Siegfried Sassoon, “Trench Duty”

Trench Duty

Shaken from sleep, and numbed and scarce awake,
Out in the trench with three hours’ watch to take,
I blunder through the splashing mirk; and then
Hear the gruff muttering voices of the men
Crouching in cabins candle-chinked with light.
Hark! There’s the big bombardment on our right
Rumbling and bumping; and the dark’s a glare
Of flickering horror in the sectors where
We raid the Boche; men waiting, stiff and chilled,
Or crawling on their bellies through the wire.
‘What? Stretcher-bearers wanted? Some one killed?’
Five minutes ago I heard a sniper fire:
Why did he do it? … Starlight overhead–
Blank stars. I’m wide-awake; and some chap’s dead.

–Siegfried Sassoon, Counter-Attack and Other Poems, 1918.

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Shamefully Biased Review of The Duke & The Pirate Queen

Today, I have a guest post at the Novelists, Inc. Blog: Making Time.

And now for our primary feature:

A Completely, Shamefully Biased Review of The Duke & The Pirate Queen…by My Good Friend To Whom I Give Free Childcare, Like, All the Time (To Give You Some Idea of the Magnitude of This Gift and Thus Her Affection For Me, We Refer to Her Adorable Tots as The Monkeys)

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The Duke and the Pirate Queen, the third novel by Victoria Janssen, from Harlequin Spice!

I am so excited about this book.

The characters first appeared in Janssen’s 2008 book The Duchess, Her Maid, the Groom and Their Lover. In my LiveJournal review of The Duchess…, I described Duke Maxime as “a wild Neptune-like old flame who rules a vibrant seaport” and Captain Imena Leung as “a tall bald Asian pirate queen.” But they’re even more fabulous than that. Captain Leung’s shaved head is covered with tattoos, relics of her time as a privateer. Maxime’s easy magnetism, not to mention his generous endowments, made some readers of the first book wonder why he wasn’t the romantic lead. Well, here he is, a truly fitting match for the most coolly powerful heroine I’ve ever read in a romance novel.

Behold the cover. Just behold the cover.

Yes, that’s Captain Leung all right, muscular from rigging and repairing her own ship, barefoot and inked. I asked oracne where she got the idea for the tattoos and she said, “Maybe the last Rush Hour movie, a movie with a woman with a map tattooed on her scalp. It seemed that her value was reduced to what she had tattooed on her, and I wanted to strike against that: ‘These are the things I choose.'”

At 30, Captain Leung is the youngest of the Janssen heroines; the Duchess and the chemist from The Moonlight Mistress were both 40ish. Janssen writes women, empowered, experienced women who can handle role reversals and adult decisions. I love Captain Leung’s confidence as she navigates the riotous world of the novel, the polyglot seaport culture and the pirates on the high seas and the court intrigues.

Janssen wrote about the sources for her world-building for this book and I can see it all in the novel. She has two degrees in anthropology, a feminist education, 20+ years of experience writing fiction and reviews, hundreds of talks delivered at literary conventions, deep grounding in science fiction and fantasy…and reads 120-150 books each year…and all of this fuses into a playful confidence in constructing a historical romance set in a history of her own invention.

Janssen’s feminism, smut-writing (she’s published many short stories as Elspeth Potter), and familiarity with SF challenges to gender conventions make her a FANTASTIC romance writer. She establishes equality immediately by comparing Captain Leung’s restricted rights as a woman to Duke Maxime’s obligation to marry according to his king’s wishes, and she deals with gender smartly and naturally through all of her characters, within the Harlequin Spice specifications.

There are geek-writerly pleasures aplenty. The fellow smut peddlers out there might recognize many of her points about writing sex scenes. I enjoyed the names she found for her characters: Chetri! Seretse! Lady Diamanta Picot, who throws a jeweled pomegranate at Maxime’s head when he rejects her!

I confess that I’m not always a fan of genre romance, but I’ve gone back to this novel twice since I read it…for the characterizations and the dialogue. I laugh every time at how Captain Leung is forever a badass, except when her mother disapproves of her. The narrator has some fun with Maxime’s wryness about his enormous cock.

We get fascinating glimpses of minor characters such as Venom, an absurd young pirate who is sulky and pretentious, lethal and despicable all at once. I know I’m going to re-read this book again, and not only because a friend wrote it, and yes, that does surprise me. Romances aren’t usually on my re-read list.

View the original post here.

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Me, I’m…blushing too hard to comment.

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Interview: Victoria Janssen

I’m a guest today at Risky Regencies, talking about “Research Mashups.”

As for this blog, remember how, a while back, I mentioned that a journalist friend was helping me with promotion? On the theory that she knows me really well and is willing to tell everyone how great I am, to cancel out my authorly shyness?

