Erotica author, aka Elspeth Potter, on Writing from the Inside

Showing posts with label promo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label promo. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

The Quick Guide to Purchasing My Work

Shorter Work

"Crimean Fairy Tale," an erotic romance set during the Crimean War. About 7000 words, available for Kindle and for Smashwords and for Nook.

"The Magnificent Threesome," a 6000 word short story set in a loosely historical American West, is available for Kindle and for Nook.

"Under Her Uniform," a Spice Brief - tie-in to The Moonlight Mistress (electronic only): (2012)
Kindle
Nook
Harlequin e-book (Adobe editions)
Google e-book from Powell's
Mills and Boon e-book (UK)
The Sony Bookstore
Audiobook at Audible.com, read by Kelsey Larsen.

Erotic Exploits (electronic only):
Seven Tales of Speculative Lesbian Erotica by Victoria Janssen. Includes: "Free Falling"; "Camera"; "Wire," a sequel to "Camera"; "Toy," a sequel to "Wire"; "The Princess on the Rock"; "Place, Park, Scene, Dark"; and "Mo'o and the Woman."
Kindle
Nook
Smashwords

Download my first published erotic story, "Water Music," in PDF format. Also available for Kindle and for Nook.

NOVELS

The Duke and The Pirate Queen: (2010)
Kindle
Amazon
Barnes & Noble
Indiebound
Powell’s
Audiobook at Audible.com, read by Phoebe Stewart.

The Moonlight Mistress: (2009)
Kindle
Amazon.com
Barnes & Noble
IndieBound
Powell's
Audiobook at Audible.com, read by Patsy Kelland.
FlipKart in India.
Italian translation.
Italian translation for Kindle

The Duchess, Her Maid, The Groom and Their Lover: (2008)
Kindle
Amazon.com
Barnes & Noble
Indiebound
Powell’s
Audiobook at Audible.com, read by Helen Stern.
Russian translation.
French translation.
German translation.
Download "Camille, Henri, Maxime," a free outtake in PDF format (please note this outtake is explicit).

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

"Under Her Uniform" is here!

Available today, at Harlequin! Go here.

"Under Her Uniform" by Victoria Janssen

Isobel Hailey has disguised herself as a man so she can fight in the British Army in World War I. Only a few people know the truth, including her two officer lovers--so why can’t she stop thinking about handsome Corporal Andrew Southey instead? Hailey has to keep her wits about her and her erotic fantasies hidden so she doesn’t blow her cover. But when she and Southey find themselves working closely on a mission, their attraction--and the truth--is impossible to deny.

A sequel to Victoria Janssen’s The Moonlight Mistress, now available in ebook from Spice Books.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Blog Relocation


This blog has moved! New posts appear at my website. You can susbscribe to the new feed here.

You can also follow me on Twitter.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Launch Party! Dukes & Pirates all welcome!

I've moved this blog to my website - all new posts will appear there. RSS Feed for the new address. Please stop by and visit!


I'm having a launch party for The Duke and The Pirate Queen, and if you're in the area, I'd love for you to attend.

Saturday, December 11, 2010, 3 pm

Big Blue Marble Bookstore, 551 Carpenter Lane, Philadelphia, PA 19119

Food! Drink! Books!

More info and directions at the store's website.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Interview: Victoria Janssen

I've moved this blog to my website - after this week, all posts will appear there. RSS Feed for the new address. Please stop by and visit!

Remember how, a while back, I mentioned that a journalist friend was helping me with promotion? Well, she interviewed me. Below is the result.

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Captain Leung, the coolly powerful privateer, silk-clad and barefoot. Maxime, the charismatic, magnificently endowed ruler of a dukedom by the sea. In The Duke and the Pirate Queen, Victoria Janssen’s third novel, these characters take the spotlight in a vibrant world even more lush than The Duchess, Her Maid, The Groom and Their Lover, the Harlequin Spice novel where they first appeared.

Q: These two characters are unusual and very equally matched. At what point while writing The Duchess did you realize that Maxime gets his own book?

VJ: Probably close to the end. I didn’t think about him much until I had to write him. It was more that I wanted Captain Leung to have her own book and I thought – who would be a good partner for her?

Q: Some reviewers thought Maxime was such an alpha male that he should have been the romantic lead in the first book.

