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Crits for Water 2012: Recap and Awesome.

So, y’all made my life a shinier, sparklier place of awesomeness and fancipants, not to mention the lives everyone changed with your fabulous donations. We took my $10,000 goal and blew it out of the water.


With over $15,000 USD raised.

In three months, guys, we raised enough to give

more than 750 people clean water

or

three communities

or

about 150 families.

In about 18 months, everyone who donated will be able to see exactly where their money went. You’ll see the community you helped to change for the better–you may even be able to zoom in on google earth and see the exact water project that we helped build.

Everyone, I am so, so grateful. This was bigger and more wonderful than I’d imagined. Despite my (many) mistakes, y’all pulled together and just…

…well, I’m getting teary eyed typing this.

So thank you.

<3

---

In other news, I've got some Water Stories prizes to give out! As a recap: throughout the campaign, rather than donate to water projects, I decided to donate to the organization. They offer super fabulous charity: water swag that goes to support things like salaries, office space, post-its, etc. And I’ve been giving away that swag to folks who wrote water stories throughout the campaign.

So, drumroll please…

The June winner is


Linda McLaren!

She’s winning this super fabulous water bottle:

And, oh yeah, there’s a grand prize, ’cause I FEEL LIKE IT, WHAT.

And the winner of this fabulous necklace (or the cuff links! Whichever) is…


Christine Finlayson!

I’ll be emailing both of you soon-ish.
In fact, PS, apologies to everyone. My inbox is a giant mess right now (I have guests! Early Fourth of July party). If you’re waiting on an email from me, I promise it’s coming! Thank you so much for your patience.

Really, thank you to everyone. Y’all are the best community of giving not-really-strangers a writer could ask for.

Big hugs!

Posted on June 30, 2012 in Giveaway · Comments { 10 }

May’s “Water Stories” Winner

For Crits for Water 2012, I’ve decided to support the running of charity: water by purchasing sweet swag from their store…for you guys. To enter for some water-themed swag, all you have to do is write a Water Story, take a photo, share a memory, whatever, as long as water’s involved. There are still two more drawings to go on the last day of June, so feel free to keep entering! No donation required–on your end. It’s a shared experience, and all to support the folks in New York who have made this campaign possible.

May had three water story submissions! Check out

And the winner of this month’s drawing is…


Linda! HUZZAH

I’ll be emailing you soon.

Linda just won this super sweet hat:

Thanks to the other fine ladies. Good news: everyone is still eligible for the grand prize drawing! And if you’d like to contribute a Water Story now, you’ll be entered for both June’s drawing AND the grand prize. I’d love to hear from you. Feel free to enter more than once, of course :D

Posted on May 31, 2012 in Giveaway, Water Story · Comments { 2 }

Water Story Prize Drawing: April

Each month, for my donation to charity: water, I’m supporting the nuts and bolts of running the charity by giving away charity: water swag. If you’d like to join in the fun, submit a water story. These can be fiction, memoir, poetry, photo, drawing–whatever you like. You don’t have to donate to participate, and each story will enter you into that month’s prize drawing, plus the grand prize drawing at the end of the campaign. Any entry starting today goes to May’s Water Prize drawing.

So enter! Let’s share our stories <3

Though we only had two water stories in April, both of them were pretty dang rocktastic: Little Hubris on the Prairie, by Heather Hawke, and an exerpt from Ruined by Ashlyn Macnamara. Give them a read!

This month’s winner is…


Ashlyn! Huzzah!

Ashlyn is winning this fancy-shmancy hoodie:

I’ll be popping you an email soon.

Posted on April 30, 2012 in Giveaway, Water Story · Comments { 0 }

Freaky Friday: Critique the Critiquer


Thanks for participating guys!

I appreciate all the wonderful comments and critiques.

Well, it’s another Friday the 13th, and I’m gonna do something I almost never do (I’m superstitious): I’m going to post an excerpt from a work in progress.

AHHHHHHHHHH!!!

Ahem.

Here’s the deal: I’m going to post THREE 250 word excerpts from three different beginnings of the same book, and in return for YOUR critiques/thoughts in the comments, I’ll donate!

