Monday, November 17, 2008

New Aspect of Crow short story is live!

Chapter One of my new Aspect of Crow tie-in story is now up on my publisher's website!

"Storm Reaper" takes place about two years before The Reawakened, but since it's set in a completely different area with different characters, you can read it either before or after that book.

Fans of Voice of Crow will remember Kiril, Filip's comrade from the Ilion cavalry. He's one of the protagonists of this story, along with a disgraced noblewoman named Helena. Filip and Alanka make an appearance in the story as well.

I was thrilled to be able to visit this world one last time. As I might have mentioned, several characters and plots were cut from The Reawakened as I was working on it. The biggest deletion dealt with how the war and revolution were affecting Filip and Kiril's native country of Ilios.

A new chapter will appear every Monday between now and January 19. Enjoy!

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Thursday, November 06, 2008

Two chances to win the entire Aspect of Crow trilogy!

It's in! I finally finished polishing Bad to the Bone and sent it off last night. Which frees me up to tell you about two fantastic chances for you to win a complete set of Aspect of Crow books.

I have a fun new interview at Amberkatze's Book Blog. Amber wants you to take my Animal Spirit personality quiz and leave your results in the comments of the interview post. She'll draw a name on Sunday to win a signed trilogy coming directly from me (US residents only--sorry, it costs a bundle to mail three big books).

Amber gave the series awesome reviews here (Eyes of Crow), here (Voice of Crow), and here (The Reawakened).

Also, author Ann Aguirre is lucky enough to be on a sun-drenched vacation in Mexico (as opposed to her sun-drenched everyday life in Mexico). While she's gone, she's left a post offering an Aspect of Crow trilogy, courtesy of her, to one lucky commenter. Of course, I'll send autographed bookplates to the winner. This contest is open to anyone anywhere (because bookplates are cheap to mail)!

Now I have to go clean my house and catch up on approximately 3,478 e-mails. And eventually shower.

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Friday, October 10, 2008

Voice of Crow takes the bronze in the PRISM!

Following in the footsteps of its predecessor, Voice of Crow (Luna Books, Oct 2007) just won Third Place in the Fantasy category of the PRISM Award!

The PRISM Award is given out by the Fantasy, Futuristic and Paranormal (FF&P) chapter of the Romance Writers of America.

Here's the list of the award-winners in all the categories. Congrats to everyone!

Light Paranormal
1. Dead Girls are Easy by Terri Garey
2. More Than Fiends by Maureen Child
3. Highland Guardian by Melissa Mayhue

Time Travel
1. Wired by Liz Maverick
2. Thirty Nights with a Highland Husband by Melissa Mayhue
3. Forgiveness by JL Wilson.

Erotica
1. Mona Lisa Blossoming by Sunny
2. Pleasures of the Night by Sylvia Day
3. Double Dating with the Dead by Karen Kelly

Futuristic
1. My Favorite Earthling by Susan Grant
2. How to Lose an Extraterrestrial in 10 days by Susan Grant
3. Insufficient Mating Material by Rowena Cherry

Novella
1. Over the Moon by Sunny
2. Street Corners and Halos by Catherine Spangler
3. Wild Hearts in Atlantis by Alyssa Day

Dark Paranormal
1. Immortals: The Awakening by Joy Nash
2. Betrayed: A House of Night Novel by PC Cast
3. Touched by Darkness by catherine Spangler

Fantasy
1. The Eternal Rose by Gail Dayton
2. Lucinda, Darkly by Sunny
3. Voice of Crow by Jeri Smith-Ready

Best of the Best
Wired by Liz Maverick

Best First Book
1. Grave Illusions by Lina Gardiner
2. She Wolf by Teresa D'Amario
3. Thirty Nights with a Highland Husband by Melissa Mayhue

A special congrats to my friend Gail Dayton, whose Rose book beat my Crow book for the second year running. But hey, her trilogy is over and mine isn't, so maybe The Reawakened will have a chance next year!


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Now playing: Wrong Impression - Natalie Imbruglia
via FoxyTunes

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Monday, September 29, 2008

Book giveaway updates

The winner of the Plot Synopsis Project giveaway is...Lisa Kessler Writer from MySpace! Yay Lisa! She won two signed books: Eyes of Crow and Voice of Crow.

There's no time to weep if you didn't win. There is time, however, for you to hop over to the blog of author extraordinaire Ann Aguirre, where she's giving away a free copy of any of my books (including The Reawakened, though you'd have to wait until November 1 for that one) to one lucky commenter. I believe the drawing will take place tomorrow night (she's posting the results Wednesday, so if I were you, I'd go comment now just to be safe).

Check out the sidebar for a link to all current and open contests. I'll put up a link on my home page soon so it's easier for people to keep track.

My posts will be getting briefer as the month goes on, as I'm descending into the Rewrite Cave for Bad to the Bone. It's a much happier place than the First Draft Cave. I'm having a blast dismantling this manuscript and rebuilding it into the Bionic Novel.

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Now playing: The Promise Ring - Pink Chimneys
via FoxyTunes

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Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Crows rule, and last chance at REAWAKENED ARC

A new study shows that crows are the smartest non-human animal, including chimpanzees. Take that, you damned dirty apes!

As some of you know, I'm not fond of non-human primates. They freak me out. Maybe I'm particularly susceptible to the Uncanny Valley, an innate revulsion to things that are almost human but not quite. Like mannequins or clowns or [insert easy celebrity joke here].

But I was able to get past my pithikosophobia recently to read the Y: The Last Man graphic novel series. I loved it despite the monkey.

(I should add that I didn't like the ending, partly because my favorite character was killed, and between that and Harry Potter and The Dark Tower and The Sopranos and Deadwood and Twin Peaks and Six Feet Under, I am forever swearing off series. My favorite characters always always always bite it in the last few episodes or final book. Not that I have room to talk, but hey.)

Where was I? Oh yeah--I hate monkeys, but I'll still read about them if the rest of the story is good.

How is this relevant to The Reawakened? Well, when I wrote this book, I figured it was the last in the series, so I would go for broke, write it exactly the way I thought it should be written and not worry about what people thought. Some of you will love it, and some of you will hate it. I respect that.

One of the risks I took was making two of the lead characters have the Aspect of Snake. Many people don't like snakes. But I always try to subvert stereotypes in my work, turn traditional symbols of evil (like crows or snakes) into something redemptive, and turn traditional symbols of good (like the sun or the color white) into something oppressive (i.e., the Ilion nation).

The Snake Spirit's domains are fire and sex (and, to a lesser extent, memory). So when our two Snakes, Sura and Dravek, meet for the first time, things get figuratively and literally H-O-T. This is bad for a lot of reasons I won't go into in this post. But Snake is one bad-ass Spirit who will not be denied.*

So....for a chance to win an Advance Reader's Copy of The Reawakened, all you have to do is answer the following poll in the comments (or e-mail me at jeri@jerismithready.com if you feel shy):

Snakes are:

a) cool
b) gross
c) scary
d) sexy
e) more than one of the above (please specify)

That's it! I'll take entries through 11:59pm Eastern time Sunday night, then draw a random name to win an autographed ARC of The Reawakened. These suckers are pretty scarce, so it's a nice prize if you can get it.

If you comment as anonymous, make sure you check back to see if you won, or leave a way for me to get in touch with you.

Also, there's one more day to enter the drawing for autographed copies of Eyes of Crow and Voice of Crow. That's two free books for one lucky person. Read them now and get ready for The Reawakened's November 1 release.

Good luck!

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Now playing: Our Lips Are Sealed - The Go-Go's
via FoxyTunes

*Ask Indiana Jones and Neville Flynn if you don't believe me.

EDITED TO ADD: This just in: THE REAWAKENED just got a Top Pick review from Romantic Times--that makes it 3 for 3 for the trilogy! Hat trick, bay-bee! I'll post the review tomorrow.

EDITED TO ADD MORE: The winner of the REAWAKENED ARC is...flip! Flip, please send your mailing address to jeri AT jerismithready.com. Congrats, and thanks to everyone who entered!

