Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Welcome to Fall

 

https://books2read.com/Loving-Charlie-Forever

Welcome to Fall


            I know Fall is well underway, but the weather in Kansas has been more like summer than autumn, so it’s been difficult to think that Halloween has passed and Thanksgiving is around the corner. I love to incorporate fall into the settings for my stories -- the changing colors of the leaves, the smell of wood smoke on cooler nights as people light up the firepits, football games and bringing out sweatshirts and sweaters.

    On past holidays, I cooked and baked for days before the kids came home from college, making all their favorites. Now, the kids have families of their own, and my son enjoys hosting Thanksgiving dinner. Last year, there were over thirty people at his house – parents and in-laws and siblings and nieces and nephews from both sides of the family. This year there will even be some new babies to cuddle. Everyone shares in making a feast with traditional smoked turkey and dressing and all the side dishes you could possibly imagine.

            Everyone has their favorite Thanksgiving dish, and while some are the same nationwide, others vary according to location. You can imagine with me being from the Midwest and my daughter-in-law being from the south, we get an extra-large variety. But until a year or so ago, I had never heard of Macaroni & Cheese being a holiday dish.


    One Thanksgiving dinner staple is bread, in all its many shapes and forms. Last year, my son wanted me to make Bulgur Bread, a long time favorite at our house, so although I live in Kansas and he’s in Tennessee, I checked the ingredients and packed what I knew he wouldn’t have when I boarded the plane. (I didn’t make it until I got there because there is nothing better than fresh baked bread.) For those of you who enjoy the art of kneading dough and the smell of it fresh from the oven, I am putting the Bulgur recipe here. It’s a coarse texture, crusty bread that I know you’ll enjoy. (BTW, you can usually find Bulgur—cracked wheat – in the organic or health food section of the grocery store.)

Bulgur Honey Bread
1 cup bulgur (dry)
3 cups boiling water
½ cup honey
2 Tbsp cooking oil
1 Tbsp salt
2 packages dry yeast
½ cup warm water
6 ½ -7 cups flour

Combine bulgur, boiling water, honey, oil and salt in a large bowl. Cool to lukewarm. Add yeast to warm water. Stir to dissolve. Add to cooled bulgur mixture. Blend in flour in 3 parts, beating after each addition until dough leaves side of bowl. (Dough will be soft.) Turn onto lightly floured surface. Knead until smooth, elastic and doesn’t stick when pinched with the fingers. Put in a greased bowl and let rise until double (about 2 hours). Punch down, divide in ½ and shape into loaves. Put in 2 loaf pans. Cover and let rise until double. Bake in 350 degree oven 45-50minutes or until done. Brush with butter.

For those who celebrate – Happy Thanksgiving. For those who simply enjoy good food, Bon Appetit!

 

Barbara Baldwin (whose story characters often have favorite foods, which are actually mine and I sneak them into my stories.)

www.authorsden.com/barbarajbaldwin

www.amazon.com/author/barbarabaldwin

 


Tuesday, November 5, 2024

The Great BB King by Scot "Little" Bihlman

 


Despite our attempts to understand and make sense of the world, humans are unlimited in our knowledge and understanding. We are constantly influenced and distracted by external factors, and struggle to see the truth that lies beyond the tangible and temporary. We are caught in a cycle of constant change and growth, striving to reach a state of absolute and eternal transcendence.

~ SLB


I hear a worn out guitar case full of old stickers slamming shut and rattling the buckles like a mislaid tambourine piercing the green room with a bombshell. Looking up through my long curly hair I feel the unrelenting and merciless high frequency hit my psyche with a cosmic bucket of ice water. All my hypnotizing anxiety runs with the vengeance of a ghost train shaking loose lost memories to all the gigs that finally brought my band and I to this time and place. My band and I, we got the BIG call for the BIG show at the BIG venue on the BIG night!

Our “green room” which is technically a fancy name for a dressing room is very small with very little catering, and the backstage guests and crew have already rifled through our deli tray like sleazy robbers from a cheap hotel. It’s all pretty funny and concerning at the same time. I mean depending on your mental constitution as you sit there watching and hoping for someone to say, “hey hands off, that stuff’s for the opening band.” However no one ever does and like good soldiers everyone in the band just makes sure to grab their setlist, water and hopefully a towel that doesn’t look like it came out of yesterday’s dumpster. In Lehman‘s terms It’s technically, the bare essentials to have with you on stage as a safety net.

The temperature in the green room is always hit or miss depending on what part of the world you’re in and the size of the venue. It’s now time to start thinking about warming up and getting my physical and mental faculties together. This is where your mind starts to wonder about the bullshit soundcheck we received when we showed up which is literally par for the course on shows like this. Are the monitors  loud enough? Could you hear everyone on stage? Are the vocals loud enough and balanced with the guitar?  Well according to the stage manager the only criteria for our soundcheck was how fast we can mimic a NASCAR pit crew by getting on and off stage in seconds flat, and the only thing we can really do is dig in and stay focused – execute, execute.

