able to return to Australia; no way one month will be enough!

Categories
tour

Down Under Lowdown

Is it really only my fourth day in Australia? Already I’m in Brisbane, the day after getting to meet some of you (and, in the case of one Jordana, talking to you on the phone) back in Sydney. You guys were right — the first Sydney event WAS canceled, and I’m sorry not to have been able to let you know. But I only found out after I arrived. Everything else looks like a go, though, so I hope to meet some of you today and tomorrow in Brisbane, and after that in Melbourne — and, yes, Adelaide, as you know if you’ve been following the tweets. We’re not doing a big event in Adelaide, but I will be stopping by some bookstores next Monday and can sign for you there. No set schedule yet, but I’ll try to post that tonight or tomorrow.

More Australia adventures to be had – will report!

Categories
contests tour

LOW RED MOON contest winner, plus your take on “personal demons”

First things first: We have a LOW RED MOON winner, who will be receiving an ARC of this awesome werewolf romance: Congratulations, Alejandra S.! It (along with a couple of slightly delayed prizes) goes in the mail tomorrow — just beating my trip to Australia.

The next ARC giveaways I do will have AFTERLIFE written all over them … but that’s got to wait until after my Australian tour. Some of you have been posting on Facebook about a canceled signing; all I can say is, I haven’t heard anything about it. It’s entirely possible that it has been canceled, but sometimes the author is the last to know. If you have any questions, don’t check with me; use the contact information from my blog posts or call your local bookseller. Hopefully all will be made clear.

In the mad rush to write more FATEFUL (my own werewolf romance aboard the Titanic), I haven’t had time for this before, but your answers to the questions about the EVERNIGHT characters’ personal demons were too good not to share. Here are some that I thought were really insightful:

Renee M. — I think the personal demons for Lucas are his inherent prejudice against vampires — and paranormal creatures, in general — despite his love for Bianca, which makes him so deliciously tortured and conflicted, and makes him take drastic measures for their love … Lucas also has this need to be the aggressor and in charge, so that he is never on the defensive, probably from his nontraditional upbringing with the Black Cross, making friendships and relationships difficult for him, so when they do happen — like with Dana and Bianca — they are that much more intense and special.

Sasha G. — I think a personal demon for Bianca is honoring who she is and what she is. She’s in love with Lucas, whose life revolves around killing her kind. She feels guilty for lying to everyone and might feel like she’s betraying her family and friends.

Kye S. — I think Mrs. Bethany has the most demons. There’s got to be a reason why she is hunting Wraiths … guilt for a past love perhaps, someone she loved but accidentally killed. She could also be jealous of Bianca’s parents because they have Bianca and she doesn’t have children or her children died long ago.

Britney W. — I think Dana is torn between who people want her to to be and who she is (probably not really knowing herself). Her personal demon could possibly be that she’s so busy trying to make other people happy that she forgets what makes her happy.

Anne S. — Bianca’s parents — did they do the right thing in keeping her origins a secret from her all these years? … They love her but could they accept her if she made a different choice than the one they have planned for her.

Ba D. — Constantly fighting with the demons of his past, Balthazar is working to create a future in which they will go away, or at least one where he can be at peace with them. Every time he sees Charity, his sister, he relives all the guilt, pain and horror of that night that, crazy with thirst, he changed her into one of them.

There were other fabulous entries (in particular, I’m looking at you, Raquel G. and Daniela S.), and thanks to every single one of you who shared your thoughts.

I hope to post your thoughts on demons and angels before I leave for Australia — but that’s less than 48 hours away!

Categories
contests interviews

Interview with Lisa Desrochers! Plus, LOW RED MOON ARC giveaway!

Sorry for the delay in announcing the winner of PERSONAL DEMONS Contest #2, but I delay no longer: Congratulations, Lauryn S.! I’ll get your books in the mail to you this week.

