Thursday, January 8, 2026

The trip that never ends by J. S. Marlo

 



Deep Beneath the Surface
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Red in the Snow
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Over the holidays, Hubby and I flew to visit our son, daughter-in-love, and two little granddaughters. Getting there was an adventure. My friend dubbed it "the trip that never ends". We were supposed to arrive at 4:30pm but ended up arriving at 3:00am. Not only did cancelled and delayed flights made it for a very long day, but my granddaughter was very disappointed when her dad told her that she wouldn't be picking up grand-maman and grand-papa at the airport.


Fast forward a week later, after making lots of new and wonderful memories, we left yesterday and should have arrived late last night. Well, we didn't arrive, not even close. We're stuck at the Calgary airport, halfway between my son's home and ours, after an unexpected night at the hotel. As of now, we're rebooked on the midnight flight, so we may be home by 2am...

At this rate, I'll need a vacation to get over that holiday vacation.

Since I have nothing to do right now but wait until I'm allowed to drop my luggage at the airline counter and cross security, I thought I'd write my blog.


One may think that bad weather is the most commun reason for flight delays, but surprisingly, it's number two, well behind the dreaded number one: Technical Issues.

I have no idea what is included under "technical Issues", but over the years, I've experienced my share of strange delays. These are the two most memorable:

- Years ago, the pilot ran out of the cockpit minutes before the plane was supposed to leave the gate. His wife had gone into labour so he decided to go to the hospital instead of flying the plane. The plane was delayed for hours until the airline found another pilot. 

- Last February, I was flying back alone from visiting my son. I had an evening connection in Calgary. It had snowed all day then the temperature had dropped. By the time I boarded my connecting flight, the plane had sat at the gate for many hours and the tires of the wheels had frozen into the ground.  The little truck tried pushing the plane off the gate, but it wouldn't budge. I had a window seat with a direct view of the left wheels. We sat on the plane for nearly two hours while the ground crew used shovels and giant heaters to thaw the ice and clear the wheels. That was quite interesting. 


This is the reason a love to set my stories in winter when snow and cold temperatures can swallow a whole town for days on end. I can always count on Mother Nature to wreck havoc with anyone's best laid plan LOL


Stay Warm & Happy Reading! 

Hugs!

JS

Quick update: I made it home by 2:30am.

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Surviving a New England Winter by Eileen O'Finlan

 

                    Click here for purchase information


Every time I send my sister in Florida a picture of the snowfall I just woke up to, she always texts me back about how pretty it is. She's right. A fresh  snowfall in New England is lovely as I'm sure it is anywhere. Waking up to look out at a blanket of sparkling white is awe-inducing. That is, until you have to shovel it. As of this writing, I have spent the past several mornings removing several inches of snow from my car and driveway. On go the boots, hat, coat, and gloves. Grab the shovel, spray the scoop part with cooking spray to keep the snow from sticking to it, and step out into frigid temperatures for some vigorous exercise guaranteed to wake me up. In my case, that also includes causing a very sore back for at least the next 24 hours due to the severe arthritis throughout my spine. On days when the shoveling is immediately followed by getting in the car and driving to my full-time job, there isn't even a moment to rest.

                   

Though I do appreciate the beauty of a pristine snow-covered landscape, I find the long, cold New England winters to be more and more of a hardship as the years go by. Oh, how I wish I could hibernate.

So, what do I do to survive the winter months? I spend as much time as possible tucked away inside my house, snuggled up on the couch or draped with a blanket in the rocking chair in my home library, a cup of hot chocolate next to me, a good book in hand, and my beloved cat nearby. More than ever, winter has become my cozy time. For me, cozy means books, cats, and warmth. The more time like this I can get in the winter, the better.

My "stay in the house as much as possible" routine has the added benefit of giving me more time for writing and research. Though I never make New Year's resolutions, I have promised myself I will be more diligent than ever about my writing this year. Ideas for novels have been spinning in my head so much lately, it's surprising that characters aren't falling out of my ears!

So, fine, bring on the snow and cold. I just wish it could be contained to the days I don't have to go out. Then I can semi-hibernate in my little house with my laptop, my books, my sweetie pie, Autumn Amelia, and some warming comfort food and that will see me through the winter just fine. 

Who could resist cozying up to this face?




