Category Archives: The Dream War Saga

This weekend is going to be AMAZING!

Washington (c) rendo79

Tomorrow, lovelies, I leave my day job at five, drive over to the airport, get on a plane, and land in our nation’s capital city: Washington, D.C.!

I won’t be in the city much because everything I’m going for the five days I’m in the area happens in either Maryland or Virgina, but it’s going to be amazing. It could be happening in Antarctica and I’d be happy!

What things, you may ask? Lots of them. Mostly, though, I get to spend quality time with my wonderful editresses Danielle and Patricia and talk about all things The Dream War Saga! The weekend will be a book-centric time and I am SO FREAKING EXCITED ABOUT THIS TRIP! Is it tomorrow yet?! Why can’t it be tomorrow yet?!

**deep breath**

Right. Okay. I’m fine! I think.

On top of book things, though, I get to meet in person a lot of really cool online friends and hang out in an area of the country that actually knows what winter feels like! For this Florida girl, that is awesome!

I’ll be posting pictures and things on Twitter through the weekend, so if you’re not already following me (@byericacameron), go fix that!

Now, please excuse me. I have to go do ALL THE THINGS at the day job today so I can take the whole next week off!!! πŸ˜€

Sing revision update #3

Progress is being made! And I finally know for sure that it’s progress in the right direction! Woohoo!

I have to go back and rework a section of this new draft, but that’s okay! Because I get to keep most of what I wrote and that makes me happy. πŸ˜€

Also, just in case you didn’t know this already, beginnings are HARD. Like, seriously. Extremely difficult. Like, climbing Everest difficult. It seems as though I’m getting closer to the top of this particular mountain, but I won’t know for sure until I stand up there and plant my flag in the snow.

WE SHALL SEE, I SUPPOSE.

In the meantime, here! Go visit Cracked.com and let them entertain you while I try to make my brain stop sending smoke out my ears…

Sing revision update #2

Guys, after working 14-16 hour days since last wednesday, I totally feel like this right now:

Study 2 (c) Colin Adamson

HOWEVER, progress is being made and I’ve been told from trusted sources that it’s GOOD progress! So, yay! There’s no time-back guarantee that my editresses shall agree, but I will just have to take that chance and go where these revisions are taking me. Because right now it’s a really fun place. EXHAUSTING, but fun. πŸ™‚

This also means that my brain is not really capable of thinking of non-SSN related things for very long right now. Because, you know, this happened:

[Co-worker comes into my office. I look up. Their mouth is moving and the words are completely lost.]

Co-worker: … Right, Erica?
Me: Did you say something about dreams?
Co-worker: [blank look] What? No.
Me: Right… of course. Sorry, what did you need?

So…. yeah. I’m going to go hide in my editing cave again. Because that’s where my brain is anyway.

Sing revision update #1

I am full throttle on revisions! Movin’ right along, I tell you. The longer this goes on, though, the more this is both a good thing and a bad thing.

Bad news first: Sing, Sweet Nightingale is starting to creep into my dreams again, which hasn’t happened since I NaNoed the novel in 2011. For most authors, dreaming about your book probably normal and/or welcome, but this series… well, let’s just say my dreams is the LAST place I want them.

The good news: I’ve managed to revise two chapters a day for the past two days. IF I can keep this pace up (and that’s a big IF), I might actually have a chance of finishing these revisions on time! Yay! Honestly, I wasn’t sure that was possible. I’m still not sure, but I guess we shall see.

Okay. That’s all I have for now. Back to the day job and sneaking in revision whenever possible!

