Here it is…take a look!
http://authorscoop.com/2012/09/11/5-minutes-alone-with-addie-king/
Thanks so much to my friend Jamie Mason for this opportunity!
Here it is…take a look!
http://authorscoop.com/2012/09/11/5-minutes-alone-with-addie-king/
Thanks so much to my friend Jamie Mason for this opportunity!
The deeper I get into the writing and publishing business, the more I cannot help but notice the sheer amount of networking that can open doors. And that networking happens on the internet, in emails, in critique groups…but happens on a bigger scale at conferences.
Here’s an example…
I’ve been Killer Nashville three times. LOVE LOVE LOVE that conference and all the peeps who run it. You guys are AWESOME.
That conference is like old home week for me. I’ve made so many friends and so many connections that I wasn’t two steps out of the elevator before I saw someone I knew this year. I didn’t go to this conference last year due to job uncertainty issues, but had been twice before, and boy oh boy did I miss everyone there. It was incredible to meet new people, to reconnect with other writers, and to, just in general, talk in depth about this crazy business that we’re all in.
The last time I had been to the conference, someone had actually made a comment to me in the hallway about me knowing everyone there. I didn’t…but I knew a LOT of people. Same thing happens to me at other conferences, as well. (I mention KN a lot because I’m just a few weeks back from it, and it’s the only con I’ve been to three times).
Here’s another thing….sooner or later, you start running into the same people at different conferences. And…people will help you out if they get to know you and like you. Let me give you some examples.
1) I met the writer who has generally been my sounding board, my mentor, and my cheerleader, at Killer Nashville on my first trip there. She writes under the names Jenna Bennett or Jennie Bentley. I’d signed up for a paid critique of the first chapter of what became my first published novel, THE GRIMM LEGACY. She read the entire thing for me before I started subbing it. (Don’t expect this to happen with each and every crit session you have…she and I connected, and have remained friends).
2) Jenna (to use her pseudonym) also found the MYSTERY TIMES TEN contest that published my short story, “Poltergeist on Aisle Fourteen”. This was my first paid writing credit. Seriously, I never would have seen the contest listing if she hadn’t alerted me to it. By the way, this story was also critiqued by an author at Killer Nashville.
3) My friend, Lee Lofland, who I met at Killer Nashville, gave me the opportunity to write a guest blog on being a prosecutor on his crime writing blog…after connecting and telling war stories from work over a glass of wine at the conference.
4) There’s an agent* out there who I first met (and I shared a bottle of wine with her and Lee at the Guest of Honor dinner my first year at Killer Nashville), who I’ve met now at four different conferences. We ended up on a panel together last spring at a different conference…and ended up having a long conversation about book marketing and promotion before we spoke on the panel together (at MARCON). I can’t wait to see what conferences I might see her at down the road. I always enjoy talking with her.
5) My friend Kay Elam was all but pitching my work for me to an agent* that was at Killer Nashville this year when she learned that I had a roundtable session with that agent, and then helped to connect me to that agent for a long and very interesting discussion. You rock, Kay. I also spoke to an editor* that I’d met at the conference before who remembered me from before, and the discussions we’d had about panels and publishing and professionalism and plot and submissions.
6) I met my friend, Steven Saus, at Gen Con in Indianapolis in 2008, only to find out later that he lived only a couple of miles down the road from where I lived when I was in Dayton. Steven and I have talked now at multiple conferences, and, through that connection, I got an invitation to write “Building Believable Legal Systems in Science Fiction and Fantasy” which just came out in EIGHTH DAY GENESIS; A WORLDBUILDING CODEX FOR WRITERS AND CREATIVES this past summer.
7) By knowing Steven, I’ve gotten to know Jean Rabe and Kelly Swails. Jean got me on panels at Origins this year, and Kelly’s running the writer’s agenda next year. These two are soooooooo wonderful…wonderful writers and wonderful people. I love working with both of them and can’t wait for Origins next year.
8) A couple of years ago, I met Celina Summers, the managing editor for Musa Publishing, at RT when it was in Columbus, Ohio. Celina and I are both members on the Absolute Write Water Cooler boards, and we ended up having breakfast at the conference. It’s Celina that offered me the contract to write the sequel to THE GRIMM LEGACY…the book I’m working on right now. It’s possible we run into each other at another conference down the road. I sincerely hope so. HOWEVER, the Grimm book was barely a seed of a thought in the back of my head at the time we had that breakfast.
