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  • Giving Tuesday and Why I Chose Mary’s House of Hope

    Giving Tuesday and Why I Chose Mary’s House of Hope

    My grandmother was born in 1911, and at fifteen she fell in love and married my grandfather.  It wasn’t that unusual an age to marry in the hills of Arkansas back in the day.  I’ve said before that I’m only one generation away from wearing shoes only in the winter, and I’m not entirely joking.  At fifteen my grandmother was so in love with the man who would become my grandfather she used a box to cover one of his footprints so the rain wouldn’t wash it away.  She was embarrassed that she ever thought that much of him, because soon after they married he started hitting her. By sixteen she’d had her first of five children by him, and the abuse continued through their entire marriage. He was abusive to the children, too, but he saved the worst of it for my grandmother.  She was 4’ 11” and he towered over her, but she was never his victim.  She fought back as hard as she could for all those years. Why didn’t she leave? Because back then there was no place to go, and he would have gotten the children. They were still seen as his property not hers. She wouldn’t leave her kids, because she was afraid of what he’d do to them without her there to protect them. She stayed until my mother, the youngest, was fourteen and old enough to choose where she lived.

    My grandmother told me once, that she left when she was afraid that either he’d kill her, or she’d kill him, and then what would happen to the kids? She endured at least twenty years of abuse to protect her children.  She told me once that if she hadn’t had two sons that she would have hated all men, but she loved her boys and her grandsons, so all men weren’t evil just most of them.  But she allowed my grandfather to visit us, he taught me to catch butterflies and to hold them just so around the middle on the thorax so that I didn’t damage their wings.  I still remember the zebra swallowtail that we caught beating its wings against the screen in the window.  I never caught another one in Indiana.  I can still hear the ping of it hitting the metal, desperate to escape.  When I’d seen it long enough he helped me set it free, because you always set them free, he said. I remember even at five or six being confused that his big hands could be so gentle with butterflies and yet had almost killed my grandmother multiple times.  It took me years of therapy to understand why I write about monsters that turn out not to be, and about people that turn out to be monsters.  When I asked why she let him visit, my grandmother said, “He’s their father and your grandpa. There’s nothing I can do to change that.”

    All five of their children took the grandkids back to visit Papa  in Arkansas in the summer.  I have pictures of me at his house with his favorite dog and one of the cats. He had a white pony that I had named Lulubelle. No, I don’t remember why I chose that name. Papa died when I was ten, and it was only when the family gathered for the funeral that the grandkids discovered that Lulubelle was also Snowball, and several other names.  Every set of grandkids had a pony at Papa’s house, but since we never visited at the same time it was the same pony. I don’t know what that says about my grandfather, but he could be charming. He was well liked by everyone except his wife and kids.

    If my grandmother had had a women’s shelter to go to with her children all those years ago it would have made a great deal of difference to her and my uncles, my aunts, and my mother. That’s why my charity is Mary’s House of Hope at A Safe Place.  So that the women enduring abuse today, right now can take shelter with their children and their pets. Most shelters won’t take pets, and some women stay to protect their fur kids, just like their human kids. It’s one of the reasons I want to support this place, because you bring all that you love. I couldn’t change what happened to my grandmother, but you can help me make a change for other women, other children, other families. Together we can make sure there is someplace for them to go where they are safe.

  • Fear, Bravery, and the Pikes Peak Writers Conference

    Fear, Bravery, and the Pikes Peak Writers Conference

    This is a blog about things I haven’t spoken of publicly before. Things that I was advised not to share ever, but sometimes not talking about something makes it grow larger until you can’t work around it. I’d been meaning to write this blog and post the attached video for a year, but I just kept putting it off, and then a woman on Twitter posted about her experience. She thought she was a coward, but bravery only exists in the face of fear, and her bravery helped me find my own. She shared her experience with a very creepy man that had verbally assaulted her in her own home. He never touched her, no bruises to show, just horrible sexual language that he had no right to say to her. She was trying to explain to some men that a woman doesn’t have to be actually physically assaulted to feel unsafe or even to feel violated. She made her point, and my first similar experience was when I was only ten-years-old thanks to an obscene phone caller that reduced me to hysterics. It would be the last time I was allowed to come home after school by myself for years after that call. My family and I both worried that he would come find me and do what he’d talked about. Women are more likely to be the victim of sexual based crimes, it’s just the truth. I learned at a tender age that the world was not safe, and there would be other incidents as I grew older that confirmed that even people you knew weren’t always safe havens, but this blog isn’t about that, not really. The every day caution that women have to exert to go through the world is just the nearest shared experience that I could come up with to try to explain how being famous feels when it goes wrong. Okay, how it feels to me when it goes wrong. I’m sure there are celebrities that handle it much better than I do. I am sharing my experience here, my feelings, because in the end that’s all any of us can share.

