A Recap of 2018

2018 was an incredible year in a lot of ways. I got a book deal! I got married! I…had other exciting things happen that I’m not allowed to talk about yet!

Every year I make this long sheet of goals for the next year. I mean, so does everyone, right? But I try to make mine super achievable, and specific–“plans,” maybe, not goals. I split them up by category to make them easier to remember.

Here’s a selection of some of the goals/plans I had for 2018, and how I did on achieving them!

Personal Care

  1. Skincare twice daily – accomplished! 
  2. Maintain a healthy weight – accomplished! 
  3. Spend less than xx “extra” money per month – faileddd (I discovered Aritzia exists)
  4. Find an exercise/sport that I can do sustainably – accomplished! (muay thai is amazing)

Self-Improvement

  1. Try to take the perspective of people making you anxious or angry. – accomplished!
  2. Count back from 20 when angry and alone, or 5 when angry and with someone else. Leave if you have to. Just don’t lose your temper. – mostly accomplished! (I think it’s fair to have exceptional circumstances sometimes though, especially if you’ve been egregiously victimized in some way which is the situation I’m thinking of, so maybe I’ll count this as accomplished)
  3. Buy or rent a house – accomplished!
  4. Say “thank you,” not “sorry.” (Think – “thank you for your patience” instead of “sorry I’m late.”) – accomplished!
  5. Do at least five good deeds. – accomplished!
  6. Go outside your comfort zone. Do things that make you anxious and prove to yourself that they aren’t the end of the world. – accomplished! 

Social and Cultural 

  1. Read 100 books this year – faileddddd
  2. Read at least 5 literary novels – accomplished!
  3. Do one political thing every month – faileddd unless you count angry twitter threads (I need to get better about this!)
  4. Watch at least 5 classic films – faileddd
  5. Get married – accomplished!

Creative/Bookish

  1. Finish revisions on TFK and go on submission – accomplished! (and sold!)
  2. Write a new book – accomplished! 
  3. Revise the new book – work in progress
  4. Write 1000 words a day – faileddd
  5. Get better at instagram – accomplished!

Academic

  1. Submit two new papers – accomplished!
  2. Learn C++ (programing language) – faileddd, but I learned Matlab instead!
  3. Survive teaching for my first semester – accomplished! 

It’s kind of been an amazing year, right? I don’t even mind knowing the things I’ve “failed” at, because they can just be goals for next year!

…Speaking of next year:

Goals for 2019

Personal Care

  1. Skincare 2x daily…again!
  2. Use whitening strips or charcoal toothpaste

Self-Improvement

  1. Go to muay thai 4-6 times a week
  2. Maintain a healthy weight
  3. Eat a balanced diet with sweets in moderation
  4. Spend less than $xx extra money a month (trying this again!)
  5. Drink in moderation (cutting down to 3-5 drinks a week)
  6. Anxiety: focus on letting go of things you can’t control
  7. Be bold, take calculated risks professionally and socially
  8. Be comfortable confronting people who violate boundaries.
  9. Say “yes” to all social invitations (unless previous plans or sick).
  10. At least five good deeds

Social and Cultural

  1. Read at least five literary/classic novels by women or POC.
  2. Watch at least five classic films.
  3. Read 50 books
  4. Do something political every month (call reps, protest, write letter to editor, etc)

Creative

  1. Write a new book.
  2. Revise the new book.
  3. Submit the new book.
  4. Write 1000 words a day on average (more achievable than my last version!)
  5. Post to instagram daily

Academic

  1. Comprehensive exams
  2. Propose my dissertation
  3. Submit four new papers.
  4. Apply for postdoc funding
  5. Submit that Scientific American invited article

…whew! That’s a lot. And that’s not even all the goals I have on my sheet, in fact, it’s just a condensed version to give you the general gist of my plans.

I think it’s fair to say I’m Type A, don’t you?

What are your plans for 2019? How will you ensure they’re achievable?

Life Stuff

, , ,
2 Comments

I’m giving away one of these puppies over on Twitter! If you want to get your hands on the first ever ARC of The Fever King, you should head over there.

The rules are: follow/RT on twitter. Extra entry if you add TFK on Goodreads.

One grand prize winner gets a signed ARC and the tarot cards. Two runners up each get a set of the three tarot cards.

(Card art is by  @bbonsbonss, my favorite person ever)

Giveaway, My Books, The Fever King

, , , , , ,
Comments Off on I’m giving away the very first ARC of The Fever King!

