Showing posts with label women's fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women's fiction. Show all posts

Sunday, August 18, 2019

The Invisible Woman (short story) by Leanne Dyck

The case of the mysteriously disappearing woman...

on Vancouver Island photo by ldyck

The Invisible Woman

The first time it happened I was out walking with your father. Both of us had put on a few extra pounds and we wanted to be proactive. We passed a guy I knew well. I'd grown-up beside him. We'd gone to school together.

"Hi, Archie," he called to your father. He usually had some kind of smart remark for me. This time nothing.

I called out, "Hey, Walter."

It was like he didn't even see me. People are odd is what I thought. Maybe it was my fault. Maybe I'd unknowingly upset him. Or maybe pretending he didn't see me was his latest tease. I tried not to let it bother me.

Later, at the grocery store, I noticed a new acquaintance. I wanted to say hello but couldn't remember her name. So I waited for her to acknowledge me. Nothing. I wrote it off to being preoccupied. Maybe she had invited people over and her brain was full planning the meal.

At the checkout, we saw Louise. She and I like to talk. It annoys your impatient father, but we don't care. I wait for him to shoot the breeze at the hardware store. This is my turn. But she looked right through me.

"Cash or credit?" she asked your father.

Feeling insulted, I let your father deal with her and we left.

This morning, at breakfast, you asked your father, "Hey, dad where's Mom?"--with a serious tone.

I'd just poured your juice. I'd just filled your plate with scrambled eggs and toast.

"Huh? I don't know." I know when Archie is teasing. He wasn't. 

That's when I knew something must be up. I ran to the bathroom. I looked in the mirror expecting to see my reflection--crow's feet around my eyes, laugh lines around my mouth, a few stray hairs above my upper lip and under my chin. But... It wasn't that I didn't recognize myself. It was that there was nothing to identify. All I saw was the shower curtain. I'd become invisible. 

More...

The mysterious case of the disappearing woman...

Next Sunday evening...




Book Review:  The Princess Dolls
written by Ellen Schwartz
illustrated by Mariko Ando 

Set in 1942, two girls--one Jewish-Canadian and the other Japanese-Canadian--bond over their mutual admiration for Queen Elizabeth and Princess Margaret


Sunday, July 9, 2017

Book review: 13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl by Mona Awad

13 chapters tell the hidden truths of women's lives. I'll guarantee that at least two of these chapters will hit so close to home that you'll wince. I started reading 13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl in a bus shelter and one scene hit so hard that I turned red in the face and wanted to hide. "No, don't tell them that. Not that." I was so convinced that the person sitting beside me would read the words and know everything. This book isn't for the fate of heart.


Photo by LDyck

Published in 2016



I admire novelists who take a different path when writing their books. Awad is another example. She uses a variety of POVs--best friend, lover, etc. But it's more than that, some of the opening chapters made me wonder if I was reading a linked short story collection or a novel. Later chapters confirmed it was a novel.

First-time authors are warned:  Don't play loose and easy with the rules. Later when you're an established author have-at-her. But. Not. Now.

13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl is Mona Awad's first novel.

Huh?

More...

The Vancouver Sun discusses 13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl




Next post:  Shakespeare and Snorri
Sunday, July 16 
Published at approximately 5 PM PT

Sunday, April 17, 2016

Book Review: Cat's Eye by Margaret Atwood


Some writers don't read while they work. They use the excuse that they don't want their writing to be influenced. But influence has long tentacles. You can be influenced by something you read months or even years ago. I need to read to prime the pump. Not only do other authors influence me, they also teach me. And I need to learn to develop my own voice. I need to read, I need to write, daily. It's a deep hungry. Writing is my voice. 

I wrote this after reading the third chapter of Cat's Eye. Can you tell that Atwood is influencing me?



The artist in Cat's Eye is staging a retrospective of her work, but by way of vivid memories she shares a retrospective of her life.

What stands out for me in Atwood's work is her use of language. 

