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"Alethea's essays are a delight. Warm, witty, and wise, they never fail to bring a smile to my face."
—Tim Waggoner, author of Darkness Wakes and Pandora Drive
Secret Agent Buyers
:: Wednesday, April 30, 2008


Stephanie and I didn't *plan* on dressing alike today...but since we did, we figured we'd have a bit of fun with it.



The Author Goddess and I
:: Saturday, April 26, 2008

My interview with Author Goddess and partner-in-crime Sherrilyn Kenyon is now live at Subterranean Press Online. Check it out HERE!



A Day in My Life
:: Friday, April 25, 2008

You guys want the scoop on the Secret Inner Workings of the Ingram Buyer?

I was asked by C. E. Murphy to Guest Blog at Magical Words about just that...and lo and behold, Ingram approved it.

Enjoy!!
http://magicalwords.net/2008/04/25/really-i-mean-it/guest-blog-alethea-kontis/



Pop
:: Thursday, April 10, 2008

Kevin J. Anderson's got this popcorn theory of publishing success he'll share with you, if you can stop him long enough to ask him about it (preferably with a decent microbrew in hand).

He says: there are two ways to make popcorn. You can put one kernel in the kettle, put a little bit of oil on it and a little bit of salt, and coax it until it evolves into the perfect *pop*. Then you put your next kernel in, and start again.

OR, you dump a huge bag of kernels in and a few cups of oil, and just let it explode. Some kernels pop; some don't. But you get to watch your movie a heckuva lot sooner.

Me, I'm in this second camp, mostly by default. I have an addictive personality. Obsessive, even. When it's not an addiction to drugs or alcohol, it's socially acceptable. Envied, even. I am a workaholic. I live life. I seize the adventure with both hands and hang on with enthusiasm. I believe in total immersion. I've got seventeen projects going on at any given time. You want popcorn? I have a warehouse out back.

But yeah.
I also have drums full of the ones that didn't pop.

What Kevin doesn't mention is that you feel every one of those duds. Every disappointment. It's personal. And yeah, it doesn't kill us and it makes us stronger and it's just the battle not the war and blah blah blah and we shed a tear and we move on.

A cup full of those misfits has enough emotional energy to fuel a small star, to call down lightning, to punch a hole in time large enough to crawl through.

But there's too little time in the day as it is.

When I'm in that moment, that indulgent, self-pitying failurefied moment, I'm lucky enough to have a father that sends me the following message, with a picture attached. I remember this day. I was what, maybe fifteen?

Dad's email read: "
As a first step in her plan for world domination, Alethea Kontis becomes proficient firing the 5.56 mm Squad Automatic Weapon."

Whatever doesn't kill you...hands you an M249.
Self-pity class dismissed.



Beauty & Dynamite!
:: Thursday, April 03, 2008

Hooray!! It's time to celebrate! Beauty & Dynamite is now up for preorder!
It will be released on June 1, 2008.
Preorder Beauty & Dynamite from Apex Books here -- only $15.95!
Check out this gorgeous cover!



"Alethea Kontis has already more than proven herself as both a fiction writer and editor, but this collection of non-fiction pieces shows her to be an essayist of the first order; funny, angry, insightful, and eloquent, Alethea's essays are what all non-fiction should be: a feast for the mind and the soul. Beauty & Dynamite , indeed."

--Five-time Bram Stoker Award winner Gary A. Braunbeck, author of Mr. Hands and Coffin County

"Alethea's essays are a delight. Warm, witty, and wise, they never fail to bring a smile to my face."

--Tim Waggoner, author of Pandora Drive and Darkness Wakes

Preorder Beauty & Dynamite from Apex Books here -- only $15.95!

Tim and Gary are classy gentlemen, aren't they? I admire them to pieces, and it made me swoon that they said such nice things about my essays (and were sure to reinforce the fact that they meant it)! And inside Beauty & Dynamite there are even more fabulous people sa ying fabulous things about me (some of them true...and some of them not-so-true).

But that's not enough. The essays in Beauty & Dynamite are about my wild and crazy and magical and heartbreaking life, to which ALL of you have contributed. You are my inspiration! I want you to be part of the excitement!

So, if you have ever read ANY of my essays -- on my blog, or in Apex -- and would like to give me your blurb, I would love to have it! Jason has agreed to put them all in a "randomized quote rotator" on the Apex website, so you will be able to see all of them!

Send your blurb to me at alethea@apexdigest.com. (Warning: if it's more than 100 words, I might edit it.) Be casual! Be funny! Be candid! Be honest! (But be nice...you know the rules about putting bad things out into the world.)