* * *


However, tonight is a whole different kind of experience. Tonight we ride with the King on the coattails of a giant. It’s his people that have come in droves to witness a true king of his people and his artistry. We are more than grateful to be on this bill and let me tell you we are more than happy to oblige!

As I start to reel in my psyche and call upon my previous life as an outside linebacker, it’s time to join the tribe backstage as we get ready to flex all the musical muscle we have. Walking to the venue through the door and down the dark hallway, it starts twisting, and turning. I navigate the crowd as best I can while wondering who the hell all these people are and how they come to be backstage. And then I hear that unmistakable voice. The voice the whole world has come to know and love as the king of the blues. Mr. BB King. The master and commander and his incredible blues army. Like a big Buddha, he sits in the center of his green room swarmed by his loved ones. His children, grandchildren, nieces, cousins, friends and even his ex-wives are all there to be at the feet of the king. It is a sight to be seen and a memory that will stick with me forever. You see I was only 26 years old and for a young long haired motorcycling midwestern boy coming up through the ranks it was priceless. As I passed by the door of his room unnoticed there was only one thought I had. Go BIG or go home! It’s time to kick ass and anything lower than that bar line would be unacceptable. To whatever moving parts, the universe made for us to share the stage in this particular time and space we could not fall short of incredible. The pressure is on and we have to leave it all out on the stage every night. And we did night after night.  Everywhere we went every last drop of blood, sweat and tears was left on stage. It was one of the greatest experiences of my professional life. The feeling one gets digging deep and rising up proving time and time again, that if people pull together with a beautiful vision we all might have what it takes to be in the white hot spotlight and walk among giants….

 


Monday, November 4, 2024

A Lifetime in the Making - by Julie Christen



A year and a half ago, while winding down a long day with a glass of wine on the front porch, my husband's phone rang. It's funny how we don't get too many actual phone calls these days. Texting is usually efficient enough for most things, but when we saw the name Frank Kuntz on the screen, he said, "Huh, look at that. It's Frank Kuntz."  

The two visited a bit and caught up a little. How are your folks? How are the ponies? But it didn't take long for Frank to come right out and say to my husband, "How do you suppose Julie would you feel about writing my story?" 

That's when the phone got handed over to me. I listened to Frank's thoughts. I listened to him tell me not to answer right away. This would be a huge undertaking. This would require a lot of time. Then he told me how hard it is these days to find people he trusts, but he was tired of being quiet. He felt it was time for people to know about his lifetime fight to save the native horse of North Dakota.

Like I said, I listened to everything he had to say. But the truth is, from the moment our conversation started, I already knew what my answer would be. Yes. Yes. And Yes. I had no idea how I would make it happen, and I knew it would be difficult, but I felt in my bones that I was meant to play this part in the Nokota® horses' timeline. I hope Frank's story inspires readers as much as it has me. 

So it is with great honor that I present Echoes of the Nokota. A Memoir of Frank Kuntz.


How has one man’s life's mission to make an unjust thing right – to save the native horses of the North Dakota plains – changed history? Or rather, preserved it?

Growing up in small-town North Dakota, Frank Kuntz led a typical, country life with lots of brothers and sisters, hard-working parents, and farm animals of every kind. He learned the value of a dollar, what it meant to show your worth, and how to care for the things and people that are important to you. After serving his country in Vietnam, he returned with ghosts of wrong-doings and injustices haunting him, but he continued to work hard, start a family, and have a farm of his own just a mile down the road from where he grew up. 

On a parallel timeline to Frank’s life, the free-roaming descendants of Sitting Bull’s war ponies were inadvertently fenced inside the Theodore Roosevelt National Park at its inception. Thus began their struggle to find a place in a world where they were no longer wanted. And even though they faced extinction at the hands of humans over and over, they were designed by nature to survive. But how long can a wild horse herd stand against the prejudice of humans? Somewhere, deep inside their memories of ancestors, they knew their people still longed for them to return home and once again rejoin their families. Instinct told them their help would have to come from man – one whose soul understood their soul. So they waited. They survived. And they listened.

Never in his dreams did Frank Kuntz think that he would become the one they were waiting for.

Once in a while, choices are made that change the fate of others. The prairie winds shift, the stars align, history is saved, and legends are made.

Riddled with pain, anger, and sorrow … this is a tough story.

Sculpted by the hardest of times … the best of them too … this is a family story.

Founded on promises and passion … this is a love story.

But most of all, despite the sacrifice, loss, and injustice … this is a success story.

 

This is Frank’s story.



 

Saturday, November 2, 2024

The trial and tribulations of researching life – and death – in 1734 by donalee Moulton

 



                                                                   Order Conflagration! here.