Monday, January 5, 2026

Drug Overdoses in Canada by Paul Grant

 


https://www.bookswelove.com/search?q=Grant

More than six thousand Canadians died from a drug overdose in 2025.  That’s seventeen people every day.  Almost one an hour.  Most of the ODs were from methamphetamine, fentanyl, or a combination of the two.  It’s as if the population of Merritt, B.C. was wiped out in one year.  That’s one of the reasons I wrote Notorious (BWL 2025).  

 

Drug addiction is not just a big city problem.  Small towns like Merritt, or Mirabel, Quebec, or my home of Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, are no strangers to the ravages of meth addiction.    We see the users downtown, mostly men in their twenties or thirties, zombies ravaged by the drug that they crave more than food or water or a warm place to sleep.  

 

Notorious is a cautionary tale about the social chaos caused by meth addiction, even in a small town like Moose Jaw.  Downtown neighbourhoods hollow out as theft, street disorder and murder drive people to the leafy suburbs.  While the cops try to catch the killers, journalist Eleanor Bell enlists her pal Jamie Staryk to follow the drug money being laundered through real estate and other legitimate businesses, and Molly Hunter turns her farmhouse into a rehab clinic for young users. 

 

Notorious is a warning, but also a celebration of the grit shown by average people as they confront evil in their midst.  Each in their own way, Moose Javians push back against the greed and depravity of the drug business, and in doing so, save their small city.


https://www.bookswelove.com/search?q=Grant



*Also by Paul Grant:  Astraphobia, a novel that follows three generations of a Sakatchewan farm family stalked by lightning.  Astraphobia is part of BWL’s Paranormal Canadiana Collection.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

"The Odd One" by Julie Christen



      Playing with perspective can be challenging and rewarding. As I let this Christmasy short story develop organically over the last month, I surprised myself. I also love how short stories don't have to tell all. A short story can just let the story ... be. It's kind of magical when even the most mundane or common moments want their story to be told, and be told by you. The truth is, I think, there are no mundane, common moments. Any moment is its own story. So you can tell it. 

The Odd One

 by Julie Christen

She’s not a typical tree hunter. The cold carries wisps of her breath into the still night air. She stands like a stone in the center of a stream of purpose-filled people. Do they know she’s there? Her eyes are limp. Her shoulders melt like wax inside her cheap poly-fil coat. Her tattered scarf hangs unevenly. Does she know what you’re supposed to do? She did get herself here, after all. She is most definitely an Odd One.

Wayward snowflakes haloed by the lot lights dangle about her.

“How about this one, Honey?” says a man in a long wool coat.

The Odd One’s head turns, though I don’t know if she or some outside force of nature made it happen. Her eyes are dull. Her face sags as she watches the man who’d spoken wave past her to the fancy lady standing behind her.

The man hadn’t been talking to the Odd One. In fact, no one calls to her. No one asks for her opinion. The odd tree hunter is here alone. Very alone. Even I could sense the lonely aura pulsing around her like a protective bubble.

Hunters of all kinds swarm about the lot. Shoppers. Whatever you want to call them. I have names for all the types, like the Strollers with their la-dee-dah, doo-dee-doo thing going on. Strollers touch everything - trickle their fingers along the Norway’s long needles, making those big softies purr. Or they pat the Spruces’ spiny needles, getting them all worked up and shaky. The Stollers hold hands as they go. This, for them, it is clear to me, is a full-on sensory experience. Boot laces hanging, coats open, scarves swinging. Quiet mostly except for the occasional “Mmm” and “That’s a nice one”. The Tree Pushers have no power over them.

“Can I help you find something?” the Pushers urge.

“We’re just browsing,” the Strollers say.

An hour later, I watch them pick any random old tree, strap it on top of their SUV, and away they go.

Then there are the Needle-seeking Missiles. They’re intense. On. A. Mission. Usually they’re by themselves, still dressed in work clothes – scrubs, suits, heels. Wallet in one hand, Karate chopping through the crowds with the other. Needle-seeing Missiles shoulder past the Strollers with a curled lip and an eye-roll.  

            One Needle-seeking Missile flags down the closest Pusher. “Where are your Douglas Firs?”

“Right over here, ma’am.” The Tree Pusher leads them to the special roped-off section intended for reservations only - as if they wouldn’t take your money anyway.

