Jenny Rae Rappaport
There will probably be countless debate, tribute, and vilification of Michael Jackson, now that he's dead. Cherie Priest has a great, short post that expresses my feelings.

For me, he will always be Captain Eo from the movie they showed at Epcot when I visited in 1988. Enjoy!

Part One:


Part Two:
Jenny Rae Rappaport
I have my third story due on Wednesday morning at 7:30am, so I'm only popping in really briefly here...

I wanted to let you know about a wonderful thing that my friend, James Maxey, is doing to support breast cancer. He lost his partner, Laura, to the disease in 2005, and has been a passionate supporter of breast cancer research ever since. Now, he's offering a signed copy of his latest book, DRAGONSEED (Solaris, 2009), to anyone who donates to the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation through "Team Dragon", which is the fundraising team he's set up.

Many more details can be found here, at his blog post about Books for Breasts.

If you have a little bit to spare, it's well worth it. One of our good family friends had breast cancer, and my husband's grandmother died of it two years ago. It affects everyone, in every walk of life. Almost everyone knows someone who knows someone who's lost a relative or a friend to this disease. Now you know me. Please go read James' post.
Jenny Rae Rappaport
Just a quick note that THE KING'S DAUGHTERS by Nathalie Mallet is now available at Amazon.

Orders being filled now! =)
Jenny Rae Rappaport
Have I mentioned yet that Odyssey is everything I hoped it would be and more? It is exhilarating and stimulating, at the same time that it is fatiguing, and I'm learning a million and one things about writing. Melissa Scott is coming as this week's lecturer guest, and we're rolling along on writing new things and discussing our strengths and weaknesses with Jeanne Cavelos (who runs Odyssey).

Plot is one of my weaknesses, which I knew before I came here, and she is so good at helping me with it that I want to put her in a box and take her home with me. =)

The best part of Odyssey though is that I'm surrounded by wordnerds. There are sixteen of us, all passionate about writing, and wanting to talk about it all the time. We have conversations at lunch, in class during our break, walking back and forth from the dorms, and even in the car on the way to dinner (we had a 21st birthday to celebrate today). I can't tell you how much I enjoy being around people who I find intellectually stimulatng, and who are also funny and kind. I would post pictures and names, but I don't want to do that without asking people first. There will eventually probably be a picture of us in Locus at some point, since there usually is of the class as a whole.

Everything has been lovely here, with the exception of the rain and the unseasonable coolness (down to 50-55 degrees at night!). It's supposed to rain the rest of the week, so we've been making a point of going outside to eat our lunches, and then sitting and soaking up the sunshine on the lawn by the dorms, while we read stories for critiques.

I think you can say I'm having fun, and I'm going to come back with a bunch of stories to revise and submit. If you can, seriously think about applying next year. =)
Jenny Rae Rappaport
While I remember, I'd like to mention that we have the first review in of BY BLOOD WE LIVE, which is the new vampire anthology edited by John Joseph Adams--it's out in August!

From the review: In By Blood We Live, John Joseph Adams has put together a collection of vampire stories that not only flows well together but shows off the best and worst aspects of our favorite creature of the night.

You can preorder the book here.
Jenny Rae Rappaport
I have spent the better part of this day quietly contemplating in my head what Twitter should do about the situation in Iran. If you're just joining us, they're killing students in Tehran and there seems to be a mini-revolution going on because of the election. It's bloody and it's bad, and the only way a lot of news is getting out is THROUGH Twitter.

But the students and other Iranian citizen journalists are starting to have a hard time getting through to the proxy servers they've been using to access Twitter. The Iranian government is actively working to censor them and to shut down any news getting out of the country. There are a lot of good people out there who are trying to run proxy servers to help the Iranians access Twitter to get the news out; there's one guy in LA who says he has up to 750 people hitting his server every minute, according to the NY Times. But as soon as the proxies go up, the Iranian government is working to shut them down.

There's little that we can do as private citizens. I have no way to march to Iran and tell them to stop killing their citizens. But I think that a public company, such as Twitter, has a bit more responsibility, especially since their service has become practically the only news source for the entire rest of the civilized world. Even major newspapers are pulling stories off of it. It's a revolution in journalism that shouldn't be stopped by a government that attempts to govern through violence.

I think that Twitter has a moral responsibility to help the people getting killed in Iran. I know it's a difficult thing for a private entity to act against a foreign nation, but there are extra servers they can set up. There are ways they can help provide more proxies. There are ways that they can globally fuck with the Iranian government's censorship. I think they should do it. I think they have a responsibility as a business that has unwittingly gotten embroiled into politics; I think they must act or they will regret doing so. Even now, the United States State Department is urging Twitter to once again delay system maintenance, so as to keep the posts from Iran flowing.

