A Favorite Piece of Literature #OpenBook Blog Hop
Writing Craft Book #IWSG
August 4 question – What is your favorite writing craft book? Think of a book that every time you read it you learn something or you are inspired to write or try the new technique. And why?
The awesome co-hosts for the August 4 posting of the IWSG are PK Hrezo, Cathrina Constantine, PJ Colando, Kim Lajevardi, and Sandra Cox!. Thanks to all of you
I’m on the road, but before I took off I pulled a few books from my shelves to note in this post.
I cut my writing teeth on poetry, and my bookshelf reflects it. A lot of what I learned from poetry is useful in my fiction writing, even if I don’t refer to those books on a daily basis. Here are a couple I grabbed from my bookshelf:
Writing Down the Bones: Natalie Goldberg
In Pursuit of Poetry: Robert Hillyer
But the best reference for poetry are the poems from other poets; the famous and the unknown. Here are a few from my collection: Robert Frost, Dylan Thomas, Gary Snyder, Alice Walker, American Indian Poetry
Now that I’m writing fiction, my research takes a different avenue. A lot of it can be done on the internet, but here are two recent purchases that I’ve used for planning future projects:
The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Private Investigating
Boots in the Ashes (a memoir of Cynthia Beebe, one of the early female ATF agents)
Quite the difference! But I’m happy to expand my writing (and knowledge) horizons.
To find out which books other authors use to refine their craft, check out some of the links below.
As always, until next time, please stay safe.
The Joy? of Growing Older #OpenBook Blog Hop
August 2, 2021
What’s something you look forward to as you age? And what do you miss from your youth?
Sorry I’m a day late with this. I’m on the road with limited internet access.
I admit it, I’m not just getting old, lots of folks would say I AM old. I own it and accept it. So what are some of the things I’m looking forward to?
First thing that springs to mind is retirement. I’m looking forward to not having to go to work every day, except for those tasks I set for myself. I may not sleep in, but how nice will it be to start the day with my beverage of choice, and listen to the birds greeting the morning and the grass warming up in the sunshine. Or maybe change the scene and watch the snow fall gently onto to welcoming earth.
Sure, I’ll want to train myself to write on a different schedule. Perhaps in the morning when the day’s projects won’t have stifled my creativity and my mind is still fresh. We’ll see. And I should have more time for other projects. I haven’t done any needlepoint for too long.
With any luck, we’ll be able to travel. That depends on factors out of my control, so we’ll play it by ear. I don’t plan on huge trips, but there are many places in the U.S. I’d like to explore.
What do I miss from my childhood?
Long summer afternoons spent wandering the backroads and, with my best friend, creating new paths in the forested hills in our area. Picking huckleberries and wild raspberries. Drinking fresh spring water straight from pipes driven into the side the hills. In the winter, we would go sledding in the nearby pastures. While I can do those things again, sadly, my best friend from those days is physically unable able to join me.
I’ll be heading over to check out what the other authors on this look are looking forward too. You can too, by following the links below.
Until next time, please stay safe!
August 2, 2021
What’s something you look forward to as you age? And what do you miss from your youth?
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use #OpenBook when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
Fighting the Fear #OpenBook Blog Hop
July 26, 2021
Write a scene or story that includes a character who has a phobia. What do they fear? How does this phobia affect their life?
I decided to write a scene involving two of my favorite characters from the Harmony Duprie Mysteries. Harmony and Eli. For those of you who have read the series, this scene would fall between the The Contessa’s Brooch and The Samurai’s Inro. At the end of The Contessa’s Brooch, Harmony had promised Eli that she would fly down to Florida to start working for him, and he had promised her that he’d use the company’s jet to pick her up instead of making her take a commercial flight when he figured out she has a fear of flying.
*****
The path on my maps app showed our path going straight, but Eli had flipped on his turn signal. Had he changed his mind, and we were driving to Florida? I could hope. “This isn’t our turn,” I said as I put my phone in my lap and wiped my sweaty palms on my jeans. He’d told me to dress for comfort.
“The jetport has its own exit.” A wide grin lightened his face. “You’re in for a treat.”
“Nothing that has to do with getting on an airplane is fun.” I wiggled in my padded and heated seat. “This is a nice car. I’d love to take it for a long drive with you. Like all the way to Florida.”
“We’ll make that happen some day, Harmony. But not this time. I have a full slate of meetings tomorrow, and you need to be there for a few of them as part of your training.” He patted my knee.
“I got myself into this fix, didn’t I? I should have never accepted the offer to work for you.” It had seemed like a good idea. I had a hard time resisting when he batted his pale blue eyes at me.
He laughed. “I’m not going to need to pull a Mr. T. intervention on you, am I?”