Well, she interviewed me. Below is the result.

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Captain Leung, the coolly powerful privateer, silk-clad and barefoot. Maxime, the charismatic, magnificently endowed ruler of a dukedom by the sea. In The Duke and the Pirate Queen, Victoria Janssen’s third novel, these characters take the spotlight in a vibrant world even more lush than The Duchess, Her Maid, The Groom and Their Lover, the Harlequin Spice novel where they first appeared.

Q: These two characters are unusual and very equally matched. At what point while writing The Duchess did you realize that Maxime gets his own book?

VJ: Probably close to the end. I didn’t think about him much until I had to write him. It was more that I wanted Captain Leung to have her own book and I thought – who would be a good partner for her?

Q: Some reviewers thought Maxime was such an alpha male that he should have been the romantic lead in the first book.

VJ: They’re totally wrong about him being alpha. There’s a section I had to cut from The Duchess in which he is completely not your typical Alpha Hero. (You can download it for free from my website.) He’s much more of a diplomat than “my testosterone drives me to be in charge.” So really he operates more in the sort of traditional female role of negotiation and emotional bonds.

Q: The cover art is compelling. It shows Captain Leung’s power and her muscles. How did you decide on her appearance?

VJ: I wanted Imena to look powerful and atypical of romance heroines, to make it clear she was different. So at a glance you would know that this was somebody interesting and there were other possibilities for women in this world. Also, I described her in a way that I thought Sylvie [a character appearing in both The Duke and the Pirate Queen and The Duchess, Her Maid, The Groom and Their Lover, Janssen’s first Harlequin Spice title] would find hot!

Q: What made you think of having Captain Leung’s head be shaven and covered in tattoos?

VJ: Maybe the last Rush Hour movie, a movie with a woman with a map tattooed on her scalp. It seemed that her value was reduced to what she had tattooed on her, and I wanted to strike against that: “These are the things I choose.” And tattoos on your scalp…you have got to be tough to get that done.

Q: At 30, Captain Leung is the youngest of your heroines. What made you decide to write older characters?

VJ: I wanted to write about somebody in that stage of life because fewer romance, or even erotica, authors do. Not callow, but she’s not at that age where she’s looking back in regret, like Camille [The Duchess]. Stories about older women are more neglected in our society. There’re fewer role models.

Q: As fantastical as this book is, it also works as a story about a thirtyish career woman who is enormously competent at her job, going home to her usually unconventional parents who have turned suddenly conventional about pressuring her to get married. Is that what you intended?

VJ: Anytime you’re writing fantasy or science fiction, you’re using an imaginary world to write about us, a lens or a mirror to make you think about the issue from an unexpected angle, like light shooting off a mirror at an angle. I try not to force it, but once I find it in what I’ve written, I can emphasize it a bit, to give the characters more depth and to develop a theme. Sometimes I find unexpected things about the characters this way.

Q: Is that what happened with the Venom/Cassidy character? You showed him to be rich and shabby at once, pretentious but lethal, especially with your dialogue.

VJ: To me, dialogue is almost inextricable from characterization. The bit on the desert island, for instance, where Maxime tells Captain Leung a big secret – I didn’t come up with that until I was writing that scene. I often discover things through dialogue. I’ll have them conversing back and forth and then my back brain speaks up. If I try to direct it too much, it gets really dry and flat.

Q: In an alternate universe, if the Squirting Squid tavern were real, where would it be?

VJ: Way south of South Street, one of those blocks where there aren’t any businesses left but a single bar. Except if was Philly, the drinks would be good, and the food would be, too – it would have been turned into a gastropub!

Q: Who are some of your favorite romance writers, and what did you learn from them?

VJ: Judith Ivory. I learned you don’t have to have a pleasant hero or heroine. You don’t have to like them immediately to be involved in the book.

Laura Kinsale. You can have cracktastic plots. You can have things in a romance novel that include penguins in the Falkland Islands, ninjas, heroes with vertigo. Very freeing.

Carla Kelly. The knack of writing about ordinary people.

Georgette Heyer. Fun with cross-dressing and banter.

Q: By the end of your career, how many books would you like to have published?

VJ: I cannot imagine an answer to that question. I can’t imagine an end. If I had to decide how many, I’d have to decide right now which ideas to use and which not to use.

Q: What are some things you would like to write next?

VJ: A Victorian-set romance with a lady adventurer and a candy magnate who’s also a spy…a bitter and angry candy magnate. A space opera. A young adult novel, with lots of angst. Definitely a Western, possibly steampunk or fantasy — a weird Western. And something with woolly mammoths.

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If you’ve got questions for my FAQ, ask them here!

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"The World Beyond the Story" and Release Day!

Today, I posted on “The World Beyond the Story” at Ella Drake’s blog.