It is poetic...
We are survivors, of each other. We have been shark to one another, but also lifeboat. (p. 17)
I hadn't yet encountered the foreign hairpins left in the bathroom like territorial dog pee on snowy hydrants. (p. 190)
It is political...
An artist is a tawdry, lazy sort of thing to be, as most people in this country will tell you. (p. 15)

Atwood is teaching me how to weave the senses into narrative... 
 Around me is the scent of newsprint and floor wax, the bureau drawer smell of my itchy stockings mingled with that of grimy knees, the scratchy hot smell of wool plaid and the cat box aroma of cotton underpants. (p. 59)

And as I read, I am learning to develop my own voice.


"Scene from my outside writing area"
Photo by L Dyck

Atwood...
On her head is the felt hat like a badly done-up package that she used to wear on Sundays. (p. 358)
Me...

The felt hat she use to wear on Sundays is on her head--like a badly done-up package.

or

A felt hat, she use to wear on Sundays, is balanced on her head--like a badly done-up package.

Does she influence me?

Yes, but many things do.

Swallowed by my eyes. Bent, stretched, blended, transformed by my brain. Pouring out of my pen. 

Next post (Sunday, April 24th approximately 5 p.m.)
For a Warmer World:  What makes you tick? What is your narrative? When you share your truth it makes the world stronger. If you're scratching your head over all this don't worry just (please) read my next post.


"Bim:  my inside/outside reading and writing buddy"
Photo by L Dyck

Sharing my author journey...
This week I've been learning how to start chapters. I've learned that...

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Book review: The Robber Bride by Margaret Atwood



Back cover blurb:  Roz, Charis, and Tony all share a wound, and her name is Zenia. Beautiful, smart, and hungry by turns manipulative and vulnerable, needy and ruthless, Zenia is the turbulent center of her own perpetual saga. She entered their lives in the sixties, when they were in college. Over the three decades since, she has damaged each of them badly, ensnaring their sympathy, betraying their trust, and treating their men as loot. Then Zenia dies, or at any rate the three women -- with much relief -- attend her funeral. But as The Robber Bride begins, Roz, Charis, and Tony have come together at a trendy restaurant for their monthly lunch when in walks the seemingly resurrected Zenia...

Notes while reading...

About the book

For me, The Robber Bride is about personal and global wars. Why the anger? What do you gain? Is it worth the struggle? In the end, what are you left with? Is there a better way?

The Robber Bribe is told by three women. Their stories are linked together through one person -- Zenia. We follow each woman through this book -- through their own eyes, their own thoughts -- and the experience helps to define them.

Zenia 


In walks the "friend" that is supposed to be dead. It's like when pure evil enters the scene and the candle flame dances in the breeze. 

Why is she there? She should be dead? They all think. Then they think she's making us feel uncomfortable. It's not us that should be feeling that way -- it's her.

Tony (educated. professor. historian. wife. childless. )

Tony lets Zenia into the deepest part of herself. Tony reveals her greatest wound to Zenia. Tony tells Zenia about her estranged mother. Zenia lasps the story up like a kitten drinking milk. 

'This is the first time Tony has ever said very much to anyone about her mother... Zenia ... can see it's a painful subject for Tony, but this doesn't deter her; if anything it spurs her on. She pushes and prods and makes all the right noises, curious and amazed, horrified, indulgent, and relentless, and pulls Tony inside out like a sock.' (p. 152)
Zenia wiggles into Tony's life, uses her, wringles her out, stuffs her full of things that Zenia will be able to use later and then she's ready comes back into Tony's life and makes withdrawals. Tony is left to pick-up the pieces.

Chrisa (new age "hippie". single mother)

Zenia stole something from her. Ever since suffering this lose, Chrisa has been investing a lot more in herself -- building a happy life.

Chrisa is growing into her own happiness. She's learning healthy ways to release the unhappiness she feels. She's learning to take pleasure in what she has, instead of grieving what she's lost. But she feels her daughter, Augusta, judging her.

Roz (business woman. single mother.)

Roz's home life is like one of those English family comedy movies from the 1960s. 

Zenia is given the most life, the most power in Roz's life. Did Roz pay the most?

'[W]hen the women's movement hit town in the early seventies, Roz was sucked into it like a dust bunny into a vacuum cleaner.' (p. 394)

The men...

'Zenia says coolly "Mitch was a creep. Roz is better off without her." ' (p. 462)

West is weak; Billy is lazy; Mitch is unfaithful. I wonder if Zenia did Tony, Charis and Roz a favour by destroying their relationships with these men.