Fun, Fate, and Farewell

I am a HUGE Stephenie Meyer fan. Seriously. I’ve been a fan since Twilight first released and have been going to different signings and events since 2006. So far, I’ve been to Nashville, Phoenix, Miami, and Los Angeles specifically for Stephenie Meyer events. When I saw she was doing a signing in Coral Gables yesterday? Yeah. I was totally there. Especially since it was a Host-centered event and The Host is the ONLY book of hers I never got signed. Problem solved. πŸ™‚

Because fate is a funny thing, I ended up standing in line next to a girl named Michelle Madow. She’s an author and was passing out bookmarks for her self-published series which starts with Remembrance. We started talking and slowly realized we’ve known each other for years! We were both early addicts of the Twilight Lexicon, fanfiction writers, and a bunch of other coincidental things. So the two hours standing (we were both really early) in line breezed by! In addition to also selling her debut traditionally published novel for a March 2014 release and apparently not being able to take a bad picture, Michelle is energetic and really fun! Check out her books and if you see a blonde girl wearing sequins at a book event this year, go say hi! It’s probably Michelle.

It’s been so long since I was at a Twilight event I forgot how much fun they can be. Book events in general, actually. I’m starting to go to more this year and it’s awesome! Definitely looking forward to the rest of the amazing events on the lineup. What are they? Well, BEA in May/June and Vegas in November! Hopefully I’ll get to sprinkle some other events between the two, but even if I can’t at least I know I have two weekends of awesome to look forward to!

In other news, my revision on Sing, Sweet Nightingale has officially begun. As of this morning, I am in editing mode. So, yeah… this post may be my last coherent one for a while. My disappearance is for a good cause, I swear! πŸ˜‰

Because it’s HELLA RELEVANT: The Five Phases of Revision

Like I mentioned before, I recently got my first official edit letter. So now I have to start, you know, editing. And so, of course, my brain is going LH KHGF LKSHKZHJGHADFU:KG<MSV!!!!!

A while back I wrote a post I called The Five Phases of Revision. I liked it a lot and I think I need the reminder of how awesome the end result is going to be to get me through the really hard work ahead. So, for my benefit and yours, here it is again:

The Five Phases of Revision:
(originally posted on this blog August 22, 2012)

I had a phone call with my wonderful editresses last night and we went over some things that essentially mean I will be rewriting 3/4 of Sing, Sweet Nightingale. We were on Skype, so I could tell they were kind of waiting for me to start going crazy. The fact that I neither started crying nor tried to jump through the computer screen to maul them seemed surprising, so that got me thinking about the way authors handle revision suggestions. The psychology major in me was intrigued and thus we end up with this post.

Kind of like for parents, it is necessary for a writer to love her book. NECESSARY. I will accept no arguments on this point, kay? Good. Now that we have that established, let’s talk about what happens when someone tears into your work for the first time and points out all the holes, inconsistencies, pacing problems, character issues, and generally sucky spots.

Sad Snot-Nose Kid (c) Mike Gieson

That’s right. You end up looking like this child. Either that or you turn into rabid lioness and try to shred anyone stupid enough to get to close. The problem is, neither of these reactions are productive! They can be, however, the first phase of the revision process.

1- Hurt
“WHY DOES EVERYONE HATE ME?! HOW COULD THEY SAY SUCH MEAN THINGS?!Β  THIS IS MY BABY! THEY JUST DON’T UNDERSTAND!!”
This reaction, while overblown, is completely natural. Someone is telling you the idea you nurtured from infancy and shaped into this beautiful thing called a book isn’t working. It’s flawed. Maybe heavily. Feel it, live through it, and then let it go so you can move on to:

2- Denial
“They signed me and read it in one sitting and they’re supposed to be my best friend, but they don’t actually know anything about books. They have to be wrong. They THINK they’re being helpful, but if they hadn’t absolutely loved the book they wouldn’t have even read it. SO THERE.”
Nothing is perfect. Ever. There’s no such thing. We just have to try to get ourselves and our work as good as we can get it and chances are you’re not going to do that on the first try. And maybe not even on the tenth. The sooner you accept that, the happier you’ll be. And this applies to both writing and life in general.

