I'm alive I'm alive!

RWA was-- well, it was a really big pond and I was a little tiny fish struggling desperately to grow, mostly.  It was lovely--and a little terrifying, and I'd even say it was humbling, except I went expecting to be humbled, and then was a little surprised to see how much I actually knew and had actually accomplished.

Mary and I both agree that I failed "Southern Dressing 101" in spite of a decent showing on the final.  On Thursday I wore jeans and a DSP T-shirt.  When I stood up to speak, people looked angry and pissed off, and it took me a while to figure out that it was because I didn't look the part of the serious writer.

The next day, I wore a very nice tank top and a pair of khaki capris.  Now in California, this would have been business casual-- hell, in California, this would have been overdressed business casual.

At RWA, I was slumming, and once again, when I spoke, yup, it was the cold shoulder.  (Of course, I was pretty tired by this time-- it could have been the cold shoulder because I sounded like an idiot--but I'm not necessarily sure that was it, because as far as I know, I always sound like an idiot, and this has been one of the few venues which has ever actually responded to me as though I were an idiot, so I'm going to keep thinking it was the clothes.)

On Friday night, the lovely Sarah Frantz told me that I had an interview the next day, on camera, for RT magazine, and, well...

DUDES!


 I was thrilled.  And a little worried.  And nervous and...

Well, I went out to dinner with Ariel and Nessa that night (do you see the pretty drink we had?  It was nummy too!) and apparently, I had finally managed to take dressing notes, because they told me the thing I wore for dinner would make a nice outfit for the interview, and hopefully I managed to make a not complete ass out of myself.

The interview was fun, actually-- Morgan Doremus from RT book reviews was lovely, funny, dynamic, and she put me right at ease.  I'm not sure how long the actual interview lasted, but I do know that between the pre-interview chat and the
 actual interview, I was on the hot seat for over an hour.

I got to talk about some nitty-gritty stuff-- my old job, my writing, why it's not erotica and what the difference between erotica and m/m romance really is.  I enjoyed myself immensely, and the opportunity was amazing-- seriously.  It will be out closer to December, because I also talk about my upcoming release, Christmas Kitsch which, of course, comes out in December.  I'm excited for it to come out--although I'm pretty sure I don't make great camera fodder, I'll get feedback from you all on whether or not my voice REALLY sounds like Minnie Mouse!

After that, we went out to dinner with T.A. Webb, J.p. Barnaby, Shae Connor, Nessa Warin, and Mary my Mary and no one else shall have her.  We went to Mary Macs, which was soul food and awesome, and we laughed and talked and went back to the hotel room and laughed and talked (and, uhm, J.p. took some incriminating video of me and llamas that I'm afraid to see on the internet someday) and in general (until Nessa strained her back :-/) we had a very good time.

This morning, Mary and I left for Kentucky-- and I probably bored her to tears but I loved every minute of the drive.  Including the moment between the first two landscape photos-- the ones of unrelenting green?  Where she said, "See?  You can tell the topography changed from Georgia to Tennessee."  At which point I said, "Uhm..."  Because to a girl from the unrelenting brown of Sacramento, it was all green to me.

Of course there was a scary moment when the heaven's opened up and the roadway became the gods' toilet, and we were just under it with our wipers on hoping to eventually see through the pissing rain, but when we were pretty sure we would live, it all got better after that.

We arrived in Kentucky, went out to dinner with the family (and dropped off Mary's rental car) and in general?  It was so worth the drive to spend more time with people I love dearly.

I can't wait to go home-- I can't.  I miss Mate and the kids, and I so want to be in my comfort zone again.  But it was an interesting trip--and I think an important one.  I'm not sure if I should go again-- if unlike RT where I felt like I had something to give--I'll have anything to offer RWA.  But for this year, it was definitely time well spent. 



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Published on July 21, 2013 22:11
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message 1: by Katyna (new)

Katyna When I go to see someone speak and they are dressed casual, I think, "Oh, she's not being choked by pantyhose and her shoes aren't trying to make her ankles swell because they are too tight and when she talks, I will be able to listen to her clearly because she obviously isn't having her diaphragm squeezed to death by her Spanx."

At least that's me. I have more faith in a person that looks like they don't have an anaconda giving them the death grip.

All hail comfy clothes and shoes and natural fabrics.


message 2: by Kaje (new)

Kaje Harper Thank goodness we won't have to dress up at GRL - I was just wondering if I needed new jeans for the panel I'm on...

Big groups sure have their own dynamics - you're one heck of a big fish in this pond though. Looking forward to that interview. You'll have to link it. As a fellow M/M author, thanks for taking one for the team and expanding a few horizons for the rest of us.


message 3: by Amy (new)

Amy Lane Katyna wrote: "When I go to see someone speak and they are dressed casual, I think, "Oh, she's not being choked by pantyhose and her shoes aren't trying to make her ankles swell because they are too tight and whe..."

YES!!!!!

Dude... that's like my battlecry!


message 4: by Amy (new)

Amy Lane Kaje wrote: "Thank goodness we won't have to dress up at GRL - I was just wondering if I needed new jeans for the panel I'm on...

Big groups sure have their own dynamics - you're one heck of a big fish in thi..."


LOL-- oh honey-- that's funny. I never thought of it as taking one for the team :-)


message 5: by Julio (new)

Julio Genao this:

"Mary and I both agree that I failed "Southern Dressing 101" in spite of a decent showing on the final. On Thursday I wore jeans and a DSP T-shirt. When I stood up to speak, people looked angry and pissed off, and it took me a while to figure out that it was because I didn't look the part of the serious writer."

is pretty much the best thing, ever.


message 6: by Amy (new)

Amy Lane Julio-Alexi wrote: "this:

"Mary and I both agree that I failed "Southern Dressing 101" in spite of a decent showing on the final. On Thursday I wore jeans and a DSP T-shirt. When I stood up to speak, people looked ..."


*bows*


Plainbrownwrapper Amy! If I had known you were driving by Nashville, I woulda waved at you! ;-D


message 8: by Amy (new)

Amy Lane Lol!! I woulda waved too!


message 9: by Sadonna (new)

Sadonna Late to comment, but it is so true that regionally there is a difference in the dress code. I remember the first time I had to travel and give some presentations for my old company. I had meetings in Newport Beach - and coming from Chicago I had on a suit - skirt, heels, the whole deal. They were in shorts and flip flops :D I had been in NJ first and of course the suit was the expected attire. I sure was overdressed in SoCal though.


message 10: by Amy (new)

Amy Lane Sadonna wrote: "Late to comment, but it is so true that regionally there is a difference in the dress code. I remember the first time I had to travel and give some presentations for my old company. I had meetings ..."

*MWAH* Thank you so much for that-- being a little overdressed isn't bad, but being underdressed makes you want to beg for forgiveness.


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Amy Lane
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