Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Booty Tuesday -- Shana Galen's The Rogue Pirate's Bride

Carrying home Booty
As you know, I returned from the RWA National Conference with Booty!
I haz signed books.  
I haz New Books, from writers I admire.  Did I mention they are signed?

One of these books can be yours.

(I have kinda bloopered here a bit.  I'm in the process of moving from one house to another and cannot put my hand on the August 28 Booty book. So you're getting next week's book this week and this week's book next week, but this is not a bad thing at all.)


Anyhow,
win a signed copy of Shana Galen's The Rogue Pirate's Bride.

This is a fully excellent work by an author who sometimes writes about Regency spies and therefore finds much delight and approval from me.  It's the third installment in Galen's 'Sons of the Revolution' series. 

It opens with a hero/heroine fencing scene and just gets better from there on in.

Romantic Times says, "Galen pulls out all the stops, striking a balance between romance and adventure that will leave readers breathless and highly satisfied." 

You want this book.
You know you want this book.
 
To be eligible, write and post a poem in the comment thread of this post.

Use one of the following words from the cover:

Shana, Galen, rogue, pirate, bride, praise, lively, dialog, breakneck, pace, great, sense, fun, weekly, tale, true, love, high, adventure, sword, fence, duel. 


Your poem can be a 
Limerick
Haiku 
(traditional or non-traditional)
Rhymed couplet
Quatrain  
blank verse
or any other rhyme or poetry form you fancy.  I am not particular.

I'll pick one lucky commenter (US only, sorry) from the comment trail on Thursday night.

Technical Topic -- Note about stays

Abigail Adams, in 1800, saw visiting Frenchwomen wearing Empire-style dresses in Philadelphia and wrote in a letter:

"The stile of dress ... is really an outrage upon all decency. I will describe it as it has appeared even at the drawing Room ... A Muslin sometimes, sometimes a crape made so strait before as perfectly to show the whole form. The arm naked almost to the shoulder and without stays or Bodice."


To me this says many respectable Frenchwomen were not wearing corsets or stays in my time period when they dressed à l'antique.
 

Friday, August 24, 2012

Technical Topics -- Talking about Cons

It is just hard to discover how con artists in the Regency period.  I'm fairly sure the current con games practiced in 1910 and in 2010 were practiced in 1810, even though I don't find references to them so much.

The Spanish Prisoner, for instance, is said to date from the late Nineteenth Century.  I imagine it was practiced, though, under another name in the Fifteenth.  And Sixteenth.  And in the regency.  Human nature doesn't change much.


So, what do we know about Regency Con Games and how can we talk about playing them.

Picking up general background stuff:

Mayhew's Characters, which is a generation later, but delightfully detailed and in voice

And more on background criminal behavior
Thieves Kitchen: The Regency Underworld by Donald Low

Grose lists several sort of scamming beggars, largely folks faking injury or war service and so on.  Those are some of the old traditions and accustomed cons.

The shell game is ancient.  It was called Thimblerig, played with three thimbles and a pea or button, is attested from 1825 by this name, though references to thimble cheats, probably the same swindle, date back to 1716.  The term 'Shell Game' is 1890, from a version of three-card monte played with a pea and walnut shells. 

So is fast and loose.  Don't know whether this counts as a con or not. 

The wikis here and here  list some latish Nineteenth Century examples that can't be applied exact and directly to the Regency.

My great sorrow as a writer is that we lack a rich, traditional vocabulary to talk about con men.  I've gone looking for scamming language and almost all the terminology I fall in love with is mid C19 or later.

Here are some of the words we can use:



Bejuggle, to get over by jugglery, to cheat;   (1680) To bejuggle and beguile the silly Rabble.   (1705) Bejuggl'd Mob! you are the Tools, That Priests do work with called Fools.  (1851) No matter how many‥thou may'st have bejuggled and destroyed before.


Burn  Meaning "cheat, swindle, victimize" is 1650s.  (One problem is the  C20 meanings may intrude here. c.f.  'Burn Notice')

 (1842) Our people were so ill-burnt, that they had no stomach for any farder medling. ...  (1808)  Burn, to deceive, to cheat in a bargain.    (1844)  Two negro burners were arrested in the act of trying to burn two Pottsville boatmen with a plated chain worth about fifteen cents.