Now that The Fever King ARCs are out in the world, I wanted to make a comprehensive list of content warnings available for anyone who might need them. They’re a little spoilery so I’ve placed them under a “read more” tag, so people who want to avoid spoilers won’t get spoiled.

A non-spoilery list of content warnings:

  • violence
  • intergenerational trauma/genocide
  • immigration
  • abuse
  • parental death
  • death of a child
  • mental health and suicide
  • slut-shaming
  • ableist language
  • drug and alcohol abuse
  • emetophobia

A detailed list is under the cut.

Continue reading

My Books, The Fever King

, ,
Comments Off on THE FEVER KING Content Warnings

the feverking (3)

I’m so excited to announce that the cover reveal for The Fever King will officially be happening tomorrow (Wednesday the 12th)!

The reveal will be happening exclusively on Hypable, so pay attention to their site and to Twitter/Insta tomorrow to see the cover as soon as it goes live! I’m told the post will go up at 11 am Eastern Time.

My Books, Publishing, The Fever King

, , , ,
Comments Off on The Fever King cover reveal tomorrow!

This content is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

excerpts, extras, My Books, The Fever King

, , , ,
Enter your password to view comments.

wish list

Hello! It’s us, your favorites (shh, we’re totally your favorites, right?), R.K. and Victoria.

We’re very excited to be Pitch Wars mentors this year. And because we know you want to get down to the good part, we’ll skip the rest of the niceties and just list what we’re looking for this year.

To start off, we are mentoring Adult and New Adult FictionAlso, if your adult book could conceivably also appeal to YA readers, send it to us, because Victoria in particular loves books with crossover appeal.

(Please note: if you submit New Adult fiction, we will very very likely ask you to ultimately revise and query it as either Adult or Young Adult, depending on which is a better fit for your book. This isn’t because we don’t adore books with college-aged protagonists, but because New Adult doesn’t exist in speculative fiction.)

genres we want_ (1)Fantasy

  • Science fantasy
  • Epic fantasy
  • Historical fantasy (and alternate history fantasy)
  • Military fantasy
  • Contemporary fantasy
  • Grimdark (But without the fridging and gratuitous rape. And also with women. And gays who don’t die.)

Soft sci-fi

Magical realism and contemporary with speculative elements

Thrillers (Especially speculative thrillers with elements of fantasy or SF)

Literary Fiction (Particularly speculative literary fiction)

genres we want_ (3)

  • Political subversion
  • Revolution stories
    • That don’t center around white saviors
  • High concept stories
  • Non-western settings and characters
  • Enemies-to-lovers, and especially villain love interests
    • Note: in enemies-to-lovers, we especially love it when they’re enemies over something actually important, like drastically different political ideologies or one of them tried to kill the other one
  • Subverting common tropes (like “the chosen one” and “the wise mentor”)
  • Morally gray everything
  • Murder
    • In general, as a plot point
  • Military and political strategy
    • Just, pages and pages of it
      • It’s okay if it’s boring
        • We have advanced degrees
  • Unlikable characters, especially women
  • Anything faintly reminiscent of Les Mis or Hamilton
  • If there’s a romance (and there doesn’t have to be), we love a slow sloooow burn
  • Gender and racebent and now-with-more-gay retellings of common narratives
  • Retellings from the villain’s perspective
  • Intense mentor relationships
  • Rival student relationships
  • Act One enemies turned into allies
  • Parallel worlds
  • Psychopaths
    • In particular: characters you think are psychopaths, but actually the trinket they carry around is their one last reminder of someone they loved and lost
    • Victoria studies psychopaths professionally, so only if done w e l l and not just as an excuse for a cardboard cutout villain
  • Crossover appeal for both YA and adult markets
  • Doomed friendships/romances because one of them is a communist and the other works for the state police
    • Listen we know this is very specific
      • But for real
        • “Javert…we see each other plain….”

This is a non-exhaustive list, though, so if you don’t see your trope listed here, don’t assume we aren’t interested! Sometimes we don’t know what we want until we read it. (Victoria recently had this exact experience while reading The Traitor Baru Cormorant and it was religious.)

As long as it’s on our genre list and we don’t list it as an anti-want, assume we’re open to it. (And feel free to ask clarification questions on Twitter.)