And the author of PERSONAL DEMONS, the awesome Lisa Desrochers, took time out of her busy schedule (as in, during her trip to Singapore) to talk with me a little about her debut novel:

CG: Your MC, Frannie, has a truly enormous mission to fulfill, even by the standards of paranormal heroines. Without giving too much away, how did you set out to build a character dynamic enough to carry such a burden?

LD: Honestly, I wasn’t thinking in terms of ā€œdynamicā€ when I started writing Frannie. I was thinking more in terms of ā€œreal.ā€ As the story progressed, she found herself in tough situations and she had to figure out how to deal with them. It was really a matter of her character learning to roll with the punches, and, on occasion, punch back. But most of all, I wanted her reactions to come across as genuine.

CG: PERSONAL DEMONS has plenty of sizzling sexual tension. If you were going to name one cardinal rule for creating that kind of chemistry on the page, what would it be?

LD: I didn’t really know what I was doing when I wrote Personal Demons, so to break it out into ā€œrulesā€ is hard. I guess chemistry goes back to what I said in the last question. It needs to be organic to feel genuine. In other words, it needs to flow from the characters. They have conversations in my head and I take dictation. It’s when I try to manipulate those conversations that I get into trouble and lose the chemistry.

CG: This book is your debut novel. Can you talk a little bit about your path to publication, and what parts of the publishing process have been most surprising to you so far?

LD: I think my road has been pretty standard. I wrote Personal Demons in February and March 2009, revised and polished it in April and May, queried in June and July, and landed my truly fabulous agent in September. The part that hasn’t been standard is Macmillan putting Personal Demons on the shelves in nine months. That would be the most surprising thing so far. Personal Demons sold at auction Christmas week and I thought we were looking at a summer 2011 release, so when my editor told me September 2010 was our target, I almost fell off my chair.

CG: Frannie’s family is much different from most of those in YA fiction, as is the role they play in the book. Can you talk a little about the importance of her parents’ influence?

LD: Frannie comes from a religious family, with the traditional Catholic upbringing, including a parochial school education. Her family has been through some rough patches, however, that have Frannie questioning their belief system. The biggest of those is the accidental death of her twin brother, which both she and her mother have taken especially hard. She and her sisters (all four) have learned to cope in their own way, but her mother still struggles with the loss ten years later, so her father is the primary emotional support system for the family—but he’s also much more. (That’s an Original Sin teaser :p)

CG: Where do you usually like to write? What’s the most unusual place you’ve ever ended up writing a chapter?

LD: I like to write in my family room. My ā€œofficeā€ is the loveseat, one end of which is piled with books. I started writing there because, until I had my agent, my husband didn’t know I was writing (I know: #wifefail) so we’d sit together in the family room and I’d write while he was watching TV in the evenings. The most unusual place I’ve ever written was last summer in a turn out of a windy little road that lead down to Monterosso al Mare, Italy when my husband stopped to take some pictures (he still didn’t know I was writing) and I scribbled about three pages on some napkins in the glove box.

CG: In what ways are you like Frannie? In what ways are you totally different?

LD: Frannie has her insecurities, but she puts up a tough front. She doesn’t want anyone to know when she doubts herself. I’m also like that, especially in the writing and publication process. I’ve had huge moments of self-doubt, but I just smile and pretend that I couldn’t be more confident. We’re different in a lot of ways. For one, I don’t have a drop-dead gorgeous angel to protect me, or a totally hot (both literally and figuratively) demon after my soul. Seriously, Frannie is a much more emotional creature than I am. Because of that, she doesn’t let go of things very easily. But she’s passionate about the things she believes in—something I could learn from her.

**

I hope to have more interviews — and, of course, more yummy ARC giveaways for you guys in the near future. (And yes, an AFTERLIFE ARC giveaway will be part of that!) But I’m only having one more contest before I leave for my Australia tour late next week (aiee!), and that is a giveaway for a much-anticipated YA werewolf romance I really enjoyed: LOW RED MOON by Ivy Devlin. Want the ARC? Then enter the contest:

1) Email me at evernightclaudia at gmail dot com with the subject line “LOW RED MOON Contest.”

