In Which I Get a Little (tiny bit) Neurotic

Okay, so remember how I posted the other day and I was all blasé and placid and oh, yes, I have a book out now, but I’m totally self-contained and just puttering along at my normal emotional speed, blah blah blah? Well, I think we’ve just found my freakout threshold.

Let me tell you about it. And yes, it has a lot to do with this very cinematic banner.

Mackie (from the Breathless Reads commercial)

What it is: I just found out yesterday that there is a Breathless Reads commercial. And on Friday, it will be debuting on MTV’s Hollywood Crush blog. Like, MTV that we are all aware of and know about from childhood. Which kind of makes my head feel very weird and like it might explode a little. This picture of Mackie is an actual still from the commercial, and once I have a link to the real thing, I will definitely (definitely) be posting it here.

Not to mention, the other Breathless Reads authors have also been given stills of their characters, so if you want to see some more graphic representations, I present to you:

Nightshade
Matched
The Eternal Ones
and
Sapphique

Now, I will most likely be over in a corner somewhere, waiting for Friday and trying to keep my head from exploding.

P.S.
, you are officially getting your emotional response!

Checking in

In brief, this has been a very good week. On Monday, I turned in a big set of revisions for Book 2. The Replacement came out on Tuesday (!!!), and since then I’ve been very busy staring blankly at the TV and melting into the furniture a little.

Then last night, I signed books at the Mountains and Plains author reception (my first-ever signing of anything). It was a blast and I got to meet some really amazing booksellers from Colorado and its adjacent states!

Leading up to the book launch, a lot of great bloggers invited me to do interviews with them and now the interviews are starting to go up. Some especially fun ones are this one I did for Myra McEntire’s Friday in the Fort feature, this one at YA Highway, and this one over at Forever YA, where I talk about high school crushes, how I met D, and being the owner of the Worst Car Ever.

Seven Days . . . Is Not a Long Time

It’s exactly one week before The Replacement officially ventures out into the world and I’m already hearing reports of sightings in the wild!

So, in honor of this being the craziest, weirdest, most surreal feeling ever, I’m posting some of the music I listened to while writing The Replacement. This playlist is representative, but not comprehensive. (If you want to know what Carlina sounds like when she sings, you have to go find Jennifer Charles—preferably some of the stuff she’s done with Firewater—but alas, playlist.com didn’t have any)

Also, this list is dominated by male vocalists. It doesn’t mean anything. Except that I apparently listen to male vocalists when I write boy-books.

Another Disjointed List

August is shaping up to be a pretty crazy month—a month filled with Various Things. Here are some of them:

1. We are finally allowed to talk about the Merry Fates anthology! It’s been a big fat gleeful secret for months, and now that I’m finally allowed to talk about it, I find that I have absolutely nothing to say except that I’m reallyreallyreally excited! Which lacks a certain element of human drama.

2. Speaking of human drama, I have my first official edit letter for Book 2! It is an excellent letter, and long, and it makes me ridiculously happy. (There’s just nothing quite like a really good edit letter. I can’t explain it. It’s like Christmas. Only with less wrapping paper to pick up, and more rending of hair and garments. What?—Writers are masochists. Everyone already knows that.)

2a. Why it is nice to have an edit letter: nothing keeps you from obsessing over the fact that you have a book coming out in a month like . . . working on a different book!

3. Speaking of the book that’s coming out in a month: You can now read the entire first chapter of THE REPLACEMENT here. Which makes it real. But I’m not going to think about that.

3a. (which wraps neatly back around to 2a.) Instead, I will focus on demons and moral ambiguity and kissing. If anyone needs me, I will be holed up in a coffee shop somewhere, revising aggressively and listening to this song 983 times:

This!