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Friday, September 19, 2008

Plot Synopsis Project Part Deux (and giveaway)

Today I'm undertaking a special project with some of my fellow SF Novelists authors. The Plot Synopsis Project was started by Compton Crook Award nominee Joshua Palmatier (author of The Skewed Throne, The Cracked Throne, and The Vacant Throne, the Throne of Amenkor fantasy series).

Joshua explains it here:
Essentially, I gathered together a group of authors who were willing to post an entry about their own plot synopsis writing technique as well as a sample copy of one of their own plot synopses OR post an entry about how they got published without using a plot synopsis, to show everyone how different people write their synopses, and that it isn’t necessarily required to get published.

So today I'm honored to take part in...Plot Synopsis Project II. Because in science fiction and fantasy, we loves us a good sequel!

At the bottom of this entry I've included links to the other PSP2 participants, whose synopses are undoubtedly better than mine, or at least shorter. But not self-deprecating-er, I bet.

I'll present the synopsis with which I sold the Aspect of Crow trilogy to Luna Books in February 2005. I sold the trilogy on proposal, which means I didn't write the entire book before selling it, but only three chapters and this eighteen-double-spaced-page synopsis.

It's fascinating (and rather hilarious) to see how much the eventual book changed from the original synopsis. With Book One, Eyes of Crow, the changes were relatively minor [and are presented in italics and brackets with self-directed snark].

With Book Two, Voice of Crow, almost the entire story changed from my original conception, because I came to my senses and decided, what the hell, let's NOT kill off the hero of Book One.

And the synopsis of Book Three (what eventually became The Reawakened, which comes out November 1) bears no resemblance whatsoever to the final version, other than the Descendant occupation and ultimate good-conquers-evil ending.

NOTE: It should go without saying that these synopses contain THE ENTIRE PLOT OF THE FIRST BOOK, which means HEY, SPOILER ALERT. I hope that even after reading it, you'll still want to read Eyes of Crow and its two sequels. (I swear, the books are better written than the synopses. Check out these excerpts if you don't believe me. Oh, and this one, too.)

***To raise those hopes, I'll give away one signed copy each of both Eyes of Crow and Voice of Crow to one commenter. I'll draw a name at random from my three blogs next Thursday at 11:59pm eastern time.***

Here we go--the synopsis as submitted to Luna Books in 2004. For those short on time, just read the stuff in italics.

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Aspect of Crow trilogy synopsis

by Jeri Smith-Ready

The trilogy covers the three major phases of the protagonist Rhia’s life and the coinciding evolution of her powers.

World background: Rhia lives in a pre-modern society [which is actually several thousand years in the future--can you believe I didn't even know that when I started? It can charitably be called 'improvisation.'] in which animals are revered, respected, and even worshiped in their iconic forms. Each animal has its own domain, similar to the members of ancient Greek and Roman pantheons. For example, Hawk is the messenger of secret truths; Turtle governs fertility; Bear and Wolverine are defensive and offensive warriors, respectively.

Each person, upon reaching adulthood, is bestowed a particular kind of wisdom and magic—their Aspect—depending on the characteristics of their own animal Guardian Spirit. One cannot choose one’s Spirit; the Spirit makes the choice, which follows neither lineage nor gender, but rather the needs of society. The powers evolve in three phases: the first phase lasts until the person becomes a mother or father, and the third and final phase begins when one becomes a grandparent. Some people manifest magic powers even before their bestowing but lack the wisdom to use them properly. One must possess and both parts of one’s Spirit power (Aspect): magic and wisdom.

Rhia’s village of Asermos has seen several generations come and go since someone possessed Crow magic, which influences the passage between this world and the next, particularly at the moment of death. In their youth, Crow people can sense if and when a sick or injured person is going to die or recover. Later, as their power grows, they can communicate with the dead. In the third stage of a Crow person’s life, he or she can cross over and bring back souls. While Crows are valuable to society, they are often isolated by others’ fear, as if they carry death with them wherever they go. On the other hand, people pay them tribute because they hope that someday the Crow will resurrect them or a loved one. [Mmm, not really. Resurrection is extremely rare.] Crows are also held in awe because the crow is the closest relative of the Raven, which represents the Spirit Above All Others, akin to a supreme god. No one has ever had the Aspect of Raven.

The people of Asermos fear the adjacent Great Forest. [Wow, I said that? Mostly it's Rhia who's afraid, because she's a scaredy-cat to begin with.] Particularly dreaded are the packs of wolves that lurk within and occasionally prey on livestock. The villagers hunt along the forest’s edges, but most only venture inside once: for the “Bestowing”—the time in each young person’s life when he or she must receive their Aspect from their Guardian Spirit.

The Asermons believe that the capacity for magic resides in every human being, not just those of their society and its kindred villages. Long ago, some of the Asermons grew arrogant in their humanity, splintered off and moved south to a gentler climate so that they could create a more “advanced” civilization, with bigger cities to hold their pride. In doing so, they lost their connection with the energy of nature—the source of all magic—and replaced it with their own works of technology, as well as a pantheon of human gods. The Asermons call these people the Descendants, a word with a double meaning—they are genealogical descendants, and in the Asermons’ view, they have descended or lowered themselves by spurning the old ways.

Book One: Crow Sees [Uh, actually, it's EYES OF CROW]

The novel opens as eight-year-old RHIA prevents her mother MAYRA from putting to sleep their sick dog. Despite all odds and signs to the contrary, she knows somehow that he will recover and even predicts the circumstances of his eventual demise, a prophecy that comes true a few years later. The villagers begin to ask her to diagnose their ill animals. Meanwhile, Asermons such as Rhia’s father LETUS [changed his name to TEREUS because a beta reader thought it could be pronounced "lettuce"] begin to worry that a war is approaching because so many young men are being called as warrior Bears and Wolverines.

When Rhia turns fifteen, the village shaman, GALEN the Hawk, comes to her family and tells them his suspicion that she has the rare Aspect of Crow. He tests her ability on his sick brother DORIUS. Rhia sees that Dorius will survive the illness, but then she receives a vision of his violent death, a vision she must keep secret. Galen asks her to journey to Kalindos, a forest settlement, to study with a Crow woman of another tribe. Though they share the same religion, Asermons consider the Kalindons wild and untrustworthy; for example, a Kalindon man named RAZVAN abandoned Mayra with twin sons several years before she married Letus.

Frightened both by her own powers and the thought of entering the woods, Rhia refuses. She resolves to shut down her mortality awareness, but the memory of her own near-fatal illness as a young child—when Crow visited her for the first time—haunts her still. The illness weakened her body forever, an effect exacerbated by her parents’ overprotectiveness and the chronic pain she still battles. Her years-long helplessness intensified Rhia’s desire to be useful to family and community, yet she is hampered by her sometimes inchoate fear.

On a late summer day two years after the incident with Dorius, Rhia is helping her best friend/lover ARCAS tend his flock of sheep in a secluded meadow. As predicted by his father Galen, Arcas has recently received his Aspect of Bear. [Or so we're told.] He possesses the strength, intelligence and acute senses necessary for a warrior, but also has an artistic side that he reveals only to Rhia. That afternoon, they make love for the first time. Afterward, her half-brother LYCAS arrives to tell her that their mother has taken ill. When she enters their home, Rhia’s awareness of Mayra’s impending death alights on her consciousness like a heavy bird. She finally accepts that she needs help coping with this power and decides to go to Kalindos for training.

During the half-year mourning period before Rhia can leave, Galen instructs her on the ways of Spirit. He teaches her to pray, meditate, and take spiritual journeys to prepare for her bestowing. These exercises, combined with her guilt over the fact that she could not help her mother cross over in peace, cause her to turn inward. Arcas begins to feel neglected. Fearing she will abandon him for another man after many months apart, he frees her of obligation to him. Rhia offers him a lock of her hair—now shorn close as a traditional sign of mourning—and a crow feather as a token of her faith, but he refuses it. Heartbroken, she leaves her home and enters the forest, with Galen as a guide.

