Z.A. Maxfield

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Deep Breath, and hold to the count of one thousand .

May 25, 2016 by Z.A. Maxfield

IMG_1095OMG. I am now officially UP FOR AIR.

This is me, powerposing back in February, during a Sisters in Crime event. I don’t know what it is about powerposing that makes it work. I don’t even know if it does. Placebo effect? Who cares?

<———I saw a Ted Talk, so I did this thing to prepare for a pitch session. What’s really hilarious is the face of the woman sitting behind me. I’m sure she was simply trying to concentrate or meditate and I was splashing my prana all over her composure or whatever. I felt bad, but when you see a chance, you take it, right? You make the most of it. I was pitching a story idea to a producer dude. I needed energy. So I stood there like an idiot and I smiled. This photograph was taken by a person who took turns powerposing and taking pictures with me. That is apparently a very popular ted talk. Thank you Dr. Amy Cuddy!

Visit This Ted Talk in a new Window. You’re welcome.

Monday, I sent the first viable draft of My Cowboy Freedom to my editor and I am really really proud of it—for a first draft.

It represents a really critical struggle: one during which I truly believed I might have to look for another job.

I can’t be the only author who ever got lost or imprisoned in a manuscript, who had to write her way free, but wow. When I say the hardest battles I’ve fought have been waged in my head, this is what I’m talking about.

If anyone ever asks me again, “What do you do?” I am going to say, “I’m a goddamn professional writer is what I do.”

Because despite the fact that I lost faith in myself about five percent of the way in, and despite the fact it was a deeper, more meaningful loss of faith than I have ever had, I fought hard to keep my job. I worked, even though I had no enthusiasm. I wrote, even when I had no energy and no ideas and no desire to do it. I finished, even though I wanted to quit.

I got help, because I didn’t kid myself: I needed help. (see writernextdoor.com)

In fact, it has been almost as though *sarcasm font* I have a real job, it’s been THAT hard.

Note, I did NOT have a capricious Sharon Stone Muse to fluff me while I worked, either. (Universe? I don’t want to harp on the Sofia Vergara thing, but OMG, I love her so much. Please and thank you!)

Now for the UGLY truth: I am mother tiger who plays favorites and this job–this book–wasn’t the child I loved best.

Authors have feelings too. I might want to write noir but my brand says Romance. Or what if I’ve discovered a new genre I love or I’ve gotten into the music scene and now I only want to write lyrics to songs. That’s still writing right?

I had to asked myself an important question:

“Am I a professional writer? OR, Am I a person who goes to writing and now I don’t like it so I want whoever is in charge to call my mom to come and pick me up?”

Or maybe I have a way, way worse, question: “Am I a person who had a moment and a muse who left me, and now it’s all gone, poof, bibbity, bobbity, boo, like some magic I’ve used up? Wait!!! Is this shit finite? Am I wasting my preciousssss words on this story, or that story, while I could be writing the other story–the one my heart believes in so completely it’s probably cosmically awful crap?”

Because oh, my god, what if I believe in a story that hard and it actually is Cosmically. Awful. Crap?

No. No. Creativity doesn’t come from outside of the creator. We all know better than that. Even I know better than that. I do.

It’s in precesly those awful moments everyone who has a job–except members of congress, apparently–find out: Shit gets real sometimes and you still have to work.

Deep. Breath. In … Out.

I fixed it. I made myself hang the f*ck on. I worked through uncomfortable writing sessions. I wrote in spurts of 250 wrong words that I was lucky to find on any given day, but now I’m done.

I finished 93K words of a book that I think should probably only be about 85K and now I must begin the unenviable process of taking out all the stuff that doesn’t belong and scouring the universe for more of what does.

And it’s going to be awesome! Or it’s not. Oh my god, maybe it’s really, really not…

And that’s okay. It’s fine. It’s PERFECT.

Because I’ve got more where that came from.

We write to contract. We write to deadline. I have to confess here that I am way, way behind on my deadlines and that’s part of what is adding to my personal shame. I can and will catch up.

I am a great worker. I am a terrific employee. I don’t want to be perceived as anything else, ever.

I am a professional, I keep my promises. And that’s exactly because the business is fickle and fast-changing and audiences are migratory. In the end all I may have to show for my art is my professionalism.

What I can tell you now is I have the power of writing.

I can write anything. It’s my job, not my hobby. It’s a project, a plan, an adventure, a journey I am prepared to take. I am prepared to work like a fiend. I’m prepared to expect adversity. I’m prepared to love my delete button so much I lick my delete button until we achieve simultaneous orgasmic electrocution, that’s how much I’m prepared to love it.