    This blog is an introduction of sorts to the talk I gave at the Pike’s Peak Writer’s Conference in Colorado last year. My husband filmed the talk with his phone, so that’s the quality of it (the volume is low), but it was the first time I spoke publicly about a lot of things that had happened to me in my career. The topic of all the key notes speeches that weekend were supposed to be on things that made you almost give up writing, like rejections, but Mary Robinette Kowal had done a hilarious speech the night before on that stumbling block, so I had to scrap my speech and start over. (By the way I just finished reading her book, The Calculating Stars, and I highly recommend it.) It forced me to think seriously about what had almost made me stop writing. Rejection was nothing compared to it. I decided to talk about it for the very first time in front of a room full of people I’d just met, or didn’t know at all. Now, I’m sharing it with all of you, with the whole internet, because it’s time I took back these pieces of myself that got broken. The only way I know to recover that part of myself is to write about it, and I can’t do that if I’m not wiling to talk publicly about it, so here we go.

  • Monday was a heck of a week…

    Monday was a heck of a week…

    Monday began with a dawn phone-call from Jonathon’s dad telling us that there’d be a death in the family. Jon’s aunt had been sick for a very long time so it wasn’t a complete surprise, but still the final call always seems to catch you off guard. We got up and Jon started making phone calls to spread the news, and then the next bad news.

     

    One of our good friends, one of my closest friends had been in a car accident with her husband and two of their youngest grandchildren. They were all alive, which was great news, but they were all in the hospital, so we rushed to find out how hurt everyone was. Monday’s supposed to be tough, but this was ridiculous.

     

    The grandchildren had broken legs, but are both home now. My friend and her husband are not so lucky. He’s got a lot of vertebra damage in his back, but the doctor thinks it will heal with a lot of rehab, and no need for surgery. That’s great news, right? A lot of relief, because when we first heard the news we were not sure the outcome would be this hopeful. My friend seemed better everyday. Yesterday she seemed like her old self even with the pain of her injuries, especially the broken ribs. We talked books, writing, history, and science, the usual stuff we’ve talked about for thirty years of friendship. I was going to go see her after FMA (Filipino Martial Arts) and gym this evening. My instructor handed me my certificate for third level tonight. I was looking forward to getting a frame and putting it up on my, love me wall. I used to call it an atta boy wall, but was informed that wasn’t PC, so fine it’s my love me wall. I met Jon at gym for a workout and while there found out that my friend had a fever. The doctor was worried that she has pneumonia. My friend has the worst case of asthma that I’ve ever personally seen in action. She is not a person who needs cracked ribs with a side of pneumonia. No one needs it, but someone with compromised lung capacity really doesn’t need it. Yes, I’m worried.

     

    It started to snow big, fluffy flakes while we were at gym, but had stopped by the time we were finished. I hit the grocery store after gym. Jon went for home. Our Wednesday was going as much as planned as we could make it considering the weather forecast was predicting another snow apocalypse. I hate them using the term for a heavy snow fall, or even a snow storm. Snow apocalypse should be saved for when the super volcano blows and sends us into a second ice age. The grocery store was the usual mad house of a snow emergency, so everything took longer. I was still hoping the storm would miss us, since the funeral for Jon’s aunt is tomorrow early.

     

    I was still debating on if I could swing by the hospital, or should I wait if they find out whether the pneumonia is the contagious variety, or if she would even be up for visitors. When I had bronchitis with the tiniest edge of pneumonia a few years back I hadn’t been much for company. It started to sleet as I loaded the groceries into the car. I decided to run the food home before I made the finally decision on the hospital run for the night.

     

    I’ve just taken the dogs out and we’ve already got an inch to an inch and a half of snow. It’s hard to tell just how much has fallen because the flakes are still huge and fluffy. At least the ice has stopped falling with it. I’m staying home tonight and hospital visits will depend on how much of the downy flakes fall tonight. Did I mention that the funeral is early tomorrow morning, or that it’s at least an hour and a half south of us on clear roads without traffic? Further south in our state is supposed to get hit even harder than we are here in St. Louis.