9) Some of the blog interviews I’ve done for promotion on the novel were with people I’ve met at conferences; Red Tash (Novels in Progress), and Jenna Bennett (Killer Nashville). I’ve also been talking with Jamie Mason (Killer Nashville) about her writing blog, Author Scoop. Hoping to have more information on this down the road.
10) By going to conferences, I’ve gotten to have breakfast with Christie Ridgeway, lunch with Debbie Macomber, drew chickens on the lounge message board with Julie Kagawa, listened to Michael Stackpole talk about organizing a conference, stayed up late talking publishing with Julianne Lee, shared wine and good music with another agent*, hung out in the bar with Elizabeth Vaughan talking publishing and law (we’re both lawyers), and was able to have a coherent conversation with Patrick Rothfuss without devolving into a puddle of fangirl squee. These are experiences that cannot be replicated, well, ever. And it’s only the tip of the iceberg.
Here’s the rub…those are just the things that came to my head just now. I’ve been going to cons and networking like a mad fool for six years. There’s a million and one other stories about going to cons. There’s a bunch of stories about inside jokes at certain cons, about craziness and critiquing and sharing tips and leads and pitching and panels.
We’re coming up on the end of this year’s conference season. I cannot stress enough just how much I’ve gained from going. It’s almost unheard of to walk away from a conference with an agent or a publishing contract. If you’re trying to decide whether it’s worth it or not to go to one, understand that fact before you make any arrangements. Know what you’re going for, and what you can realistically expect. Understand that getting to know people is a good thing…and being professional, easy to talk to, and willing to learn are the most valuable skills you can have as you set out to start on the writing path.
*I’ve listed names of people if I either 1) have an already existing professional relationship with them, 2) they are friends, 3) the interaction I’ve mentioned is just about happenings at a con rather than about writing and/or publishing, or 4) any combination of 1), 2), or 3). I’ve mentioned some interactions with publishing professionals (agents, editor) to show the power of networking, but because I do not yet have an already existing professional relationship with them, I prefer not to say on the blog who they are or who they might be. I do not currently have an agent. They may or may not recognize themselves in these stories if they see this blog, but I’m talking about networking, not about my specific relationship or lack thereof with any of them, so I’ve left them anonymous, so as not to put any of them on the spot.
I do try very hard to shy away from posting a lot of personal information on the blog/social media.
It’s not that I’m ashamed of my personal life; it’s just that it is exactly that. Personal.
I, however, have taken to monitoring Facebook (and for some reason, it’s more of a problem on Facebook than any other social media…probably due to the significant outpouring of birthday wishes I got from people!) and I’ve been deleting mentions of my very big personal news in between birthday wishes. As much as I’m doing this deletion for privacy/safety/personal reasons, I need to not be playing censor on my social media accounts.
I will say that I mostly use Facebook/Twitter/this blog for writing related stuff. I’ve prosecuted some nasty cases in my time, and so I’m quiet and cautious about what I say and what I do…because I’m trying to very carefully be social and visible without jeopardizing those I love. In that end, I refer to people in my life as Mom, Dad, Brother, Sister, Nephew, Grandma, etc., to avoid drawing some of those lines…I’m not trying to be obscure, just generic. If you know me in real life, you know who I’m talking about, and if you know me only by my writing, or only by my work life, then you either already know who I’m talking about, or there’s no reason for you to know. I’m doing that to protect them.
I’ve started to refer to someone in my life on Twitter as BF, short for Boy Friend. We’ve been together since December 2011. Since we’re not teenagers anymore, talking about having a boyfriend sounded like I was in junior high, so I abbreviated. He has an eleven year old son, whom I’ve referred to once or twice on Twitter as The Boy. BF has started to petition for a new online title, since our status has now changed, however we haven’t come up with a better online title for him yet.
SUFFICE IT TO SAY…WE GOT ENGAGED ON AUGUST 17, 2012. We are currently planning a wedding for May 2013. I kept the news off the internet as long as I could so we could tell people in person or by phone as necessary, but I think we’ve hit most of it. I apologize if we’ve missed anyone.