“Mr. T.?”
“Old TV show. The tough guy on a team had a fear of flying. They had to come up with creative ways to drug him and get him on a plane to their next job almost every week.”
“I thought that soda you bought for me tasted funny. You didn’t…”
“No, I wouldn’t. But I’m not afraid to throw you over my shoulder and carry you onto the jet if I need to.”
“One time. One time you pulled that trick. And we were headed to the bedroom, not an airplane, and I wasn’t fighting.”
“That sounds like a challenge.” He turned onto a side road. “We can test it tonight. I’ll carry you to my bed. At my house. In Florida. That’s another benefit of taking the company jet.”
“Good selling point, but what else can you throw in to sweeten the pot?”
“Comfy leather chains you can stretch out in? Your pick of adult beverages, including your favorite wine? Not needing to go through TSA security or wait in line to board? Me to keep you company?”
“They all sound nice.” I wasn’t sold, I laid my hand on my thigh and and squeezed to hide the trembling.
Eli pulled into a parking spot but didn’t turn off the engine. He turned to me and put his hand on my shoulder. “You never have told me why you’re afraid to fly.”
“I never told you I was afraid to fly.”
He moved his hand and rubbed my neck just below my bun. “You didn’t need to say the words.”
I leaned into the massage, and the tautness in my muscles eased. His phone rang, and I missed the warmth of his touch when he answered it.
Eli’s side of the conversation was mostly words of acknowledgment, and I wondered who he was talking to. It wasn’t a normal business discussion. “We’ll be in the lounge when you are ready,” he said. “See you soon.”
He turned off the car. “That was Andy, my pilot. He’ll be landing soon. It’ll take a while to do paperwork, refuel, and he takes a break. We can wait in the visitors’ area.”
Every muscle in my body tensed. “I can’t do this, Eli.”
“One step at a time, Harmony. We’re just going inside and get a drink and use the restroom. You don’t even have to take your luggage. Andy will handle it. Okay? That way I can hold your hand.”
I swallowed back the lump in my throat.
He got out of the car, came around to the passenger’s side, opened the door, and crouched beside me. “Tell me what’s going on.”
“Blame it on my parents.” The bitter words dripped from my mouth.
He scrunched an eyebrows. “I thought they died in a mountain-climbing accident.”
“They did. I took them to the airport for their trip and they never came back. I don’t have a fear of flying, I have a fear of abandonment. Me abandoning everyone else. But only with airplanes. I don’t want to go somewhere and never return It’s not logical, but there it is.”
“And all those times I’ve left you, you’ve never said a word.”
“Because somehow I always knew you’d be back, and it was okay.”
Eli stood, stretched, and smiled. “There’s your answer! It’s logical. As long as we are together, we’ll both be okay. Right?”
I mulled over the logic, looking for flaws, and didn’t find any. “It can’t be that easy.”
“No, but it’s a start. Let’s go inside.” He held out his hand.
After undoing my seatbelt, I accepted his help to get out of the car. I stood glued to the spot, searching for courage.
He slipped his arm around my waist. “It’s only to the lounge. One step at a time.”
How had I’d missed it? Eli was my courage. I leaned into him. “One step at a time. But we’re going to discuss the fact that you’re taking it for granted we’ll be sharing a bed tonight.”
*****
To read what our other authors have to say about their character’s phobias, follow the links below. And, until next time, please stay safe!
July 26, 2021
Write a scene or story that includes a character who has a phobia. What do they fear? How does this phobia affect their life?
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use #OpenBook when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
Creativity By The Sundial #OpenBook Blog Hop
July 19, 2021
Is there a certain time of day when you are most creative? When you handle the ‘business’ side of writing? What’s your favorite time of day?
My bedroom faces south. Despite the room-darkening curtains, daylight has a habit of sneaking in long before I’m
ready for it. I can roll over and ignore it for only so long until I succumb to its invitation and crawl out of bed.
But those early mornings, while I’m sipping on a glass of orange juice or a cup of tea, are the perfect time to check emails and social media. I can be productive while getting my brain warmed up. Just in time to go to work!
The evening brings another round of social media—some sites may be different. There’s always the check to see if I’ve sold any books, or if there are publicity opportunities i need to take advantage of. There may be chores to be done, supper to be cooked and eaten, or any number of errands.
Once the sun has set, and life has slowed down, my fingers itch for the keyboard. All those ideas that have niggled at the back of my brain all day seek release. That’s when I can shut out the rest of the world, put on some music, and crawl into the worlds I create and spend time with my characters.
That time is never long enough. Hours after dark, I have to watch the clock. Much as I hate it, I can’t write as until the words run out. Real life interrupts. I’m too old to operate without enough sleep.