Galen says that he cannot accompany her all the way to Kalindos, for she must fast and meditate for three days alone in the forest to claim her gift. She wakes one morning to find the shaman gone. The first night she spends sleepless, staring wide-eyed into the darkness, her empty stomach aching and her limbs stiff from the cold winter air. The second night an old, gaunt wolf approaches her, belly to the ground in supplication. She is terrified but takes pity and tosses it the last of her food. It accepts her offering and runs away.

As evening falls on the third day, when Rhia has reached the end of her strength, the forest around her turns to a place of enchantment, and the great Crow Spirit appears. Before bestowing its powers upon her, it guides her into a glade where the cold winds cease to blow and her fear drops away. There stand two trees—one lush and vibrant, one barren and scarred. The healthy tree, Crow says, is her own inner wisdom, resilience, and love of life. The barren tree symbolizes her powers’ self-destructive potential, which will manifest if she surrenders to the illusion that death makes life bitter rather than sweet. Rhia herself will become like the barren tree if she allows death to take over her life. After she pledges not to make such a mistake, the vision clears, and her Aspect is granted. Peace and serenity overcome her, along with a sense that someone is watching over and protecting her. She continues on the way to Kalindos.

A cloudy, moonless night falls, and a young man appears without sound or sight. He reveals himself as MAREK from Kalindos, sent by the Crow woman to guide Rhia the rest of the way. He has Wolf magic, which allows him to travel in silence and become invisible at night—in fact, he has been following her for the last night and day. His lupine nature frightens her, yet she cannot resist her attraction to this man who seems to know her so well. Their mutual lust is instant and all-encompassing—they make love in the dark before she ever sees his face, and it takes several extra days for them to reach their destination. In the meantime, he helps her overcome her fear of the dark, an essential element of her Aspect. Her encounter with the old wolf, he says, was a test of her compassion and will help her in return one day.

Rhia learns that Marek’s Wolf powers are in the second phase already, which means that though not much older than she, he is already a father. He tells her he had a child and will speak no more about it, except to say that he has no wife. His short hair and haunted look, however, suggest that he has suffered a recent tragedy. [He actually does tell her his mate (girlfriend) and son died in childbirth.]

When they reach Kalindos, she meets her new mentor, CORANNA. Rhia is relieved to discover that the Crow woman is anything but a menacing harbinger of doom; Coranna’s gentle humor and lightness of spirit put her at ease immediately. She gives Rhia a few days to grow accustomed to her surroundings before training begins.

Magic permeates the everyday life of Kalindos more so than that of her home village. Compared to the bustling riverside port of Asermos, Kalindos feels like a place of spiritual retreat. The people there live in close communion with the surrounding forest, which Rhia learns to regard with reverence instead of trepidation. A friendship blossoms between her and a young Wolf woman named ALANKA, who turns out to be the daughter of Razvan, the Fox man who abandoned Rhia’s mother and brothers over two decades ago. The warm, charming Razvan clearly loves Alanka and regrets the reckless irresponsibility of his youth. He explains that he left Asermos because Mayra’s family disdained him for being Kalindon. Rhia still has trouble trusting him, but she dismisses her uneasiness as a result of her family’s old wounds and her perceptions of Fox people (who possess powers of stealth and invisibility similar to the Wolves, but are also great liars and have none of the Wolf strengths of cooperation and social cohesion—Foxes are basically individualists who look out for themselves [And if anyone suggests a connection between lying Foxes and the cable news channel of the same name, I'll deny it until the day I die]).

Through Alanka, Rhia learns more about the Aspect of Wolf, the first phase of which grants certain powers of stealth as well as the ability to read others’ moods through the subtlest of body language. The Wolf wisdoms of devotion and loyalty also impress her as her relationship with Marek deepens into the emotional realm.

Her training begins in a baptism by fire. Before Rhia can help the dying, Coranna says, she must learn not to fear and dread death, and the only way to do that is to experience it herself. They will travel up the mountainside the following day, where Rhia will freeze to death and Coranna will bring her back to life. Naturally, Rhia is terrified at the thought of dying, even temporarily, but she pretends to agree.

That night, she escapes the village with Marek’s help. They travel on foot until morning, when she discovers that he has led her to the base of the mountain, where Coranna waits for her. Marek apologizes for his betrayal, but says his loyalties lie not with what Rhia wants but rather with what she needs. He accompanies them to the summit, both for emotional support and to prevent another escape attempt. Rhia weeps bitterly all the way up the mountain, until exhaustion overcomes her and Marek must carry her to the top.

[Screeching halt! In the final version, Rhia decides on her own to turn back and go through with the ritual--she is not I repeat NOT tricked by Marek. Because that would've made him a complete dick.]

When they reach the peak, Coranna removes Rhia’s coat, then chants and prays while Rhia paces, shivers, and curses both of them for their cruelty. A full day passes before her body surrenders its battle for survival. She lies down and immediately falls into the embrace of a warm, peaceful slumber. The chants of the Crone are the last sound she hears as a large black bird gently carries her into a place of light and freedom. The Crone pulls her back, though Rhia does not want to leave the Other Side and its peace. She discovers that dying isn’t half as painful as coming to life. Angry at her lover’s betrayal but even more ashamed of her own cowardice, Rhia rejects Marek. [Obviously this last part isn't true, since he didn't betray her (not a dick, remember?).]

Crossing over has changed Rhia in many ways. Newfound courage leads her to take risks she never would have considered before, and Coranna must warn her to be careful with her own life. She accompanies her teacher to deathbeds and assists in the ceremonies to help people cross over without incident. She learns to offset her new fearlessness with sensitivity for the dying and their families. At burials, Coranna speaks for the dead to deliver a final message, allowing people in effect to attend their own funeral. [Most of this was dropped or compressed for length.] Rhia will be able to perform this communication after she enters the second phase of her life, when she has carried a child inside of her.

Tapping into her powers makes Rhia unstable, unanchored, in a painless, dreamlike state—a welcome relief from the physical discomforts that have plagued her since childhood. [Also dropped for length.] Marek offers himself as an anchor to this world, and they reconcile. [No breakup = no makeup.] He convinces Rhia that she doesn’t need to prove her courage with reckless acts, that he accepts her as she is. He also divulges the truth about his late wife and baby—they died during a difficult childbirth nearly two years ago, and Coranna was unable or unwilling to bring them back. In his ongoing grief, Marek cut his hair not once, but many times, against the usual tradition. Furthermore, he became a parent before he was spiritually mature enough to move to the second phase; thus he struggles to control his Wolf powers (e.g., he has trouble not being invisible at night) and has been something of a rebel within his tribe. [All true, except in the final version he tells her this the day after they meet.] Since meeting Rhia, however, he has settled down and gradually learns to forgive Coranna and himself for the death of his wife and daughter. He wants Rhia to stay in Kalindos always, but they both know that one day she will have to bring her gift home to serve her own people.

Rhia begins to suspect Razvan in the recent sudden death of ETOR [ETAR], a Kalindon man, whom she had seen Alanka’s father threaten. She asks Coranna to communicate with the dead man to find information. Coranna remembers that Etor’s soul seemed restless and reluctant to let go of this world during his funeral. Because of his untimely death, his spirit still lingers enough to speak with Coranna when she tries to contact him. Etor warns of a “treacherous fox” before slipping away to the Other Side. [Etar is a little more direct than Etor--he comes right out and accuses a young Bear named Skaris, the brother of Marek's dead girlfriend.]

