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Karen Harbaugh, Author About books, writing, and other random things

Karen Harbaugh

Karen Harbaugh


Last Updated: 4/21/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: Married
State: Washington
Country: US
Signup Date: 12/3/2006

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April 11, 2009 - Saturday 

Current mood:  happy
Category: Music
Won 3rd place! Which is pretty danged good considering they'd only been together as a band for a couple of months, whereas the other competing bands have been together for years. Plus, it's a competition for bands in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. They had heck of a lot of competition; it means they were serious contenders.

Apparently, the scores for first, second, and third were the closest ever in Battle of the Bands history. I hear they were 93, 92, and 91, with United State of Mind scoring 91.

If they're this good now, they're going to be REALLY good in a year or two.
April 10, 2009 - Friday 

Category: Music
Another newspaper article about my kid's band, The United State of Mind, in the Daily Evergreen.

Looks like they've got some buzz. From what I understand there should be streaming media or a podcast of the Battle of the Bands at WSU, Pullman, WA. Don't know where, though! Hmph.

But yeah, I'm a proud mom. :-)



If the link doesn't take you to the article, do a site search for "United State of Mind."

--Karen H.
April 8, 2009 - Wednesday 

Current mood:  pleased
Category: Music
My son is in a band--the United State of Mind--and they're one of 8 finalists in the Battle of the Bands! They'll be playing at the Compton Building at Washington State University in Pullman, WA, this Friday, April 8, and the show starts at 7 pm.

I'm so happy for him. They've even got a MySpace page at:

http://www.myspace.com/nomad0901.

The recordings are okay--it's all they could afford at the time (hey, they're struggling students!)--but their songs are good, and I'm not just saying that because one of the band members is my son. :-D I especially think "Yellow Ribbon" is well-done, and quite poignant--it was written by their lead singer. My son, Derek, plays the electric guitar parts.

So, check it out!

--Karen
March 15, 2007 - Thursday 

Current mood:  artistic
Category: Writing and Poetry
In more ways than one. When I get stuck writing or revising, I turn to my spinning wheel and start spinning yarn from wool fleece, alpaca, silk, etc. A measure of how stuck I am is the amount of yardage I produce. It's a good thing, though. Usually within 15 minutes of spinning yarn, I figure out what I need to do to write or revise, and I'm back at writing again.

However, the yarn builds up (the yarn is taking over my office, I kid you not), and I can't knit with all of it, so I end up selling it. First on eBay, and now on Etsy.

So...now...back to the writing.
Currently reading:
Tales Of The Vampires
By Joss Whedon
Release date: 25 December, 2004
March 12, 2007 - Monday 

Current mood:  happy
Category: Writing and Poetry

Elisa at http://www.myspace.com/elisarolle let me know that I have an Italian translation of my book Dark Enchantment out now!  Is that cool or what?  You can see the cover and description at http://www.romance-novels.org/dark_enchantment.htm#title.  The description is in Italian, which has got to be one of the most romantic languages around.  Well, okay, it's a Romance language, but it's also romantic. 

So, thanks Elisa!

--Karen H.

March 10, 2007 - Saturday 

Current mood:  mellow
Category: Writing and Poetry
I really like the cover for Dragon Lovers, the anthology in which I have my novella "Anna and the King of Dragons." New American Library/Penguin USA did a lovely job of it.

MUCH better than having my picture there. I noticed that others have pictures of themselves or some other avatar, but I discovered that I have very few pictures of myself around, and the latest one (which I have included in the pictures section of my MySpace (is that redundant? "My MySpace"?)) is not at all recent. This probably because I'm the one who takes all the pictures in my family.

Anyway.

Love the cover on the anthology, and I absolutely loved writing the story. All the novellas I've written have given me a chance to write something different than what I've written before, whether it's exploring a different era or place, or different kinds of characters. And I truly enjoy working with Jo, Mary Jo, and Barbara to come up with the anthology's concept. In fact, in our Faery Magic anthology, we even had our characters appear in each other's stories. Very fun!

Mine is set during the Edo period of Japan (1650's or so) on the island of Kyushu, where my mother was born. I've never set anything in Japan, though I am of Japanese heritage and was born in Yokosuka. But, I really wanted to write in a different place and time from my novels, and heaven knows a full-length romance novel set in Edo-period Japan would have been a difficult sell. But, I think publishers give a bit of leeway with novellas, because there is relatively little risk with them, especially if the other authors are best sellers, have a solid following, and/or are not taking too much of a risk with the rest of the stories.

Overall, I think we were taking bit of a risk with the subject matter (dragons), but there's enough pull with most of the authors to carry it off.

Funny thing: when I was writing the novella, I told my mother that I was writing about a dragon that was living around Arita. She piped up and said that she had gone to a dragon's cave near that city, and that she had seen a dragon's pool. There is a cave not too far from Arita that is unique n that the interior is covered in what looks like stony scales.