Atwood's writing

When Atwood wants to introduce back-story, she writes, 'For instance'. So simple; so effective.

I love this quotes... 'Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of women. A mother knows.' (p. 95)

Concepts to mull over... 'Perhaps the soul breaks up as the body does, and only parts of it are reborn, a fragment here, a fragment there.' (p. 508)

'The dead return in other forms ... because we will them to' (p. 525)

If you enjoy reading The Robber Bride you might also enjoy reading...


The Secret Life of Bees


Oh, yes, and Margaret Atwood has written a diverse collection of 55 books. No doubt you will find more books that interest...delight... inspire...entertain  you among them. Her latest book is Stone Mattress

Next Post:  Monday, January 26th:  Writers, how do you attract readers?

Sharing my author journey...

Monday, September 22, 2014

Book Review: The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd


Photo by D. Burrowes

My friend and fellow author, Amber Harvey, recommended that I read The Secret Life of Bees and lent me her copy.



Blurb:  Set in South Carolina in 1964. The Secret Life of Bees tells the story of Lily Owens, whose life has been shaped around the blurred memory of the afternoon her mother was killed. When Lily's fierce hearted black "stand in mother", Rosaleen, insults three of the deepest racists in town. Lily decides to spring them both free. They escape to Tiburon, South Carolina--a town that holds the secret to her mother's past. Taken in by an eccentric trio of black beekeeping sisters. Lily is introduced to their mesmerizing world of bees and honey, and the Black Madonna. This is a remarkable novel about divine female power, a story that women will share and pass on to their daughters (or younger friends) for years to come.

These are the fragments I left behind as I read--thoughts, comments, questions, quotes--reflections on what I read.

Sue Monk Kidd doesn't start the story with details about Lily's mother. Instead Lily tells us about the bees, introduces us to Rosaleen, and talks about her relationship with her distant father. We get to know and like Lily first and then she tells us about how her mother died. This way, when we hear, we are upset because by that we truly care about Lily.

'Time folded in on itself.' (p. 7)

'This is what I know about myself. She [my mom] was all I wanted. And I took her away.' (p. 8)
I can't believe Lily's father is actually telling her that she shot her mother. How low can you go? What a burden to lay on your own flesh and blood, on your own child. Especially when clearly it was him that shot her. Of course, I don't know this for certain. But he does have an uncontrollable temper and his wife did make him angry and he was holding the gun. Or, at least, that's what I remember reading. And T. Ray continues to stain Lily's life with physically and emotional abuse. In fact, his abusive treatment of her has become so common place that she has begun to view it as normal.

'The door closed. So quiet it amounted to nothing but a snap of air, and that was the strangeness of it, how a small sound like that could fall across the whole world.' (p. 33)

If you don't have anyone special in your life or if you think you don't, you long to fill the void. And yet Rosaleen has acted like a mother to Lily. It's plain they care about each other. Yet for Lily that's not enough. And so she sets out on an adventure to find someone who knew her mother--she sets out on a journey to gather the fragments that her mother left behind.

I'd never considered what my characters are carrying as tools for story development, before--clever idea.

This book is reading more and more like a mystery.

May, June, and August are such fascinating characters. I long to learn more about them and to explore their property. What is that low fence for and why are pieces of paper stuck into it?

' "Stories have to be told or they die, and when they die, we can't remember who we are or why we're her." ' (p. 107)

Page 126 is such a sweet scene.

Is August the queen bee?

Page 226 such a beautiful ritual.

August is the perfect person to remove the lies from Lily's world and replace them with truths.

Four women ushering a girl into the sisterhood of women.

'Mary did not need to be hundred percent capable all the time. The only thing I wanted was for her to understand.' (p. 258)

Learning that your parents aren't as prefect as you believed they were is part of growing up.

'[N]o matter how much you thought you could leave your mother behind, she would never disappear from the tender places in you.' (p. 273)

So many beautiful images in this book. Sue Monk Kidd truly knows how to paint with words.