     

    It’s only Wednesday, can we just call this week over and declare a four day weekend, please?

  • 25 Years Since Guilty Pleasures Was First Published

    25 Years Since Guilty Pleasures Was First Published

    We’re celebrating twenty-five years since Guilty Pleasures was first published. It came out in time for Halloween that year, and I got to add that to all the other reasons October is my favorite month. I love autumn. Late summer as the weather begins to turn cooler all the way through the end of October is my favorite time of year. I was raised without air conditioning, so the heat and humidity of summer going away was part of my love of fall. It’s easier to bundle up in jackets and sweaters for warmth than to stay cool in less clothing. But September was the beginning of fog. Sometimes the fogs were so thick that the start of school would be delayed for hours. Once I was old enough to drive, the fog wasn’t so fun; but when I was younger I thought fog was magical. It turned the ordinary into something mysterious. A foggy world was full of hidden dangers, monsters, or maybe a fantasy world that you could accidentally walk into through that soft, wet, gray cloud cover. From the trees blazing with color, fog, rain, cooler temperatures, it always made my muse happy even before I realized that I wanted to be a writer.

    But now autumn means something else to me: boot weather! Boots and shoes in general weren’t that important to me until after I created the character, Jean-Claude. He walked on stage fully formed and very who he was from the first scene. He was a serious clothes horse from the beginning and elegantly fashionable. I was none of these things. I have pictures to prove that I dressed by picking the T-shirt on the top of the pile, jeans, and tennis shoes. I never wore makeup. I just didn’t care. I was raised that what I looked like didn’t matter, what I could do was what mattered. And then Jean-Claude came into my life and onto the pages of my novel. To be able to design his clothes and keep him dressed in the style to which he demanded. I bought my first copy of Vogue and other fashion magazines. I watched fashion shows on TV. I so could have used Fashion TV back then, but it was the late 1980s, so I went to the library to find research books on clothing through the ages, and costuming. I’d never worn a pair of stilettos, but researching for Jean-Claude opened up the world of shoes to me, and his voice in my head was what helped me learn to walk in heels higher than three inches. Writing him as a character made me more interested in clothes, makeup, even trying to gain control of my curls. I don’t think I would have needed a second closet just for shoes if it wasn’t for researching clothes, and especially boots, for Jean-Claude. So, now autumn doesn’t just mean, “season of mists and mellow fruitfulness,” as John Keats wrote, or apple picking and apple cider, or a dozen other wonderful things. Now it means boot weather.

  • Deal Announcment

    Deal Announcment

    Publishers Weekly had an exclusive on this news, so I couldn’t share it until after they published it yesterday.

    • Hamilton Re-ups At Berkley

    Bestseller Laurell K. Hamilton inked a new three-book deal with her editor at Berkley, Cindy Hwang. The North American rights agreement, which Merrilee Heifetz at Writers House handled, will bring fans her first new series since 1999. The new books feature Detective Samuel Havelock, who works in the Meta­physical Coordination Unit. Berkley said Havelock exists “in a universe where heaven, hell, and our own world converge,” and “he is all we have keeping the Apocalypse at bay.” Also included in the agreement is a novel in Hamilton’s Anita Blake , Vampire Hunter series and a third book, which Berkley said is “yet to be determined.” Hamilton, according co Berkley, has sold more than 20 million books.

     

  • Thank You!

    Thank You!

    Thank you to everyone that came out to see us on tour. I say us, because my husband, Jonathon and our security person were by my side at every event. Security person is nameless at his request. Jonathon especially got pulled into the limelight to help answer questions, but then we’re starting to plan our twenty year anniversary celebration, so we’ve been each other’s supplemental brains for a long time. Most of you married over ten years will understand exactly what I mean by that. Thanks to everyone that asked questions, that told us how much you loved Anita Blake and all the characters in the series. Thank you for sharing how much the books had touched you and your lives. I am still honored that my imaginary friends are your friends, too. I never planned or dreamed that my fiction could mean so much to so many people, and impact their real lives.

    I am grateful to all the women who have told me that until they read Anita Blake they didn’t know that women could be strong, and that it’s helped them be more kick-ass. I’ve now lost track of the number of women who have told me they’ve left abusive relationships because they knew Anita wouldn’t take it. Blessed be.

