Today, I'm over guest blogging at Carolyn Abiad's Serendipity, for her new series on International Romance.
Join me there, where I share how living in Africa and France with my French husband has affected my (writing) life. There's also a link at the bottom of my article to photos of me in Africa.
The naive girl in this photo is me in 1994, just before I jumped on a plane for what was supposed to be a two-year stint in the Peace Corps. I didn't make it home for almost nine years! (Notice my army duffel bags? I heard everybody would pack their stuff in these types of bags, so I painted happy flowers on mine. It was a good call. About 35 out of 45 of us that went over together had army duffel bags. I never had to search in airports through mountains of drab olive to find my bags!)
See you over at Carolyn's!
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Monday, January 3, 2011
Literary Foray
Literary Foray, a new anthology of literary fiction short stories, is now available for pre-order. I'm extra excited about this book. Not only is one of my short stories featured, but there are stories and poems by my real life sister and several of my close writer/blogger friends! Beneath this book's hauntingly beautiful coverart, you'll find work by Jessica Bell, Matthew Rush (a.k.a. Matthew MacNish), Mara McBain, Adriana Noir, Noelle Eisenhauer (my sister :D) and me, alongside the work of 24 other authors and poets.
The book is in editing post-production, but you can pre-order at Amazon.com. And, it's available at a discounted price from the publisher's online store. Details at Pill Hill Press.com.
Tomorrow, I will be Carolyn Abiad's guest at her blog Serendipity. My post will be the first in a series about international romance and how it affects a writer's work. As many of you know, I was a Peace Corps Volunteer, and I met my husband while we were both working in Africa. I hope you join me at Serendipity tomorrow for my discussion and photos!
What about you? Any news you'd like to share with me? I have confetti....
The book is in editing post-production, but you can pre-order at Amazon.com. And, it's available at a discounted price from the publisher's online store. Details at Pill Hill Press.com.
Tomorrow, I will be Carolyn Abiad's guest at her blog Serendipity. My post will be the first in a series about international romance and how it affects a writer's work. As many of you know, I was a Peace Corps Volunteer, and I met my husband while we were both working in Africa. I hope you join me at Serendipity tomorrow for my discussion and photos!
What about you? Any news you'd like to share with me? I have confetti....
Labels:
Literary Foray,
Pill Hill Publishing,
Published
Saturday, January 1, 2011
Thursday, December 30, 2010
First Blogiversary!
Today is my blog's one year anniversary!
It's hard to believe it's been a whole year since my first post, and just as hard to believe it's only been one year! On milestones like this, I like to look back on where I've been, and look forward to where I'm going.
On December 30th, 2009, I was a newbie blogger to the tenth power. I had no idea what I was doing. I was afraid anyone would read my posts....And, I was terrified no one would, either. In my first post, it's evident I didn't even realize there was an entire community of writers that blog.
In the past year, I've connected with so many people who, like me, love to write. Some of us aspire to publish our work, some of us have seen our work in print, some of you have already sold your novels. But the common thread weaving us all together is our shared passion.
This isn't the first community of writers I've belonged to online. I've been a member at Writing.com (WDC) since 2007. But, it's not the same. I post my short fiction there and elicit feedback from fellow members. It's all about my finished projects. WDC connects me to the writing community at a different stage in the game, I guess you could say. I love my WDC home, and it is a place where you get out of the community what you put into it. The more active you are, the more interactive you will find your experience. Yet, there are only a handful of writers from WDC who are my true friends, who I feel a connection with that goes beyond cyber-relationships. And they blog here now!! (*waves to Mara and Adriana*)
But blogging about writing is unique. In blogging about my process, about my struggles as well as my triumphs, I come to understand myself as a writer on an ever more intimate level. And being surrounded by a community of writers who are confessing the same ups and downs, and sharing their inspirational strategies for success, makes me feel less crazy and alone.
I didn't know, a year ago, the impact my decision to launch this blog would have on my writing and on my life. It's been an amazing ride, and I want to thank everyone by name -- but that would take a long time. In fact, I actually began a list, but I realized I couldn't stop adding names. I started with those of you I have met in real life, and who I often email with, and to whom I sent and received holiday cards, and who regularly visit my blog, and who's blogs I try to visit every new posting, and....by that time, I realized the insanity in trying to pick out certain stars from the universe of those who have touched me in some way. Like the heavens, those stars are too numerous to count.