' "You have to find a mother inside yourself." ' (p. 288)

August about Mary (Madonna) ' "When you're unsure of yourself,...when you start pulling back into doubt and small living, she's the one inside saying. 'Get up from there and live like the glorious girl you are.' She's the power inside you, you understand?... And whatever it is that keeps widening your heart, that's Mary, too, not only the power inside you but the love... Not just to love--but to persist in love." ' (p. 299)

In the back pages of his book there is a reader's guide and an interview with the author. It was fascinating to discover how Sue Monk Kidd worked on this novel. It started out as a short story. She was overwhelmed by the idea of transforming that story into a novel and so employed techniques such as collaging. Read The Secret Life of Bees cover to cover--you'll be glad you did.

If you enjoyed reading The Secret Life of Bees you may also enjoy The Help by Kathryn Stockett


Sharing my author journey...

Monday, March 3, 2014

Book review: Annabel by Kathleen Winter




Back cover blurb:  In 1968, into the beautiful, spare, environment of remote coastal Labrador, a mysterious child is born:  a baby who appears to be neither fully boy nor girl, but both at once.

I jotted down notes as I read. They read as a traveler's journey through the book--Annabel.

Kathleen Winter knows Labrador. Her words paint a vibrant picture not only of the land but also of the people who live there. 
'Anyone from Labrador called vegetables by their name. Cabbage. Turnip. Carrot. No matter how many individual specimens, you spoke of them as one entity. He realized Treadway thought about people in the same way. Men, to him, were all one man.' (p. 121-122)


***

' "We will love this baby of yours and Treadway's exactly as it was born."
"Will other people love it?"
"That baby is all right the way it is. There's enough room in this world."
This was how Thomasina saw it, and it was what Jacinta needed to hear.' (p. 26)

'It never once occurred to Treadway to do the thing that lay in the hearts of Jacinta and Thomasina:  to let his baby live the way it had been born. That, in his mind, would not have been a decision. It would have been indecision, and it would have caused harm.' (p. 27)

And between what Thomasina said and in what Treadway thought, there lies the story's conflict. Need one conform to society or can one be uniquely themselves?


***

Kathleen Winter has a lot of talent but I think the most striking are her vivid descriptions.


***

Kathleen Winter has a lot to say about how males and females differ in eastern, rural Canada--their roles and their underlying believes. 


***

In acting to protect his son, Treadway may have lost him preeminently. But he did discover that his biggest fear is a reality--Wayne does dream of being a girl.


***
I'm reminded of something I heard many years ago: to grow to be a man, a son must grow away from his mother.


***

Male--female. It's a toss of a coin, a 50/50 choice. Had the doctor guessed wrong, those many years ago? And if, he had, what now? I've studied group dynamics--formally and informally.  I know that if the group identifies a person as a member, it can overlook variations that wouldn't be tolerated if seen in an outsider. Could this happen to Wayne? Will his community accept him?


***

Thomasina to Wayne
' "I wouldn't call what you have a disorder. I'd call it a different order. A different order means a whole new way of being. It could be fantastic. It could be overwhelmingly beautiful, if people weren't scared." ' (p.208 - 209)


***

Treadway
'If only the world could live in here, deep in the forest, where there were no stores, roads, windows, and doors, no straight lines. The straight lines were the problem. Rules and measurements and lines and no one to help you if you crossed them.' (p. 216)


***

(Page 238 to 242) This is such a heartwarming scene between Wayne and his mother. Wayne seems so understanding about his body--so philosophically together. I hope this continues. 


***

Did Wayne graduate from High School? Is he going to live at home for the rest of his life? If he doesn't marry Gracie, who will he marry? Will he marry? Will he marry Wally? Will he ever see Wally again? Will he tell Gracie or Wally his secret? And what about what Thomasina has just told him... Will his parents ever straighten out their differences? Will they get the help they so desperately need?  


***

I'm of two minds over Wayne's decision to leave.  I want him to stay were others can protect him. Yet, in order to grown, Wayne must leave. And I know he is ready. But is the world?


***

The courage and strength Wayne shows in advocating for himself on page 370 is admirable.


***

Chapter 27 was a very difficult chapter for me to read. I wanted so badly for Wayne to be protected from this type of treatment but if he had been the authenticity of the story would have been lost.


***

Chapter 29
All it took for Treadway and Jacinta to get back together was Jacinta to be practical and Treadway to remember. They got back together over a pair of men's gardening gloves.