We’re particularly excited by #ownvoices stories, and also for stories by marginalized creators (whether #ownvoices or not).

genres we want_ (4)

  • Hard sci-fi
  • Urban fantasy (note: not the same as contemporary fantasy!)
  • Time travel
  • White medieval fantasy
  • Paranormal romance
  • Portal fantasy

genres we want_ (5)

  • Our own books
    • We wrote them
    • We also like each other’s books
      • At least that’s what we tell each other…. 😉
  • TRAIL OF LIGHTNING by Rebecca Roanhorse
  • THE BLACK PRISM by Brent Weeks
  • THE TRAITOR BARU CORMORANT by Seth Dickinson
  • The BROKEN EARTH trilogy by N.K. Jemison
  • The adult version of THE CRUEL PRINCE by Holly Black or SIX OF CROWS by Leigh Bardugo or NOW I DARKEN by Kiersten White
  • JADE CITY by Fonda Lee
  • HER BODY AND OTHER PARTIES by Carmen Maria Machado
  • THE SECRET HISTORY by Donna Tartt
    • We have strong feelings about this book
    • Send us this book, but with magic
  • THE LIES OF LOCKE LAMORA by Scott Lynch
    • But gayer, and with more women
  • SPINNING SILVER and UPROOTED by Naomi Novik
  • THE NIGHT CIRCUS by Erin Morgenstern
  • THE PAPER MAGICIAN by Charlie N Holmberg
  • A DARKER SHADE OF MAGIC and VICIOUS by VE Schwab
  • CHILDREN OF BLOOD AND BONE by Tomi Adeyemi
  • DEATHLESS by Catherynne Valente
  • SABRIEL and LIRAEL by Garth Nix

genres we want_ (6)

  • We are Ravenclaws
    • As such, we are plotters
      • We will make you a plotter as well. You cannot escape it.
  • I (RK) write very thematically and look for big issues/motifs/high literary academic shit
    • And I (Victoria) write super character-focused almost literary fiction stuff, so I’ll be paying attention to your character arcs. I also like prose and line edits.
  • We will be straightforward in our criticism, and occasionally blunt. However, we also won’t shy away from telling you all about the things we LOVE in your book! You can expect a healthy mix of constructive feedback and cheerleading.
  • We’re happy to answer questions over email pretty much whenever…about your book and editing, about the industry and querying, whatever.
    • We will also do at least two Skype or Facetime calls–one at the beginning, and one later on when preparing for the agent round.
  • We will do at least two reads through your book–the initial edit letter and then a subsequent round of revision and comments. More (and line edits) if time allows!
  • We might ask you to do a LOT of work. You should be prepared for this if you submit to us.

genres we want_ (7)

Screen Shot 2018-08-09 at 1.05.15 PM

V i c t o r i a   L e e

Author of The Fever King 

website | twitter | insta

I grew up in Durham, North Carolina, where I spent twelve ascetic years as a vegetarian before discovering spicy chicken wings are, in fact, a delicacy. I’ve been a state finalist competitive pianist, a hitchhiker, a pizza connoisseur, an EMT, an expat in China and Sweden, and a science doctoral student. I’m also a bit of a snob about fancy whisky.

I write early in the morning, then spend the rest of the day trying to impress my border collie puppy and make my experiments work.

I’m represented by Holly Root and Taylor Haggerty at Root Literary, and live in Pennsylvania.

 

dpxyJF_P_400x400

R.  F.   K u a n g

Author of The Poppy War

website | twitter | insta

I immigrated to the US from Guangzhou, China in 2000. I have a BA in International History from Georgetown, where my research focused on Chinese military strategy, collective trauma, and war memorials. I’m a 2018 Marshall Scholar, and I’ll be heading to the University of Cambridge this fall to do my MPhil in Chinese Studies.

Writing-wise, I graduated from Odyssey Writing Workshop in 2016 and attended the CSSF Novel Writing Workshop in 2017. I really love corgis, drinking nice wines I know nothing about, and rewatching The Office! When I’m not writing, I co-run the review blog Journey to the BEST! with Farah Naz Rishi.

 

If you’re excited about Team Gay Commie Mommies, we’d love it if you added our books on Goodreads! The Fever King  &  The Poppy War

We can’t wait to read your words!

xo, RK & Victoria

32104594_10212825939668926_303812418717351936_o-1

Click here to return to the blog hop!

 

For Writers, Pitch Wars

,
20 Comments

i'm a pitch wars mentor!