And keep checking back at the Apex Books Company website to see the ! new quot es!

I will be at NY Comic Con in a few weeks -- you can find me at Sherrilyn Kenyon's booth, signing copies of the Dark-Hunter Companion and handing out exclusive bookmarks for Beauty & Dynamite!

For those who haven't seen them on MySpace, here's what they say on the back (you might recognize the snippet from "Making Dynamite" in Apex Digest issue #12):

I am Alice, and Beauty & Dynamite is a doorway to my Wonderland.

It is a collage of magic and misery--collected tales of life, love, and one girl's coming of age in the publishing industry.
Welcome.

Brush off the Looking Glass. Sit back. Have a spot of tea. Move down one and make room for the Doormouse. Ignore the smiling cat. If you buy the book, enjoy it. If you don't spend the day indulging in something else that's just for you. You deserve it.

Be happy.

Have fun.

Say "Screw it."

I did.

After all, no one's going to read this anyway...right?

--Alethea Kontis,
New York Times bestselling author

Preorder Beauty & Dynamite from Apex Books here -- only $15.95!

Beauty & Dynamite
has between its gorgeous covers:

* All my essays published in Apex Digest

* other essays and blogs, published and unpublished

* some poetry snippets (oh yeah!)

* interior art (and we’re talking every single page) by Daniele Serra and Judi Davidson (cover pic by Dee Clingman)

* introduction by Brian Keene

* afterward by Jason Sizemore

* Contributing fiction, non-fiction, and everything in between from: Casey A. Cothran, John Ringo, Scott M. Roberts, James Maxey, Tom Pendergrass, Tom Piccirilli, Dan, Ben, Ellen and Jackie Gamber, Chesya Burke, Maurice Broaddus, Edmund R. Schubert, Gray Rinehart, Ken Scholes….and my lovely Nana, Helen Kontis.

Jason said it’s hands down the oddest thing Apex has ever published. And one of the most stunningly beautiful.

I am so excited!!!

Remember -- send me your blurbs, and please spread the word!

May you all step in interesting stories,
xox
~Alethea

Preorder Beauty & Dynamite from Apex Books here -- only $15.95!



Anything But Foolish
:: Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Today is Anne McCaffrey's birthday, everyone! The Mistress of Pern is 82 years young today. Woohoo!!

Like the rest of the SF world, Mark Newton and I were discussing Arthur C. Clarke over the Ides of March. Not just because he meant so much to the genre, or the world, or our careers, but because each time the world witnessed the passing of an SF Giant, the rest of us authors were left to realize that *we* were the next SF Giants. We thirtysomethings (or late twentysomethings, or early fortysomethings) are the Next Generation. But what have we done? Are we ready to wear this mantle?

No pressure.

The signs are there: Pat Rothfuss and Naomi Novik are taking the world by storm. Jay Lake is his own hurricane. Ken Scholes is being launched as the next Robert Jordan. Mary Robinette Kowal and Scott Lynch will be duking it out at the Hugos over the John W. Campbell Award, and I don't know whom to put my money on.

And me? I've been handed a torch carried by two of the most powerful women in speculative fiction. A torch that, in this world, looks remarkably like a book. And two women, as it happens, whose names also begin with A.

Mom calls Andre Norton one of my guardian angels. I think she would have approved. Those few years of correspondence with her meant so much to me. And the few times I was invited to her library, High Hallack, I was honored. There was a time when I was afraid to visit her because I knew she would see right through me and know I was a fraud. Perhaps she did see right through me.

Only she saw something else.

The last time I saw Miss Andre was after the sale of her library to fund the prestigious Andre Norton Award. I had completely missed the public sale, but when I called she told me there were still many quality books left, and that I was welcome to drop by and go through them. I would have been just as happy donating a check, but no writer worth her salt is going to pass up books, for heaven's sake. Especially when they might actually be helpful.

You see, every writer has a little library of their own. And almost every writer dreams of having a library so large that other writers would come and visit them to work in it. Miss Andre had that library. And, having been a librarian myself with my own misfit author friends, I shared that dream. Perhaps magic from the books that had been living in her library would rub off on my own personal collection, and I would be able to soak in it forever.

But at the time, the magic wasn't in the books. It was in Miss Andre herself. When I arrived, she helpfully presented me with a cherry red library cart...and then took the role of my own personal shopper.

It was amazing.