2) In that email, tell me what you like best about werewolf stories!

3) Also in that email, include a name and address where I can send your copy if you win (and yes, I’ll ship anywhere.)

4) Do all this by Wednesday, Aug. 11, when I will choose one winner (just one — I only have the single copy!) at random.

Good luck!

Categories
contests

PERSONAL DEMONS Contest #1 ends, and PD Contest #2 begins!

First of all, congratulations to the winner of PERSONAL DEMONS Contest #1, Jansci C.! There were a ton of good entries, and some time this weekend, I’ll post a summary of your thoughts about the personal demons of the characters in the EVERNIGHT series — you guys had some really compelling answers.

(Why am I not posting this right now? As those of you who follow me on Twitter know, my brother and nephew are visiting Chicago this week, so I’ve been extremely busy. The planetarium! The Sears Tower! Navy Pier! You name it. So I will need more time to (a) sleep for a zillion years and recover and (b) post.)

But I can wait no longer before announcing PERSONAL DEMONS Contest #2! The loot: A much-sought-after ARC of Lisa Desrochers’ PERSONAL DEMONS, along with two more awesome ARCs — LEGACIES, the first book in the upcoming Shadow Grail series, from Mercedes Lackey and Rosemary Edghill; and ALL THAT LIVES MUST DIE by Eric Nylund, the sequel to MORTAL COILS. So we are talking about some amazing reads here. How can you be the lucky winner?

1) Send me an email at evernightclaudia at gmail dot com with the subject line “PERSONAL DEMONS Contest #2.”

2) In this email, tell me whether you believe in angels, demons or both!

3) Include an address where I can send your books if you win. (And yes, I’ll ship anywhere — though at this point, if the winner is Australian, I might just bring them down there with me!)

4) Do all this before Tuesday, August 3, when I’ll pick the winner at random.

Good luck, everybody!

Categories
interviews

Interview With Kelley Armstrong!

As anybody who’s asked me this at an event knows, I’m a big fan of Kelley Armstrong’s “Darkest Powers” series, which is only the latest in a long series of incredibly popular books from Kelley, a longtime bestseller in the adult urban fantasy genre. I’m also a fan of Kelley herself, since we were able to tour together on Supernatural Summer 2009, and I got to know what a fun, down-to-earth person she is. So I’m really excited to be able to feature her interview here on the blog — read on to see her thoughts on the transition from urban fantasy for adults to YA paranormal, how she handles her evolving universe, and why your characters can never be too happy.

**

CG: So far, I’ve had relatively little input on my covers — though I’ve been lucky to get great ones. But you’re a longtime bestseller in the urban fantasy world, so you must have gotten lots of say in your YA covers, right?

KA: Not…exactly. I was thrilled with the cover design they chose for the YAs, though. Well, except for that changing jewel thing (if anyone ever wants to know why Chloe’s jewel really changes colour, ask me at an event, where I can tell the truth!) I’ve come to accept that a cover is really a marketing thing, and I know nothing about marketing. Ones I don’t particularly like caught the eye of more new readers than the ones I do.

CG: What surprised you most about the move from writing urban fantasy for adults to writing YA as well?

KA: Two things surprised me. One, how little of a difference there was in the actual writing of the books. The YA are paced a little faster and the characters must be teens with teen issues, but otherwise, there’s not much difference. Except for the second thing…the audience. Fantasy readers can become very invested in a series–quick to let you know what they like and dislike. But they have nothing on teens!

CG: I was really impressed by how smoothly you incorporated the universe you’d built in your urban fantasy novels into your YA work; readers were given the exact right amount of information to understand what was going on, even if they were visiting your fiction for the first time. How did you manage to strike that delicate balance?

KA: I have very good editors. Seriously, that’s what it takes. I think I’ve developed a decent sense of how much to give–the balance between giving enough not to confuse new readers but not so much that bore current readers with repetition. But I do lean toward “not enough,” and that’s where I rely on my editors to say “You need to explain this for new readers, Kelley.”

