Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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Two months in the wild; a moment of contemplation.

I was intending to make this post yesterday, on the actual two-month anniversary of Rosemary and Rue being released into the wild. Tragically, intentions only count in horseshoes and hand grenades, and my post-World Fantasy exhaustion resulted in my spending the evening watching Supernatural and playing "Plants vs. Zombies." I'm actually not all that sorry. I really needed the rest. All that being said...

Rosemary and Rue has now been available for two full months. People I don't know and never will have bought and read my book. (Sometimes I can tell who doesn't know me, because they call me "Mr. McGuire" in their reviews. I find this adorable.) People have loved it, people have hated it, people have called it original and amazing, people have called it the usual urban fantasy fare. I have stopped having chest pains when suddenly confronted with large book displays. I have stopped having stomach pains when stores had other books in my genre, but didn't have mine. I have, in short, calmed down a lot. Much like a woman who spends a year planning her wedding, then finally realizes she can do other things, I am basically recovered.

Which is good, because now it's time to get ready for A Local Habitation. Which is, I think, a better book than Rosemary and Rue (and I do believe Rosemary and Rue to be a good book; I wouldn't have bothered trying to publish it if I didn't). Rosemary and Rue was the book that established my world, and that means that large chunks of textual real estate did have to go toward making the rules coherent and clear; without the rules, the whole towering palace comes tumbling down. It was also the book that made the largest number of introductions—much like inviting all your friends who've never met to the same cocktail party. A Local Habitation gets to skip all that, and go straight to the "smashing stuff" part of our program. I like smashing stuff.

I have learned a lot about self-promotion, event organization, not taking everything personally, keeping myself pointed in the correct direction, organization of the world in general, and not exhausting myself too much. I have learned that no matter how much I feel like I've thrown my book at everyone in the known universe, there will always be people going "Who are you again?" I have learned that a bad review is not the end of the world, and that a good review is exactly as awesome as I always hoped it would be. I have learned to take the time to breathe.

And now, in a hundred and thirty days, I get to learn all these lessons all over again.

Whee!
Tags: a local habitation, contemplation, math is awesome, rosemary and rue, toby daye
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  • 39 comments
I don't think the worldbuilding is "dull," I just think it's not necessarily as plot-centric as the rest of the story. I love worldbuilding. I'd write the Toby RPG core book if they let me.

I think the balancing act varies from book to book, and that I depend on my machete squad and The Agent to keep me firmly on-track.
I do love worldbuilding. Rosemary and Rue is a good book because you've imagined a world that is interesting and consistent and you manage to tell us enough about it that we don't just look confused even in the middle of a rip-roaring plot. When I used "dull", I was responding to the idea that seems to be pretty widespread that exposition is boring, and your own remarks about being fully able to devote yourself to smashing things.
That's fair. I just know the world so well at this point that sometimes, I don't want to slow down and explain; I just want to throw stuff.