Yes, this:

NYT bestselling author of SHIVER Maggie Stievfater, Tessa Gratton, and Brenna Yovanoff’s package of stories, as well as conversations about where these stories come from, taken from their popular blog The Merry Sisters of Fate, from flesh-eating faeries and demons in love, to unearthly magicians and alternate histories, to Andrew Karre at Carolrhoda Lab, for publication in Spring 2012, by Laura Rennert at the Andrea Brown Literary Agency for Stiefvater and Gratton, and Sarah Davies at the Greenhouse Literary Agency for Yovanoff (World English).

This announcement has been a long time in the making, and in honor of it, we’ve revamped the blog. Not to mention: a contest. Also, we ask you what kind of extras you’d like to see in an anthology!

Contest Winners

Hi, everyone! Thanks for the awesome turn-out last week—I didn’t wind up responding to comments individually (I could, but I think it would mostly be you’re entered!), but it was great to see so many people eager for a shot at The Eternal Ones!

This morning, I drew names randomly from each of the two contest posts, so without further ado, the winners of the signed, finished copies are:

Jessica, of the email address JessRing84

and

(I’ll be contacting you both to get your mailing info.)

To everyone else, thanks for participating, and keep an eye out for my upcoming Breathless Reads posts, because I can guarantee that this will not be the last chance to win fabulous prizes!

Brenna Interviews Kirsten Miller

Wow, you guys are awesome—so many comments on Kirsten’s guest-post! It’s great to see this kind of enthusiasm for The Eternal Ones. Guys, you are going to love this book!

Okay, same deal as before: comment here and you’ll be entered to win a signed, finished copy of The Eternal Ones. I have two of these bad boys, so on Sunday, after 8:00pm Eastern, I’ll draw two names—one from the comments here, and one from Wednesday’s post—and announce the winners next week. Just a reminder, if you don’t have a livejournal account, be sure to include a name and your email address in your comment.

Now, allow me to introduce my personal favorite part of Eternal Ones Week: a real live actual interview with Kirsten. I love hearing about other people—what they like, what they think about, how they work. This is because I am nosy, but Kirsten didn’t mind. She gave some great answers, which I will now share with you:

1) In The Eternal Ones, Haven and her friend Beau operate a lucrative business custom-making dresses for their classmates.  Let us in on the facts—are you a closet-seamstress, or do you prefer to write about vocations you haven’t personally pursued?

One of the best things about writing books is being able to give my characters the skills, strengths, or vocations that I’ve always coveted but never possessed. I often daydream about being able to whip up a fabulous dress in a single evening. If I tried to accomplish such a feat in real life, I would surely stitch my fingers together. I’m quite handy with power tools, and I can fix an impressive number of small appliances, but somehow sewing machines have never made sense to me. It’s too bad, really, because I’m a HUGE fan of Project Runway. I would be soooo good as the bitchy one. (Can I say that on your blog?)(Yes, Kirsten, yes you absolutely may.)

2) Now, people might expect authors to feel equally benevolent toward all their characters, but . . . I almost always have favorites.  Without giving too much away, is there a character in The Eternal Ones that you’re particularly pleased with?

Everyone seems to love Beau Decker, but I’m going to go with Leah Frizzell. She’s an odd, otherworldly girl who lives deep in the Tennessee mountains and attends a snake handling church. She’s not at all what one might expect her to be. She’s deeply religious yet extremely open minded (many deeply religious people are, but they’re rarely portrayed as such). She speaks in tongues, but she’s headed to Duke on a physics scholarship. She can see the future, but she’s no crystal ball gazing psychic.

There’s a side of my family that’s lived in the Appalachian Mountains for well over 200 years. Though I’m pretty sure none of them handled snakes (unless they’d been into the moonshine) Leah reminds me a great deal of some of the aunts, uncles, and cousins who were around back in my grandfather’s day. They were eccentric, brilliant, religious, tough, and nothing like the two-dimensional hillbillies you see in the movies.

3) Music plays a big role in my book The Replacement, and it also proved to be a big influence while I was writing it.  Is there a particular song or artist that you associate with The Eternal Ones?