***

Chapter 30 seems like a high wire act. Wayne is up there, high in the sky, on his way from male to female. Will he make it without falling? The wire is so very long and the other end too far away for him to see. How will he know when he has arrived? Will he know? He won't arrive because he will always be drawn to two realities--male, female. Is he stuck or free?

Why is Annabel my Canada Reads choice?

Well, I believe that when we learn to embrace our similarities while respecting each other's differences, Canada will be a much better place.

***
Sharing my author journey...

Friday, June 14, 2013

Guest Post Author Deanna Lynn Sletten


How/why did you start to write?

I've always had the bug to write. I began writing my first "novel" when I was about ten years old which was influenced by the Nancy Drew Mystery series. Of course, that one was never finished and published, but it started my interest in writing. Years later, I was told by two of my college English professors that I should become a writer. I found this interesting since I was an Accounting major at the time. But their encouragement started me on the path to writing and I've continued in one form or another ever since.

How did you become an author?

I wrote my very first novel, Memories, many years ago but after multiple rejections from agents and publishers, I shoved it into the bottom drawer of my desk and gave up. Although, I didn't give up on writing completely. I continued writing non-fiction articles for years for various publications and then for websites. During this time, I also completed two more books, even though I had yet to publish any. About twelve years ago, I self-published two of the novels through a print-on-demand publisher, but not many sold. In those days, there was a stigma attached to self-published books, and no one wanted to try them. Then, in 2011, I discovered the world of self-publishing through Amazon and published my novels there – even the one that was sitting, dusty, in my desk drawer. Since then, I've published my fourth novel and I am currently working on my fifth.

What was your first published piece?

I published Widow, Virgin, Whore, a contemporary women's fiction novel in December 2011. It was the first novel I self-published through Amazon. After that, I published my middle-grade novel, Outlaw Heroes, and then in March 2012, I published Memories. In December 2012, I published Sara's Promise, a romance novel.  

What inspires you?

I never know what is going to inspire a story for a novel. It could be a song (a song inspired my next novel, Maggie's Turn), it could be a scene from a movie, or even just a conversation with a friend. I'll see or hear something and think, "What if…", and off I go. When I come up with an idea, I start to write it down so I don't forget it. I may even start writing the first few chapters. I've done this with several books, so I already have a few ideas all ready to go. I just need the time to finish them all.

What is your most recently published work?

I just published Sara's Promise in December and have been actively promoting it. Sara's Promise is a romance novel with a twist. It brings up the ideas of soul mates and love lasting even after your partner has left this earth. So far, everyone who has read or reviewed it has enjoyed it, which is very rewarding.

What are you currently working on?

I'm working on my fifth novel, Maggie's Turn, which I hope to have published this summer. Maggie is the perfect mother and wife, completely devoted to her family until one day she drives away, leaving behind an indifferent husband and two sulking teenaged children.  As Maggie goes off on a quest of self-exploration and enjoys adventures meeting new people and learning new things about herself, her husband, Andrew, begins some self-exploration of his own, slowly beginning to understand what drove Maggie away. Is it too late to resolve their differences and save their marriage or will Andrew lose Maggie for good? I think that many moms who are in the thick of raising kids and working will be able to relate to Maggie.



Sara's Promise Book Description:

Do you believe in soul mates?

William Grafton had the perfect life with his lovely wife, Sara, and two wonderful children. But one day his perfect forever was shattered when Sara died suddenly, leaving him alone to raise his children and wonder how he would ever get through life without his soul mate. Five years later, he finds himself looking into a familiar pair of blue-green eyes that remind him of Sara. The woman is the exact opposite of his late wife, yet he finds he is drawn to her. But after a few strange occurrences, he begins to wonder–are these just coincidences or has his Sara come back to him as she once promised in the form of this new woman? 

Annie Paxton doesn't believe in soul mates or fate. She had watched her father die of a broken heart after her mother passed away and has since cast away any fairy tale ideas of love. Then she meets the man who has been haunting her dreams and she begins to see love in a whole new light. But her dream man is still tied to his deceased wife, and Annie doesn't know if he will ever be able to break away from his past. As strange occurrences unfold, Annie wonders if William could ever truly love her for herself and not for the traits that remind him of Sara.

Were William and Annie brought together by fate, coincidence or by Sara keeping her promise?