VJ: They’re totally wrong about him being alpha. There's a section I had to cut from The Duchess in which he is completely not your typical Alpha Hero. (You can download it for free from my website.) He’s much more of a diplomat than “my testosterone drives me to be in charge.” So really he operates more in the sort of traditional female role of negotiation and emotional bonds.

Q: The cover art is compelling. It shows Captain Leung’s power and her muscles. How did you decide on her appearance?

VJ: I wanted Imena to look powerful and atypical of romance heroines, to make it clear she was different. So at a glance you would know that this was somebody interesting and there were other possibilities for women in this world. Also, I described her in a way that I thought Sylvie [a character appearing in both The Duke and the Pirate Queen and The Duchess, Her Maid, The Groom and Their Lover, Janssen’s first Harlequin Spice title] would find hot!

Q: What made you think of having Captain Leung’s head be shaven and covered in tattoos?

VJ: Maybe the last Rush Hour movie, a movie with a woman with a map tattooed on her scalp. It seemed that her value was reduced to what she had tattooed on her, and I wanted to strike against that: “These are the things I choose.” And tattoos on your scalp…you have got to be tough to get that done.

Q: At 30, Captain Leung is the youngest of your heroines. What made you decide to write older characters?

VJ: I wanted to write about somebody in that stage of life because fewer romance, or even erotica, authors do. Not callow, but she’s not at that age where she’s looking back in regret, like Camille [The Duchess]. Stories about older women are more neglected in our society. There’re fewer role models.

Q: As fantastical as this book is, it also works as a story about a thirtyish career woman who is enormously competent at her job, going home to her usually unconventional parents who have turned suddenly conventional about pressuring her to get married. Is that what you intended?

VJ: Anytime you’re writing fantasy or science fiction, you’re using an imaginary world to write about us, a lens or a mirror to make you think about the issue from an unexpected angle, like light shooting off a mirror at an angle. I try not to force it, but once I find it in what I’ve written, I can emphasize it a bit, to give the characters more depth and to develop a theme. Sometimes I find unexpected things about the characters this way.

Q: Is that what happened with the Venom/Cassidy character? You showed him to be rich and shabby at once, pretentious but lethal, especially with your dialogue.

VJ: To me, dialogue is almost inextricable from characterization. The bit on the desert island, for instance, where Maxime tells Captain Leung a big secret – I didn’t come up with that until I was writing that scene. I often discover things through dialogue. I'll have them conversing back and forth and then my back brain speaks up. If I try to direct it too much, it gets really dry and flat.

Q: In an alternate universe, if the Squirting Squid tavern were real, where would it be?

VJ: Way south of South Street, one of those blocks where there aren’t any businesses left but a single bar. Except if was Philly, the drinks would be good, and the food would be, too – it would have been turned into a gastropub!

Q: Who are some of your favorite romance writers, and what did you learn from them?

VJ: Judith Ivory. I learned you don’t have to have a pleasant hero or heroine. You don’t have to like them immediately to be involved in the book.

Laura Kinsale. You can have cracktastic plots. You can have things in a romance novel that include penguins in the Falkland Islands, ninjas, heroes with vertigo. Very freeing.

Carla Kelly. The knack of writing about ordinary people.

Georgette Heyer. Fun with cross-dressing and banter.

Q: By the end of your career, how many books would you like to have published?

VJ: I cannot imagine an answer to that question. I can’t imagine an end. If I had to decide how many, I’d have to decide right now which ideas to use and which not to use.

Q: What are some things you would like to write next?

VJ: A Victorian-set romance with a lady adventurer and a candy magnate who’s also a spy…a bitter and angry candy magnate. A space opera. A young adult novel, with lots of angst. Definitely a Western, possibly steampunk or fantasy -- a weird Western. And something with woolly mammoths.

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If you've got questions for my FAQ, ask them here!

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

"The World Beyond the Story" and Release Day!

Today, I posted on "The World Beyond the Story" at Ella Drake's blog.

And it's release day for The Duke and The Pirate Queen! Imagine fireworks going off! And check out my new website design, including blog!!!