Coranna and Rhia decide to gather more evidence before confronting Razvan or revealing their suspicions to anyone else, mostly to avoid hurting Alanka. Rhia finds an opportunity to follow him alone through the forest, and is stunned when he meets with one of the Descendants to discuss the invasion of her home village. Razvan has long harbored a hostility towards Asermos for that community’s rejection of him. The Descendant takes the information Razvan offers, then slays him in cold blood. [Not really--he freaks out when Razvin shapeshifts into a fox in front of him. Also, Razvin tells the Descendant that Skaris tried to poison Rhia but accidentally got Etar instead.] Rhia feels his death and cries out. The Descendant chases her through the forest and easily catches her. She tries to fight him off, and he breaks her arm [dislocates her shoulder]. He is drawing his sword to kill her when they hear a low growl. The old wolf, the one she fed the night before her bestowing, leaps upon the Descendant. As they struggle, Rhia flees, her arm stabbing with every step. She is about a hundred yards away when a yelp, followed by silence, reaches her ears.

Panic and sorrow threaten to paralyze her, but she overcomes these feelings and acts to preserve her life, since her entire village depends on her survival. Realizing now that she can’t outrun the killer, Rhia evades him using her familiarity with the environment and the methods of stealth Alanka and Marek have taught her. Eventually the Descendant gives up and heads back to the river to return home.

Rhia runs to Kalindos and proclaims what she has just witnessed. Alanka is heartbroken at her father’s betrayal and death, but she alone vows to accompany Rhia back to Asermos. The rest of the village displays typical Kalindon isolationism and refuses to risk their paradise by getting involved in the upcoming war. Marek is torn between love for Rhia and loyalty to his tribe. Ultimately he decides to stay behind, infuriating Rhia. [No no a thousand times no. He takes off after Skaris to avenge the attempt on Rhia's life.]

After the village healer sets Rhia’s arm, the two women set off at full speed for Asermos. Along the way, Alanka’s horse is bitten by a poisonous snake, injuring her in its fatal fall. [This was removed for length.] Rhia uses all her strength, and then some, to lift her unconscious friend onto her own horse and continue on. They reach Asermos in time to save Alanka, who is overjoyed to meet her half-brothers Lycas and NILO for the first time. Upon Rhia’s warning, spies and scouts are dispatched to gather intelligence on the Descendants’ troop movements.

The people of Asermos prepare for battle, including the reluctant Bear warrior Arcas, who despite his vows to do otherwise, has remained faithful to Rhia in her absence. He gives her a beautiful wooden crow that he has carved in secret. Her bitter longing for Marek makes awkward the reunion with her former love. They turn their thoughts toward the upcoming conflict.

A major challenge is the enemy’s use of war horses, a concept that scandalizes the people of Asermos because it endangers the creatures. They want to disable the enemy horses without harming them, though Wolverines like Rhia’s brothers show little interest in fighting fairly or showing mercy. While the warriors work on tactics to remove the horses from the battlefield, Rhia devises a more innovative plan: tranquilize the horses before they even enter battle. On foot, the two sides will be better matched. But to steal into the Descendants’ camp requires someone with courage, stealth, and the willingness to sacrifice himself if necessary. Marek appears in time to declare his love for Rhia and volunteer for the assignment. He has brought with him dozens of Kalindons, including Coranna, who pledge their powers to aid Asermos. That night Marek sets out on his mission. [Some of these events are scrambled, but basically, yes.]

The Descendants invade the following day, without horses, yet Marek has still not returned from the enemy camp. Because the wounded outnumber the healers, Rhia and Coranna must perform battlefield triage, making instant judgments on who has a chance to live and who will die with or without help. Rhia’s brother Nilo is one of the fallen who cannot be saved, as is Dorius, just as her vision had shown her years before. She insists that the healers aid a few of the Descendants’ soldiers who would die otherwise. At last she comes upon a wounded Arcas, and a swelling of emotion clouds her ability to discern his chance at life. She tells the healer to save him, knowing that she may have given up hope for anyone else in his condition.

The two forces reach a stalemate until the Descendants reveal that they have taken Marek prisoner and ask a ransom of all the horses of Asermos. The villagers demand that the enemy prove that Marek is in their capture and still alive. He is brought forth, badly beaten and tortured, and Rhia must determine whether he will survive. When she faces him, he signals to her that he won’t be traded for such a high price, a price that would surely debilitate Asermos. She lies and tells the Asermons that he will die, anyway. The ransom is refused and the standoff continues.

Overwhelmed by the death and suffering around her and guilt-wracked over her complicity in Marek’s self-sacrifice, Rhia drifts into despair. [No! Over and over I planned to have her 'drift into despair' throughout this series. But when I tried to write it, it was depressing and lame. Anyway, she and Alanka and Lycas sneak into the Descendant army camp and rescue Marek.] But that night Crow delivers the vision of the two trees again, reminding her to fight for life. She wakes with a plan to free Marek from the enemy camp. When the rescue party arrives, Marek assists in his own escape, having exaggerated his condition to instill complacency in the guards.

On the way back to Asermos, they encounter Descendant troops, including the man who broke Rhia’s arm. In the skirmish, he tries again to kill her. Lycas knocks the Descendant’s sword to the ground. As they fight, Rhia picks up the sword and turns to her attacker just as he lunges for her. He impales himself on his own weapon, and feeling his death, she shrieks as if the sword had pierced her own body. [Mm, no. Marek stabs him while he's strangling Rhia.]

Frustrated at the loss of their bargaining chip and daunted by the villagers’ magic, the enemy warriors retreat, vowing to return. A few of the more seriously wounded enemies remain in Asermos.

Rhia and Coranna preside at a mass funeral. After reciting prayers for the departed, Rhia hears her dead brother Nilo’s voice. At first she mistakes it for that of his twin Lycas, but he is silent in his mourning, holding onto his sister Alanka for comfort. Rhia realizes that she has moved into the second phase of her powers, signifying that she’s pregnant with Marek’s child. She and Marek journey back to Kalindos together to marry and begin a new life.

Book 2: Crow Speaks [Voice of Crow]

[Here it's easier just to italicize the things that actually happened. IF IT'S NOT IN ITALICS, IT DID NOT HAPPEN. Look at this crazy tragic crap. You know, it's so bad, I'm just going to strike it through, lest anyone glance at it and think I actually wrote this.]

Rhia continues training with Coranna. In her conversations with the dead, she learns that the peace she experienced during her brief death is only part of the dying process—a temporary serenity to lull the person into leaving the old world behind. It can also be terrifying and unbearably lonely for some. Rhia confronts Coranna with this knowledge and accuses her of deception. The crone acknowledges that she only imparted a half-truth to her protégé, and explains that part of the wisdom of a maturing Crow person is knowing how to protect others from truths that would paralyze their lives. Rhia struggles with an internal battle between honesty and compassion and becomes fiercely protective of her newborn son DAMEN.

In retribution for assisting Asermos in the previous battle, the Descendants from Book 1 attack and overwhelm Kalindos, killing Coranna and Marek. Rhia flees back to Asermos with Damen, Alanka, and several other surviving Kalindons. She nearly wastes away, spending most of her time communicating with her dead husband, and becomes addicted to the pain-free death trances. Damen’s needs and the efforts and devotion of Alanka and Arcas eventually drag her back to reality. Later she marries Arcas and has a son by him as well, named THERON.

Book 3: Crow Flies [Wings of Crow and then eventually The Reawakened]

Enemy forces now occupy Asermos. They suppress the expression of the old, animal-based religion and force the Asermons to worship the humanlike gods they have constructed. Asermons continue to practice magic in secrecy, in defiance of the Descendants’ death penalty for doing so.

As they grow up, Rhia’s two sons Damen and Theron develop a burning animosity towards each other, and eventually the half-brothers fight over a woman and die from the wounds they inflict on each other.

[MY GOD, WHAT WAS I THINKING? HER CHILDREN KILLING EACH OTHER? WHO DID I THINK I WAS, SOPHOCLES?]

[Anyway, the rest of the synopsis for The Reawakened is also inaccurate, but it includes my original answer to the big Who Is the Raven? question, so if I tell you it's wrong, that eliminates one person.]

Aspect series possibilities: Other characters in this world could become the focus of later books, with titles such as Aspect of Wolf, Aspect of Eagle, etc. Many features of this world could form the basis for further volumes—issues such as:

What happens when someone strongly resists their Guardian Spirit and the Aspect it tries to bestow? [Covered to some extent in all three books.]