I’m prepared to throw out days and days and days’ worth of work if I think you, dear reader, deserve better from me. And I am prepared to have a goddamn blast doing it.

So that’s one contracted book down. I have five more to go, plus four un-contracted projects. This work will take me through to 2018. But now I know I can do it, deep in my bones, in my heart, in my ancestor’s hearts, where all my stories come from, I know this.

I’ve got this.

From Partially sunlit Orange County, home of the world’s largest mouse house, I say: Let the books begin!

Okay word herd, ye ZAMbassadors, and ZAMsters. I know you’re out there. Chime in. Tell me what you’re writing, Tell me how you’re feeling. Tell me what’s new with you, because I have rejoined the world, and it is very fine indeed.

 

Filed Under: about me, Blog, writers, writing

RT 2016 – Coming up for air

April 24, 2016 by Z.A. Maxfield

IMG_1136It’s been a week since we said good-bye, RT, and I miss you more than I can say! The Rio? Not so much…

This year I took my daughter Zoe with me, and we roomed together. To say my daughter is adorable and amazing and fun to be around is a major understatement. But I’m such a mom!

First off, I should probably qualify my thoughts by starting with the reality! I don’t enjoy much about Las Vegas. I know, I know. It’s a fun place and everyone loves it. But when you don’t gamble and you don’t drink Vegas is just one big smoke-filled titty bar. Or… Mantitty bar. Because the Rio is where they host the Chippendale folks. A lot of people got mileage out of that. Did I mention I was there with my daughter? If strangers see me perving on a muscle-clad dancer half my age that’s one thing. If my daughter sees that??? Quite another.

So, um. I wasn’t really up for the cover model reindeer games. Although the cover models were handsome and personable as always, I’m now at an age where I solicit their advice on where to shop for young men’s clothing and if they’re too thin, I offer soup. And not in a “Stick your finger through the bars, lets see if you’re plump enough for me to eat, Hansel” way, either.

I got to see a whole bunch of people I love. I wish I could name you all. After a week in Vegas I’m lucky I remember I saw you.

And then there’s The Food. WTF is wrong with you people! I ordered eggs Benedict and I got something that had fried mashed potatoes,  a chicken cutlet, deep fried vermicelli noodles, and a cheese blanket.

A CHEESE BLANKET? 

Sounds like something astronauts had to use to keep warm in 1969. 

Tasted like it too.

IMG_1111

Every time I ordered food it was like I’d lost a bet to the house. Burgers? IMPOSSIBLY HUGE. Nachos? Came in a trash can. Room service? Non-existent. Coffee makers? Also non-existent. Thank God for Starbucks protein packs. And existential guilt, which caused my daughter to be very accommodating when I asked her to get me coffee in the morning. Here we are with Cherry Adair, because we were all waiting in a line together to drop our books off for the book fair:

That’s how you worm your way into photos with your idols!

IMG_1115Got some pictures of the Riptide peeps! Amelia Vaughn isn’t in this one, but she was there too, being her adorable self. I won’t be happy until I get a Sarah Frantz Lyons hug, but that’s just me.

<—–That’s Rachel Haimowitz, Chris Muldoon, (locals only, baby!) and Alex Whitehall. This is just before playing my first game of Cards Against Humanity. How I managed to avoid this game for as long as my kids have played, I have no idea.

We won, because YEAH. Our table was definitely all that!!!

Have I mentioned that Riptide Publishing never fails to impress me with their hard work, their attention to detail, and their kindness to their authors? Riptide Rocks. Just Sayin’!

I also got to see my editors from Berkley! Authors wore pink feather boas and since I mostly wear black from head to toe I walked around spitting pink feathers and shedding them off my clothes for the rest of the day! Say hello to Kristine (top) and Cindy (next). They are two of the wisest, kindest, people I know. Thank you for helping bring my cowboys to life! (And readers: look for My Cowboy Freedom in September)

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IMG_1133

 

There was a book signing on Saturday morning and the Penguin party right after. I finished there at about 5:30 and I was just… KNACKERED. AND HERE IS WHERE I APOLOGIZE!!!

Unfortunately, exhaustion and hunger claimed me at that point. Five LONG days in, after three panels, after parties and working crowds and enjoying the company of everyone I had the chance to meet, it all became too much, and I missed the Fan-Tastic Day Party that Dreamspinner puts on every year. I deeply regret any disappointment I may have caused.

The following day, I heard someone who’d traveled from France was looking for me. I am truly, deeply sorry if I missed anyone who wanted to see me there. I heard someone brought book covers for me to sign, and apparently, I missed crossing paths with them at all the events.