Chicanery c.1600, from Fr. chicanerie "trickery,"

Chisel  Slang sense of "to cheat, defraud" is first recorded in 1808 as chizzel.  Origin and connection to the older word are obscure.  (Obscure, but in period and perhaps useful.)

Chouse "swindler, swindle," 1650s, from Turk. chaush "sergeant, herald, messenger,"  (Good Regency usage for this.)


Con  in the meaning "swindling"  Is 1889, Amer.Eng.  Confidence man is 1849.  Derives from the many scams in which the victim is induced to hand over money as a token of confidence.

Cozen.  To commit fraud, trickery" mid-15C  In use in the Regency.


Diddle "to cheat, swindle," in 1806, from dial. duddle, diddle "to totter" (1630s). One has to be aware of later meanings --  "to have sex with" is from 1879; that of "to masturbate" (especially of women) is from 1950s. 


Dodge   Common from early 18c. in figurative sense of "to swindle, to play shifting tricks." .

Double cross is much older than I thought, dating to 1834, from double + cross in the sense of "pre-arranged swindle or fix." Originally to win a race after promising to lose it. As a verb from 1903, Amer.Eng.


Fleece The verb is 1530s in the literal sense of "to strip a sheep of fleece" and 1570s in the figurative meaning "to cheat, swindle."  It holds that meaning to present day.

Gouge 1560s meaning "to cut as with a gouge,"   Meaning "swindle" is Amer.Eng. colloquial from 1826.

Grab 1580s, "to seize", often with a sense of "to get by unscrupulous methods".  The 'grab game' is a kind of swindle, 1846.

Gull.  cant term for "dupe, sucker, credulous person,"  with a sense of "someone who will swallow anything thrown at him." From 1590s  Still in use today.


Hornswoggle to cheat," 1829. 

Humbug, 1751, student slang, "trick, jest, hoax, deception," also as a verb.  


Jape.  early 14c., "trick, deceit," later "a joke, a jest" (late 14c.) It's been through several transitions, but currently means a joke or jest.
Jig.  "lively dance," 1560s,  A "piece of sport, trick" 1590s.  Phrase the jig is up (first attested 1777 as the jig is over).

Jink  To trick, cheat, diddle, swindle.   (1785) For Jove did jink Arcesius.    (1832) The gipsy, after all, jinked an old rich goutified coffee-planter.  


Mace  To swindle.  (1790)  Potter New Dict. Cant. (1795) "Mace, to cheat."  (1812)  A .‥party of inferior pugilists had been macing in the southern towns.  (1819)  I sometimes raised the wind by‥obtaining goods on credit, called in the cant language maceing. (1885)  Fancy him being so soft as to give that jay a quid back out of the ten he'd maced him of!

Mark. slang sense "victim of a swindle" is 1883.

Pigeon.  one easily cheated, gullible;  to gull, cheat, delude, swindle; esp. at cards or any kind of gaming.  (1675) Of Lies, and Fables, which did Pigeon The Rabble into false Religion.  (1785) They have pigeoned me out of my money.   (1805)  They mean to pigeon him, as their phrase is.   (1807) Having one night been pigeoned of a vast property.

To play.   To use or treat as a counter or plaything, to manage or use for one's own ends (like chessmen or cards in a game). Also, to fool, swindle; to play (someone) for a sucker: to treat (a person) as a dupe; to make a fool of; to cheat.  (1656) Some Wisemen, and some Fools we call, Figures, alas, of Speech, for Destiny plays us all.  (1879) You could have played him on a stranger for an effigy.    

To play upon advantage (obs.): to cheat.   (1668)  Your only way is to turn rook and play upon advantage.   (1826) Once it happened that the enemy took him at advantage. 

Rook. 1570s noun, "a cheat," especially at cards or dice. Verb "to defraud by cheating", originally especially in a game, 1580s.