What happens when someone lives long enough to become a great-grandparent? [Nothing.] Is there a fourth-level power to these Aspects? [Nope.]

What happens when parents pressure their own children to reproduce before they’re ready, so that they themselves can achieve third-level powers? [Addressed in The Reawakened. Dire times call for dire measures.]

What happens when two people with the same Aspect fall in love? (When Rhia exhibits jealousy over Marek’s closeness to Alanka, he explains that sharing an Aspect makes two people more like siblings than sharing a parent.) [Addressed in The Reawakened. Hot stuff!]

------

And here are my fellow PSP2ers:

Alma Alexander (Will post on the 20th instead.)

Sam Butler

Diana Pharaoh Francis

Daryl Gregory

Simon Haynes

Jay Lake’s comments and his synopses

Kelly McCullough

Joshua Palmatier

Jennifer Stevenson

Edward Willett

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Monday, September 15, 2008

New Aspect of Crow story sold!

Starting November 17, one of my publishers will be posting eight weekly installments of "Storm Reaper" (tentative title), a short story in the same universe as my Aspect of Crow fantasy trilogy. It takes place a couple of years before The Reawakened and features several characters from Voice of Crow (Alanka, Kiril, Filip) who mostly didn't make it into The Reawakened, due to my publisher not wanting the novel to be 1,000 pages long (go figure!).

Naturally, I'll remind you when it starts. The story will be completely free to readers online. Basically, it'll be just like "The Wild's Call", except the installments will be longer and only once a week. Oh, and with a completely different story.

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Now playing: Hole - Asking For It
via FoxyTunes

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Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Win an ARC of THE REAWAKENED!

Here's the first of two chances to win an Advance Review Copy of The Reawakened. Here's a new image--now with bonus back cover!




(Click image to embigulate.)

As I mentioned in my post last week (where the cover flat giveaway is going on for one more day), The Reawakened is the final installment in my award-winning Aspect of Crow trilogy.

For those who've just joined me since Wicked Game, a little more about this trilogy:

Aspect of Crow takes place in a world where everyone has magic bestowed by their Guardian Spirit Animal (what some might call a "totem" or "power animal"). Sort of X-Men meets Clan of the Cave Bear.

It began in November 2006 with Eyes of Crow and continued last October with Voice of Crow. More information, including excerpts of all three books, can be found on my website by following those links.

The main character, Rhia, has the Aspect of Crow, which in her first phase gives her visions of people's deaths; and in her second phase, gives her the power to speak to the dead.

Charles de Lint called Eyes of Crow "a delightful coming-of-age novel" in his review in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, which pretty much made my life. That novel also won the Romantic Times Reviewers' Choice Award for Best Fantasy Novel, and was nominated for two Rita Awards.

In addition to the three books, there's an urban fantasy prequel story online, "The Wild's Call." It takes place roughly mid-21st century, thousands of years before Eyes of Crow, and depicts the first Reawakening. It's completely free, so check it out!

Now for the ARC. I’d like to see them go to current fans of the series, the ones who are really salivating for it, so to enter, please e-mail me with your best-guess answer to the following question:

Who is the Raven?

Everyone who sends me a character name will be entered in a random drawing to take place at 11:59pm Eastern Daylight Time on September 10, 2008. All entries will be eligible for the drawing, not just the correct ones.

BONUS entry opportunity! To double your chances to win, tell me WHY you think this person is the Raven.

(Note: I'm disabling comments so that people e-mail me directly with their guesses instead of dropping hints in public. Spoiler-free blogging ahoy!)

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Friday, April 11, 2008

The post with something for everyone

And you are...?

That's probably what you're thinking, since I haven't blogged (first I typed "blooged," which shows you how out of practice I am) in ten days. This morning I turned in the rewrite for The Reawakened (yes, you will cry buckets, but not until November) and found out I'll be getting the line edits back in ten days, before I've had time to forget what it's all about.

Line edits, basically, are when the editor gets a little more nitpicky than the first go-around (where he or she discusses major issues, such as character and plot and I dunno, maybe the fact that the manuscript is twenty-five thousand words too long, just as a fr'instance). The author makes changes as quickly as possible and sends back the manuscript so it can go to the copyeditor.

For both of my publishers, the line edits are done on paper, which means I write each change on the manuscript, and then the editor (or her lovely assistant) types in my changes. Some publishers are moving toward electronic edits, which I imagine involve Microsoft Word's comment and track changes functions (anyone with electronic edits, feel free to enlighten).

---

So, the latest updates:

1. There's one more day to enter the ARCs for charity contest. Please consider donating to the MS Walk. Even a fiver would help me make my fundraising goal and more important, help treat and one day cure this devastating disease.

2. The May issue of Romantic Times (on newsstands now!) has a feature on me and Wicked Game. My name is on the front cover 'n' everything. You can read an excerpt of RT's and other reviews on the Wicked Game home page. I won't post each review on my blog, because if I'm going to be self-aggrandizing (and oh yes, I plan to be), it should be in a less boring way than linking to reviews. Like linking to interviews, of which there shall be so many, I'll probably have to start lying just to keep everyone entertained.

3. WVMP Lifeblood of Rock 'n' Roll swag will be available very soon. As in, days.

4. I'll be at the Romantic Times Booklovers Convention next week Tuesday through Saturday around 2. I'm on the Urban Fantasy 101 panel on Friday at 11am, with fellow authors Kelley Armstrong, Keri Arthur, Richelle Mead, and Jeanne C. Stein, as well as Paula Guran, editor of Juno Books. I'll also be signing copies of Eyes of Crow and Voice of Crow and sneak previews of Wicked Game at the Book Fair on Saturday from 11-2. If you see me at the convention (hint: try the bar), stop and ask for a "Lifeblood of Rock 'n' Roll" or "Feed the Need" button.

5. Then I'll be at the New York Comic Con on Sunday, April 20, signing pre-publication copies of Wicked Game at the Simon & Schuster booth from 12 to 1.

***This is the first time this novel will be available to the public, and it will be FREE!***

So if you want a free signed book, stop by the S&S booth as close to noon as possible, before we run out. I'll stick around until 1:00 and sign cover flats, your arm, or your forehead--or just to chat.

Speaking of the real book...here it is! They came in the mail yesterday.


That's Misha (Mikhail Kristanovich), galvanized by the greatness that is Wicked Game (or possibly by the guy honking his horn in the next door neighbors' driveway--geez, what is his deal? Just go to the door, for cryin' out loud!)

I think that's it for now. As you can tell, I'm a bit fried. Tomorrow I'm thrilled to be doing an interview with Fast Forward TV. Wish me luck, and a complete lack of stuttering stupidity!

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Monday, January 07, 2008

Top Ten signs a book was written by me

Rachel Vincent brought a meme to my attention on the Fangs Fur & Fey LiveJournal community and invited us all to take part. I promised myself I wouldn't take more than half an hour away from Bad to the Bone to jot this down, so forgive the brevity.

Here we go, in order in which I thought of them. Call them Jeri Cliches or Smith-Ready Selling Points, it's the Top Ten Signs a Book Came Out of My Head:

1. Hero and heroine hit the sack fast. They don't always go all the way, but they usually break the sexual tension in a hot and hasty fashion. Exception: Voice of Crow. Oh, and The Reawakened, where self-denial reaches new heights of insanity. It's important to break out of ruts.*

2. Main character has hostile and/or distant relationship with father. Exception: Eyes of Crow.

3. Prominent gay or bisexual characters. Exception: Eyes of Crow.

4. Music is integral to the plot and characters. Once again, exception is Eyes of Crow (did I actually write that book?).

5. Moderate to heavy alcohol consumption. NO EXCEPTIONS

6. Natural dialogue and a fast pace. I guess these go together as stylistic factors, and the former certainly helps the latter.

7. Beta male hero. Exception: Requiem for the Devil. They don't get any more alpha than Lucifer. But he's the POV character, which probably increases my tolerance for the attitude.