Coincidence? Hmm.....

But for all my research I can find neither hide nor hair of such a cave, not mentioned anywhere on the Internet. So, maybe it exists, and maybe it doesn't. I decided at least to include the dragon's pool, anyway, as dragons are considered air and water creatures in Japan.

Well, I'm going downstairs to watch TV. I was going to revise more of my manuscript, but I feel too tired to do so, most likely because my doctor said I had pneumonia today.

So, good night.
March 9, 2007 - Friday 

Current mood:  hopeful
Category: Writing and Poetry

It occurs to me that I shouldn't have said it was the "manuscript that will not die."  I don't, of course, want my manuscripts to die.  It should have been called the "manuscript that keeps threatening to die."  I had to do major surgery on it, after having another manuscript die on the publisher's table.  After removing and transplanting most of this one's vital organs, including excising some of its intestines, I realized the organs I was trying to transplant were not a match.  As a result, major rejection occurred, it had heart failure, and it was for a long time on life-support.

Or so I thought.  It seems it's not brain-dead, but was only in a temporary coma; with the right treatment and therapy, it should recover to full health, at least according to my critique group, that valiant team of word surgeons.  The heart is still good, thank God.

It gave my own heart an infusion of hope; it seems the heart of a story is intricately linked to that of the author.  A crisis of confidence cuts to the quick and severs the gut, and creativity then is on the scalpel's edge of life and death.  Approaching the editing task seems fraught with danger:  a wrong cut could mean poison spreading through the belly of the story.

For a long time, I stared at it, too scared to make any more cuts for fear it would die entirely (can a story die from a thousand cuts?  Can it live?), or at best turn into a patchwork creature, much like the Frankenstein monster.  A good heart would not matter in that case:  Everyone ran from the monster, after all, and didn't care it only wished to love and be loved.  It's necessary, these days, to have a pretty face as well.

But the heart is solid, and that is vital.  Life-blood flows from that core, and without it, not all the plastic surgery in the world would fix it.  Or, it would, but I would rather have a living story with a good heart, than a dead one with a pretty face.

So, for now, I have hope.  The story's heart is pumping well, it lives, and I am good at making small, neat, almost invisible sutures.  With luck, the story will heal well, and even thrive.

March 9, 2007 - Friday 

Current mood:  tired
Category: Writing and Poetry
Home from work...and I'm tired. But, I did have a chance to read my critique group's comments on the manuscript-that-will-not-die. Got remarks such as, "your new prologue is great! It's snazzy and engaging and sets an intriguing tone for the reader," and "I love Cranston! I think that his character goes a long way toward putting the 'Karen Harbaugh' stamp on this work." Cranston, by the way, is not the hero, but a secondary character. I do like Freddie Cranston--so boyishly eager to solve crimes, and quite clever. I might have to use him in another book some day.

So, i feel more encouraged about this book than I had been feeling, and that gives me more energy to keep on going with it. It's been hard slogging.

Oh, the book? It's another vampire historical romance, set in England at...let's see, 1796 or so. Don't know when it'll be out. I'll post the pubication date once I know.

Gotta say that this working full time and then writing another 10 hours a week is the pits. Caught bronchitis twice in two months. I'm not so sure those extra 10 hours are all that productive; I stay up way too late at night working.

C'est la vie du auteur. (Is that correct French? I haven't taken French lessons since high school, which is a good 30 years ago.)

So, on to the salt mines.
March 8, 2007 - Thursday 

Current mood:  chipper

Well, here I am, posting at last, even though I've had this MySpace space (place?  Blog?  Website?) up since December.  I also have a blog at ANOTHER place, but thought I'd try MySpace to see what that's like.  More than a few of my readers plus author pals have urged me to try out MySpace, and so I am.  Bear with me: I'm still learning how to navigate this place, and I must find a way to change the look of it.  And there must be some way to minimize or get rid of the ads.


I think I'll keep to writing and book-related things here, and general life things in the other blog.

Anyway, if you want to see a list of my books, do visit my my web site, since I'm too lazy to post all of them here.

 

Until later...

 

--Karen H.

March 8, 2007 - Thursday 

Current mood:  frustrated
Category: Writing and Poetry

So there I was being interviewed at the Word Wenches blog, regarding the Dragon Lovers anthology, and right in the middle of it, I get a great idea for the 2nd book in my contract.  Not, of course, for the eternally-revising manuscript I'm working on now.  Nooo.  For the next book after that.

Which of course means that I have to WAIT until I'm done with this doggone manuscript.  Grumph.  That's what I say.  Grumph.

Currently listening:
Bach: Cantatas
By Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
Release date: 27 April, 1990