"Captain Imena Leung, imperial privateer, is a woman who answers to no one – until her parents decree that she must marry and give up her ship. Her employer, the magnificent Duke Maxime, is expected to marry according to his king’s wishes. Neither is free to love as they please. But when Captain Leung learns of a plot to assassinate Maxime, she abducts him and takes to the seas to protect him. And aboard her ship, fighting to survive pirates, storms, and the sex rituals they encounter on a desert island, they learn to live by nobody’s rules except their own.

In this sequel to The Duchess, Her Maid, The Groom and Their Lover (December 2008), Janssen creates an erotic world aglow with even more lush details. But even in this fantasy setting, the characters resonate with the maturity and the subtle, wry sweetness that Janssen’s readers have come to expect. In Captain Leung, Janssen shows the full glory of a powerful woman meeting her match."

Monday, November 29, 2010

"Sexy Pirates" at The Smutketeers


I'm a guest of The Smutketeers all this week talking about "Sexy Pirates" - and am also giving away a print copy of The Duke & The Pirate Queen. Stop by their blog to enter!

Also, keep an eye on this blog; in the next few weeks it's going to be moving to my website domain, with a new design and everything. I'll make sure to have pointers when it happens.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Happy Thanksgiving!



And in other news, Erotic Exploits is now available for the Nook. If you have a Nook, and are willing to download the free sample, please let me know if the formatting looks all right or is terrible. The preview function does not seem to be working for me.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Rachel Kramer Bussel interview

Please welcome my guest, Rachel Kramer Bussel! Rachel and I met almost a decade back, when we were both reading our stories from Best Lesbian Erotica at Bluestockings in New York City. She graciously consented to answer some questions I had about the process of editing and her latest anthology, Passion: Erotic Romance for Women.

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How do you choose a focus for an anthology? How did you choose the focus of Passion?

I try to look at what readers might want to read, what I’m interested in, and what would be fun to work on. I like having a theme but it’s tricky because you don’t want the stories to be too similar to each other, so a theme like passion and erotic romance is wide enough that there’s room for plenty of variety.

I’ve done a lot of kinky anthologies and wanted to try something a little sweeter and more romantic, though there is definitely kink in it. I was surprised to find that it was a challenge to write my own story, “Five Senses,” but it also brought me to a range of new authors who work in the erotic romance field, something I’m looking forward to continuing with 2011’s Obsessed anthology, and another erotic romance book to follow.

How does your original idea for an anthology translate into the call for submissions, and into the stories you eventually choose?

Sometimes it’s a more exact match than others, and that process has gotten refined over time. I put out very detailed calls in terms of what they should look like but regarding content try to leave plenty of room to allow authors to come up with whatever strikes their fancy.

To me the beauty of editing an anthology is that so much of it is based on the writers’ creativity; they always come up with a cool take on my original idea that I never could have foreseen. One great example of that in Passion is Jacqueline Applebee’s story “My Dark Knight.” I know nothing about Renaissance Fair type of play but I didn’t need to to appreciate her story, which also touches on the uncertainty of new relationships, especially where you really like someone and aren’t sure exactly how they feel about you. I look for stories that have a real-life nuance to them, where even if the plot is outlandish, there’s relatable emotion between the characters.

What's the hardest part of choosing stories? The most fun?

The hardest part is rejecting stories. I hate that, and sometimes it makes me want to quit editing anthologies because it’s not fun at all, but I also know I’ll always be working on new anthologies so I can pass along those calls for submissions.

The most fun part is finding a story that just nails the theme perfectly and is so wonderful I want to read it to everyone I know. Those are the gems and make the very time-consuming process of reading submissions a joy.

How do you choose the order in which stories appear? What input does the publisher have into the final product?

I tend to select the first and last stories as ones that will, respectively, suck the reader in and leave the reader satisfied but maybe wanting a little more, and beyond that, I don’t have a highly scientific ordering process. I add stories as I go over a few months of editing, and at the end may move them around. I like to build up to the more intense stories, but a lot of it, for me, is actually pretty random.

Cleis Press rarely alters the order of the stories, though they do have final approval of manuscripts and sometimes stories get cut for space or if they aren’t quite a fit with the book. I appreciate this attention to detail and think it makes the books truly beautiful, inside and out. They find outstanding cover photographs and work hard to create quality, memorable books.

What was the first anthology you edited? How did that come about?