 

My second mystery novel, Conflagration!, is my first historical mystery. BWL has

a series of historical mysteries than span Canada from coast to coast. I was offered the 

opportunity to write the book and step back to 1734 when the colony of New 

France was ruled by King Louis XV. It was an opportunity I embraced. With trepidation.

 

At readings and book clubs, I joke that the I am not from Quebec, I do not speak French

as more than 80% of Quebecers do, and I do not write historical mysteries. So, of

course, I said “yes” when I was offered me the opportunity to write

Conflagration!. I am grateful I did.

 

What scared me most about the writing the book was getting something wrong.

Misspeaking. Misunderstanding. Misconstruing. The foundation for Conflagration! (and

for all historical mysteries) is accuracy. As a freelance journalist, I am used to writing on

topics that I knew little (and somethings nothing) about. I have written articles on

everything from buying cyber insurance to surviving a helicopter crash to paying the

tooth fairy. I know how to research, how to interview people, how to find people to

interview, and how to find accurate sources of information. For the most part though, the

research I’ve done was contemporary or contemporary adjacent. It wasn’t from 300

years ago.

 

Conflagration! chronicles the arrest, trial, and subsequent execution of Marie-Joseph

Angélique, an enslaved Black woman accused of setting the lower town of Montreal on

fire. When the flames were finally squelched, forty-six homes and buildings were gone.

The quarter, where the merchants lived and ran their businesses, was destroyed.

Fortunately, no one died.

 

I had never heard of Angélique, had never read her story in the many history classes I

took throughout school and university. I was not alone in this lack of knowledge. That is

because Angélique’s story is also the story of slavery in Canada, and for centuries we

have avoided the topic or rewritten the facts to shape the narrative. Fortunately,

Angélique’s story is more well known in Quebec, where a plaque has been erected in

her memory in Old Montreal.

 

As I delved into the events of April 10, 1734, I discovered others had gone before me.

There were books, websites, articles, documentaries, shorts. I embraced them all.

Some of these sources also referenced court documents, meticulously recorded, albeit

in French. One site translated those documents although translations from old French to

modern English are not always clear and understandable. The golden rule in journalism

is you must have at least two sources before you use any information. I also embraced

this rule.

 

As nerve-wracking as ensuring my story accurately referenced the trial transcripts and

sequence of events from the first flames to Angélique’s final breath, I discovered that

the justice system was only one element of research required. At one point, I had my

main character Philippe Archambeau, a court clerk assigned specifically to document

Angélique’s case, get up early and make himself a cup of coffee. Then I asked myself,

“Did they drink coffee in New France in 1734?” (They did, but tea was more common.)

 

This issue of everyday life came up in a myriad of ways. Philippe goes to put on boots.

(Did they wear boots three hundred years ago? What kind?) His wife, Madeleine, is

making supper. (How do you make supper when there are no stoves, no ovens, no

electricity? What do you eat?)

 

The answers to these and a multitude of other questions were answered thanks to

reliable sources on the internet, books written by authoritative sources, individuals

knowledgeable about aspects of the story, the time, the history – and more.

 

I owe them all a debt of gratitude.

 




Friday, November 1, 2024

BWL Publishing Inc. New Releases November 2024



How has one man’s life mission to make an unjust thing right –  save North Dakota’s native horses – changed history?

Growing up in small-town North Dakota, Frank Kuntz led a typical, country life with lots of brothers and sisters, hard-working parents, and farm animals of every kind. He learned the value of a dollar, what it meant to show your worth, and how to care for the things and people that are important to you. After serving his country in Vietnam, he returned with ghosts of wrong-doings and injustices haunting him, but he continued to work hard, start a family, and have a farm of his own just a mile down the road from where he grew up.

 On a parallel timeline to Frank’s life, the free-roaming descendants of Sitting Bull’s war ponies were inadvertently fenced inside the Theodore Roosevelt National Park at its inception. Thus began their struggle to find a place in a world where they were no longer wanted. And even though they faced extinction at the hands of humans over and over, they were designed by nature to survive. But how long can a wild horse herd stand against the prejudice of humans? Somewhere, deep inside their memories of ancestors, they knew their people still longed for them to return home and rejoin their families. Instinct told them their help would have to come from man – one whose soul understood their soul. So they waited. They survived. And they listened.

 
Never in his dreams did Frank Kuntz think that he would become the one they were waiting for.

 
Once in a while, choices are made that change the fate of others. The prairie winds shift, the stars align, history is saved, and legends are made.

Riddled with pain, anger, and sorrow … this is a tough story.

Sculpted by the hardest of times … the best of them too … this is a family story.

Founded on promises and passion … this is a love story.

But most of all, despite the sacrifice, loss, and injustice … this is a success story.

This is Frank’s story.

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