I’m over the moon happy. I’m ecstatic to be marrying someone who is so supportive, so sensitive, so caring, and so wonderful. I’m excited that I’m going to be a stepmother (and those who have read THE GRIMM LEGACY know how funny that is), and my future stepson is a wonderfully funny kid whom I completely adore.
So, while I might not be linking our names on Facebook, or using their first names, it’s not because I’m hiding them, or because I’m ashamed of my personal life. It’s because I’m trying to balance my need to be cautious with people’s desire to say congratulations as they hear my news.
I appreciate your good thoughts…and will definitely need all your good wishes as I plan a wedding and try to deliver my first write-to-deadline book all at once!
As of last week, I signed a contract with Musa Publishing for the sequel to THE GRIMM LEGACY…current working title, THE ANDERSEN ANCESTRY!!
It’s my understanding that as long as everything abides by schedule (including, but not limited to me finishing the manuscript on time) we are looking at a release date sometime in Spring 2013.
I’m also in the midst of two other novel projects and a couple of short stories…most of which are taking a backseat to hitting my deadline on the sequel.
So…just an update…the writerly part of my life is screaminingly busy this summer. I’m having an interesting time pulling it all together, what with all the changes that have been happening in the personal life as well. And no, I’m not commenting on any of that here…but many of you know just how crazy this summer has been!
Congratulations to KELLY SADERHOLM!
Kelly, you should find an email with your prize…it’s already been sent.
Please let me know if you did not get it.
Haven’t read THE GRIMM LEGACY yet? Interested in winning a free ebook copy?
(Or you’ve read it and want a free copy to pass on to a friend?)
Here’s what you need to do in an email…
1) List your name. I’d like to put the name of the winner on my website. Do you really want to be known as superflysprinkles@glitterbug.stuff.net? I’ll keep your email address off the website as long as you give me your real name.
2) What’s your favorite fairy tale? It can be anything…from Grimm’s Fairy Tales, Hans Christian Andersen, Charles Perrault…or from any other multicultural folk tale that tweaks your fancy.
3) Is there a reason why you like that fairy tale? And it’s okay just to say…because I like it. If that’s the reason. Because that’s true of television shows, movies, books, etc…you might not be able to put your finger on it. If you know why, don’t cheat…let me know!
4) What format do you need? (Kindle, Nook, Mobi, PDF, etc…)
5) send that email to me at addiejking AT gmail.com a before midnight July 31, 2012. Notice I took out the @ thingy. I’m trying to avoid spammers.
I’ll print off the emails, fold the sheets, toss in a bucket, and have my Resident Contest Winner Picker draw the winner…and post it on the website on August 1.
Questions? Post them in a comment.
(Don’t have an ereader? It’s available in PDF format…which you can read right on your computer. Don’t let the lack of an ereader stop you from entering!)
UPDATERY…
If you already bought a copy of THE GRIMM LEGACY (first, let me say…THANK YOU!!), and want to try to win a copy to give a friend as a gift…that’s okay.
If you already bought a copy of THE GRIMM LEGACY and would rather win a sneak peek at book 2…which I’m currently writing…THAT’S COOL TOO!
I’ll email the winner to make sure when I draw…
I was out at the Art Affair on the Square in Urbana, Ohio, this weekend…and held another drawing for a free ebook.
The winner is….TARI MOSBARGER
Tari…I’ve dropped you an email to find out what format you need. If you haven’t gotten the email yet, drop me a message at addiejking@gmail.com and we’ll get it figured out.
CONGRATULATIONS!!
I try really hard not to comment on trials in the public eye.
A lot of people ask me privately what I think of specific cases that they’ve heard of on the news.
I have a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice with a minor in psychology. I have a law degree. I’ve spent ten years as an assistant prosecutor (even though I’m doing a different kind of job at the moment), including three years that I spent handling felonies, sex abuse, and child sex abuse. In other words, yes, I might have a bit of an informed opinion about these kinds of cases.