3- Bargaining
“Well, what if I sent so-and-so to Sibera?! That would fix the plot problem, right? And then I would get to keep this little shiny section I love so much that doesn’t really fit here, right? RIGHT?!”
You might come up with some crazy ideas and try to pass them off as good. Maybe you’re stuck and maybe you’re trying to save a particular part of the story you adore, either way if you’re getting weird looks when you explain your ideas you might want to reconsider actually putting them in writing.

4- Slow Acceptance
“I finally reread the book and I guess, MAYBE, I can see what they mean about this one part told in second person totally distracting from the rest of the first person narrative. But it seemed so quirky and original at the time!”
This step is arguably the most important. This is when you once again become capable of rational thought and are able to look at your book through the editor’s eyes and see what they’re seeing. Then you can look at it again through your knowledge of the world and hopefully end up hit with:

5- Inspiration
“OMG! I just had this brilliant idea! What if A and B went to X and did Y?! It would fix everything and it’s SO MUCH BETTER than what I had before! How could I have been such an idiot? Why didn’t I think of this the first time around?!”
All the pieces have finally come together! You see the editor’s changes and raise them a rewrite of four other chapters that suddenly you’re absolutely certain you can make shinier. YOU ARE AUTHOR! Nothing can stand in your way. Now go lock yourself in a room and start typing. πŸ˜‰

If you ever get stuck on any of the phases before Inspiration, just try imagining how shiny and wonderful and compelling and three-dimensional and addictive and beautiful your book will be once your editors are done with you. Then, suddenly, you feel like this:

Happy Young Woman (c) Vera Kratochvil

And that, friends, is a very great place to be. πŸ˜€

For the next couple of months, I make no promises.

So, remember how I was all excited about getting my edit letter a couple of months ago?

Well, I got it! And now I’m not sure if I’m excited or if I want to go curl up in a ball in the corner and cry.Β  I think I’m leaning more toward the latter at the moment. But, anyway. MOVING ON.

I tell you this for two reasons:
1- This means that Sing, Sweet Nightingale is one step closer to being finished and ready for ARCs which is one step closer to being an actual book I can share with people! Yay!

2- The next few months of my life are going to be INSANE and therefore I make no promises whatsoever on my posting schedule here.

It’s not just the arrival of the edit letter that has taken over my life, it’s also one of the two busiest times of year at my day job. Within the next five weeks, I have two events that will put me out of commission for anything non-day job related for five days each. Plus, I have an awesome book-related trip that will also put me (at least partially) out of commission for five days. Combine that with an incredibly in-depth edit letter and I’m surprised my brain isn’t already melting out my ears in protest.

There shall definitely be posts here, particularly when I get to share cool things from other Spencer Hill authors. I know there’s a trailer reveal on Friday and I’m jumping on a cover reveal a couple days late on Monday! Luckily, these are things that take very little thought processing from me and even less creation of content. Other than that, don’t expect much. I might not even have the time to do my roundup of awesome Cracked.com articles because I won’t have time to read them myself.

So, um, that’s it for now! I still have some good news that I hope to share later this week or sometime next week, but for now I need to go buy ten thousand post-its and a few hundred notebooks and prepare for SSN Rewrite Number Three…

The view from my side of the fence.

In an industry where change has occurred rarely and at a slow pace, the past decade has brought an avalanche of new ideas, technology, and problems. Publishing as a whole has dealt with all this in ways both good and bad and, honestly, I don’t know enough about the details of those decisions to even begin to tell you which is which. One of the things I do know has happened because of these changes has been the rise of the small press both in number and in prestige.

Despite this, many people within (and outside) the publishing industry don’t know much about small presses. Or equate them all with the vanity presses of old. This is just not the case. And my editor (and fellow small press author) Danielle Ellison has teamed up with the girls from Tangled up in Words as well as various industry professionals to help shed more light on the pros and cons of publishing with a small press.