I co-edited the anthology Up All Night: True Lesbian Sex Stories, and was brought on board by co-editor Stacy Bias. She asked me to help and that book includes stories by Tristan Taormino and L. Elise Bland. That came out in 2004 and then soon after I started editing anthologies on my own, like Glamour Girls: Femme/Femme Erotica and Naughty Spanking Stories from A to Z.

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Thanks, Rachel! I'm looking forward to the anthology!

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Philcon 2010 & "Hints of Mystery" at K.S. Manning's Blog


Today, I'm visiting K.S. Manning's Blog talking about "Hints of Mystery" in the plot of The Duke and The Pirate Queen.

Please stop by!

I'll be at Philcon 2010 this weekend (November 19-21). Here's my schedule:

Fri 7:00 PM in Plaza VII (1 hour)
Breaking into the fantastic erotica market

Victoria Janssen (moderator), Stephanie Burke, Jennifer Williams, Lynn Perkins
How to be part of this burgeoning market for strange and sexy tales.

Fri 10:00 PM in Executive Suite 623 (1 hour)
Victoria Janssen, Reading


Fri 11:59 PM in Crystal Ballroom Three (1 hour)
Eye of Argon reading

Oz Fontecchio (moderator), Keith R.A. DeCandido, Victoria Janssen, Gregory Frost, Hildy Silverman, Michael A. Ventrella
Science fiction professionals and members of the audience compete in a live reading contest of what may well be the genre's worst story ever. Last year's contest played to an audience that spilled half way down the hall and to peals of laughter. Come see what all the guffawing is about!

Sat 12:00 PM in Grand Ballroom A (1 hour)
Is steampunk a rejection of the present?

Victoria Janssen (moderator), Jeff Mach, Gil Cnaan, Philippa Ballantine, C.J. Henderson
What is the appeal of steampunk? What is the source of its enormous popularity?

Sat 3:00 PM in Plaza III (1 hour)
The avoidable cliches of steampunk

Jared Axelrod (moderator), Jeff Mach, Victoria Janssen, Bernie Mojzes
As this sub-genre has crystallized, what are the elements we see too much of?

Sat 9:00 PM in Plaza VI (Six) (1 hour)
The paranormal romance

L.A. Banks (moderator), Stephanie Burke, C.J. Henderson, Victoria Janssen, Gail Z. Martin
What is meant by the term paranormal romance, and what are the significant works in this field?

Sun 10:00 AM in Grand Ballroom A (1 hour)
Robots since Asimov

Ty Drago (moderator), Victoria Janssen, Neal Levin
There is more to robots than Asimov's Three Laws. A discussion of recent science fiction about robotics and artificial intelligence.

Sun 1:00 PM in Crystal Ballroom Three (1 hour)
Vampires thick as fleas

Victoria Janssen (moderator), L.A. Banks, Genevieve Iseult Eldredge, Michael A. Ventrella
Has this trend crested? Is it going to take over the field or has it become a ghetto unto itself?

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

E-Galleys - Lost Sales, Gained Publicity

I've had people ask me why I think it's good to give out free books instead of selling them. Having been a reviewer, I know that regardless of my opinion on the matter, publishers want reviews and will send all kinds of things to reviewers in hope, even if the reviewer hasn't published a review in years. (Having served on an award jury, I also know that publicists will send books on the mere off-chance that they might be suitable for consideration, even if they only squeak into the award category by a whisker.)

Also, galleys are intended to reach reviewers before the book's release date. Sales during a book's first month on shelves are extremely important. (I'm considering them separately from bookstore orders, which happen far in advance.) Better to have the online buzz start early and continue throughout that month. If the reviewer has to wait for release day, she doesn't have as much time to read and review.

I don't know if free books lead to lost sales. But consider: what if those reviewers, in other circumstances, had never heard of the book at all? Better a slim chance of a review, reaching potentially thousands, than leaving it to fate.

Since I don't know how much longer galleys will be available, this post is also to serve as a reminder that The Duke and the Pirate Queen is now on NetGalley if you're a reviewer who's registered with the site. The catalog of Harlequin galleys. You don't have to review for magazines or a blog to register; you're eligible if you only plan to review books on GoodReads, Amazon.com, etc..