8. Main character's friends and/or siblings get a lot of "screen time." This is self-explanatory, and yet I'm adding a note here because otherwise it looks funny, like I didn't want to talk about it.

9. Religion is prominent. Whether negatively or positively portrayed, it's always a psychological factor.

10. It's about more than what it's about. This probably sounds pompous, but I like my stories to be meaningful. My primary concern is to entertain, but if a reader comes away from the book looking at the world in a different way (or just looking at the world period), that's a bonus.

*Ruts. Hee. I just got that.

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Now playing: Round & Round (It Won't Be Long) - Neil Young
via FoxyTunes

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Wednesday, December 19, 2007

It is now....Post Time!

Once again I'm taking part in the annual eHarlequin Holiday Open House Post Party, where I'm giving away a signed copy of Voice of Crow as well as a signed cover flat of the original artwork.

Stop by, sign in, and win! Or just lurk and watch me try not to drink too much punch. I'll be there off and on until 10PM tonight.


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Now playing: Violet - Hole
via FoxyTunes

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Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Animal of the month - Horse


In September I began discussing the Animal of the Month as it pertains to the characters in the Aspect of Crow series. Last month I discussed the Cougar, and Adrek in particular. This month our favorite critter is, if you can't guess from the photo: Horse!

Here’s the description of a typical Horse, from the Discover Your Spirit Animal quiz results:

As a Horse, you're sensitive, peaceful, and social. You easily make friends with members of all species, but you hold a special place in your heart for those who respect your intelligence. Sometimes your empathy can leave you vulnerable to others' moods or manipulations. Don't let one grumpy person ruin your whole day.

Best matches: Wolves, Otters, Swans

Watch out for: Foxes, Spiders, Owls

If you’re a Horse, you’re communicative and caring, and you enjoy the company of others. Everyone likes you.

None of this applies to Filip, the main Horse character in the Aspect of Crow series. He’s an Ilion (Descendant) native introduced briefly at the end of Eyes of Crow. In Voice of Crow he becomes one of the central characters. I've included an excerpt of his first scene on my website.

Much to his dismay, Filip discovers that even though he’s an Ilion who believes in his people’s pantheon of human-like gods, the Horse Spirit has called him and given him magic.

At first, this seems appropriate, since he was a cavalry officer. But Horse’s power is telepathic communication with animals. In the first phase, a Horse can hear (in words) what an animal is thinking. But since Filip resists accepting his power, he can’t control it, which means he’s bombarded with the mental chatter of dogs, horses, and worst of all, in the middle of the night, mockingbirds:

On one level he heard the mockingbirds chirp and tweet, but only in the background. Overlaying that was, "Bad raccoon I’m a chickadee stay away stay away I’m a robin pick a fight berries berries grass is wet too many redbirds berries mine tree-to-take tree-to-take hee hee hee tell me a song fight on babies don’t fly…"

He doesn’t even like animals.

Interestingly, his personality is nothing like the Horse profile from the Spirit Animal quiz. I took the quiz on his behalf and he turned out to be a Bear, which goes a little like this:

You're #1! At least, you're happiest when in charge. You lead with courage, integrity, and compassion. People gravitate to your confidence and charisma, and they feel safe in your care. But be careful not to believe your own hype—stubborn pride is every Bear's downfall.

It's okay that he's not a typical Horse, even by the end of Voice of Crow. Filip--like his people--has a lot to learn, and a long way to go.

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Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Crow e-books available at last

Eyes of Crow and Voice of Crow are now available as e-books on my publisher's website. They're in all three major formats and cost a few dollars less than the paperback. So no matter where you live, you, too, can be down with the Crow.

PLUS--and this is the part I'm really excited about--on the same page you can find the long-awaited third installment of my favorite Luna series, Christie Golden's Fire Dancer trilogy. Under Sea's Shadow is only available in e-book format, unfortunately, but at least we finally get to find out what happens to Kevla and the Shadows and the possible end of the world.

If you haven't read the first two, On Fire's Wings and In Stone's Clasp, they're both available in paperback, or you can buy the entire trilogy as an e-book package on the same page of the store. Looks like a great deal.

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Monday, October 01, 2007

I'm known for my 'na's

Every once in awhile, I check out BlogPatrol to see where my visitors are coming from. The most entertaining part is the "Last 10 Keywords," where I can see what people Googled to get here. I just found a new favorite:

na na na na na nah na na na na-na na na nah

which came from this post. Yes, I am the 53rd most popular source for information on

na na na na na nah na na na na-na na na nah

But alas, my reign as the Queen of Squeaky Deaky is no more. I've fallen from #1 to #15.

Oh by the way, Voice of Crow is officially released today. Go get it. Tell your friends, your family members, and that friendly FBI agent tapping your phone line. Thanks.

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Thursday, September 27, 2007

Booksigning Saturday

I'll be signing copies of Voice of Crow and Eyes of Crow at the Borders in Winchester, VA, this Saturday, 3-5 PM. It's located at 2420 S. Pleasant Valley Rd., Winchester, VA 22601.

The Winchester Star did a nice article on me and the Aspect of Crow series. She managed to make me sound like not too much of a blithering idiot, which is quite a challenge.

Last year the signing at Borders went magnificently--47 copies of Eyes of Crow sold!--and I'm hoping we can top that performance this Saturday. Cross your fingers for me--or better yet, stop by and say hi!

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Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Special deals for Voice of Crow readers

REVIEWER CONTEST

Okay, this isn’t so much a contest as it is a pact. Everyone who reviews Voice of Crow by October 31 gets an autographed ARC of my May 2008 vampire novel Wicked Game. Blog about it, post it on an online bookseller site, send it to your local newspaper, talk about it on your podcast, whatever. Just do it by Halloween and let me know about it.

Again, this is not a drawing. Everyone--that’s EV-REE-WON--who does this will get an ARC. Even if it’s a bad review, though in that case “ARC” might stand for Angry Red Cobra. Kidding, of course! I love animals.

ORIGINAL COVER FLAT
The original artwork for Voice of Crow’s cover is quite different from the final version. I liked the first one just fine, but the reaction from book buyers (i.e., the people who place orders for the bookstores) was, “Hmm. Try again.”

Curious? I won’t be posting it on my website ever, but I have about twenty cover flats with the original artwork. If you’d like a copy of this collector’s item, all you have to do is buy any of my books from my favorite independent bookstore, Mysterious Galaxy.

Here are the direct links to the four books (Wicked Game would be a preorder, obviously):

Voice of Crow

Eyes of Crow

Requiem for the Devil

Wicked Game

Just send me your proof of purchase (receipt, shipping confirmation, packing slip), either by e-mail to jeri@jerismithready.com or snail mail to P.O. Box 66, Westminster, MD, 21158, and I’ll send you the cover, autographed. This is a one-time offer, while supplies last, as they say.

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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Happy Release Day to Voice of Crow!


Voice of Crow is in bookstores now! Like this Borders in Albuquerque, where we were today. Both of these copies were spoken for, so you might want to call your local store to make sure they have a) gotten the books in, b) unloaded them, and c) still have some left.

Gotta go have celebratory dinner in Nob Hill. More Thursday.

UPDATE: Yanni's Mediterranean Bar on Central Avenue--one of the best meals I've EVER had. And after four straight days of southwestern cuisine, I was ready for something without red and green chiles on it.

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Sunday, September 23, 2007

Animal of the month - Cougar


When I redesigned this website last year before Eyes of Crow’s release, I intended to create a page for each of the twelve Animals to correspond with the Animal of the Month. I made one for Crow, but it was so much damn work I never got around to making any more. No one wrote me begging to be enlightened as the biology, mythology and cultural history of various critters, so after a few months of feeling guilty, I gave up.

But then it occurred to me that I could still talk about the Animal of the Month as it applies to the books themselves, since that’s probably more interesting to readers, anyway. After all, more information on real animals can be found on the internet.