I have great faith in the hivemind of the Internet. I have great faith in the power of the people. I have great faith that if enough of its users demand that Twitter do something, then they will be forced to do so via the will of the people. So please retweet this blog post. Please leave comments, as I'm eager to hear your opinions; comments are moderated, but I release them quickly. Please link to it and spread the word. If we say nothing, if we try to do nothing, then we are just as guilty in those deaths.

In the meantime, here's some other stuff that you can do, via Scott Westerfeld.
Jenny Rae Rappaport
In the books read department, when I couldn't sleep on Saturday night...

25. FIRE by Kristin Cashore
I was incredibly lucky to snag a copy of this at this year's BEA and I adored it. I think it touched on a number of themes that are very close to my heart, and at the end, I wanted more. I know it's a prequel to GRACELING, but it's really Fire's own story, which is great. If you liked GRACELING, you'll love FIRE. I eagerly await BITTERBLUE.

And it also has one of the most simply perfect last lines I've ever read in a novel.
Jenny Rae Rappaport
I'm at Odyssey now, without a TV, but as far as I can tell that's a good thing. Since the 24 hour news networks don't seem to be covering what's happening in Iran very well, my husband tells me, and I'm literally getting my news from people Twittering from Iran, including pictures.

And they are horrible pictures.

These are the not-so-horrible-pictures.

There are others that are excessively graphic. They have blood. They have conceivably dead students, judging from the blood. I thought hard and long about putting up the link to them because they are so graphic and so horrifying. And then I thought that I needed to put the link up because as terrible as they are and as much as I want to cry from them... people need to see what the Iranian government is doing to its students.

THE FOLLOWING LINK CONTAINS PICTURES THAT ARE NSFW AND MAY BE UPSETTING TO MANY PEOPLE. PLEASE BE WARNED OF THIS, IF YOU CHOOSE TO CLICK ON THE LINK. THEY ARE MOST DEFINITELY NOT FOR CHILDREN.

These are the horrible pictures from the University of Esfahan.

I sit here, in my safe little dorm room in New Hampshire, and I am utterly horror-struck that they are killing students. Or attempting to kill students. I'm not very sure on the details right now. I just see the pictures and it hurts.

There are monsters out there. And they are killing people.
-------
FYI: Two of the most informational twitter feeds at the moment are @Change_For_Iran and @persiankiwi. Hooray for citizen journalism.
Jenny Rae Rappaport
In a bit of catchup, I think I shall list all the books that I've read in the past few months, since my last book post.

21. AT LAST COMES LOVE by Mary Balogh
Book Three in the Huxtable series, which I found slightly stronger than the other two. Don't get me wrong, I'm enjoying these books, but it bothers me that the people in the family are all so good. SO good...

22. SEDUCING AN ANGEL by Mary Balogh
Book Four in the Huxtable series, where the characters are still good. Decent book though. I am greatly looking forward to Con's book because Con is such a wonderful demon of a man.

23. THIS DUCHESS OF MINE by Eloisa James
Jeli's story! Jemma and Elijah were always two of my favorite characters in the Duchess stories, and I was very pleased to find that she managed to give them a happy ending. And oh my, I never knew that chess scenes in bed could be written to be so deliciously sexy. I'm also really looking forward to the last book in the series, which is Villiers and Shakespeare-based, a bit. Loving the Montague daughters and/or crazy Lisette. My money is on Lisette and Villiers. =)

24. THE HUNGER GAMES by Suzanne Collins
I didn't read this for the longest time, and then I finally bought it and was completely hooked.

And that's it for now, although I'm almost done with a few other books that I'm sneaking in before bed. There's just something so unsoothing about the thought of retiring to bed with my Kindle to read...
Jenny Rae Rappaport
This is both a blog post about Odyssey and an experiment to see whether I can post to Blogger via e-mail... let experiment commence!

Odyssey is wonderful.  Every day I am required to be up and in class by 9 am.  This is a gargantuan task for me, considering that my normal habits are that of a night owl, but I have managed so far.  We have class from 9 am-1 pm; the first part of the class is when Jeanne Cavelos lectures on the topic of the week, and the second part of class involves lengthy critique circles, which are at the heart of the workshop.  We do two crits a day on Tuesday-Thursday, and then three crits on Friday and Monday.

