This just in: rubber chicken JUGGLING!

I’m just now going through my photos from Memorial Day weekend, including my Monday morning stroll through Folk Life, a festival they have here in Seattle every Mem. Day weekend.

And what do I find? I knew I got shots of juggling, but little did I know that the chickens had invaded the juggling world, too!

E

They’re taking over the world, I tell ya.

Lost

Yay! 
Finally some resolution for Penny and Desmond. At least, I think. Still have 10 minutes to go.

ETA 10 minutes later: AAAHH!!
 

Career day

Many thanks to the teachers and students at Dimmitt Middle School in Renton, WA, which hosted their 7th annual Career Day yesterday. It was an honor to be invited and I had a lot of fun showing the students how a book comes to life, from the author’s first ideas, through the writing, submitting, and working with an editor, and on to the typesetting, design, illustration, and press.

I had a great time! It was a great experience to chalk up for my first school visit.

Work life after returning from a show tends to be pretty busy. When you’ve been out of the office for a week, you often have a lot of catching up to do. It’s always complicated when warm weather hits because then you have coworkers going on vacation, etc.
So if you’re wondering where I’ve been, now you know–things have been really busy. And it’s not much to speak of–deadlines to make, books to get in from the copyeditor and proofreader and send them on to be typeset, books to edit and get feedback to the author, that kind of stuff. The everyday life of an editor which has been covered again and again here. 
In my off time, I’ve been getting out and enjoying a bit of the lovely Seattle weather we’ve been having. This is the time of year that I first moved to Seattle–my three-year anniversary at Mirrorstone was just a couple weeks ago, actually–and this is the time of year that sucks you in and makes it worth living in Seattle. I’ve even been able to get my allergies (mostly) under control the last few weeks, and that bodes well for a summer of outdoor activities. Yesterday some friends and I had a barbecue out on my deck, and I tried yoga for the first time with my friend yesterday morning at a community yoga-thon that left me more relaxed than I think I’ve felt in a decade. I think I should start taking the yoga class at work! (One nice perk of working at Wizards of the Coast is that we have a gym and a dojo where we can go work out any time, and they offer personal training and classes like yoga, Pilates, and kickboxing for a relatively low fee.) And my friends and I are planning camping trips, canoeing outings, and road trips like mad right now. I think I may just have plans every weekend for the next two months.
So we editors aren’t always holed up in our offices reading. Just most of the time. 

IRA in pictures

I’m taking a break from tilling the garden with a potato fork (it actually works pretty well on a small plot and you don’t have to use a gas tiller, though on anything like the 1/2 acre garden we had when I was growing up that would be torture–thank heavens my dad used a tractor, then a tiller, for that one!) and waiting on the cable guy to show up for the second time in two days (the guy yesterday hooked up our internet but completely unhooked the cable in two bedrooms) to bring you this entry about last week’s International Reading Associat
ion conference. We had a brand new booth this year (if you’ve seen it in previous years, it looks very similar, with some tweaks like carved dragon heads on the bookshelves) and we really looked forward to meeting all the teachers who come to this conference. Normally, they say, attendance is in the 20,000 to 30,000 range. I’m not sure of this year’s exact number, but I think I met every single one of those 20-30,000 teachers over the course of the three days I worked the booth! 

I got to do the window displays in the booth this year–it was so much fun making it all pretty. The end result is a booth that looks very cozy, much like a cross between a Victorian bookshop and, as one teacher pointed out, a pub.

When I checked into the hotel in Atlanta, I was surprised to find a pretty fancy room–a balcony with a view of the pool (for which I’d forgotten my swimsuit, and it was great swimming weather), an iPod alarm clock (I need to get me one of these–I love that I can wake up to a playlist or play my iPod any time–right now I just use my computer for that), and weirdest of all, my bathroom towels decoratively folded. A flower for the washcloth under the soap dish, and a little shirt for the bath mat. I checked with my coworkers, and I seem to be the only one who had something quite that fancy. Apparently my housekeeper was on the creative side–but only for that first day, so I’m glad I got a shot of it before I used the bath mat! That was balanced out by how housekeeping kept moving my things around–even putting my toothbrush, which I’d left out to dry, into its travel case, and lining up all my allergy meds in a neat row. There’s service, and then there’s invasiveness. That was plain odd.

Please excuse the dark exposure. I’m a little too lazy today to do any Photoshopping.


soap dish


Bath mat


ipod alarm clock


The view


me, taking in the view

This year authors Candice Ransom and D.L. Garfinkle were on site signing their books–the Time Spies series for Candice and the new Supernatural Rubber Chicken for

  . We had some rubber chickens on hand to promote the debut of the Ed, the Supernatural Rubber Chicken, so they played a few antics on us, trying to take over the booth. 




I also got to meet Lisa Yee (

 ), a blog friend for a while but the first time we met in person–and of course, Peepy.

Lisa is the author of several hilarious books. Check out her Millicent Min, Girl Genius, Stanford Wong Flunks Big Time, and So Totally Emily Ebers.
 
And had ice cream with blog friend and fellow editor Alvina and her coworker Joe.

 

More pictures later. That’s enough for one entry!
 

IRA in brief/Writing Excuses

Atlanta is gorgeous. A normal warm spring day! It’s gorgeous. I love Seattle, but I’m still in sweaters till June there. The other day was wearing a spring cotton shirt and a skirt, and it was just lovely.