So let’s start this month, right now, with Cougar. Here’s the description from the Discover Your Spirit Animal quiz results:

Grrr, baby—you're the personification of animal magnetism. Your confidence, beauty, and athleticism make you the target of many romantically inclined individuals. Too bad for them—you don't stick around long enough to make breakfast, much less a lifetime commitment. Hello Kitty, Goodbye Heart.

Sounds dangerous but fun, no? In the Aspect of Crow series, the Cougars are the hunters. They have super-speed and strength, average stamina, and are skillful tree climbers. They can see in the dark and therefore make great sentries.

In a scene from Eyes, Alanka tells Rhia about her blemished relationship history:

Alanka counted on her fingers. “There was Adrek, a Cougar, he was the first. After that came Morran, a Bobcat, then Endrus, another Cougar.” Alanka sighed. “Learned my lesson finally. Thrice bitten, once shy, right? Cats don’t stay around.”

Adrek is less than reliable, but in Eyes he does the right thing when it really counts. In an early draft of Voice, he broke Alanka’s heart again, but the feedback I got from beta readers said that he was too much of a jackass for a strong woman like Alanka to fall for. So I shipped him off to a foreign country to rescue his kidnapped two-year-old daughter, thus

a) making him more heroic, and

b) saving Alanka from his jackassedness.

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Wednesday, September 12, 2007

L'Engle justifies my revision madness

As with all my books, Starfish was more rewritten than written, and with each subsequent book the need to rewrite becomes more rather than less. As the writer struggles to grow in knowledge of techniques, characterization, theme, more and more work becomes necessary.
--Madeleine L'Engle, Walking on Water

Thank you! I thought I was just growing more and more incompetent with each book. The final version of Voice of Crow was 25% brand-new material; the final version of Wicked Game, 35%.

I'm already tearing apart The Reawakened, and anticipate much more bulldozing to come both before and after I turn it in to my editor. I doubt even half of what's currently written will remain standing at publication.

Make that a quarter, or a fifth.

Hmm, I could go for a fifth of something right now, just thinking about it...

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Thursday, September 06, 2007

Gimme an E!

Got confirmation yesterday that both Eyes of Crow and Voice of Crow will be available as e-books starting October 1. And I noticed on Simon & Schuster's website yesterday that Wicked Game will also come out in electronic formats coinciding with the print publication.

Since a number of my readers first started out with me with Requiem for the Devil, this is great news. It also means that all of my books will now truly be available around the world.

Wait! I think this calls for tacky WordArt......


Another bit of news, garnered from the S&S site: the second vampire book, with the scintillating name of Untitled Sequel, will be published June 1, 2009. So plan your 2009 beach reading now! Mmm, can't you just smell the sand and the suntan lotion as they create a sticky smear across page 321 of Untitled Sequel?

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Monday, August 27, 2007

Voice of Crow an RT Top Pick

Following in its predecessor's footsteps (do books have feet? I mean, they have spines and sometimes jackets, so...), Voice of Crow has just received a 4.5 Stars Top Pick rating from Romantic Times Book Reviews magazine.

Here's the review (if you're a subscriber to the magazine you can go directly to the site to see that I'm not making this up):


Smith-Ready has outdone herself with the second book in the Aspect of Crow trilogy. Events unfold quickly but with enough backstory for new readers to grasp what's happening. The characterization is impressive. Book one focused primarily on the heroine; now we see the action through other characters as well. Readers will relate to these sympathetic people as they face heartbreaking challenges.

A summary follows, but like many reviews it gives away a plot point that doesn't take place until almost halfway through the book. I'm not including it here because if I were a reader, I'd want to be surprised. And go, "Oh my God, no!" instead of, "Oh, I was wondering when that was going to happen."

But I realize it's hard to write a decent review without giving anything away, so no complaints here. Besides, it's partly given away by the paragraphs on the back of the book.

I'm very relieved at this rating, because reviewers tend to be a little harder on sequels, I've noticed. Partly because their expectations are higher, and partly because sequels don't always stand alone very well.

So that's two reviews that have said it's better than Eyes of Crow. So far so good, sophomore slump averted. But it's the readers' opinions that really count, so I'm anxious to see what everyone thinks. Not Valium-popping anxious. Just chamomile tea-sipping anxious.

A-Z Update: "So Much to Say" by the Dave Matthews Band

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Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Voice of Crow excerpt

At long last, I've picked an excerpt from Voice of Crow to post on my site.

In case you're wondering, Rhia is still the main character as she was in Eyes of Crow, but I thought it'd be fun to introduce the new character ahead of time. Some of you might remember Filip from a brief scene near the end of Eyes.

Filip's scenes in Voice were some of my favorite, and in most cases were the ones that needed the least revision. I "clicked" with him right away, probably because he's more like us than the other characters. He gives us an outsider's perspective on Rhia and Marek's world of the Spirits. To him, all this animal magic is pretty darn freaky.

We also get to see more of his people (the Ilions, or "Descendants" as our friends call them) in Voice of Crow. The nation of Ilios is one part Ancient Rome, one part Ancient Sparta, and three parts I-Made-It-Up-istan.

A-Z Update: "Sick of Myself" by Matthew Sweet

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Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Voice of Crow's first review!

The Romance Zone got in way early to be the first to review the sequel to Eyes of Crow. The author of the review is Merry Cutler, owner of Annie's Book Stop in Sharon, MA.
Many times, when the first book in a series is as good as “Eyes of Crow” was, the reader is disappointed by the succeeding volumes. This is not the case with “Voice of Crow” – if anything it is more powerful, more gripping, than the first book, as the characters grow and mature and are more fully developed by this skillful author.

Now that's what I like to hear. Sophomore slump, be damned!

Read the rest here. In the second paragraph, she gives a wonderful summary of the series in just a few sentences. I may have to steal it....

A-Z Update: "Serve the Servants" (Solo Acoustic version) by Nirvana

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Saturday, August 04, 2007

Win an ARC of Voice of Crow

I'm giving away an autographed Advance Review Copy of Voice of Crow next week to one lucky subscriber of my newsletter, six weeks before the scheduled release date of September 25.

To enter, just sign up for my fun, text-based, and totally non-annoying e-newsletter by this Tuesday, August 7.

The winner will be announced in the August 8 issue, which will offer more chances to win great prizes, including early copies of the book itself.

If you've ever gotten a newsletter from me, you're already on the list. No need to resubscribe. Though I promise I won't yell at anyone who does it.

A-Z Update: "Scattered" by Green Day

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Monday, July 30, 2007

Voice of Crow available for pre-order

This isn't news to a lot of you, but I think the last time I mentioned it, the notice was buried in the middle of a post about something entirely different.

So...

Voice of Crow is now available for pre-order from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Mysterious Galaxy (my favorite independent sf/f bookstore).

And if you really feel like planning ahead, you can pre-order Wicked Game from Amazon. I yelped when I saw it up there this morning. I have four books now. I'm like a real author or somethin'.

Here's the purty, purty cover again, in case you need inspiration:

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

Voice of Crow cover

Taking a wee break from the RWA recap, which will return tomorrow when I have more time, to show you the final version of the Voice of Crow cover (click image for larger version).


The dead tree in the background figured prominently in Eyes of Crow and will do so even more in Voice of Crow.

Also, the fact that Rhia is standing in a wheat field is particularly clever on the part of the artist. Though she never literally does that in Voice of Crow, we all know what happens in the wheat field at the end of Eyes (clue for those who haven't read it: bad, bad stuff). The psychological and spiritual ramifications of that event weave throughout Voice, so it has resonance for this book as well.

So a million thanks to the brilliant artist Chad Michael Ward of Digital Apocalypse, and the art team at Harlequin for another great cover.

A-Z Update: "Perfect World" by Liz Phair

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Friday, April 13, 2007

It's still yesterday

Stayed up all night to finish Voice of Crow line edits, which just went out the door (I love the USPS's Carrier Pickup service).

Fixed a scene at the end that was really bugging me and my beta readers.

Discovered that I have an embarrassing crush on the word 'only' (who knew?).

Squashed said crush.

Have programmed laptop to give me an electric shock whenever I type the word 'only.'