The DFs puff up and look down their branches.

“Here they are. Our finest.”

“Which one’s the best? That’s what I want.”

“Well, this one here stands at twenty feet, full and even, balanced and …”

            “Fine. Yes. It’ll do. Meet you at the checkout. Have it bound and taken to my vehicle.”

Self-important, the massive Douglas Fir grunts smugly as it takes three grown men to haul him out of there.

Then there are the Hurricanes. They come in groups of four or five or seven or eight. Usually, it’s two Tall Ones, and the rest are shorter at varying intervals. Sometimes one is so tiny, it fits in a taller one’s arms ‒ and squawks a lot. The Shorties of the Hurricanes whirl around the fake forest like snowflakes snatched up in a mini-tornado. They scream and scatter ‒ scatter and scream through the trodden paths. Knitted pom poms bouncing on top of their heads. Mittens on strings flopping like dead fish on a line. The Tall Ones reach and grab and try to collect their Shorties. I chuckle as they holler and sigh and gasp.

Sometimes, the Tall Ones have Lankies dragging behind. The Lankies lean a lot ‒ not helping in the least ‒ inspecting fingernails, gnawing on gum, and staring at something rectangular in their hand.

“This one! This one, Mommy!” screeches a Shortie.

“Daddy, Daddy! This one!” whines another.

“That’s a nice tree, dear. But how about this other …” a Tall One attempts.

“No! I WANT THAT ONE!” echoes throughout the entire lot.

I really do feel for the Dwarf Pines in the fake North Pole. I can feel them shudder and clench as they’re yanked and knocked around. Even the plastic reindeer, eyes squinting, look ready to take a hit.

Amidst it all, there stands the Odd One. The alone one. Out of place. Unmoving. I think she’s given up. Yes. She’s definitely given up.

She blinks. A dot of water slips down her nose.

Larger snowflakes now float in the air like drunken fireflies.

She moves. Canvas sneakers drag in the snow toward the fake North Pole, but she stops at the candy cane entrance. Wipes her nose. I can’t be sure, but I think her shoulders slump even more as her face twists. More leaking from her eyes. Or melting snowflakes. I can’t be sure. Then she stares into nothingness for a time. Just sags and stares down the lane of little Dwarf Pines.

All around, fresh snow coats the sludgy paths with crystal flakes. A single draft swirls around her feet, sending diamond dust up to the sweatshirt hanging out from under her coat. Somehow, this appears to stir her toward the Douglas Firs.

She inhales deeply and, as though given a whiff of an unseen elixir, she, with what appears to be great effort, straightens and walks to the roped-off reserved section. She frowns ‒ a painful-looking contortion. Then her brow loosens as she shakes her head at the ground and all the way up to the top of an, I will say it, intimidating ten-foot DF. She throws her ratty-gloved hands to her head, closes her eyes, and breathes a defeated sigh.

Her footsteps are mushy. She looks around, now mildly desperate. Her chapped lips part a fraction as a Pusher sails past. A tinny “Silent Night” from the single-horn speaker attached to one of the lot lights scrapes the air. A whimper of a breeze makes the Norways rock-a-bye, lulling her toward them now. They’ll comfort her, if it’s comfort she needs. Norways are good at that.

But even as she pets their soft fronds and gently fluffs a dusting of snow off of them, she cries. Full-on weeps. So much so that some Strollers notice and give one of those “oh dear” looks. They move on.

I can’t figure her out, this Odd One. It’s like she’s searching for something that’s not even here. I find myself worrying that what she wants isn’t … anywhere.

Then, as though drawn by some mirthless place, she floats over to where I’ve been leaning since morning. She stops in front of the chain link fence and stares, arms limp, at the sign attached. “REJECTS and DISCARDS,” it reads.

She takes off her left glove and fiddles with a silvery metal band on her finger. I see a tiny sparkle in the center of it. She slides it off her finger and lays it in her palm. It weighs her down. A burden. But something visceral, a sense that travels down to my phantom roots, tells me she’s not ready to give it up. It is too much a part of her still.

Her fingers curl around it, and she looks up, confused, unsure, eyes glistening ‒ like she wants someone to tell her what to do about it, about the burden, about … all things. A Pusher glances her way and stalks toward her ‒ ready to tell her what she needs ‒ when she looks into my pen and sees me. And I think she can tell I see her.