And it’s release day for The Duke and The Pirate Queen! Imagine fireworks going off!

“Captain Imena Leung, imperial privateer, is a woman who answers to no one – until her parents decree that she must marry and give up her ship. Her employer, the magnificent Duke Maxime, is expected to marry according to his king’s wishes. Neither is free to love as they please. But when Captain Leung learns of a plot to assassinate Maxime, she abducts him and takes to the seas to protect him. And aboard her ship, fighting to survive pirates, storms, and the sex rituals they encounter on a desert island, they learn to live by nobody’s rules except their own.

In this sequel to The Duchess, Her Maid, The Groom and Their Lover (December 2008), Janssen creates an erotic world aglow with even more lush details. But even in this fantasy setting, the characters resonate with the maturity and the subtle, wry sweetness that Janssen’s readers have come to expect. In Captain Leung, Janssen shows the full glory of a powerful woman meeting her match.”

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"Writing Explicitly" at Kate Elliott’s blog


Today, I’m posting on “Writing Explicitly” at Kate Elliott’s blog – visit, comment!

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"Sexy Pirates" at The Smutketeers


I’m a guest of The Smutketeers all this week talking about “Sexy Pirates” – and am also giving away a print copy of The Duke & The Pirate Queen. Stop by their blog to enter!

(Contest is now closed.)

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Siegfried Sassoon, "Haunted"

Haunted

Evening was in the wood, louring with storm.
A time of drought had sucked the weedy pool
And baked the channels; birds had done with song.
Thirst was a dream of fountains in the moon,
Or willow-music blown across the water
Leisurely sliding on by weir and mill.

Uneasy was the man who wandered, brooding,
His face a little whiter than the dusk.
A drone of sultry wings flicker’d in his head.
The end of sunset burning thro’ the boughs
Died in a smear of red; exhausted hours
Cumber’d, and ugly sorrows hemmed him in.

He thought: ‘Somewhere there’s thunder,’ as he strove
To shake off dread; he dared not look behind him,
But stood, the sweat of horror on his face.

He blunder’d down a path, trampling on thistles,
In sudden race to leave the ghostly trees.
And: ‘Soon I’ll be in open fields,’ he thought,
And half remembered starlight on the meadows,
Scent of mown grass and voices of tired men,
Fading along the field-paths; home and sleep
And cool-swept upland spaces, whispering leaves,
And far off the long churring night-jar’s note.

But something in the wood, trying to daunt him,
Led him confused in circles through the thicket.
He was forgetting his old wretched folly,
And freedom was his need; his throat was choking.
Barbed brambles gripped and clawed him round his legs,
And he floundered over snags and hidden stumps.
Mumbling: ‘I will get out! I must get out!’
Butting and thrusting up the baffling gloom,
Pausing to listen in a space ’twixt thorns,
He peers around with peering, frantic eyes.

An evil creature in the twilight looping,
Flapped blindly in his face. Beating it off,
He screeched in terror, and straightway something clambered
Heavily from an oak, and dropped, bent double,
To shamble at him zigzag, squat and bestial.

Headlong he charges down the wood, and falls
With roaring brain—agony—the snap’t spark–
And blots of green and purple in his eyes.
Then the slow fingers groping on his neck,
And at his heart the strangling clasp of death.

–Siegfried Sassoon, The Old Huntsman and Other Poems, 1918

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Siegfried Sassoon, "To My Brother"

To My Brother

Give me your hand, my brother, search my face;
Look in these eyes lest I should think of shame;
For we have made an end of all things base.
We are returning by the road we came.

Your lot is with the ghosts of soldiers dead,
And I am in the field where men must fight.
But in the gloom I see your laurell’d head
And through your victory I shall win the light.

–Siegfried Sassoon, The Old Huntsman and Other Poems, 1918

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Things I Like To Write About

I’m trying to find my bliss.

It’s been so long since I’ve deliberately sought out inspiration on this scale that it feels like something new! I haven’t had time to come up with a totally new project since back in 2007. Ever since then, I’ve been writing from book to book, under contractual demands. It’s freeing to imagine all the different things I could be writing right now; or, at least, after I finish a couple of short-term writing goals from the to-do list.

I’m trying a bit of free-association. What have I written about in the past that gave me great joy? What thrills me when I read about it? What things/situations/events make me eager to write? And can I reduce some of my free association to a list of Things I Like which might coalesce into a new idea?

World War One
losing and finding family
colonialism
space opera
horses
social class
psychic powers
hats
cities
postwar traumas
formal address
woolly mammoths

…and the list goes on.

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Happy Thanksgiving!

And in other news, Erotic Exploits is now available for the Nook. If you have a Nook, and are willing to download the free sample, please let me know if the formatting looks all right or is terrible. The preview function does not seem to be working for me.

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