Ow.

Forgive me if I take off the remainder of my forty-hour day. Maybe have some lunch.

A-Z update: "Changing Your Demeanor" by The Chieftains

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Monday, April 09, 2007

VOC line edits

(Apologies for early-morning incoherence, if applicable.)

Right now I'm at the line edit stage for Voice of Crow. This is the stage in which the editor makes short notes, usually related to language usage or sentence clarifications, and the writer makes his or her last stab at substantive changes.

Though I'm happy with the story as it stands, I think there are a lot of places (like, every page) where the language or description could be pumped up, or where I cut too much in the last edit.

A musician with a slightly out-of-tune instrument might still play a good song and entertain her listeners, but even those of us with a tin ear will come away with a sense of sub-excellence.

In the same way, a book that's a bit "off" here and there might still provide an enjoyable read, but readers deep down will know the difference. Each time a repetitive phrase is used, or a paragraph contains a stilted rhythm, or an emotional transition goes "clunk" for the lack of a few more words, readers subconsciously lower their estimation of the book another fraction.

They might not be able to articulate why the book was merely good instead of awesome, but when their friends ask if they recommend it, they'll give a shrug and a "Yeah" instead of an arm-clutch and an "Ohmigod, you MUST take a sick day and read this book NOW, then call me the minute you finish it!"

And on that note, I'm off for the next few days to complete the line edits. See you on Friday!

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Wednesday, February 14, 2007

That's why they call them "dead"lines

In 1999 I had a summer internship with a federal agency (I won't name names but if you shouted the acronym it would sound like "Eee-PA!").

My office computer at the agency was underpowered, but it served me well for the first two months, as long as I didn't run too many programs simultaneously*. But by August the hard drive would often freeze, as if in pain, at seemingly random times during the day. I learned to save early, save often.

The last two weeks of my internship, that poor little computer trudged bravely on, stumbling (i.e., shutting down) every few hours. The day I left, just after I pulled off all my files and handed them to my supervisor, that sucker died. It was landfill-bound (though maybe because it was Eee-PA!, it would at least be recycled).

After this last month of 10-, 12-, 14-hour days in front of the laptop, or hunched over a manuscript, revising Voice of Crow, my body feels like that old government computer. It's whimpering for a massage, a yoga session, and normal personal hygiene. All its parts hurt and have to be taught how to live again.

So that's where I've been the last two weeks, in the Rewrite Cave. Today and yesterday, recovering, letting my eyes adjust to the light. Normal blogging resumes tomorrow. Thanks for your patience.


* "too many" = 3

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Sunday, January 21, 2007

Break time!

I'm taking an internet hiatus for the next ten days to two weeks to finish revisions on Voice of Crow. This book has been kicking my butt since Word One. It's time to start kicking it back.

In an entirely non-hostile manner, of course.

If I'm smart (and sane), I'll follow my own advice from a year ago.

See you after the Super Bowl! I mean, after my deadline.

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Monday, January 08, 2007

Blogger's block

It happens every once in awhile, usually while the real writing is going quite well.

I can't think of anything to blog about. Oh, sure, there are the trivial matters that grab my attention, like the fact that Mary Worth is going to 'Nam, or that the label of the Snow Cone Hot Chocolate Mix for Two clearly depicts a snowman suicide pact, or that the Ravens are playing their arch-nemeses the Baltimore Indianapolis Colts in a playoff game on Saturday that has left everyone in this town groping for the Valium. But none of that is worth discussing on a focused, professional blog such as this one.

I'm finishing the rewrites of my young adult fantasy (the novel previously known as Angel's Gambit). I just threw an old lady down a flight of stairs.* Life is good.

Later this week I'll begin the long-awaited revision of Voice of Crow, due at the end of this month. Like most writers, I have to balance my time between the books I'm already contracted for and the books I hope to sell. The plan is to continue submitting one new series proposal each year until I'm fully contracted. My definition of "fully contracted" means:

a) more than one book per year for the next three years, AND/OR
b) having enough work to make my head almost but not quite explode

How's your year been so far? Discuss.

*Relax! It was a homicidal maniac old lady, and she only broke a hip, leaving her able to get all homicidally maniacal in a later book (at which point she can be thrown off a bridge or into an active volcano).

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Wednesday, November 29, 2006

The (quarter) million word march

The other day I calculated that I've written 222, 000 words this year--by far my most productive year ever. Yay! These are all first-draft words, not revisions, although I do count significant additions to later drafts (such as the three poker scenes added to Bad Company in the second draft).

The breakdown:

Voice of Crow: 113K
Bad Company: the final 68K (begun in 2005)
Angel's Gambit Book One: the final 26K (begun in '03, continued in '04)
"The Wild's Call": 15K

Which leaves 28K to hit the quarter-million word mark by the end of the year. This normally wouldn't be a problem (I usually about 2K/day when I'm in full first-draft mode), except that I'll have revisions to Voice of Crow (which don't count toward the total, remember, unless I add scenes) and will probably only include one chapter in my Wings of Crow proposal.

But I will make the 250K mark, even if it means cranking out the first 100 pages of Wings of Crow or Angel's Gambit Book Two in the last week of December.

It's good to have goals, however random. Anyone else have end-of-the-year goals or unfinished New Year's 2006 resolutions?

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Tuesday, November 14, 2006

The long-awaited lull

As you can tell from the sidebar, I'm working on* the proposal for the Aspect of Crow Book 3, Wings of Crow, which means I finally handed in Voice of Crow to my editor, only two days past deadline (which, everyone assures me, does not count as "late").

Then there was World Fantasy Con. Then there was Election Day(s). Then there was the Book Fair. And now...

The lull. The sweet, sweet lull, in which I might actually clean a sink or two. I have a To-Do List that measures in feet, not inches.

Lots of little tasks, such as getting ready for two booksignings and trying to set up several more. Such as sending thank-you gifts to various departments of my publisher to show my appreciation for all their hard work. Such as, oh, heck, why not--reading a book or two.

But I welcome the long To-Do list, because for the entire month of October, it was very short:

1. Finish book
2. Finish website

The lull ends tomorrow, when I start putting the Wings of Crow proposal on paper. It's due December 15, which gives me a month. I might even try that First Draft in 30 Days method again.

Now about those sinks...

*"working on" = tossing around ideas in my head until something feels right

P.S.: Look! It's Chapter Two of "The Wild's Call"

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Wednesday, October 11, 2006

VOC release date

Found out that Voice of Crow will be released in trade paperback in October 2007 rather than November 2007 as originally planned. Which means readers will only have to wait eleven months instead of a whole year to read the sequel to Eyes of Crow. Yay!

Of course, it also means I have that much less time to work on revisions. So on that note...unplugging the wireless card again!

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Next Release

Shade

Jeri's teen debut — May 4, 2010, from Simon Pulse, for ages 14 and up

First in a worldwide generation of ghost-seers, Aura's relationship with the dead changes when her boyfriend dies and comes back to haunt her.

More about SHADE

Pre-order at Mysterious Galaxy, Amazon.com, or Barnes & Noble.

Latest Release

Bad to the Bone

Bad to the Bone (sequel to Wicked Game) — now available!

“Smith-Ready pours plenty of fun into her charming, fang-in-cheek urban fantasy” — Publisher's Weekly, starred review

Order at Mysterious Galaxy, Amazon.com, or Barnes and Noble.

Mass market paperback version coming February 22.

Book 3, BRING ON THE NIGHT, will be released August 2010, and Book 4 will follow in August 2011.

Sorta new!

Wicked Game

“A colorful premise and engaging characters” — Library Journal

Wicked Game is now available in mass market paperback

Order at Mysterious Galaxy, Amazon.com, or Barnes and Noble.

About the author

Jeri Smith-Ready

Jeri Smith-Ready is a Maryland author of adult and teen urban fantasy.

Learn more about Jeri...

Photo © 2006 Szemere Photography

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    • First draft of WVMP Book 4
    • "The Bones of You" by Elbow