I’m so stoked to finally announce that I’m going to be a 2018 Pitch Wars mentor! I’m co-mentoring with my friend R.F. Kuang (you might know her as the author of The Poppy War).

The most I’m allowed to say right now is that we’ll be mentoring Adult fiction, and that we are both super super excited about reading all the submissions that’ll be in our inbox soon!

For Writers, Pitch Wars

,
Comments Off on I’m going to be a Pitch Wars mentor!

I’ve now been to two (!!) bookish festivals and conventions, and honestly, the experience was amazing.

295AD3F0-2FEC-4FD7-B8E2-18A54B577074

First up was YALLWest, hosted in Santa Monica, California. YALLWest is a one-day event, and it was wild. The weather was desperately hot, but there were plenty of food trucks with cold bubble tea and fancy grilled cheese to tide one over.

The ARC lines were crazy long, but I managed to snag a few, including THE CHEERLEADERS by Kara Thomas (which was amazing, by the way, and you can find it on Goodreads here). I’d been to visit my agents Holly and Taylor the previous week, and they’d also hooked me up with badass ARCs like CITY OF GHOSTS by Victoria Schwab and THIS SPLINTERED SILENCE by Kayla Olson. I highly suggest preordering these, too. City of Ghosts is a dark middle grade about a girl who can see ghosts and her spectral best friend, and This Splintered Silence is a fast-paced, lyrically-written space suspense.

I actually ran into Kayla at the festival. We’re agent sisters, and stuck together for a while wandering the stalls and picking up new books, fun book sleeves by Book Beau, and making sure we had plenty of A+ instagram moments. We found our other agent sister Rachel Hawkins promoting her new book, ROYALS, and managed to get this badass Root Lit group photo:

5E27A61D-FA2D-4349-9B7E-04D96C9B6D39

There were a couple writer parties we went to, as well, which were super fun. I spent some time hanging out with Twitter friends (and fellow #novel19s), but also met a bunch of new and incredibly interesting people who had great things to say about the industry and process in general. Honestly, that was my favorite part of both YALLWest and BookCon–the people!

…well. And this matcha passionfruit donut:

Processed with VSCO with a6 preset

BookCon was a whole different beast.

BookCon is a reader-focused spinoff of BEA (BookExpo America), and it was VERY CROWDED. Think Comic Con for books. I signed up for four autographing sessions and went to precisely zero of them. I did catch a few panels, though–like this one worldbuilding panel with Renée Ahdieh, Sabaa Tahir, Scott Westerfeld, Leigh Bardugo, and Marie Lu, in which I actually (!) took notes.

Seriously, though, I can’t even tell you how many ARC lines I stood in only to get to the front and realize the person right before me took the very last book.

I did manage to snag CAMPFIRE by Shawn Sarles though! I’m really excited. I love horror. So.

Processed with VSCO with a6 preset

I was lucky enough to run into several of my agent siblings at BookCon. I got dinner with Marisa Kanter and Natasha Ngan (whose book GIRLS OF PAPER AND FIRE is coming out this fall–check it out!), who share Taylor as an agent. I also briefly chatted with V.E./Victoria Schwab, who is a Holly agent sister. Ash Poston (HEART OF IRON, GEEKERELLA), also a Holly client, met up with me and we ended up going to dinner with Kaitlyn Sage Patterson (THE DIMINISHED), where we talked about the industry but also about living as an immigrant/expat abroad and being from the US South and creation myths. (Listen. You had to be there. It was great.)

…Seriously. Holly and Taylor have a well-refined affinity for knowing which of their clients are going to get on like houses. Although I’m starting to suspect all their clients are just amazing people.

Speaking of Holly and Taylor, I got to meet up with them both at a party hosted by my publisher on Thursday, during BEA (which I didn’t attend, except for the parties, haha). I honestly felt very adrift in this massive crowded industry party on the roof of this fancy Times Square hotel before H & T showed up as familiar faces.

The venue was freaking gorgeous, though. They had these market lights strung up over the patio, and you were surrounded by skyscrapers so high you couldn’t see their peaks for the fog. And the drinks were….yea. They were good.

I had the privilege of meeting my editor, Jason, and some other people from the Skyscape team. It was great to finally put faces to names…although since I’m faceblind, I hope they forgive me if I ever run into them in some other context and don’t recognize them. (This goes for everyone I met at BookCon or YALLWest actually. I’m sorry in advance!!)