Buy Sara's Promise on Amazon Kindle or Paperback 


 Author Bio:

Deanna Lynn Sletten writes women's fiction novels that go beyond the basic romance novel. Her stories dig deeply into the lives of the characters, giving the reader an in-depth look into their hearts and souls. Deanna has also written one middle-grade novel that takes you on the adventure of a lifetime.

Deanna started her writing career in the early 1990s writing articles for parenting publications and local newspapers. Over time she transitioned to writing for blogs and websites and was a contributing writer for the women's website, She Knows. In November 2011, she changed course and put all her energy into novel writing and hasn't looked back since.

Deanna is married and has two grown children. When not writing, she enjoys walking the wooded trails around her northern Minnesota home with her beautiful Australian Shepherd or relaxing in the boat on the lake in the summer. 

Connect with Deanna:





Amazon Author Page  http://www.amazon.com/Deanna-Lynn-Sletten/e/B00683SQYK/

Friday, June 7, 2013

Guest Post: Knitting a novel by Holly Robinson


Holly Robinson has been writing feature articles, essays and advice columns on health, parenting and psychology topics for national magazines since 1995.  She has been a contributing editor at Ladies’ Home Journal and Parents magazines.  Her work has appeared in The Boston Globe, Family Circle, More, Parents, Parenting, Shape, and WorkingMother.  Her first book, The Gerbil Farmer's Daughter (Crown 2009) is now available in paperback.  Her second novel, Sleeping Tigers, was indie published and named a 2011 ForeWord Reviews fiction semifinalist and a 2012 Best Indie Books semifinalist by Kindle Book Review.  Her new novel, The Wishing Hill, will be published by New American Library/Penguin in July 2013.
            Ms. Robinson holds a B.A. in biology from Clark University and is a graduate of the MFA program in Creative Writing at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. 


 Knitting a Novel:  
Pull Out Your Stitches and Put in Your Time

            I am a new knitter, but an experienced novelist.  It's only lately, as I've jumped ship from indie publishing to one of the Big Six publishing houses, that I've begun to realize what my two favorite activities have in common.
           
PASSION: 
            I majored in biology in college because I wanted to be a doctor.  My last semester of college, I had to fulfill an elective, so I signed up for Creative Writing.  I had been slogging through microbiology and organic chemistry classes, so I was looking for something easy to breeze through.  I couldn't have been more wrong:  from the moment I began writing that first short story, writing absorbed my attention like nothing else.  Seven hours could pass like seven minutes.  I had found my passion!

            Oddly, knitting had the same effect on me.  I've never been a crafty person.  (My Christmas gifts look like they were wrapped by an eight-year-old.)  But for whatever reason—the colors and textures of the yarn, the soothing sounds of needles clicking together—knitting became my passion for those times when I need an excuse to sit.  By now, I've graduated from scarves to sweaters, and I always have a project handy.

AN OBSESSION TO REVISE AND REWORK:
            To paraphrase Mark Twain, writing is one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration.  When I decided to go to graduate school to earn my MFA in creative writing, I met many other writers who were convinced they would one day own posh houses and live off their royalties.  The thing is, the writers who managed to publish books weren't necessarily the ones who were so confident, or even the writers with the most talent. 

            Instead, those who actually managed to publish their stories were the writers most committed to working and revising their writing.  They didn't bring the same story to workshops all semester long.  They brought many stories (or chapters) and reworked them over and over again.  For my part, I had vowed that I would write only for a year and, if I didn't get rich or famous, I would be sensible and become a doctor.  It took me many years to publish a story, and even longer to publish books—over two decades of not just creating new works, but revising them.

            Likewise, every sweater I've made, I've had to go back and pull it out, sometimes more than once.  “You're not really going to do it over again, are you?” my husband will ask.  “Nobody will even see that row!”

            Maybe not.  But I'll know it's there, so I pull out the sweater and start over, the same way I revise my imperfect sentences.

A BELIEF IN THE CREATIVE LIFE:
            Because we live in a world where money matters, believing in the creative life enough to actually live it can be difficult.  Most people perceive art—whether you're knitting a scarf or writing a story—as something nice to do in your spare time, maybe, but not as something “real” and worth doing.  It takes a lot of courage to follow your passion with enough conviction to put in the hours you need to succeed.