Even so, I try really hard not to comment about trials and investigations in the news. Even if the news media has every single detail correct (and in most cases they really do), they don’t report every single detail. They simply do not have the room, in column inches, or in video segments, to cover every nuance, every detail, every scrap of information, that a lawyer or an investigator or a police officer, or a private investigator, if one is involved, might pry out of a case file. And case files on major cases can be thick files, sometimes contained in multiple boxes and shelves. It’s just not possible to know enough about a case that I’m not handling to form an opinion over whether someone is doing something right, doing something wrong, or try to make some prediction as to the outcome of a case.
That said, Mr. Amendola, defense attorney to Jerry Sandusky, needs to apologize to every single investigator, police officer, social worker, prosecutor, or other public employee ever to work a sex abuse case.
He has blamed a “conspiracy” on the investigators and prosecutors and police and social workers, based on the hope of gaining a big payout. He’s mentioned civil suits that they “hope to cash in on.”
On what planet does a police officer or prosecutor get a cut of a civil trial brought by a private citizen? Because I’ve never heard of happening on EARTH, much less in any state in the USA. Now I’m not licensed in Pennsylvania…but I’d think that this one would be big news in public employee circles these days…since there are so many layoffs and benefit cuts in the public sector. There’s been not a whisper of this. Anywhere. Ever. You know why? Doesn’t exist.
As a matter of fact, it’s harder and harder to pay for the kinds of resources to handle these cases…in these days of budget cuts and cut backs. The Sandusky case has probably cost the people of Pennsylvania hundreds of thousands of dollars…and that’s not in making the people doing the work wealthy…it’s in court costs, security concerns, lab fees, and transcriptions. It’s in investigation hours, it’s in witness fees and jurors in seclusion. It’s in hours and hours of interviews and supplies and transportation and all the other costs I’m probably not thinking of at the moment. The resources to pay for this kind of case aren’t readily available in a state office anymore….if they ever were. And other than asking Mr. Sandusky to pay court costs, the State does not have a way to recoup this money. Those “court costs” don’t even put a dent in it.
Mr. Sandusky owes more than an apology to his victims. I can’t begin to describe what he has taken from them, and I wish them all the very best in trying to put their lives back together after this circus, after going through not just his abuse, but the microscope of coming forward. I commend your bravery, and I hope that others look at your courage and find the strength to stand up and say NO to another predator in the future.
This is not about the victims. I could spend hours, and many many words talking about my beliefs in victims’ rights, or in how such a trial can affect their lives. No judge, and no jury can unring the bell…not one of them can make this like it never happened. The hope here is that your strength and courage carries through and inspires others to speak out rather than stay silent.
Mr. Amendola on the other hand, I am speaking to you. I do not know the people involved in this case, but I have handled cases of this nature. The sheer scope of this case means late nights away from families, many times without overtime or hourly billable time, it means worrying about the victims even after they go home, lying awake at night worrying about the next step in the case, about how to protect them from the storm that they know is coming. It means sometimes having to tell a victim that they cannot go forward, even though they believe a crime occurred, because the evidence isn’t enough to prosecute, which breaks one’s heart. It means being called out of holiday gatherings to interview a victim at a hospital, it means constantly looking at the children in your life and having to draw a line between work and personal or going completely mental. These people do these jobs because they care. They aren’t getting rich. And these days, they’re handling larger case loads with lower salaries, or more expensive benefits, or fewer resources to help get it all done…because they no longer have the staff that they once did.
It means stress and worry and work and a million and one other things. Being in that role means that your job is to find the truth in the situation presented first, to act as an ethical officer of the court, to only go forward in cases that the evidence warrants, and to represent the public interest. What part of that includes getting a cut of a private civil case?
Cases like Mr. Sandusky’s are big in the media. But for the investigators and prosecutors? It means twenty hour days. It means little to no sleep. It means worrying every minute about every minute detail of everything. They don’t make any extra money for any of it.
AND THEY HAVE NO STANDING TO GET MONEY IN A CASE BROUGHT BY A PRIVATE CITIZEN FOR MONEY DAMAGES.
Mr. Amendola, I am not saying that all cops or prosecutors or lab techs or social workers are saints. What I am saying is….
(I have deleted this line so many times that if I was using pencil and eraser, I’d have long since put a hole right through the paper.)
You owe an apology so huge, I’m not even sure you are capable of making one that is adequate.
http://musapublishing.blogspot.com/2012/06/introducing-addie-j-king.html
Here’s another blog interview! Check it out!