  • If you comment on the blog post with the number of your favorite excerpt (or none at all), I’ll donate $1 to Crits for Water.
  • If you critique an excerpt, I’ll also donate $2 more, up to $6 ($2 for each)
  • As I’m not made of money (sadly), this Freaky Friday will end on Sunday at midnight, EDT, or when my donation reaches $100. Whichever comes first.

So come on guys! Spend my money and, HOLY GUAC, HELP ME. I’ve had this genius idea for over a year now, but I can’t seem to get the beginning right…which means I keep stalling on writing it. I love the concept behind the story, though, so let’s make some magic!


The Grass Cutter

A re-telling of the Firebird


Drawing by Red Dragon Ace on Dev Art (click on the photo!)

The Pitch: Only Reimi’s father has ever believed Rei could play major league baseball. When he’s kidnapped by the King of birds right before she’s about to try out for her high school’s baseball team, she drags her sisters through the torii gate into the Spirit World. Reimi will save him no matter what, even if that means bargaining with demons…or battling with the gods themselves.

Excerpt 1

Ohayo,” Rei’s mother said, smooshing rice in her hands.

“Morning,” Rei responded.  She snatched the rice ball as her mother finished shaping it.  Sliding onto a barstool, she set her elbows on the counter and bit into the triangular snack with relish, pleased when her mother wrinkled her nose.

“Elbows off the table.  And don’t take one without asking,” her mother ordered in Japanese.  Rei narrowed her eyes as she chewed.  Her mother’s jet-black hair waved across her shoulders, out of its usual practical bun.  It was odd to see her like that.  Even though she wore a regular cardigan with her favorite large, glittery butterfly broach over her heart, the hairstyle made her appear almost…casual.

And if sixteen years of trudging after her mother as the woman took her from ballet recital to vocabulary building exercises to Let’s Origami! had taught Rei anything, it was that her mother was not casual in the least.

Rei giggled, then reddened as she spat out several grains across the immaculate granite.  Reaching across the sink, she tore off a sheet of paper towels and wiped up her mess.  “Sorry, mom.  Itadakimasu.”

“That is more like it.  I didn’t raise you to—”

“—turn into a stereotypical, ungrateful American.  Yes, thank you, mom.  You’re doing a fab job with me.”

Her mother clicked her tongue and went back to packing Rei and Juri’s lunches.  Next to the rice balls went the small hot dogs cut to look like cute octopuses, a spoonful of spaghetti, a strawberry, and a handful of pickled Japanese radish.

The God of the Sea, Susanoo.

Excerpt 2

Mukashi mukashi.

A man shifted at his dying mother’s bedside.

“You are not what you think,” she murmured.  Her words gurgled in her throat like a child blowing bubbles into a glass of chocolate milk.

The man glanced out the window.  A sea of high rises and haze.  His hand tightened around bedsheets damp from humidity and sick. “I am exactly what I think.”

His mother grappled for his wrist.  The shrieks of cicadas nearly drowned out her words. “I have…lied.”

She turned her head to the side, nodded at the door.  The man stood and strode towards the opening.  He shook his head at his father and the Shinto priest.  Not yet, he mouthed.  His father slumped and blinked at the warped wooden floor.  The man slid the door shut.

He padded back to his station.  “Even if you have lied, I do not deserve to know the truth.  I have dishonored you and your sacrifices.  I am incapable of providing for your daughter-in-law and your grandchildren.  I—”

“You are wasting the last few moments you have with me on apologies.  Repeat them to my ghost over the next forty-nine days.  Perhaps it will keep me from haunting you later.  For now, listen.”

The man’s brow wrinkled.  His mother’s skin, always pale, was papery thin, so white against her dyed black hair that it could have been porcelain.  Blue veins popped from her temple with each haggard breath.

He shut his mouth.

“Your father cannot have children.”

The man jerked.

Excerpt 3

Japanese flew out of everyone’s mouth like the barrage of beans Rei’s father had tossed at their entryway to welcome spring earlier in the week. Licking her lips, Rei shifted her weight to the other leg and glanced along the long table to her mother.