They’re calling the series Small Press 411 and it started with a post yesterday. And now? Now there’s already a post with questions answered by agent Julia Weber! I’m thrilled by this blog series because the information needs to be out there for those still doing their research on the publishing industry–and even for those already in the industry.

Simply based on my own experiences, small presses are awesome! Granted, I’m still at the beginning of the process, but the most important part of publishing–to me–was finding an editor who understood my vision for my book and was willing to take the time to help me get there. I ended up with TWO! I call that lucky and I’m more than happy that Danielle is now taking the time to spread the small press love.

Take the time to check out what’s already up and look for a LOT more posts over the next three weeks. Even if you already know about small presses, you may be surprised by what you’ll learn!

Money, debt, writing, and priorities.

Reflectors (c) Jing Villareal

I might have said this before (or, you know, a million bazillion times), but I really want to be a full-time writer. The goal is possible and I’m doing everything I can to make it happen sooner rather than later, but things get in the way. Things like money and fear of falling into debt again and the stress of having too much on my plate and not enough time to give the things I care about the time they deserve.

So what should I do in a situation like this? I see the end getting closer and I see the things standing in my way and I see the huge gaping chasm I could fall into if I take a step in the wrong direction…

This is where priorities come in handy. What is truly important to me and is my fear strong enough to keep me from getting them? The more I think about it, the more I realize my priorities look something like this:Β 

1. Family/Friends
2. Writing/Creative time
3. Necessities of life (house/food/air/etc)
4. Money
5. Fear of debt

There are a bunch of other things on that list in random places, but for the purposes of this post, those are my priorities. I’ve been in debt before and I got myself out of it. I’ve never had a ton of money and although it’s nice right now to be able to afford things like trips to BEA and writing conferences, I could survive without them. More and more, though, I’m realizing that I’m miserable when I have to spend five days a week (and some weekends) working on things that, honestly, don’t matter to me AT ALL. I have a growing number of opportunities in the writing world lining up in front of me and I won’t be able to take them all (or take them on and do them justice) unless I make some sacrifices as far as money goes. At least in the short term. Honestly, I’m hoping that my sacrifices now will pay off over time.

It’s a scary thing, though, to be standing on the edge of that cliff. I’m not entirely sure I can see the other side, so, if I jump, I very well might fall. And I don’t think there’s a safety net.

The thing is, even with the fear of falling, the possibility of flying still seems worth the risk.

WIPs, friends, weekends, and good news!

This is a post of news in various forms: Progress news, Good news, and Vague news. So, let’s get started.

Wow! (c) David Siqueira

Progress News:Β 
I’m still plugging away at The Dream War Saga Book 2 and over the weekend hit the 56,000 word mark! I’m past the halfway point and I’m really loving where this book is going… as long as I concentrate on how shiny it will be after my editresses Danielle and Patricia help me polish it and not how rough and raw draft one is now. Luckily it’s not too hard to look past the uneven pacing, the dropped emotional threads and subplots, the unanswered questions, and the chapters that kind of ramble. I see the potential and the potential is all sorts of awesome!

Good News:Β 
Speaking of my editresses, Danielle Ellison announced this morning that she sold ANOTHER two books! This time the series starts with the digital-only release of Salt, a YA paranormal, with Entangled Publishing! This is awesome news and I am so proud of her! I know it will be incredible because, well, it’s Dani. So, duh. πŸ˜‰ Read more about this amazingness on her website here.

Vague News:Β 
I got an email last night that could lead to something amazingly cool for me and a friend of mine. I can’t say much about it yet, but I really hope everything happens the way it looks like it might! Also, pretty awesome things are happening behind the scenes of The Dream War Saga! I wish I could say more about both of these things or even tell you when I might have news for sure, but I just don’t know! Suffice it to say that 2013 is shaping up to be even more awesome than I’d hoped it might be!

That’s it for now, but I’ll check back in on Wednesday, lovelies! Hope you all enjoyed your weekend!