To the person who looked for me: I had nothing but a description to go on, but I looked for you the following day, Sunday, and also Monday, until it became necessary for me to check out. I never found you!!! If you like, please contact me through email, zamaxfield @ zamaxfield (dot) com. We can make arrangements somehow to get those signed at my expense.

I am so terribly sorry. More on that if you read this! If anyone knows the person I missed, please let them know! (OR me, so I can contact them) Thanks!

 

Filed Under: Adventure, author friends, Blog, writers, writing

Writing is Weird.

December 5, 2015 by Z.A. Maxfield

DeepDeliverance72lg I’ve said this before. Writing is weird. I mean, a writer grabs words out of the air and arranges them like she’s hooking up train cars to an untested engine. This word must appear before this word, and then this one should come next. THEN that writer must roll that word train out there for everyone else to see if the train runs and well…

Writing is WEIRD.

Writing is especially weird if you have some kind of real life you need to live while you’re doing it.

Don’t get me wrong! Writing is still the best damn job a girl can do in her pajamas. I want to go to work, every single day, (almost). As long as I can make my living, even if it’s not quite as flashy as fictional author Rick Castle’s living, I am perfectly, justifiably, content.

But case in point, I’m editing the third novel in the vampire series I started back in 2009. I wrote the first two books for MLR Press. They were titled Notturno and Vigil, and I was to follow up with a third, Matins. Cue REAL LIFE.

Actually, painfully, cue the grim reaper.

It’s not a secret I was in the process of writing the second book, Vigil, when my mother passed away. Something about the book, or the universe I set it in, or the woman I was then–the optimist, the mother of elementary school kids, the daughter who lost her lifelong best friend and became an orphan in one day–created a barrier between me and those books I couldn’t get past for a long time.

I back-burnered the third book in the Hours series, I shelved the universe, and I put Adin and Donte away because I simply wasn’t the same woman who wrote them.

And I could pull them back out–rescue them from that place of dustballs and sadness–because I realized am never going to be that same woman again.

And that’s why writing is weird.

Writers take everything they experience in life and synthesize it into their work. They mash life and spindle it and fold it and mutilate it. They hold a mirror up to it or they fling it down and stomp on it. That’s the job, man. It’s fun. It’s exciting. And it’s never, ever boring. (Or well, yeah, it really can be but that’s a different blog post.)

At the same time writers are gorging on this big old crazy world buffet and trying to make sense out of it, they’re also required to be inside the drama, interacting with it, or simply reacting to it. You don’t get a time-out from the job of being a writer, even if you step away from the computer, put down the journal, and walk away from any kind of recording device.

Because it’s all still there inside your head.

The author who starts a book on day one isn’t even the same author who continues writing the book ten days later.

The author who writes book one of a series is a wholly different person than the author who pens book seven.

Of course, this is a major oversimplification and I don’t mean to be precious about it. As with a lot of the observations I make, this one took me a little bit by surprise. I’m very happy with how Deep Deliverance is going, but I can’t help but wonder who I’ll be when it’s time to write the next book, and what experiences I will take with me to that place…

Stay tuned for Deep Deliverance, coming out March 30th, 2016 from Samhain Publishing. 

And speaking of OBSERVERS–all caps–I thought I’d share a link to an essay that made a HUGE impression on me when I was a kid. Joan Didion, my favorite contemporary writer, talks about keeping a journal here:

https://www.penusa.org/sites/default/files/didion.pdf

 

Filed Under: about me, Blog, real life, The Vampires, writers, writing Tagged With: The deep series

Sundays are for reflection.

September 13, 2015 by Z.A. Maxfield

ZAM(Iam)-rainbowI had an awesome time at OCCRWA yesterday with my brothers and sisters in Romance.

It’s always so great to hang around with people who are in the trenches, writing books, pitching to agents, querying editors, and doing the dance of publishing. Writing can be an awfully solitary pursuit, though in point of fact, I always hoped it would be more solitary than it is. I know I’ve said this before, but I really had this mental image that I’d be able to write by myself by day and stare out at the stormy sea at night time. I figured I’d have my immediate family around, but that would be it. I saw the romanticized ideal a writer’s life as a walk in the woods, a cabin by a lake. I saw it as uneventful, solitary, reflective. And I saw that as good thing. A peaceful thing.