Oh yeah. The Rolling Stones. To this day, no one has done sinister and sexy quite like the young Mick Jagger. They have quite a few songs I’d put on my soundtrack:

The Gimme Shelter
Miss You (the ultimate New York love song, in my opinion)
Sympathy for the Devil
Paint It Black

4) Quick—without over-thinking!  What’s your favorite verb?

Plunk

5) Is there an author who’s had a strong influence over your own writing, or who just holds a special place in your heart?

I adore EH Gombrich’s A Little History of the World. If it were a required text in every grade school, there would be no need to cram history down kids’ throats. They’d gobble it up willingly instead. The book is funny, beautifully written, and unbelievably useful. It’s the perfect book to give to any smart ten-year-old. (Or thirty-year-old.)

6) On a related note, have you read anything recently that really knocked your socks off—that’s just begging to be shared with everyone you know, plus people you pass on the street, plus that friendly checker at the store?

I really enjoyed your latest book, The Replacement.* I read it a while back, long before I knew we’d be in touch. I insisted the publisher send me a copy because I thought the cover was awesome, I adore scary books, and I’ve always been fascinated by the notion of changelings.

I thought it was completely original, which is a real rarity these days. And quite a few of the characters (you know which ones) have stayed with me for months. You are, I’d imagine, a very interesting lady with a dark and disturbed mind. (A complement in my world.)

7) And last, because I have a deep affinity for hot beverages and naturally assume other people do too: coffee, tea, cocoa?  Something more . . . unusual?

I’ve always been a coffee person. I’m kind of a reverse snob about it. I like the coffee you can buy at little metal stands in New York. I think it’s sad that a great tough-girl drink has been turned into something so frou-frou.

(Interview concluded, now Brenna is talking again)

Kirsten, thanks so much for letting me interview you. These are some great answers! Also, yay for black coffee, the Rolling Stones, and Leah Frizzell—who I absolutely love!

This concludes Eternal Ones Week. However, next week, Kirsten will be guest-posting and answering questions on Andrea Cremer’s blog, so I highly encourage you to visit her there, and remember, you can also swing by Kirsten’s website, and stay tuned early next week, when I’ll be announcing the winners of two signed, finished copies of The Eternal Ones.

*Brenna here—totally blushing at this point. Isn’t she sweet, guys?

Guest Post: Kirsten Miller (Plus Giveaway!*)

Hi Everyone,

My name is Kirsten Miller. I’m the author of The Eternal Ones, and this is the first time I’ve “guest-posted” on another author’s blog, so I’m feeling a little awkward right now.

Fortunately, I’m a big fan of Brenna’s latest novel, The Replacement. As many of you probably know, it’s an extremely weird and wonderful book. Which is great. I love weird books, heck I even like to write weird books. (I’m thinking my next project might be a nice, gruesome horror novel.) ouroborossociety So I don’t feel I’m too out of line when I say that if you share my interest in all things bizarre, you might like my latest book.

The Eternal Ones is a sinister tale of true love, reincarnation, and secret societies. What kind of secret societies, you ask? (Or was that just in my head? Sometimes it’s hard to tell.) The Ouroboros Society (whose symbol is a silver snake swallowing its own tail) is an organization that claims to be devoted to the scientific study of reincarnation. As you might imagine, that’s only a very small part of the story.

youngmozart I’ve always been fascinated by tales of people born with inexplicable talents. (Think of Mozart composing music at age five. Or kids who earn graduate degrees in physics before they’re old enough to drive.) What if such skills could only be built over multiple lifetimes? And what if the people who possessed them were gathered together and granted membership in an elite club?

These were the questions that inspired the Ouroboros Society, and the answers I offer in The Eternal Ones probably aren’t the ones you’d expect.

If all this piques your interest, check out the Ouroboros Society’s website or my website. And be sure to drop by my blog for your own “past life reading.” I’m offering them free of charge to all visitors brave enough to send me a picture.