CG: Chloe is a very strong lead character for someone who begins the series in a rather vulnerable position. How do you walk the line between creating a dynamic main character and putting that character in enough jeopardy to keep things entertaining? Is this a tougher line to walk

KA: Characters need to be tortured. It sounds sadistic, but if the character is never “tested” he/she can’t grow and develop. Testing usually means torture, in the sense that life goes very awry. Chloe has led a very sheltered life so when she’s first hit with trouble, she’s very vulnerable and unsure. The options at that point are to curl up in a ball and pray for rescue or to develop the skills to deal with the threat. In fiction, option B is a must, at least for main characters.

CG: Do you ever feel the urge to write non-paranormal/urban fantasy fiction? (“Realism,” I think it’s called; I wouldn’t know personally.) Or is your universe big enough to hold your stories?

KA: I do have two books out in a non-paranormal series–straight crime thrillers. Considering that the main character is a hitwoman, though, “realism” might not be the right term to use! They still gave me a lot of room for world building within a subculture, and I think that’s what I need to keep me interested.

**

Thanks to Kelley for stopping by! Hopefully Kelley and I will share some more tour stops in the future — but that’s another announcement for another day.

You still have a little while to win some awesome ARCS, so check out the contest details and enter now!

Categories
tour

Australia travel plans (partial)

OK, at long last, I have some tour dates for Australia! This is NOT a final or complete list, but this is the larger part of my public appearances Down Under, so take a look:

SYDNEY:

Event name: Author talk with Dymocks Sydney
Date: Monday 16th August
Time: 6.30pm
Venue: Dendy Opera Quays Cinema, 9/2 Circular Quay, Sydney
Cost: $20 members of SMH Dymocks Events / Students & Non-Members $22. Talk and signing session

I have no idea what it is I’m supposed to be doing that’s worth $20 to get in. I hope they don’t ask me to pole dance. A NIGHT OF ADVENTURE.

Event name: Signing at Big W Eastgardens
Date: Tuesday 17th August
Time: 4pm
Venue: Big W at Westfield Eastgardens, Level: 2, Store M1, 152 Bunnerong Rd., Eastgardens NSW 2036
Cost: Free

No pole dancing here.

BRISBANE:

Event name: Author event with Dymocks Albert Street
Date: Wednesday 18th August
Time: 5pm
Venue: Shop D17, 177 Albert Street (Cnr Elizabeth & Albert), Brisbane
Cost: Free

This will be my first day in Brisbane! (They have scheduled me to spend my first day in Sydney — after plane trips that total about 19 hours — just sort of sitting around blinking. Trust me, this is for the best.)

Event name: Public signing at Angus and Robertson Morayfield
Date: Thursday 19th August
Time: 4pm
Venue: Angus and Robertson Morayfield, Shop 62 Morayfield Shopping Centre, Morayfield Road, Morayfield, 4506
Cost: Free

It is my opinion that this venue does not have enough “Morayfield” in its address.

MELBOURNE:

Event name: Author event with Dymocks Melbourne
Date: Friday 20th August
Time: 5pm
Venue: 234 Collins Street

Whoo, Melbourne! I watched a Food Network special about great restaurants in Melbourne, so I plan to essentially eat my way across the city. Look for me to perhaps still have a napkin tucked in my collar.

I’m hoping I’ll be able to add a couple more events, maybe in some places a bit farther afield (though not so far as Perth, I’m afraid — please forgive me!) But that’s all tentative. What you see here is for sure. I am SO looking forward to this and to meeting as many fans as possible!

BTW, I will also have some Illinois events to announce for September before too long, so the signings continue —

**

Check back at the blog tomorrow for an interview with the fabulous Kelley Armstrong, of THE RECKONING, THE SUMMONING and all kinds of other awesome books. šŸ˜€

And have you entered the PERSONAL DEMONS contest yet? If not, what’s stopping you?