- measles
- March 2/15 1917, aboard the imperial train at Pskov (you didn't have to mention the train to win)
- Yakov Yurovsky
- Sverdlovsk
- July 17, 1998
What does “shvibzyk” mean in Russian?
- Absolutely nothing! It doesn't mean imp -- it's a made-up nickname, possibly derived from the German word "schwipsig," which means tipsy.

Blog: Sarah Miller: Reading, Writing, Musing... (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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There may still be 8 months to wait for The Lost Crown, but look what I can do with my brand new dust jacket and a great big book* from my own shelves in the meantime:

The spine is GINORMOUS. And pearly. The little purple square is glossy-laminated, and the title is embossed on the front. Possibly this is crazy, but my favorite part might be the back:


Blog: Sarah Miller: Reading, Writing, Musing... (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Page proofs for THE LOST CROWN arrived on Friday, and they are prettyful:
Appealing as that is, you know what I looked at first? The back matter. Nerdy stuff like photo captions and bibliography:
I kind of like this page, too:

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OMG, I LOVES THAT.
But oh wait, it's a latin-cyrillic hybrid font, so look at the dumb things that happen when I add the subtitle:

I guess it's supposed to look exotic and Russiany, but if you are a person who actually reads Russian, this is what your mind says when your eyes try to read those words: D Iovel of Yaomanov Yaussia
OMG, I HATES THAT.

Blog: Sarah Miller: Reading, Writing, Musing... (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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(I'm supposed to be working.)

Blog: Sarah Miller: Reading, Writing, Musing... (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Among the goodies under my Christmas tree: the latest fluffed up re-release of Bedknobs and Broomsticks.
***********************
Currently re-reading:

The Trial
by jen Bryant

Blog: Sarah Miller: Reading, Writing, Musing... (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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As far as actual post-its, these last couple weeks aren't so impressive. You could count them on one hand, without even using your thumb. HOWEVER. In the last month since receiving Madame Editor's suggestions I have:
- removed 109 out of 130 post-it flags
- drafted 3 pesky unfinished chapters
- cut somewhere in the neighborhood of 3,248 words (it's hard to know for sure when you're simultaneously drafting at the back and deleting from the front)
- converted 20 chapters from past to present tense (which I swore I wouldn't do)
- rewritten the end (ditto)

Zel
by Donna Jo Napoli

Blog: Sarah Miller: Reading, Writing, Musing... (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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- Rewriting the first 20 chapters in present tense (maybe)
- Finishing chapters 44 and 45
- Trimming the whole shebang by 15%
Blogging from this quarter might be erratic for the time being. I've got stuff to do.

Blog: Sarah Miller: Reading, Writing, Musing... (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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- This manuscript is HUGE. I'd never printed it out myself, so I didn't really understand the scale of this thing. According to the shipping label, it weighs more than my godson did when he was born.
- Madame Editor is SMART. (Even when I don't agree with her.)
A nosy reader's guide to Post-It color-coding:
- Red - points where Madame Editor and I disagree
- Orange - stuff I'm willing and able to fix
- Yellow - same as above, but affecting more than just the line or paragraph indicated
- Green - evidence of editorial brilliance
- Blue - quick fixes (typos, deletions, repetitive vocabulary, etc.)

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Chapter 40, while not exactly vanquished, has finally become something I can stand the sight of. For the first time since, oh, MARCH.

Liar
by Justine Larbalestier

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The Revise-O-Meter is on the rise again. Keep your fingers crossed.

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I have neglected to mention a couple Items of Note:
Rather than panic and scrabble for the next two weeks only to be marginally less unsatisfied with my progress, I offered to gag my inner Rainman and send Madame Editor what I've got RIGHT NOW so we can make the most of the remaining six weeks before her leave. She took the bait (the crazy woman claims to like rough drafts) and I didn't chicken out. Yesterday afternoon, I closed my eyes and hit "send."