Finally, the Novel Nineteens (2019 YA debut authors) met up for lunch on Sunday, and we managed to take this weirdly-imbalanced but still-good photo together:

Processed with VSCO with a6 preset

And…that’s it!

It was a great experience overall, for both cons, and I can’t wait to attend next year…this time, with a published book.

Events, Festivals and Cons, Publishing

, , , , , , , ,
Comments Off on An update from the festival trenches: YALLWest and BookCon!

pub weekly announcement

I’m so thrilled to announce that THE FEVER KING–the book of my dark, twisted little heart–is going to be published by Skyscape in Spring 2019!

After over two years of writing, rewriting, and revising this book with the help of CPs, Pitch Wars, and my wonderful agents, I’m delighted to have the opportunity to introduce the world to these characters and their story.

THE FEVER KING will appeal to you if you like:

  • Antiheroes
  • Moral ambiguity
  • Revolutionaries
  • Enemies-to-lovers

I’m also really excited about the fact that all three of the main characters in this book are Jewish. I’ve been missing good Jewish rep in fantasy…so I wrote it!

THE FEVER KING is already up on Goodreads. You can add it to your to-read list here!

My Books, Publishing, The Fever King

, , , ,
Comments Off on Good news – THE FEVER KING is going to be published!

Congrats, you got The Call!

This is a very exciting time, and you should be extremely proud of what you’ve accomplished in even getting to this point. You wrote a book! That another human loves! Enough to read it fifty zillion more times and try to sell it! Yay!

But, okay, now what?

Lucky for you, with the help of my friend and fellow PitchWars mentee Ian Barnes, I’ve managed to accrue quite the list of questions to ask agents on an offer call. You may find agents answer these spontaneously, without being asked, while they’re telling you what they love about your book and what they’d want to change about it, so these are just guidelines more than a script.

It’s also worth saying that I’ve referred back to the notes I made on these questions from my call with my current agents at least ten times since I signed with them. It’s super helpful when you’re, for example, mired in the pit of revisions and want to remind yourself that there are nice things about your book, to go back and reread what your agents said in response to the first question.

Here we go:

 

What about my book did you respond to?

Do you have editorial feedback?

What’s your editorial style?

How many clients do you have? (If new: How many clients would you like to have?)

Are you interested in representing only this book or all future books? Career or just this project? Prom date vs partner?

Author brand support beyond this book/series? How many books a year?

What sort of timeline do you envision for this book if I sign with you? Edits first? When would you want them by? When would we go on sub? How involved in the planning/drafting stage do you want to be?

What’s your submission plan? Small rounds? Big? How many?

Do you keep your authors informed about sub? Rejections, offers, who submitted to, etc.?

Where do you think my book fits in the market? How would you pitch it?

After a book sells, how actively involved do you stay in consulting on the publication process?

What if the book doesn’t sell? Or series doesn’t do well?

How do you handle idea generation? Do you want your authors to pitch ideas to you and you vet them? What if you don’t like my next idea? What if another client and I approached you with a similar idea?

What’s your preferred method of communication? Typical response time? Turnover rate on reviewing manuscripts? How often do you want authors to check in with you, and how?

Favorite recent non-client [category/genre] books?

How do you handle foreign rights? Film?

Do you work with a publicist? Do you do any publicity yourself?

Agency agreement: Can I see a copy prior to deciding? Is it per book or client? Would I be signing with the agency or with you? (i.e., if you change agencies, do I go with you?)

What kind of support staff do you have?

How does your agency support the client?

Can I speak to one or two of your clients about their experiences working with you?

(Ideally, someone who has sold and someone who hasn’t yet.)

Average duration of contract negotiation when selling a book?

Do you make any decisions on behalf of the author when evaluating offers from publishers? Will I have the opportunity to review any publishing contract before I sign? And would you or someone at your agency be able to walk me through any of the clauses I might not understand?

(Answers should be no/yes/yes)

If, down the line, you leave your agency for another, what happens to your clients? Do they come with you too or stay?

Do you audit royalty statements?

(Answer should be yes.)

Do you bill me for any submission supplies or costs? Do you take standard 15% commission?

BONUS ROUND

What % of your clients make their living solely from writing?

Why should I sign with you as opposed to another agent?

For Writers, Publishing

, , , , ,
Comments Off on Querying Resources: Questions to ask an agent on a call