            Despite having sold a memoir to Random House in 2009, after two decades of writing fiction, I still hadn't sold a novel.  In frustration, I self-published my novel, Sleeping Tigers, in 2011.  Scarcely two weeks later, my agent sold my newest novel, The Wishing Hill, to New American Library, Penguin.  I was so astonished to hear the news that I had to lie down on the floor during that agent's phone call.

            In retrospect, though, it all makes sense.  I had to believe in myself enough to put in the hours necessary to master the craft of writing.  Yes, there are writers who publish early in their careers, but many more of us have to face rejections along the way and maintain that belief in ourselves.  It isn't easy.  That's why, just as I have a knitting group to help me master new stitches, my writing life has been made possible by being in a fiction group that has met monthly for the past ten years.  I wouldn't be where I am without them.

            Whether you're writing or knitting, follow your passion with purpose, and your life will be rich indeed.



THE WISHING HILL:  A Novel

By Holly Robinson



You don’t have to be miles away to be far apart.


What if everything you thought was true about your life was wrong? 

Years ago, Juliet Clark gave up her life in San Francisco to follow the man she loved to Mexico and  pursue her dream of being an artist. Now her marriage is over and she's alone, selling watercolors on the Puerto Vallarta boardwalk to tourists.

When her brother calls to ask her to come home and help care for their ailing mother, Juliet goes reluctantly.  She and her self-absorbed actress mother have always clashed.  Plus, no one back home knows about her divorce—or the fact that she’s pregnant and her ex-husband is not the father. 

Her plan is to get her mother back on her feet and return to Mexico fast, but nothing goes as Juliet planned.  Back in Massachusetts, she plunges through the ice while skating  and is saved by her mother's oddly reclusive neighbor, Claire—and finds herself caught up in a strange feud between the two older women.  Despite her ever-expanding waistline, she also finds herself falling hard for her mother's carpenter.  As Juliet resists an inappropriate romance and tries to uncover the roots of the animosity between her mother and Claire, she discovers that she’s not the only one keeping secrets that could change everyone's lives forever…


Friday, April 19, 2013

Guest Post Author Melodie Ramone



How/why did you start to write?

I started writing before I could actually write. The first poem that ever spilled from me spilled when I was only four years old. I still remember it word for word. I have no idea why, but I do. Beyond that, I wasn’t the kind of kid who was outside digging in the dirt much, I was always playing quiet pretend, making up stories and sending my toys on missions and adventures. Writing, even then, without words.

How did you become an author?

Quite by accident! When I was in sixth grade writing a short story became part of a lesson in school. Everybody had to do it, most moaned and groaned, but I relished in it. I must have done a good job because my teacher submitted it for publication and it was accepted.

What was your first published piece?

As I mentioned before, a story I wrote as a piece of schoolwork when I was twelve. It was called JC Collins, and it was the tale of a thirteen year old mute girl who ended up caught in a classroom when her school caught on fire. The story detailed her harrowing escape. 

Where was it published?

That story ultimately was published in a few different places. My teacher thought so much of it that she submitted it to a literary magazine for students nationwide and it was published in their annual Excellence edition. Then, the same teacher entered it into a contest, which I won, and I got published again in several newspapers. It was pretty exciting stuff! I was hooked!
  
How long ago?

Dare I date myself? First publication date was 1984. I never quit writing, so I’ve been published since…thank goodness! Whew!

What did you do before embarking on your writing career? Was it an asset to your writing? How?

I’ve always written. Well, mostly always. There was a short period of time in my twenties when I felt discouraged and stopped. Big mistake. A writer should never give up that creative outlet. It leads to a rotten, negative state of mind. During the time I didn’t write, I did lots of silly things. I was a nurse’s assistant, a customer service rep, a waitress, a phone operator, an Emergency Medical Tech. I also moonlighted as a receptionist and a gas station attendant and a dental assistant. Oh, and I went to college, too.

I think anything is an asset to a writing career. Going to the supermarket can be an asset to a writing career if you allow the experience to settle in and use it later in a book.  Any little thing, from the frustration gained by suppressing an urge to slap the crap out of somebody on the other side of a cash register, to dealing with people in general, and especially high stress moments like pulling somebody out of an crumpled car after an accident, leave imprints on your mind you can use later in a story. As long as they don’t leave you, you can draw on them later. Sometimes, when you’re not aware of it happening, and, especially, sometimes, if you’re not even trying.