    I am thankful for the men who have told me that showing male characters that are abusive survivors has helped them find a voice of their own. When I first wrote Nathaniel Graison as a character I had no idea he would be as important to Anita, to me, to the series, or to all of you. He’s become not only a fan favorite but a role model for hope to real life people that have backgrounds of abuse or addiction. We’ve watched him grow healthier, happier and create a life for himself that is full of so many good things. It didn’t occur to me that it was a big deal for Nathaniel to talk about going to a therapist and how much it was helping him. I’ve benefitted from therapy and its just another kind of doctor. If you’re allergic to something you go to an allergist, if you break your arm you see an orthopedist, if you have an emotional wound you see a therapist. It’s just that simple to me. I had no idea that having Nathaniel talk about it on paper, and showing his own healing through the stories would impact real people. For my imaginary bestie Nathaniel and me, thank you to everyone that has told us that they’ve sought therapy because he did. To those women and men that told me they have gotten help for their addictions and gotten clean because if Nathaniel could do it, they could try – I am humbled and so happy that Nathaniel’s journey could help you along your own path.

    To all those people over the years that have told me that my books have helped them through some of the darkest times in their lives, thank you, and you’re welcome. I had no idea that my stories would ever have that level of impact on anyone’s real life. The first few times someone told me that my books literally saved their lives, or their sanity, I didn’t know how to respond. I write paranormal thrillers, not self-help books, so I was confused. It’s taken me years to realize that I don’t have to understand what my books and characters mean to you, that it’s about you, not me on this one. You reminded me that books saved me once, too. They showed me better ways to live, to think, to feel, to be, and helped entertain me in the darkest of times. I don’t know why it didn’t occur to me that I might do the same for other people someday, but it didn’t. Thank you to all of you that told me how important this series, and the Merry Gentry series, has been and continues to be in your lives.

    Thanks to everyone that bought my book the first week and helped us get on the New York Times List and the USAToday List! Thank you to all of you that wrote into my FaceBook page, or Instagram and said you were waiting for payday to buy the book. I remember when a hardback book was something I saved up for, too, so thanks for spending your hard earned money on Serpentine. Thanks to everyone that will buy the book and help us stay on the Lists!

  • Serpentine Tour – Blog One

    Serpentine Tour – Blog One

    Serpentine, my latest novel hits the shelves on August 7th! I can’t wait for you to finally get to read it. There were so many times that I’d write something fun, or surprising and I’d want to Tweet it, or blog about it, but I knew that was a nope. Why? Because it was usually something that would give away the mystery, or character development, or the big reveal. When a certain character finally came on stage it was everything I could do not to Tweet it, or do a quick video for Instagram, but I knew that if I could have behaved myself on Twitter, I’d totally have spilled the beans on a video. So I stayed offline and behaved myself, because I wanted you to be able to read it yourself for the first time, not have me do spoilers months, or even a year ahead of time. But now, the tour for Serpentine is about to begin, and I still won’t be able to talk about spoilers, because not everyone will have read the book yet. Arrgghhh!

    So now I have to decide, do I let you and I talk about Serpentine as if we’ve all read the book, or do I police us so we don’t spoil things for those who haven’t finished the book yet? I wish we could all sit down with a cup of coffee, or tea, and just talk about the book, but I can’t talk to each one of you personally, so how do we do it? I’m also doing interviews in print and recorded, some of which have a few spoilers in them. Not like who/what done it, but character interactions and some reveals about plot, so as those come out then we should be able to talk more freely at the signings and tour events. But the first event in Huntington Beach Barnes & Noble (Tomorrow night at 7-10 pm more info in the link) that has to be spoiler free; right? Right? Come on, right? Yes, right, because most people will not have read Serpentine all the way through yet. We have to behave ourselves and let everyone catch up, but I think as the tour continues we might all finally be on the same page. Or not, we’ll see. I’m thinking that maybe you can give your opinion in the comments below. Let me know who’s having time to finish the book so I can gauge whether it would be fair to talk about spoilers at the tour events.

  • Serpentine Virtual Signing

    Serpentine Virtual Signing

    Serpentine Virtual Signing

    Click on the image above  or simply visit https://www.left-bank.com/laurellkhamilton and reserve your copy of Serpentine today!

     

  • NOIR FATALE

    NOIR FATALE

    This was announced Last Week on Larry Corriea’s Blog, NOIR FATALE A Noir Scifi Fantasy Anthology.

    The silky note of a saxophone.  The echoes of a woman’s high heels down a deserted asphalt street.  Steam rising from city vents to cloud the street-lit air.  A man with a gun.  A dame with a problem…

    Noir. 