If you're curious about the service, here's the FAQ. To me, it seems like a good idea just from the standpoint of being Green. Publishers who are making their galleys available in electronic form are not printing galleys, many of which would end up being discarded. And, hopefully, they can reach reviewers who prefer electronic reading, or who might not have been receiving review copies previously.

Here are some excerpts from the book:

Excerpt from the opening chapter.

Second excerpt.

Third excerpt.

Fourth excerpt.

Amazon link for pre-ordering print copies.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Giveaway - The Duke & The Pirate Queen

I have received my author copies of The Duke & The Pirate Queen! Therefore, it is time for the Traditional Giving Away of A Signed Advance Copy.

Comment on this post between now and midnight, U.S. Eastern Time, on November 14th. On Monday, November 15th, I'll use a randomizer to choose a winner and announce it in the blog.

It's not required, but I'd appreciate it if your comment was amusing or entertaining in some way. For instance, you could tell me why you are special and should win a free book. Or how you are the biggest pirate fan ever. Or how much you hate pirates but have a thing for privateers. Etc.

It doesn't matter where in the world you live; if you win I will ship the book there. Except if you live off-planet. Then, we'd have to talk logistics.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Website Makeover

My website's makeover is in progress. The hard part, for me, was telling the designer what I want. I'm not that great with visual stuff and when I organize things, they tend to spiral on and on and on rather being laid out in tidy grids. Luckily for me, the designer had a questionnaire for me to fill out.

It's much easier for me to formulate my website ideas around what I like and dislike rather than just imagining what I want it to look like. I now know a lot about what I don't like.

Things I like: organization, organization, and organization. Open space, so it doesn't feel cluttered. Black print on white background.

Things I dislike: blinky lights; animation; splash pages; image maps; blinky animated splash pages that lead to image maps. Sea green backgrounds. Also, I am not fond of taglines for authors, but I understand why some people have them.

What about you? What do you absolutely detest on author websites?

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Kindle-cising

Sometimes I read while I'm exercising. Usually, it's an article or newsletter I've printed out, so I can discard the pages into recycling when I'm done. Occasionally, I read a magazine, particularly thin ones like the SFWA Bulletin, because they're easy to fold flat.

I've noticed that the elliptical trainers at my gym have little ledges that look broad enough to support a Kindle or other e-reader. The treadmills probably do as well, though I don't usually use those.

Those of you who have e-readers, do you ever use them while exercising? What model do you have?

Do you make the font larger? How do you protect your reader from sweaty hands? Is it difficult to operate while you're in motion?

Are there any drawbacks I should be aware of?

...nice shorts, Rudolf Valentino.

Also, Erotic Exploits is now available for Kindle. Since I don't yet have a Kindle, if you happen to download the sample, I would be grateful if you could let me know how the formatting looks. UK Edition is here. [Edited to add, the formatting does have an issue. So I need to take it down and fix it.]

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

The Mammoth Book of Threesomes and Moresomes


The Mammoth Book of Threesomes and Moresomes, edited by Linda Alvarez, releases today in the U.S.!

(My contributor's copy has a different cover than the one shown on Amazon. Not sure why.)

It includes one of my favorites of my own stories, "The Magnificent Threesome." One day, I want to write more about those characters. There are a few classic Western plot elements I wasn't able to include in the story's six thousand words or so. But only a few. *ahem*

Monday, September 27, 2010

Galleys now available for THE DUKE & THE PIRATE QUEEN

The Duke and the Pirate Queen is now available on NetGalley if you're a reviewer who's registered with the site. If you're just curious about the service, here's the FAQ.

Excerpt from the opening chapter.

Second excerpt.

Third excerpt.

Fourth excerpt.

Amazon link for pre-order.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

LeGuin Festschrift

The Ursula LeGuin Festschrift, produced last year for her 80th birthday in an edition of one, will be coming out in print for the rest of us October 21, which happens to be Ursula LeGuin's 81st birthday.

You can pre-order (at a 25% discount) here.