(By the way . . . Brenna’s last life? Let’s just say that if I were her, I’d avoid the entire
state of Kentucky.)

Thanks for the invitation to post, Brenna. I’ll see you on my blog in September!

Kirsten

*Brenna here—I’ve been informed that I can have two signed copies of The Eternal Ones as prizes, so I’ll be giving away one copy to a random winner from today’s comments, and the other to someone who comments on my interview with Kirsten on Friday!

The Eternal Ones

This week, I’m featuring fellow Breathless Books author, Kirsten Miller. We’ll be hearing from Kirsten herself on Wednesday, so as a warm-up I’m going to tell you a little bit about The Eternal Ones, which comes out on August 10th from Razorbill/Penguin Group.

Haven Moore has spent the better part of her oppressive life in Snope City, Tennessee, struggling to control the visions that have plagued her since childhood. Despite her best efforts, however, her visions are worsening and she is haunted by images of a fiery catastrophe that happened before she was born—images that just might be residual memories of another life. Now, she finds herself compelled to unravel a decades-old mystery and rediscover a love that has spanned centuries, and may or may not have been the death of her.

Haven is irresistibly drawn to New York, and likewise to the wealthy and charismatic Iain Morrow. But Iain has a dark side, and his preference for keeping secrets doesn’t bode well for the budding relationship, or for Haven’s safety.

Now, Haven is faced with a growing apprehension, and her only hope may lie with a secret society that claims to be in the business of helping people remember their past lives. But with so many new faces and so many paths that have crossed before, how can she know who to trust?

The chemistry between Haven and Iain is heart-fluttering, to say the least—a romance that is passionate and timeless, while still remaining firmly anchored in the here and now. Haven and Iain are captivated by each other, bound by a magnetic attraction so ferocious and consuming that it frightens Haven, even as it draws her steadily onward.

While The Eternal Ones is filled with gripping twists and turns, and the subject of reincarnation is a fascinating one, it is the secondary characters who charmed me. I was especially taken with the people from Haven’s hometown, who are complex and vividly drawn, and I was enchanted by Haven’s irascibly loyal best friend Beau, and by her classmate, Leah Frizzell, a girl who has been even more ostracized than Haven, and who, like Haven, has her own mystical gift.

Throughout The Eternal Ones, there is a strong theme of personal identity. Despite the passage of numerous lives, Haven has always retained the core qualities that make her who she is, and this endurance is echoed in the characters of Beau and Leah, who—like Haven—are consistently true to themselves, even in the face of great adversity.

You can preorder at Powell’s, or the bookseller of your choice, or visit the Eternal Ones at its website.

Friday Five (ish)*

1) I am ridiculously fortunate. While I usually feel that way in a very broad sense, today I mean it specifically—The Replacement has been included in a pretty major endeavor on the part of Penguin, called Breathless Books (which officially has its own website)!

The advance reading copies are being given out as a package deal, sort of like a little book-basketball-team. See the pretty slipcase?

Penguin Five Slipcase

So, from time to time, I’ll be putting up reviews, guest posts, and interviews with my fellow Breathless Books authors. Stop by next week to see what Kirsten Miller, author of The Eternal Ones has to say about music, hot beverages, and dress-making!

2) You may have already heard this, since the news—it is big! But I see absolutely no harm in saying it again. Over and over. Forever.**

Linger (the much-awaited sequel to Maggie Stiefvater’s hot novel of angst, Rilke, and werewolf nookie, Shiver) debuted at #1 on the NYT list! (!!!!!!!!!!)

Go here for the full story, some pretty glorious piano, and an ungroomed Maggie.

3) This month’s Tessa Does Shakespeare is up and features tears—real ones—and a chance to win Tess’s ARC of The Replacement just by commenting. I suggest that you watch it, because DUDE! Tess is crying. Did that just sound totally dysfunctional?

*Well, three. But that doesn’t have nearly the same ring to it.

**Oh, see what I did there?