    We humans are collectively fascinated by the seamy underside of society as represented in stories and films.  Names such as Raymond Chandler, Dashiel Hammett, The Maltese Falcon, The Big Sleep, Sam Spade… these have inhabited our collective consciousness for decades.  Humanity, it seems, loves the dark.  And within the dark, one figure stands out: that of the femme fatale.

    Kacey Ezell and Larry Correia are editing an anthology of all new, noir themed sci-fi and fantasy short stories titled Noir Fatale, and we’ve got a great line up of authors who will be contributing:

    David Weber
    Laurell K. Hamilton
    Sarah Hoyt
    Larry Correia
    Kacey Ezell
    Robert Buettner
    Alistar Kimball
    Griffin Barber
    Michael Massa
    Hinkley Correia
    Christopher L. Smith
    Patrick Tracy
    Steve Diamond
    Michael Ferguson

    Larry and Laurell have enjoined sharing the spotlight on panels at Conventions, and dinner tables at various restaurants, over the years.
    Larry and Laurell
    – Jonathon

  • When the Demons Come – Memorial Day 2018

    When the Demons Come – Memorial Day 2018

    Once I loved a military man. My husband and I dated him after he’d already come home with his wound and his medal. We’d go to sleep in a twist of sheets and warm bodies, me in the middle of my two men, but he’d wake in the middle of the night driven by dreams of those that didn’t come home with him. Things done and things left undone. I’d wake to find his side of the bed empty and I’d go searching in the darkened rooms. I’d usually find him on the couch not sleeping, but not wanting to wake anyone else. I’d coax him back to bed, asking him to let me hold him, even if he didn’t sleep, just come back to bed. I learned his breathing, the feel of his body, the change in weight as the demons came. If I could catch it soon enough I could pet him back to sleep. Caress him until his breathing evened out, his body relaxed beside me, and I’d cuddle back down between my two men. Some of the most peace I’d known was sleeping between my husband and our soldier. Until by the time we parted ways I missed his snoring, and had to relearn how to sleep without it.

    I love a military man, he’s my best friend. I knew him before he put on a uniform, and I’ve known him ever since. He trusts me and I trust him. He trusts me enough that he knew he could call on the day that he had his gun in his hand. He didn’t tell me he had it, I heard the metallic clack-clack as the slide went back on the gun. There’s no other sound like it and I knew it meant he’d put a bullet in it and it was live. I knew he was sitting there on the other end of the phone with a loaded gun. I remember the spurt of fear, the panic as I thought, what do I do, what do I say? First, I told him I knew what that sound was, he’d known I would. No bullshit between us, no lies. I knew he was sitting there thinking about it, but I trusted him enough to believe I was his call for help, not his suicide note. I heard the slide go back again, knew he’d ejected the live bullet. I breathed a sigh of relief and kept talking. I tried doing the whole, all you have to live for speech. I tried to be comforting. The slide went back again. And that was it, I called him names, I asked how could he do to me what his friend’s death had done to him? How could he make his family feel the pain of loss he was feeling right then? I used some more colorful phrases, some of which he’d help me prefect over the years. I got angry at him, fuck softness and hand holding. If this was it, we were both going down fighting. I heard the slide go back again, and I yelled at him some more, that we weren’t doing this again, and he agreed. He put the gun up. I told him if he took the easy way out and I didn’t, then I won. I’d be the better man. What military man wants to lose to a girl?

    I love another military man, and the demons wake him, too. The loss of his brother in arms haunts him. I’ve held him while he railed against the loss. I’ve held him while he screamed his rage at those that didn’t come home, and why was he alive, why him and not them? I helped hold him and finally screamed myself, until he could hear me. That I was glad he was alive. That I was glad he was in my life. That his brother would want him to live. That his lost friend wouldn’t want him to die with him, but to live, and to keep on living.

    Memorial Day is to honor the dead who have fallen in defense of our country and our freedom, but we don’t just lose our soldiers to the violence of war. Every day twenty veterans commit suicide. Every day an average of twenty of our brave men and women that have served in our armed forces take their own lives. Every day, not just Memorial Day, not just Veterans Day, but every day.

    We need to lower these numbers. We need to figure out how to help the men and women that we send to fight our battles for us.

    If you, or someone you know, may be considering suicide, please reach out.

    Veterans Crisis Line

    Call 1-800-273-8255 ext 1

    Or text 838255

    Mission 22

    http://www.mission22.com

    Battle In Distress

    http://www.battleindistress.org

    Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors

    http://www.taps.org