Well. It turns out writing isn’t exactly the peaceful gig I thought it would be. It’s fraught. It’s anxious. It’s hurry up and wait. It’s brave. It’s a little bit crazy. You’re stringing words together, essentially spewing your most intimate garbage out and other people get to judge it whether you want them to or not, so writing as a career is NOT the pleasant walk with the ghost of Thoreau I thought it was going to be:

I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived. I did not wish to live what was not life, living is so dear; nor did I wish to practise resignation, unless it was quite necessary. I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life, to live so sturdily and Spartan-like as to put to rout all that was not life, to cut a broad swath and shave close, to drive life into a corner, and reduce it to its lowest terms, and, if it proved to be mean, why then to get the whole and genuine meanness of it, and publish its meanness to the world; or if it were sublime, to know it by experience, and be able to give a true account of it in my next excursion.

— Henry David Thoreau, Walden, “Where I Lived, and What I Lived For”

But…

The word peaceful has a positive opposite: Exciting.

And I am always excited to learn more about the craft of writing. I love my job and I love my colleagues. They come from all walks of life. You wouldn’t be able to spot the most successful writers I’ve met by just looking at them. You might just walk past them in the grocery store. The writer at RWA with a hundred published novels doesn’t act like the rock star she is. She’s kind. She’s accesible. She’ll answer questions, even if she’s heard them a hundred times.

One of the traits my colleagues share is generosity. Another is enthusiasm. They model optimism, humor, intelligence, and resilience. These are all characteristics the writers I have met share in abundance. And today, I’m so grateful I get to be part of the community of working professionals that make up the gang at RWA and the community of writers in general.

Thanks to everyone for keeping it lively, keeping it going, and keeping it real.

 

 

 

Filed Under: about me, author friends, Blog, real life, writers, writing Tagged With: colleagues, friends, writers, writing

Breaking a mental log jam…

September 4, 2015 by Z.A. Maxfield

cover-design-for-the-yellow-bookSometimes I play a game with myself. I think about all the problems I’m having in a novel before I go to sleep. Maybe they’re logistical problems, such as how do I get character A from one city to the next within a certain time frame, and sometimes they’re existential problems, such as what does character A care about so much that he will do this one thing I need him to do without it seeming weird?

All writers play games like this. What if? or How about this? or What if that happens?

A lot of times the wandering I do during the day–on the Internet, at the store, or inside my imagination becomes the tinder for whatever idea will eventually come. All I need is the spark. And usually, once I get a good night’s sleep, that first thought I have in the morning will provide the answer I need.

Today’s revelation came as the result of some Aubrey Beardsley prints I saw while I was wasting time surfing the web for fin de siecle erotic art yesterday. And it works.

Filed Under: Blog, writers, writing Tagged With: process, writers, writing

The Writer’s Police Academy

August 26, 2015 by Z.A. Maxfield

WPA_LogoIt WAS Awesome!

I got to play with handcuffs and a thermal imaging device. I got to see a K-9 officer (Franz) and his handler in action. I watched a bank robbery and car chase, a couple of rescues, and some really interesting speakers talk about things that ordinarily don’t come up in polite conversation (why a corpse might burst, for example.)

Wisconsin weather could NOT have been more lovely, and I found myself wanting to look for real estate in the Fox Valley. After all, we’re in a decades long drought in California, and when I saw all that green–green trees, green grass, green, green, green, I fell instantly and irrevocably in love. I’ve always loved Wisconsin because that’s the great state that produced Mr. ZAM, so I of course, I had to get my cheese curds and my Packer Backer T-shirts and my Bucky Badger sweatshirt.

Fox Valley Technical College has to be the most exciting place for the kids who go there. They have a whole fake village, complete with motels, bars, banks, and an actual airplane in which to experience these dramatic rescue and criminal apprehension scenarios. So much thought was put into this little school, it’s truly, truly a gem. I’d love it if my kid, the one who wants to be a firefighter, could go there.

The only problem I had was an iffy ankle (that I had to walk on constantly) and the fear that I wouldn’t know anyone when I got there! But on the very first day, I found Piper Vaughn, and on the second, I found Jamie Lynn Miller and J.D. Ruskin! Could I have been more lucky? I got to see my M/M cohorts there!

At any rate, I had a wonderful, wonderful time. A huge thank you to everyone who worked so hard to make that happen, especially Lee Lofland, Joe Lefevre and those amazing Sisters In Crime! I hope someday, once I’ve taken all this to heart, I’ll write a great scene with accurate technical details and make all of you proud.

Or maybe I can simply keep some of you from tearing your hair out!

I’m back at home now, but plot bunnies seem to be boiling out of the woodwork!

Filed Under: Adventure, real life, writers, writing Tagged With: News, Writer's Police Academy, writing

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