I bought four huge boxes of books -- most of which because she told me to and not because they looked like they'd be immediately useful. I didn't care; I would have time to flip through them all later and decide for myself. I bought whatever she had left on the Victorian age, and various and sundry other ones about World Mysteries and Superstitions. She didn't have anything left on costumes, but she unearthed a beautiful, huge stack of paper dolls that she swore would do just the trick in a pinch. And she made me an incredible deal. Too good of a deal. But as a poor little nobody fraud of an author, I was in no position to argue.

The books made it home and most of them stayed in their boxes for lack of shelf space. And then they got buried under other books, and other boxes. And then, after Miss Andre passed away, it was just too painful to think about going through them.

Fast forward to last summer and the Great Book Purge of 2007. I desperately needed a home office and something to distract me from my chronically absent fiancé. I have no idea how many hours I spent surrounded by piles and piles of books, making a maze from which I wasn't entirely sure I could escape...even if I wanted to.

Eventually, I unearthed the Andre Norton boxes.

Now, I'm a practical woman. I certainly hope that I'll be as lucky as Miss Anne and have another 50 great years. But even if I read every single moment of every single day until then, I doubt I'd be able to make it through the entirety of my current library. It's just impossible. Literally, literarily, impossible. Some things just had to go.

But I couldn't get rid of Miss Andre's books. Not a one. It was still too painful. They still meant too much. I sat there with a book in my lap: Live Alone and Like It by Marjorie Hillis. I couldn't remember if it was one Miss Andre had placed on my cart, or one I had picked out myself -- undoubtedly the former. "Lee," I said to myself, "you know you are never going to read this book. Sure, it's vintage 1930's, but you're about to get married. You aren't even going to live alone. Put it in the give away box. Now! Do it!"

But I couldn't.
I just couldn't.

I sat there for a very long time, my brain yelling orders and my body stubbornly, sentimentally refusing.

Fine. FINE. I was going to keep the book. But if I was going to keep the book, the least I could do was open it up and read some. I gingerly lifted the front cover. That's when I saw the inscription.

"A talisman for Andre--
May it bring you what it brought me.
Anne"

Oh.
My.
God.

Most writers are introverts -- it takes one to know one. And being one, you know what a small circle of true friends you have, and how that circle grows and matures right along with you. New friends become old friends sooner than you think. They are yours forever, if you want them to be.

There was only one person "Anne" could be. But I checked against my signed Dragonriders of Pern just to be sure.

My family does not use the word "talisman" lightly. I knew what it meant to be holding that book in my hands. I knew what it meant for that talisman to have made the journey it did -- from Anne to Andre to Alethea. I knew what it took to be a strong, successful woman in this industry, what sharks swam these waters, and what sacrifices had to be made.

I knew what it was like to live alone, and I didn't like it.
But I knew.
I knew he wasn't coming back.

I read a good chunk of Live Alone and Like It, cross-legged on the carpet, surrounded by books. I kept having to remember that when Marjorie referred to the "nineties," she meant the 1890s. My favorite line was from the chapter on liquor, and what every single woman should have in order to make the basic, most common drinks. "Only worse than a woman who puts marshmallows in her salad," says Marjorie, "is the woman who messes around with fancy cocktails."

After about an hour, I was consumed by the desire to share the knowledge my good fortune, my treasure, my talisman. I wanted my friends to experience this feeling of discovery and symbolic importance. I went directly to Codex and posted on the boards there. Everyone was excited and awed and happy for me. I called my mother, who laughed and said that Murphy and Miss Andre had sent me a sign, and that I should pay attention. I should remember that I was destined for great things...and I had better start acting like it.

The next day, Jenny added to the thread on Codex with a link to Publisher's Lunch. It had just been announced that the rights to Marjorie Hillis's classic Live Alone and Like It had been reacquired by Little Brown.

The very day after I found the book.
There's coincidence, and there are signs.
Gotta say, I'm with Mom on this one.

Fast forward to yesterday. Nicole came by my office with a small pink galley in her hand. "You are going to love this book," she said.

I took it from her, glanced at the title, and smiled. I had been living alone for almost a year now, and thanks to my family and friends I was finally, truly learning to love it. "I already have this," I said. "Did I not tell you the story?"

Nicole sat down, because she knew it would be a good story. And it is a good story, a story about some very special women that deserves retelling on this very special day. I'm so glad she reminded me.

I'm sure it wasn't a coincidence.

Happy birthday, Miss Anne.
Thank you.
For everything.



Events

August 29–September 1
Dragon*Con
Atlanta, GA

September 26–28
Context 21
Columbus, OH

October 17–19
K-Con 2008
New Orleans, LA