Blog: Sarah Miller: Reading, Writing, Musing... (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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It seems the WIP and I are having a difference of opinion. I would very much like it to hold steady at 44 chapters. (You may recall that back in April I acquiesced to similar demands and upped it from 40 to 44.) The WIP, however, is now lobbying for 48. FORTY-EIGHT, folks. And I'm afraid the WIP knows what it's talking about. Again.
This may require some primitive tools -- things like paper, scissors, and an expanse of living room floor. Also, St. Clair Highballs, and plenty of 'em.

Harvey

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In light of the history behind my WIP, when I look at the four presidential daughters - Jenna and Barbara Bush and Sasha and Malia Obama - I can't help but think...
90-odd years ago, the Bolshevik party achieved regime change by gunning down a man, his wife, their son and four daughters, and four staff members in a cellar in Siberia. Today in America, the Democratic party did it with music, poetry, and prayer. No matter what you think about this president or the last one, that's the kind of change we can all take pride in.

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Perhaps you've noticed that things haven't been going so well for the Revise-O-Meter. So have I. Believe me.

Blog: Sarah Miller: Reading, Writing, Musing... (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Darcy Pattison has this revision trick I've been meaning to try for some time now called The Shrunken Manuscript. When Laurie Anderson mentioned it at lunch this weekend, I finally added it to my official list of things to do. Because really, who doesn't want to be cool like Laurie? Plus, there's no one home to trip over the whole mess for two days.
6. The temptation to go wild with the color-coding is intense if you're as geeky as I am (I could have indicated internal vs. external conflict with different colors, for example) but there comes a point when too much fussing turns a helpful revision strategy into a mess of plaid.
Learn this trick and lots more in Darcy's revision workbook, Novel Metamorphosis.

Blog: Sarah Miller: Reading, Writing, Musing... (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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So now that I've come out of the WIP closet, it's time to talk revision. I've got until November 1 to make OTMA presentable for Mr. Editor Man to have his way with. Risking humiliation with public accountability seemed to work while I was drafting, so how about we give that another go?
The catch is, revision is a slippery thing to measure. You add, you trim, you mash stuff up and move it around. Consequently the word count, that sacred progress meter, zigzags all over the place and becomes downright useless.
But darn it, I like to measure and monitor stuff like this. So here's my latest bright idea: the Revise-O-Meter. (I was going to call this the Unsuck-o-meter, but as I read through the manuscript I figured out that isn't quite fair. Lots of stuff that needs work isn't officially crappy -- it just needs bulking up , or untangling.)
According to this utterly unscientific system, each chapter gets an individual satisfaction rating, based on wildly subjective factors that all boil down to what sort of mood I'm in when I sit down to tackle a portion of this project. At the end of a day's work, I tally up the points and see how happy I am with the whole enchilada.
Mind you, a rating of 100 doesn't imply perfection. Perfection is different from satisfaction.
The goal: an 85% or better overall satisfaction rate by November 1.
Why not 100%? Because after seeing what a smart editor can do for a book, I know I can't do this alone, and I'm not about to drive myself crazy trying. A little room to breathe is good for all parties involved. Besides, the more I obsess over alleged perfection, the harder it is to adapt to an editor's (mostly brilliant) suggestions and solutions.
And pardon me for saying so, but that's effing astonishing. I never would have guessed I was in the 70% range at all, which just goes to show how far out of whack my perception of a project as a whole can go when I focus on one stubborn fragment that's giving me trouble. (Chapter 22, for example. Horrors!) I mean, gosh, that's dangerously close to a C+. I don't think I've ever been this pleased by a potential C+ before.
ps: If anyone can show me how to put one of those nifty little progress meter images in my sidebar, that'd be awfully spiffy. I'm flummoxed.
Congratulations to all the winners!
What a great contest!
All my compliments to those who won!!
I want to thank Stephania
for her help! Thanks girlfriend!
Congratulations to the winners. I spent hours researching the answers to quiz three and had to give up on the names of the plays.
Congratulations to the winners, and thanks for the opportunity! :)