Looking forward, I have plans for the blogging year to come. I've changed my blog's layout, as you can surely tell. I'm working on that white bar you see across the page. I'm always going into the coding and personalizing my templates -- computer programming is the ONLY area classified as Mathematics that I actually enjoy. This time, I pulled the template header image out and doctored it through Paint Shop Pro, since the original header says "FASHION" across the top :P
When I pasted the new image url into the template coding, the white line appeared. Hmmm...Any ideas? Anyone?
Also in 2011, I will post on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Tuesdays and Thursdays will be heavy WIP writing days, with blog visits/commenting during breaks. I am determined to successfully juggle my writing and blogging schedules, and to FINISH THAT FIRST DRAFT. (Please feel free to hold me accountable. *waves sheepishly at Jessica, in particular*)
Thank you, blogging friends, for contributing to the best year of my life. I look forward to another great year of reading your blogs, cheering you on during your writing projects, and celebrating our successes.
Come on, 2011. Bring it!
Labels:
Anniversary,
Goal Setting,
Writing
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Going Through Some Changes
Anyone who happened by today saw any one of a hundred-ish blog templates I tried out. Tomorrow is the first anniversary of this blog, so I'm changing it up. Hopefully, I'll have chosen something...soon. Bear with me!
Have a happy evening!
Have a happy evening!
Labels:
Update
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Thanksgiving in December
I was up yesterday morning before the sun rose, before the children woke, while the house was dark and quiet. I wanted to log onto the Web for just a little while, to view some holiday pictures on friends' sites, work on a guest blog post I'm doing on January 4th (more about that to come), and just enjoy the sound of my fingers tapping the keys. Imagine my dismay/dread/pout/frustration when my hard drive power button didn't respond to a push.
No dull whirl of unseen, internal components, no blinking green lights, nothing.
I checked the connections. All good. I checked the monitor, modem, printer. Everything seemed to function, except the hard drive.
Basically, I had a comatose machine, in a vegetative state. A headless, metal corpse.
Braced to hear the worst case scenario, I took the drive to Best Buy. It felt like Christmas all over again when the Geek told me the power box was blown -- just a $60 part -- which he would replace in-store for $50 more. Three hours later the ordeal was over.
Yesterday revealed an unexpected realization: I don't want to go back to life without my computer! Let's face it. A writer doesn't need more than her hand, a pen or pencil, and a sheet of paper to compose. And it's more than enjoying the online experience. Simply put, I have come to rely on my online network of friends and family.
I love reading what you've aspired to, attempted, and accomplished. I'm inspired by your perceptions. I feed off your energy. Yeah, I can pick up a telephone and call some of you. (And I do!) But the Internet brings so many more of you right to me, right into my life.
I love it. And there's just no going back.
So thank you, for every word on your blog, every status update, every tweet. I don't know what I'd do without you!
And, let's all decide right now to back up our flippin' files -- 'cause if my hard drive can pass away quietly in the night, so can yours!
Happy Tuesday!
No dull whirl of unseen, internal components, no blinking green lights, nothing.
I checked the connections. All good. I checked the monitor, modem, printer. Everything seemed to function, except the hard drive.
Basically, I had a comatose machine, in a vegetative state. A headless, metal corpse.
Braced to hear the worst case scenario, I took the drive to Best Buy. It felt like Christmas all over again when the Geek told me the power box was blown -- just a $60 part -- which he would replace in-store for $50 more. Three hours later the ordeal was over.
Yesterday revealed an unexpected realization: I don't want to go back to life without my computer! Let's face it. A writer doesn't need more than her hand, a pen or pencil, and a sheet of paper to compose. And it's more than enjoying the online experience. Simply put, I have come to rely on my online network of friends and family.
I love reading what you've aspired to, attempted, and accomplished. I'm inspired by your perceptions. I feed off your energy. Yeah, I can pick up a telephone and call some of you. (And I do!) But the Internet brings so many more of you right to me, right into my life.
I love it. And there's just no going back.
So thank you, for every word on your blog, every status update, every tweet. I don't know what I'd do without you!
And, let's all decide right now to back up our flippin' files -- 'cause if my hard drive can pass away quietly in the night, so can yours!
Happy Tuesday!
Labels:
Captured Moment,
Update
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Reading Goals, Evaluated
Artwork by rogerandmore@deviantart.com |
With only nine days left in the year, it's time to make a realistic evaluation of my 2010 reading goal. I made a valiant effort, but I won't have reached it. In all fairness, the goal I set -- to read 50 books in 52 weeks -- was arbitrary, because I had no idea how many books I generally average reading in a year, nor did I know how many I could read. Some bloggers were signing on to the 100 Books in a Year challenge back in January, and I knew that was too lofty a goal for me. So I set my mark at half that. The goal definitely kept my reading momentum high all year. Here's what I did read:
1. The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo - by Stieg Larsson (2005, Norstedts Forlag [Swedish] -- ISBN 978-1847242532) Read my discussion here.