What inspires you?

Beauty inspires me. It can be anything. A poem, a melody in a song. A snippet of a lyric, a cloud passing in the sky. I’m inspired by colors and scents and moments suspended in my mind, caught in time, waiting for me to put them on paper.

Please share one of your successful author platform building technique

The most important thing that any author can do is to touch people. Not just their readers, but their fellow authors as well. Reading and writing are obviously intertwined, you can’t have one without the other, and they’re never-ending as well. Never, ever, will a person finish a book and say, “I am completely fulfilled! I shall never read another!” Readers read and writers write, so, in my mind, there is no competition amongst writers, and no reason why we should not help and support one another. Especially in the Indie World of publishing.

So, the most successful author platform anybody can have is to have friends. Lots of them. Make friends in the community and support those friends. Talk about their work as well as your own. Read it. Get to know them and build up a strong community all your own. Advertising is in the eyes and out of mind when the website is changed. But the word of somebody who knows you suggesting your book to somebody they know is priceless and personal. Be real about it. Make connections, make friends. You’ll see success begin to happen.

Parting words

Publishing, whether it’s traditional or Indie, is a tough egg to crack. You can do it. You were strong and brave enough to put your soul onto paper for all to see, you’re strong and brave enough to endure the pitfalls and make your dreams happen. Set goals. Work hard. Never give up. Never surrender and never, never be afraid to shine, shine, shine. 



Orphaned by her mother and brushed off by her dad, fifteen year old Silvia Cotton has lived a lonely life. That is until her father moves the family from the Highlands of Scotland to the Midlands of Wales. It is there she is enrolled in Bennington, a private boarding school, and meets the charming and rebellious Dickinson twins, Oliver and Alexander. Her regrettable life is changed forever. 

Locked into a fierce friendship with Alexander and lost to a whirlwind romance with Oliver, Silvia finds herself torn away from everything she thought she knew. Married too soon, she moves with Oliver to a rustic cabin deep in a Welsh wood and embarks upon a life she'd never planned for, surviving on hope she never knew existed and faith she never knew she had. Through the years of laughter, joy, sorrow and tears, she makes her way through university and onto a career, only to surrender her ambition to raising her children and living a life that was strikingly "normal". But what is normal? Certainly not what ensues in the wood.

True love, faeries, friendship, loves lost and gained. Fate, doubt, friendship, strength and courage, Silvia's story could belong to anyone, but it is her own. Simple yet extraordinary, told with wit and candor, Silvia unravels the tangled web of her days as she reveals the secrets that exist in an ancient wood, how hearts given freely can become the stuff of magic, and how true happiness is never any further than one's own back garden.


Goodreads page:

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/16046121-after-forever-ends


Links to book are:

Amazon US
http://www.amazon.com/After-Forever-Ends-ebook/dp/B009ODTG86/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1358381453&sr=8-1&keywords=after+forever+ends

Amazon UK
http://www.amazon.co.uk/After-Forever-Ends-ebook/dp/B009ODTG86/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1358381502&sr=8-1

Amazon CA
http://www.amazon.ca/After-Forever-Ends-ebook/dp/B009ODTG86/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1358381550&sr=8-1

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

A Woman with a Pen by Leanne Dyck

photo by Terrill Welch


A personal essay that explores the question, what inspires my women's fiction?

I'm the first, last, and only daughter in a family dominated by males. 

I spent my childhood tagging along after male cousins. They did cool things like climb trees and jump from rooftops.

Sometimes their friends said, "Leanne can't do that! She's a girl."

Thankfully my cousins didn't listen. Unfortunately, I did. In my young mind, I began to equate being a girl with being weak. I did everything I could to prove that I wasn't a girly girl. This self-talk shaped my life. I became a feminist because I thought if we worked really hard we could shed our femininity and prove ourselves men's equals.

My mom's death changed my life, in so many ways. She'd always been my sage. Once again she taught me. I witnessed firsthand the steel strength she possessed. A strength nurtured by the women who encircled her hospital bed.

What does it mean to be a woman? What powers do we possess? Why do we act the way we do? What challenges do we face? How do we overcome them? These are the questions that make my muse dance.