This, quite obviously, makes for a lot of work.  I have spent the majority of my time here reading other people's stories, making detailed line edits, and writing out my critiques.  Given the fact that my crits tend to be ~1000, give or take some depending on the story, I've estimated that I've written ~9000 words of critique this week.  And more next week!

It is exhausting.  I kept trying to get at least seven hours of sleep a day, even if it was spread out over two naps, but then I would wake up and feel like I hadn't rested at all.  And then my back started hurting, and I put two and two together, and realized that the mattresses here are utter crap (typical of college mattreses).  So I caved in and paid lots of money for a memory foam topper, which came yesterday, and is like heaven.  I think I slept ten hours last night.  Absolute heaven. =)

Let's see, what else.  They discourage blogging at Odyssey, partially due to the time-sink given the fact that you need to write AND do crits, but also because there are certain things that shouldn't be told to others.  So you'll never hear about my reactions to the critiques of my own stories, or what i think about other people's work.  You'll also never hear about my other Odyssey classmates (there are 16 of us total), unless they give me specific permission to talk about them.  Suffice it to say that all sixteen seem like genuinely awesome people, I love my roommates, and everyone here can WRITE.  It's humbling and happy at the same time, to be among people who can kick my butt at writing.

Back to the (mostly) non-personal stuff, I guess!

My first story is up for critique on Monday and is titled "Appeasing the Glacier".  I'm currently working on my second story, which doesn't have a title, but involves a character named Susan and a library drop-box.  That story is due by 7:30 am on Monday, and is going to be mailed to Patricia Bray for a private critique in two weeks.  We get a combination of in-class and private crits, with both the writer-in-residence (Carrie Vaughn this year!), Jeanne herself, and our lecturer guests. 

This week's lecturer guest was Jack Ketchum, who I found to be as charming as I remembered him, and who gave us a wonderful lecture on how to create a powerful opening.  We had to read two stories by Jack before he came, "Luck" and "Returns".  "Luck" is something of a Western, which I liked, but "Returns" made me bawl like a baby.  It's a short piece about a man who comes back from the dead to see his cat Zoey, and terrible things happen to the Zoey in the story--and by the end, I was hysterical, for obvious reasons because MY cat is Zoe.  I ended up calling Chris up at 2 in the morning and insisting that he tell me that Zoe was ok... he was somewhat disgruntled. =)  Zoe was fine.  We've been webchatting through Skype, so that I can see her every couple of days.

[brief pause in this blog post, as I made egg salad for myself and my roommates, and now I'm at the kitchen table, finishing this]

Next week's lecturer guest is Melissa Scott and after that is Patricia Bray.  And now I'm off to change out of pjs and write my story... more blog posts later! =)
Jenny Rae Rappaport
Just a reminder that I will be attending the Odyssey Writing Workshop starting tomorrow and running through July 18th. I will be back at work full-time on July 20, 2009.

WE ARE NOT CLOSED TO QUERIES.

I put that in all caps because it's important to make that clear. Jodi is in charge of holding down the fort while I'm gone, and she'll be happily reading submissions. On the rare chance that she finds something to pass on to me (~2-5% of total submissions), I won't get a chance to read it until the middle of July. I'm only doing work for clients while I'm there.

But please don't let that stop you, as I'm still looking for clients, and would love to find the next great writer!

Odyssey blog posts will commence on Monday or so. =)
Jenny Rae Rappaport
After many delays and some growing pains, I am happy to announce that the sequel to THE PRINCES OF THE GOLDEN CAGE, THE KING'S DAUGHTERS by Nathalie Mallet, will be hitting a store near you in a few weeks! This is the link to the Amazon page, but they haven't fixed the pre-order button yet.

However, Night Shade Books, Nathalie's publisher is holding a sale!!!

The details are as follows:

Sale: 50% off all in-stock and forthcoming Night Shade titles

It’s that time of year again, sale time at Night Shade Books. We’ve got a lot of big new titles coming in, and we need to clear space in a big way (and pay off a few print bills)! So for the next two weeks, from Wednesday, June 3 until midnight on Wednesday, June 17, we’re offering 50% off all in-stock and forthcoming* Night Shade books, with a four book minimum order. Just use the coupon code 50NSB2009 at checkout, and we’ll do the rest!

THE KING'S DAUGHTERS and many other Night Shade titles are available for purchase at www.nightshadebooks.com. You can also order some of John Joseph Adams' anthologies there (WASTELANDS, THE LIVING DEAD, BY BLOOD WE LIVE, THE IMPROBABLE ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES), as well as many other great titles by other authors who I don't represent. =)