Contributions include fiction from John Kessel, Andrea Hairston, Sheree Renee Thomas, Ama Patterson, and Pan Morigan, and essays and poetry from Richard Chwedyk, Debbie Notkin, Eileen Gunn, Kim Stanley Robinson, Lynn Alden Kendall, Brian Attebery, Gwyneth Jones, Vonda N. McIntyre, Karen Joy Fowler, MJ Hardman, Ellean Eades, Paul Preuss, Molly Gloss, Sarah LeFanu, Victoria McManus, Jed Hartman, Ellen Kushner, Pat Murphy, Nancy Kress, Jo Walton, Una McCormack, Julie Phillips, Patrick O'Leary, Eleanor Arnason, Deirdre Byrne, Suzette Haden Elgin, Lisa Tuttle, Judith Barrington, Nisi Shawl, Elisabeth Vonarburg, and Sandra Kasturi.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Pirate Promotion

A friend of mine is providing me with quite a lot of her own time and energy to help me with promotion for The Duke & The Pirate Queen. Recently, we met for lunch a couple of times and she, who once worked as a journalist, walked me through an outline she'd created, of things she saw as easy opportunities for book promotion.

She has a lot more confidence in me than I do. Which is one of the lovely things about friends. We even discussed how certain things might not actually do any good, but I might do them anyway to make me feel like I was doing something to help the book.

Aside from organizing the book's launch party, which she has done for both of the previous books as well, she's writing up a press kit for me to include on my revamped website, which will hopefully go live in November; she looked at the press kits on some romance author sites, and we're going to base it on those patterns, with the addition of a sort of FAQ interview (she's done a lot of interviews in the past). I'm hoping that will make my biography page more interesting. She left it to me to arrange for an author photograph, which I've never actually had; I contacted a professional friend, and potentially I'll be able to get that taken care of before the book comes out.

The rest of her ideas, we're going to work on after the new year. Right now, the website is my priority, and I'll be working with someone in October on that.

It feels good to have a priority. It all feels more manageable when I have a tidy list.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Promotional Bookmarks

Back when I first posted about promotional bookmarks and postcards for The Duke & The Pirate Queen, I promised to give an update on how it was going. So, here's how it's going...sort of.

I don't actually know yet how it's going. I carried quantities of the bookmarks and postcards with me to the RWA conference and to Readercon, and left them on the freebie tables. People took them. I had taken far too many to RWA, so I collected most of the leftovers before I left on Saturday, but a lot of them had still been taken. Several people told me they'd seen my materials and said how beautiful they were, so that was nice feedback.

Once home, I began preparing packages of the promotional materials to send out. First on the list was a bookstore owner who'd actually contacted me via email, and second was a librarian I'd met at RWA; she'd given me her card. I also collected a few librarian and bookstore addresses from various sources on the internet: people who'd recently won awards from RWA, and specialty bookstores who looked as if they might be interested. In the weeks since, I've been gradually preparing envelopes for each of those venues, including a handwritten letter in each one, to ask if they are willing to distribute the materials for me. I'm not expecting to hear back from them; I just hope they have a use for what I've sent. Ziplock bags inside of flat-rate priority mail envelopes have been my method so far.

The best thing, so far, about having these materials is that I, well, have them. I was able to give them to people I talked to, and in some cases the bookmark seemed more appropriate than giving them my business card. The materials also served as conversation pieces, as anything with my covers tends to do, thanks to Harlequin.

I will be bringing more bookmarks and postcards to the fall conventions I plan to attend. If you'd like me to send some to you, or to your local bookstore or library, please comment or email me.

If I get any additional feedback, I'll report!

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Top Posts from 2010 (so far)

I like playing with the tracking on my blog sometimes. Here are the most popular posts on this blog, by month, for 2010 so far. It's very interesting to see which posts seem to be of more general interest.

January: Tell Not Show, a writing craft post.

February: My Favorite Girls Dressed As Boys (Fantasy Edition), which continues to get visits along with its companion post from September 2009, The Romance Edition.

March: Why Not 20th Century Historicals? The first view of the Alison's Wonderland cover was close behind. People like pretty pictures!

April: Slow Writers Anonymous. Author Gwynne Garfinkle's post on Researching the 1970s was close behind.

May: Combined posts (the Brontë tag) on my reread of Jane Eyre. Various individual posts on that set were also in the top ten for the month.

June: Evie Byrne's guest post on On the Female Vampire.

July: Eroticism in To Have & To Hold by Patricia Gaffney.

The top posts for August were news rather than topical posts: my announcement that I was writing a steampunk Western, and my reports on the 2010 RWA Conference.

If you had a different favorite, let me know in comments!