She ticked her eyebrow, and Rei nearly collapsed. If she shifted out of the traditional Japanese seated position anytime soon, her mom’d kill her. Which sucked. She hadn’t been able to feel her feet for the last five minutes. And the thin cushion protecting her legs against the bamboo mats did pretty much nothing. Rei had no clue how her mother managed to sit for hours and hours, back ramrod straight, when she practiced her calligraphy.

“…very interested in a new”—unintelligible Japanese—“definitely excited about your dekopon, chichi.”

Rei swirled a piece of raw tuna in her soy sauce. Farming. Again. Her father and brother, Jinichiro, had talked about nothing else for the last, oh, three days since Jinichiro’s family had arrived from Osaka. Not that she didn’t like her dad’s J-Oranges. The dekopon were possibly the most delicious thing on the whole planet, exempting maybe chili dogs. But with harvest season in full swing, getting the oranges picked, organized, weighed, and matured was all her family breathed.

And really, even the most delicious food in the world tasted like crap if nothing else broke up the monotony.

So she stuffed the tuna in her mouth and chewed, glancing across the table at her oldest nephew for some solidarity. Sandwiched between his mother frantically pouring everyone drinks and Jinichiro’s nonstop-farm talk, the ten-year-old had to be bored.

All right guys. So let me know–which one do you like? 1, 2, or 3? Or none? And feel free to critique the excerpts, too.

Spread the word, folks, and let’s change some lives :D

Posted on April 13, 2012 in Giveaway · Comments { 6 }

Tokyo and The Water Wars

Hey guys! I’m back. (Woo!) I had a great time in Tokyo. I went to an exhibition of Robert Doisneau’s photographs, a rainbow-brite one by O Ay, and ate more food than I thought my stomach could fit.

Also, I saw this guy:

I heard him sing! In person! I still can't quite get over it.

And also these guys.

Michael Saunders, Chone Figgins, and Ichiro of the Seattle Mariners.

Anyway. That’s not really the point. I may eventually throw up more photos over at my personal blog, but in the meantime…dudes.

Crits for Water starts tomorrow.

TOMORROW.

Yeah, I may be flipping out a little. There is so much awesome. Have you checked out the list of Guest Critiques? We’ve got a crazy amazing starting week for romance writers, with the amazing ladies that are Tessa Dare, Roni Loren, Tiffany Reisz, and Ashlyn Macnamara.

But! Before we begin, my Partner-in-Crime/the smoothest of Peanut Butters, Jess Silva, has offered up possibly one of the most perfect books for a Super Splendiferous Crits for Water Let’s Generate Buzz giveaway!

The Water Wars Super Splendiferous
Generating Buzz about Crits for Water
Giveaway!!

by Mr Cameron Stracher
Vera and her brother, Will, live in the shadow of the Great Panic, in a country that has collapsed from environmental catastrophe. Water is hoarded by governments, rivers are dammed, and clouds are sucked from the sky. But then Vera befriends Kai, who seems to have limitless access to fresh water. When Kai suddenly disappears, Vera and Will set off on a dangerous journey in search of him-pursued by pirates, a paramilitary group, and greedy corporations. Timely and eerily familiar, acclaimed author Cameron Stracher makes a stunning YA debut that’s impossible to forget.

Reading the book, I was especially struck by Stracher’s potent description. Even his word choice when not describing the parched land evoked feelings of, well, thirst. I found myself running for the tap many times, at least, and grateful that I didn’t have to worry about disease when I did. Yet Stracher also showed the dangerous, volatile nature of water (and, ahem, nature), implying that you can’t have life without sacrifice. I also very much admired the world-building, the way Stracher detailed how water affects every. single. thing. we do. How not having it can destroy everything we care about.

Which, yanno. Is kinda apt for Crits for Water.

In addition to entering, you can get extra entries in the giveaway for tweeting or blogging about the Crits for Water 2012 campaign. Just point folks straight to http://critsforwater.katbrauer.com, or you can send them towards the info pages either about the campaign or about charity: water.

Giveaway is open internationally. Huzzah!

Continue Reading →

Posted on March 30, 2012 in Giveaway · Comments { 1 }