2. The Almost Moon -- by Alice Sebold (2007, Little, Brown and Company -- ISBN 0316677469)Read my review here.
3. The Hunger Games - by Suzanne Collins (2008, Scholastic Press -- ISBN-13: 978-0-436-02348-1) Read my review here.
4. The Giver - by Lois Lowry (1993, Dell Laurel-Leaf, an imprint of Random House Children's Books -- ISBN: 0-440-23768-8)
5. Among the Hidden - by Margaret Peterson Haddix (2000, Aladdin Paperbacks -- ISBN-13: 9780689824753)
6. Hush Hush - by Becca Fitzpatrick (2009, Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing -- ISBN-13: 9781416989417)
7. Animal Farm - by George Orwell (copyright 1945, Current Pub. Date 1996, Penguin Group (USA) -- ISBN-13: 9780451526342)
8. The Shack - by William P. Young (2008, windblown Media -- ISBN-13: 9780964729230)
9. A Christmas Memory, One Christmas, and The Thanksgiving Visitor - by Truman Capote (copyrights in order the short stories are listed here: 1956/1984 by Capote; 1982/1983, by Capote; 1967 by Capote, renewed 1995 by Alan U. Schwartz, Current Pub. Date 1996, Modern Library Edition, Random House, Inc. -- ISBN-0-679-60237-2)
10. Sula - by Toni Morrison (copyright 1973; Reprint Pub. Date 2004, Knopf Doubleday Publishing, ISBN-13: 9781400033430)
11. The Pearl - by John Steinbeck (copyright 1947, Reprint Pub. Date 2002, Penguin Group (USA), ISBN-13: 9780142000694)
12. Breakfast at Tiffany's: A Novel & Three Stories (Modern Library Series) - by Truman Capote (Original copyright 1958; Current Pub. Date January 1994, Random House Publishing -- ISBN-13: 9780679600855)
13. Pickles to Pittsburgh - by Judy Barrett (1997; Simon & Schuster Children's --ISBN-13: 9780689801044)
14. Charming Billy - by Alice McDermott (2009; Picador USA -- ISBN-13: 9780312429423)
15. Catching Fire - by Suzanne Collins (2009; Scholastic, Inc. -- ISBN-13: 9780439023498)
16. And Murder for Dessert - by Kathleen Delaney (2009; Poisoned Pen Press -- ISBN-13: 9781615950416)
17. Among the Imposters - by Margaret Peterson Haddix (2002; Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing -- ISBN-13: 9780689839085)
18. Among the Betrayed - by Margaret Peterson Haddix (2003; Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing -- ISBN-13: 9780689839092)
19. Among the Barons - by Margaret Peterson Haddix (2004, Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing -- ISBN-13: 9780689839108)
20. Among the Brave - by Margaret Peterson Haddix (2005, Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing -- ISBN-13: 9780689857959)
21. Among the Enemy - by Margaret Peterson Haddix
22. Among the Brave - by Margaret Peterson Haddix
23. The Town That Forgot How To Breathe - by Kenneth J. Harvey
24. The Mistress - by Philippe Tapon
25. Mockingjay - by Suzanne Collins
26. Paranormalcy - by Kiersten White
27. Devil Bones - by Kathy Reichs
28. Fallen Knight - by DL Hammon
29. Enzo's Mamma - by Wendy Ramer
30. On Writing - by Stephen King
31. Housekeeping - by Marilynne Robinson
And, I'm in the final chapters of book #32, Nightshade City by Hilary Wagner.
Fun stats from my 2010 Reading Challenge:
Novels read in my genre (literary fiction) = 9
Books by debut novelists read = 6
YA novels (I never read this genre before 2010) = 5
MG novels (I never read this genre as an adult) = 9
Novels read that are over thirty years old = 5
Books I read that I would recommend to friends = 23
Books I read that I would have quit reading if I weren't so stubborn = 3
I'm definitely planning to challenge myself with reading goals in 2011. What those will be, I haven't decided. I may set a more reasonable number so that I don't feel like I'm rushing through each selection. Perhaps I'll add reviewing to my goal sheet.
One thing's for sure: I still have a stack of To-Read books on my nightstand, to kick off the new year!
Do you set reading goals for yourself? And Must-Read recommendations for me?
Labels:
Goal Setting,
Reading
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