What’s my favorite time of day? It depends upon what day of the week it is, and what season. Each day brings new joys. Perhaps it’s the moment of a summer day when the temperature is just right and the birds are calling their joy. Or that minute when a gentle snow starts falling at night and glows in the light shining from the windows of the house. Maybe it’s that second when I read what I’ve just written, sit back, and say “Damn, that’s good.”
Those all are contenders. But none of them match the eternity when my husband and I pass each other in the hallway or in the kitchen and he reaches out to touch me.
What about you? What’s your favorite time of day? Tell us about it in the comments, if you’d like to share. In the meantime, let’s check out what the other authors have to say by following the links below.
And, as always, until next time, please stay safe.
July 19, 2021
Is there a certain time of day when you are most creative? When you handle the ‘business’ side of writing? What’s your favorite time of day?
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use #OpenBook when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
Audiobooks – The Future or a Fad? #OpenBook Blog Hop
July 12, 2021
Are audiobooks the future of book sales? Do you have your stories on audio?
First it was large print books and books for the blind. Then there were books on tape. Now we moved into proprietary formats based on what platform you listen on. Alternative ways of reading have been around for years.
I own copies of James Bond books as MP3s that I got back in the late 90s. (I think – I’ve transferred them from one PC to another so many times that I’ve lost track of when I got them.) I listened to them when I was doing chores that didn’t demand my total attention but found my enjoyment was based on the voice of the narrator—when the narrator changed in the middle of the series I didn’t like it—and I never got ‘addicted’ to the format.
To be honest, I don’t understand people who listen to audiobooks when they’re driving. I need to concentrate on the road, and the radio is background noise to keep me company, especially on long drives. I can’t imagine trying to pay attention to a book and still giving traffic the needed attention. Even on the long, flat, lonely stretches of Wyoming roads, you never know when someone is going to fly around you doing over 100 mph. Obviously, that changes if you are the passenger and someone else is driving.
Are audiobooks the future? Maybe, in the same way that ebooks were the future not too long ago. There will always be an audience for all forms of books – print, ebook, and audio, as well as any form that hasn’t been invented yet. (Neural implant, anyone?)
I’ve looked into audio for my books. (NOT Audible, because that’s part of the Amazon monopoly.) I looked is as far as it’s gone. The price to have audio books done right is out of my budget and I don’t have the skills or equipment to do it myself. It’s more than just reading your story out loud. I think I’m an expressive reader, but I am aware of the slight mistakes I make. To have a recording edited to make it error-free would be more work than many editors would tackle. I need to sell many more of my books before an audio book would fit into my plans.
We have authors on this hop that have audiobooks, and I’m looking forward to their input. You can find them by following the links below.
As always, until next time, please stay safe.
July 12, 2021
Are audiobooks the future of book sales? Do you have your stories on audio?
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use #OpenBook when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
Adeus, Do svidaniya, Annyeong, Au Revoir, Auf Wiedersehen, Goodbye #IWSG
Welcome to another month, and a new Insecure Writer’s Support group. This month’s topic is: What would make you quit writing?
The awesome co-hosts for the July 7 posting of the IWSG are Pat Garcia, Victoria Marie Lees, and Louise – Fundy Blue!
I’ve thought about it. Quitting, that is. When the book sales are non-existent and the reviews aren’t tumbling in, it’s hard to keep putting pen to paper. Or fingers to the keyboard.
But although selling books feeds my ego, that’s not why I started writing.
I started writing because I have these stories tumbling around in my head. Characters who talk to me and keep me company and make me laugh and make me cry. Even if I never publish another book, I’ll still want to capture these tales and figure out what they have to teach me. Even if I stop sharing my books with the public, I can’t imagine that I will ever stop writing.
Those words may never even make it to paper. Some stories are better left floating around the interior of my brain. That’s still writing, as far as I’m concerned.
So, back to the original question. What would make me quit writing? Nothing. As long as I can form coherent thoughts, I’ll keep writing. That’s just part of who I am.
Don’t forget to check out some of the other posts on this hop by following the links below. As, as always, until next time, please stay safe.
The Art of Going UnderCover #OpenBook Blog Hop
July 5, 2021
If your character wanted to wear a disguise, how would they dress?
I giggled as Lando adjusted the support stockings. They hid the thick bandages he had wrapped each leg with to make them appear fatter. “Luckily it’s getting chilly outside,” he said, handing me a heavy sweater. “The more layers of clothing you wear the less you resemble yourself.”
With the foam form strapped around my belly, I thought I had plenty of padding already. It was designed to give a man the concept of the extra weight women carry when they are pregnant, but mostly it made me look fat. The over-sized dress with the huge Hawaiian flower pattern exaggerated the effect. Under all the foam and extra layers of clothing, it wouldn’t be long before I started to sweat.
