
Devil's Right Hand: The Dante Valentine Series Book 3
By: Lilith Saintcrow
Paperback | 1 July 2008 | Edition Number 1
At a Glance
432 Pages
2.8 x 11 x 17.9
Paperback
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Dante Valentine is short on sleep and far from happy. She's just signed away seven years of her life - and her partner's - to hunt down four rogue demons that have escaped from hell. Maybe she'll find them.
Maybe they'll find her. Nobody said it was easy being the Devil's right hand. Dante Valentine is licensed to raise the dead: a fully accredited Necromance in an world where a range of psionic Talents have been harnessed to help mankind.
Not that mankind always appreciates this. She's one of the best in her field to survive training, and has an emerald embedded in her forehead to prove it. She's also dangerous and prickly with a suicidal streak.
Who better to make a contract with the Devil - but what will happen when the deal turns sour and all hell breaks loose?
ISBN: 9781841496733
ISBN-10: 1841496731
Series: Dante Valentine Novels
Published: 1st July 2008
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Number of Pages: 432
Audience: General Adult
Publisher: Little Brown
Country of Publication: GB
Edition Number: 1
Dimensions (cm): 2.8 x 11 x 17.9
Weight (kg): 0.23

Lilith Saintcrow
Lilith Saintcrow (aka Anna Beguine, Lili St. Crow) was born in New Mexico, bounced around the world as an Air Force brat, and fell in love with writing when she was ten years old.
Lili lives in Vancouver, WA with her children, a houseful of cats, and assorted other strays.
Lilith Saintcrow: In her own words...
I’m going to answer four common questions I get asked when I tell
people I write for a living.
Seriously. These are the things I get asked/said to me most often when
I tell people what I do. Enjoy!
1. Huh. Is there any money in that?
I’m very lucky that I can support myself by writing, and I do it by
being pretty careful what I spend money on. (I’m helped by the fact
that my priorities do not seem to be the average person’s set of
priorities.) When you’re only paid twice a year and expected to live on
chunks of your advances for months at a time, you have to budget pretty
carefully. Also, you need to build up a safety cushion for those times
when the royalty or advance payments dry up. It happens.
So yeah, there’s money…but only because I’m careful.
2. So how long does it take you to write a book?
It depends on the type of book. There’s the brute work of typing
60-100K words (and quite possibly twice that amount if there are
multiple drafts, endings, and revisions). There’s the research
involved, which can add hours and hours (even if it is Internet-based,
which I don’t recommend…but that’s another blog post). There’s the time
between revisions/drafts to let it sit and cool down. Then there’s the
emotional energy and time one invests into a book.
For example, the Watcher books were relatively painless to write. They
were fun and I had the structure down after the second one, so it was a
matter of relaxing into the structure. I could probably write one of
those every couple months, if I wasn’t doing anything else. Contrast
that with the Jill Kismet books, which take a lot out of me. I need a
year for each Kismet book, period. This is partly because I have other
projects going at the same time, but it’s mostly because Jill’s world
is a very dark place and the emotional toll of entering that world and
suffering with her, as well as feeling her triumphs, is very large.
Oddly, short stories sometimes take me longer than novels, because the
word count is so limited–I have to have everything just right before I
draw my sword and make my cut.
So, that’s actually a very complex question. There are books that took
me three years to write, books that took me a month and a half of
intense effort, books that sort of dumped themselves out of my head
whole. Writing a book is an incredibly complex process, with all sorts
of factors affecting it. So I usually say, “From a month to three
years, it depends on the book.”
3. I always wanted to write a book. How do you get published?
Persistence. Sheer dumb brute persistence. And luck, but the harder you
work, the more likely you are to be lucky.
There are many ways to climb the mountain to publication[1], as well as
many ways to climb the mountain of a sustainable writing career. The
bedrock all these ways rest on is not quitting and learning.
You do not have a guarantee of getting published. All you can do is
maximize your chances. Plenty of people do not bother to maximize their
chances and so, just clog up the pipes with slush. But I can tell you
this much: if you quit, it’s CERTAIN that you will never get published.
If you don’t keep producing work and submitting, of course you’ll never
get there. It’s a question of whether or not this matters enough to you.
The other half of the answer is learning. I never open a finished book
of mine without wincing at things I could have done better and feeling
the urge to correct/revise. Never. Part of that is simply my work
ethic; the other part is that I an consistently and constantly trying
to learn more about language, grammar, what makes stories work, what
makes writing work. I rarely read for pleasure anymore; instead, I’m
“looking under the hood” and seeing how the story is put together while
another part of me is searching for typos. It’s become a reflex by now.
If you aren’t wincing and thinking you could do better when you open up
a story/document you wrote six months ago, it’s time to focus on some
more learning. I sincerely believe this is not a finite process.
4. I’ve got this great idea for a book. Why don’t you write it and
we’ll split it 50-50?
Writers sometimes joke about this, but it isn’t really a joke. People
actually say this to me. The only thing that saves the top of my head
from blowing off while steam shoots off my ears and I reach for
something sharp is the fact that most people don’t have the faintest
idea how much work it is to write a book. They know that they walk into
a bookstore and see the finished product and it takes them ten minutes
to buy it if the line’s super-long around Christmas.
They do not see the months or years it took to write that book, the
different drafts, the revisions and proofing process, the waiting for
publication schedules to line up…I could go on. It’s like people
thinking a television commercial only takes thirty seconds to film
because that’s how long the finished product ends up being.
I used to try to explain this to people, but two sentences into the
explanation people’s eyes would glaze over. People largely don’t care
to hear about how their conveniences or consumable entertainment
actually comes into being. Listening to that is too much like work, and
I suspect it drains some of the “magic” from the mental image people
have of writers.
So now I just settle for taking a deep breath, reminding myself that
dismemberment is frowned upon in most social situations, and say,
“Sorry. I’ve got my own books to write.”
The funny thing about this is most people just nod and move on with the
conversation. There is, however, a slight but definite proportion of
people who are actually offended when I say that. I suspect they are
some of the same people you read about here. I actually had one man say
to me, “What, my ideas aren’t good enough for you?”[2]
*snorts* So here’s what I wish I could say: “It’s not that your ideas
aren’t good enough. It’s that I’d rather spend my time on the line of
my ideas that’s stretching out the door and around the block. Other
ideas are free to wait in line, and I’ll get the money for the actual
effort put into writing them, thank you very much. Next!”
Ideas are a dime a dozen. What makes a book special is the time, care,
and effort the writer puts into expressing the idea and its
consequences, the effort spent revising until it’s as good as it can
be, the effort the publisher puts into it from their end, and the
ongoing engagement the writer cultivates with the readers. Five seconds
of “hey I have an idea!” isn’t worth much when stacked against those
months or years of backbreaking effort.
Anyway. So there you have it, the four most-common questions I’m asked
when I tell people I write for a living. Someday, just to shake things
up, I’m going to tell someone that I shave gorillas for a living.
They’ll probably say, “Huh. Is there any money in that?”
[1] Note that when I say “publication” I mean traditional publishing
with all its quality control. I do not mean self or vanity publishing.
[2]At that point I realized I was dealing with irrationality, and took
refuge in absurdity. “Yes. My cake is burning, thank you.” And I walked
away.
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