Well, till I got coffee spilled on me at dinner, but hopefully it’ll wash out. There have been a few weird moments like that this week, but never all that bad–don’t worry, the coffee wasn’t too hot and things happen. I just hope my favorite shirt won’t be stained!

I’ve been meaning to post all week, because we’ve had some very photo-worthy moments–housekeeping in my hotel folded my bathmat like a little shirt, for example–but I have just been so exhausted! Who knew there were so many teachers?

So it’s been a great show, and I’ll post pictures soon.

Meanwhile, it’s a little late for this, but make sure to catch the second half of my guest appearance on Writing Excuses, where we
talk about submitting to editors and they ask me about Hallowmere and other great projects I’m working on.

Linkety

Via Oz and Ends:

Scalzi discusses the state of YA fantasy and SF sales compared to adult. (Scalzi’s got some good stuff this week!) Of particular note is that old refrain, often heard from authors and readers of adult SFF, that YA is an “undiscovered country”–when, as Scalzi points out, it’s kinda that the adult SFF people just aren’t in on the highly popular open secret that’s selling far and above what any adult SFF bestseller is . . . .

From the mailbox

I’m taking advantage of still having internet at home when I thought it was going to turn off last night (we’re in household internet transition) to post one last thing before I go dark for a week. I’ll be at IRA next week, so it’s unlikely I’ll be posting from there.

On the flip side of the content question coin, a reader asks,

I’ve been reading your blog for awhile with interest. I have written a teen fantasy and I have a question about Mirrorstone and YA in general. My novel has some profanity, drinking, and sex. (I like to call it a Veronica Mars meets Tamora Pierce meets Joss Whedon type of book) This seems quite ordinary to me as my protagonist is seventeen years old. (And I remember high school vividly.) But I keep hearing that YA should be ‘cleaner’. Is that true and does it mean that I should submit to Wizards under the adult imprint?

Thanks for reading! As are most of my answers, this one is “it depends.”

How graphic is the mature content? We at Mirrorstone keep to a fairly strict PG-13 standard, so anything of a graphic nature really isn’t for us, but that doesn’t mean we don’t shy away from tough subjects. But Wizards books often have that restriction as well (though not as strictly) because of corporate policy–there is just a line we won’t cross as a company.

That doesn’t mean you won’t find that kind of thing out there, though, in the YA marketplace. There is a YA book to suit pretty much any teen’s taste, from the gamut of innocent adventure and fantasy like Shannon Hale (who nevertheless also doesn’t shy away from extremely tough subjects) to the darker work of Holly Black and Melissa Marr. (See that previous post for more on that.)

But that doesn’t mean we’re the right publisher for you. Or it might. The best way to answer this question is to read widely. Read all our YA books–check out our anthology, Magic in the Mirrorstone, and see the kind of variety we’re looking for–and notice that it has a Holly Black story and a Cecil Castellucci story, both authors who are known for their edgy material.
Look at how they crafted their stories, and see if your work fits within that same gamut. Then check out other books from other publishers putting out books similar to yours, and after all that, submit accordingly. You may decide that we’re not quite a fit for you–but then, you might.

Now, the secondary issue in your question is adult versus YA. Is an edgy novel with a 17-year-old protagonist YA, or is it adult?

Again, it depends.

Generally if your protagonist is living your story in the moment–not looking back on being 17 from the point of view of a 30-something–then that’s one clue that it’s YA.

Generally if teens (including the teen you remember yourself being at 15 or 16, because kids read up) would be more interested in the story than adults would, then it’s YA. Check out coverage of the “Think Future” Panel Debates to see some good discussion of this issue. Note what George Nicholson of Sterling Lord Literistic said about S.E. Hinton’s books:

Nicholson provided some historical perspective, recalling the days there was no category called “young adult.” Then, in the 1970s, a few writers came along “who had a social context,” such as S.E. Hinton, and a teen audience was identified and located. “When [Hinton] was first published by Viking,” Nicholson recalled, “No one wanted it in the adult world. But when the book was republished as a book for teens, with a new cover, it began to sell in the millions.”

With that in mind, who do you see reading your books? Thirty-somethings? Twenty-somethings? Or right smack in the teen years, anywhere from 12 to 18 or 19 year olds?

Also, boys or girls?

If you’re looking for teens to read it, you should be trying to sell it to a publisher who publishes books for teens, and then target a YA publisher who targets the readership you’re looking to reach. 

Teens, especially boys, do read the books published by the adult imprint at Wizards, so perhaps that complicates it and takes you back to square one, but I think if you just make sure to keep in mind what kinds of books that publisher makes and send it to the imprint with books most like your own, you’ll be fine.

More on self-publishing

John Scalzi has some great points today that extend our discussion of self-publishing from a couple weeks ago. Specifically I don’t think I covered the returnability issue:

3. No access to bookstores or other retail outlets, because most bookstores won’t take non-returnable items, which my printed books would be. This further limits the chance that people who don’t already know me will find my work. This is a problem because I do in fact get a lot of my readers from people taking a chance on my books in the bookstores (for that I can thank my book and cover designers, who help draw their eyes in the first place). There are ways to get around this, but they take lots of time and effort.

Check it out.