Sham 1670s, "a trick, a hoax, a fraud,"  Sense of "Something meant to be mistaken for something else" is from 1728.

shark.  To practise fraud or the arts of a ‘shark’, parasite, or sharper; to live by shifts and stratagems. Often to shark for (something).  (1608) I name it gently to you; I term it neither pilfer, cheat, nor shark.  (1765) It is only slipping a puffer or two of quality at them, enough of whom come sharking to every sale for that purpose only.  (1809) Those vagabond cosmopolites who shark about the world, as if they had no right or business in it. (1837) Thou must hawk and shark to and fro, from anteroom to anteroom.

Sharp  "a cheat at games," 1797, short for sharper (1681), probably a variant of sharker

Stall.  Mid-15C as "pretense to avoid doing something." A variant of "stale" -- bird used as a decoy to lure other birds.  In the meaning of "evasive trick or story, pretext, excuse" first recorded 1812.  This sense entwined with that of "thief's assistant" (1590s).
"The stallers up are gratified with such part of the gains acquired as the liberality of the knuckling gentlemen may prompt them to bestow. [J.H. Vaux, "Flash Dictionary," 1812]

Sting  A slang meaning "to cheat, swindle" is from 1812.
The sense of "police undercover entrapment" is from 1975.  (It would be lovely to use in 1812 if it weren't for the C20 meanings layered on top.)


Swindler is 1774,  "giddy person, extravagant speculator, cheat,"  Said to have been introduced in London by German Jews c.1762.
"Stall" is still used as a pickpocket's assistant.



Thug  1810, "member of a gang of murderers and robbers in India who strangled their victims,"  In general sense of "ruffian, cutthroat" first recorded 1839.  (I have used this in 1812 with characters who would have contact with army officers serving in India.  They use it as they would a foreign word.  Kinda.)
 Trump. (v) "fabricate, devise," 1690s, from trump "deceive, cheat" (1510s),  'Trumped up' as  "false, concocted" first recorded 1728.


ETA:  Janet McC sends further era-appropriate terms and expands on some I mentioned -- shrak, mace, burn, bejuggle, pigeon, play, play upon advantage, jink.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Booty Tuesday -- Jill Shalvis' Animal Attraction

Carrying home Booty
As you know, I returned from the RWA National Conference with Booty!
I haz signed books.  This swag is all new books, from writers I admire.
One of these books can be yours.

This week, win a signed copy of Jill Shalvis's Animal Attraction.  The cover design is a montage, in case you were wondering.  The kitten from Getty Images, river, mountains and man's body from Shutterstock.  


Jade Bennett couldn't be happier to escape her past for the quiet ranching town of Sunshine, Idaho. Plus, there's nothing like working for veterinarian Dell Connelly. And though Dell has no intention of settling down, Jade's strength and sass are enticements no red-blooded male can resist.
All About Romance calls Shalvis' writing "Light, funny, sexy and just plain enjoyable to read."

To be eligible, write and post a poem in the comment thread of this post.
Use one of the following words from the cover: 
Today, bestselling, author, Jill, Shalvis, animal, magnetism, slow, heat, attraction, write, humor, sizzling, time.

Your poem can be a 
Limerick
Haiku 
(traditional or non-traditional)
Rhymed couplet
Quatrain  
blank verse
or any other rhyme or poetry form you fancy.  I am not particular.

I'll pick one lucky commenter (US only, sorry) from the comment trail on Thursday night.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Booty Tuesday -- Yasmine Galenorn's Night Seeker

Carrying home Booty
As you know, I returned from the RWA National Conference with Booty!
I haz signed books.  This swag is all new books, from writers I admire.
One of these books can be yours.

This week, win a signed copy of Yasmine Galernorn's Night Seeker.  This is just fresh off the presses.  A July 2012 book.
the swag

Eons ago, vampires tried to turn the dark Fae to harness their magic, only to create a demonic enemy more powerful than they could have imagined. Now, the Vampiric Fae are on the move, hunting anyone in their path. As the war with the vampires ratchets up, Myst, Queen of the Indigo Court, enshrouds New Forest in her chilling grasp.