The gray wig was a nice touch too. It was hard getting all my hair to stay under it, and thank heavens the curly hair hid the lump my bun made. Lando worried the makeup he had applied didn’t fill my face out enough, but he did the best job possible with his limited supplies. He hoped the huge glasses he’d found would help. The plain thick glass meant I still needed my contacts. The ugly white nurse’s shoes were a size too big, but with the thick socks they fit just about right.
A cane was the last accessory. To put any weight on it, I had to lean forward. He stood back, nodding and admiring his work. “Well, I think that’s it, Aunt Martha,” he said grinning.
I smiled back and pointed the end of the cane at him. “That’s enough out of you, sonny.”
From The Marquesa’s Necklace
That’s the first time we got to see Harmony Duprie in disguise. It wasn’t an outfit she picked, but it worked. Several times, actually, until it got a bit too well-known and she had to abandon it.
Where did her friend Lando get his knowledge of makeup and camouflage? He’s a cosplayer, and had build several elaborate costumes. I like to think he got his start doing theatre in high school, trying to impress a cute girl.
It wasn’t the last disguise Harmony adopted in the series. She soon discovered how useful changing her appearance was when to went to local bars to do ‘research’ on whatever mystery she was investigating. She also found out how many tutorials there are on the internet to give her step-by-step instructions on applying makeup, wigs, and other essentials for becoming someone new.
Most of my camouflage came from thrift shops in Pittsburgh. Old jeans, tank tops, and plaid shirts, paid for in cash, to make the purchases untraceable. All except for the bright red wig. It came from a costume store. Still, it looked real.
And I’d spent far too much time watching on-line videos on techniques for applying makeup. My makeup supplies had swelled to never-before-seen proportions. I hadn’t owned this many colors of eye shadows and lipsticks even in high school.
For a finishing touch, I knotted the pink plaid shirt under my breasts, exposing the black tank top underneath it. With a final fluff of the wig, I nodded in satisfaction. In the harsh lights of my bathroom, I looked sufficiently unlike myself to suit my purposes. And in the typical dim lighting of a typical bar, my alter-ego should fool everyone.
From The Baron’s Cufflinks
Harmony is aware that going in disguise isn’t the answer to all situations. That doesn’t stop her from planning elaborate costumes and scenarios to get the answers she’s needs. It’s a challenge, and one she enjoys.
What about the other authors on this hop? Do their characters utilize disguises? Find out by following the links below. And, until next time, please stay safe!
July 5, 2021
If your character wanted to wear a disguise, how would they dress?
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use #OpenBook when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.
The Curse of the Question Mark #OpenBook Blog Hop
Do you use said or asked after a ? or tag your interruptions? Any punctuation that bugs you? What’s the hardest for you to get right?
The first thing I thought about when I saw this topic was how to make the post funny, but a comedian I am not. Not for lack of trying, but my sense of humor is warped. People don’t get my attempts at humor, and I have to admit, I’m not that funny. So, you’re stuck with me answering this as blandly as possible. Hopefully, it won’t be that bad.
Punctuation is hard. I don’t get it right 100% of the time. Thank heavens for good editors. But the question mark question I have covered. If I add a tag to a sentence that ends in a question mark, it’s always asked or questioned, but it’s never said. That wouldn’t make sense to me. I suppose it’s possible that a person asks a question in a monotone and using said would work, but I don’t believe I’ve ever written a sentence like that. I have written sentences that grammar programs have interpreted as questions when they aren’t, and then I confuse the computer by refusing to change the period to a question mark. But there’s no ask or said involved.
Is there punctuation that bugs me? Let’s talk quotation marks. Why is there a difference in usage of question marks between the United State and part of Europe? They use the single quote to mark dialogue. ‘Punctuation is the devil,’ rather than the double quotes we use in the US “Punctuation is the devil.” How did that happen and why? Who thought that was a good idea?
And is there punctuation I struggle with? Besides almost all of it? Let’s talk dashes. Why do we need three forms of dashes? Not two, but three. You have the dash – the en-dash – and the em-dash —. The rules of how and why to use each other is enough to make a writer’s s head spin and a grammarian’s heart sing, and I’m not going to try to explain them here. I don’t think I’d do a good job. Feel free to give yourself a headache and research them in your favorite fashion.
What about you? What punctuation do you struggle with? Let’s commiserate in the comments. And don’t forget to check out the other authors on the hop by checking out the links below.
As always, until next time, stay safe.
June 28, 2021
Do you use said or asked after a ? or tag your interruptions? Any punctuation that bugs you? What’s the hardest for you to get right?
Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use #OpenBook when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.