Cicely Waters, owl shifter and Wind Witch, has rescued the Fae Prince Grieve at a great cost. Their reunion has lost them the allegiance of the Summer Queen--and the tolerance of the vampires. In desperation they turn to the Consortium for help. Now, to regain the good will of Lainule, they must dare to enter the heart of Myst's realm. But as Cicely and Grieve embark on their search for the heartstone of Summer, Winter is already wreaking her terrifying revenge.  (back cover copy)

This is the third in the trilogy, following Night Mist and Night Veil.  As you can see -- there's lots going on.  And the cover has an owl on it. (You may buy it here if you happen to feel unpoetic.)


To be eligible, write and post a poem in the comment thread of this post.
Use one of the following words from the cover: 
new, york, time, bestselling, author, novel, book, jasmine, imagination, owl, knife, tattoo, wind, witch, grieve, winter, beautiful, thing, fresh, fiction, rules, revenge, written, blood, indigo, court, night, seeker.

Your poem can be a 
Limerick
Haiku 
(traditional or non-traditional)
Rhymed couplet
Quatrain  
blank verse
or any other rhyme or poetry form you fancy.  I am not particular.

I'll pick one lucky commenter (US only, sorry) from the comment trail on Thursday night.

Monday, August 13, 2012

An Interview at USA Today

Not your average general
An Interview with Pamela Clare of the USA Today, Happy Ever After Blog in which I talk about writing Black Hawk, winning the RITA, and why Napoleon beat the pants off all the armies of Europe for a decade and knocked the moral, ethical, and philosophical foundation of the aristocracy into a cocked hat.


Pamela: What was it like, winning the RITA for best historical? 

Joanna: Awesome. Frightening. Surreal.

And surprising. I didn't expect to win, competing against that finalist list. Wonderful books. It's like the freestyle swim in the Olympics. What separates the winner from the second place? Two seconds maybe.

I'll admit that when I got the RITA statue home I took it out and put it on the table and just touched it a few times. I kept thinking, "They like the book. They like the book." And it made me so happy.

Here's the URL.

Monday, August 06, 2012

Booty Tuesday -- Jayne Ann Krentz' In Too Deep

Carrying home Booty
Back from the RWA National Conference.  With Booty!
I haz signed books.  All new.  All from writers I admire.
One of these books can be yours.

This week, win a signed copy of Jayne Ann Krentz' In Too Deep. 


To be eligible, write and post a poem in the comment thread of this post.
Use one of the following words from the cover: 
new, york, time, bestselling, author, first, paperback, too, deep, arcane, society, novel, book, one, looking, glass, trilogy.

This is the booty
Your poem can be a 
Limerick
Haiku 
(traditional or non-traditional)
Rhymed couplet
Quatrain  
blank verse
or any other rhyme or poetry form you fancy.  I am not particular.

I'll pick one lucky commenter (US only, sorry) from the comment trail on Thursday night.

Sunday, August 05, 2012

The shoes of RWA12

 

Sometimes it's neat and traditional

Sometimes it's slinky
Sometimes it's floral  











Sometimes it's stripy            

 Sometimes it's practical                      ... sometimes not so much




Sometimes it's barefootin'







Sometimes we're not in Kansas any more.


Thursday, August 02, 2012

What did we wear to RWA?






















This blog is really meant to be read next year.  It's to help out those folks who, the month before RWA13, will start asking -- "What do I wear?"

This is a serious question, because we writers are prey to many natural uncertainties and the addition of Wardrobe Insecurity drives us mad.



So ... this is what folks wore to RWA12 for walking around and for the ordinary sessions and workshops.  A good many of these pictures are PAN members so you know they are the experts when it comes to picking out suitable writer regalia.

In my informal survey of the walkaround choice, slacks lead.  They run about 80% at this conference.  But then -- it's California.    


If you're going to an agent pitch, you'll probably dress up a little bit more.   Maybe wear a jacket.  The big name authors expect to get photographed and pick something photogenic.  If you're giving a presentation or workshop, you'll look professional.

Many folks dress up for the Awards Ceremony.  There are some just lovely dresses there.
And HQN had a slumber party ...

But, as you see, most of the conference is Casual Friday informal.




Note in the pictures generally how folks are carrying a sizable bag.  This is for conference materials, notebook, water bottle, and maybe some of your own books or promotional stuff to give away.