The Tree Pusher’s voice is slick, “That’s an odd one there, ma’am.”

She gives him a quizzical look. The sparkly ring slips into her baggy sweatpants pocket.

The Pusher goes on, “A balsam fir of no impressive stature, flat on one side, and a gap at the center. I think a stray cat’s been shacking up in this tree’s belly every night for the last month. Chewed the needles, smashed and cracked a bunch of branches, and made it generally unfit for the lot. We finally slid it in here this morning.”

She and I just kept staring at each other. I think it was weirding out the Pusher because he rather unceremoniously said, “The trees in this pen, ma’am, are on a one-way trip to the chipper.”

I had figured my hours were numbered when they shoved me in here today. I’ve never seen a fellow coniferous in here more than two or three days.  But to hear it put so bluntly, well, it feels most uncomfortable. I imagine, however, I’ll return to a state that will take me back to the earth where I started some fifteen or so years ago.

The Odd One tilts her head and gives me such a look of consternation, I’ll admit, I get a little self-conscious. But her eyes are dry.

“Ma’am,” the Pusher redirects her, “allow me to guide you to our trees for sale.” His words sound forced.

Mechanically, she turns to follow him. A swirl of wintry wind blows through the lane, ruffling her scarf and making her reach both hands to catch her loose stocking cap. I watch her fuzzy glove fall to the ground. The Pusher doesn’t offer to pick it up. When she turns back toward my pen and bends down to retrieve it, she looks at me again, squinty-eyed this time.

Some mystic version of “The Christmas Song” cuts through the thin air as more fresh pixie flakes twinkle down, landing on my uneven branches and my gaping hole.

The Odd One turns to the Tree Pusher and says, “I’m fine.” Then she turns to me and says it again, but this time it feels like she’s not talking to him. “I’m fine.”

“Suit yourself,” he says, having already turned around to hone in on a high-heeled, fur-coated Needle-seeking Missile.

The Odd One sniffs. Looks at her snowy fuzzy glove.

Shakes. It. Off.

With a snap of a glove cuff, she marches ‒ yeah, I actually have to say marches ‒ through the chain-link gate and plants herself in front of me, hands on hips. Her resolve quavers, I can tell, slightly with a weakened eyebrow and pressed lips, but she reaches in through my branches and grabs my trunk ‒ with more strength than I believed she had ‒ and stands me upright. I hear her spit out a needle or two, and I see her hair sticking with sap. In a minute, I’m propped up in a corner, and she’s taking a step back to get a look at me. I feel a little exposed, what with my gaping cat hotel vacancy for the world to see. She touches my needles gingerly, staring at the empty space. Then she lays a hand on her own center and gives such a look of understanding, the snowflakes on my needle tips melt.

Her voice comes softly but sure. “I’ll take this odd one,” she says so that only I can hear.

We stand in the falling snow. In the drifting music. Away from the rest. Just us. I’ll belong to her this season. Maybe we can fill each other’s empty spaces for a while.


 

Friday, January 2, 2026

So You Wanna Be A Writer? Do the Novel Thing? by Graeme Smith

 



SO YOU WANNA BE A WRITER? DO THE NOVEL THING?

(with apologies to ‘So you wanna be a boxer’ from the movie ‘Bugsy Malone’)

 

 

Once upon a time—well, you could see them most anywhere you went. Now? Now, not so much. Oh, they’re still there, if you know where to look. But now they’re in the back alleys and the darker streets. Not the really dark ones—the ones you don’t go down less’n you’ve got the types of friends nice folks don’t admit to, or maybe you just got no friends left at all. But not the bright ones, the big streets either. The other dark streets—the ones most folks don't remember is still there at all, the ones you only find when you got nowhere's else to go. Still, if you know where to look you can find a boxing gym here and there. Full of sweaty guys (yes, and girls. Women. Er, not-guys) punching bags of words that weigh more than they do and dreaming of being a Contender. And in the corner, there’s Joe. Joe don’t look much, but he owns the place. He's seen it all—the good times, the not-so-good. He could have been a Contender once, maybe, but now? Now he just takes money from guys (yes, Jones Minor. Or not-guys) he knows will never punch more than a bag, and tells old stories of The Guy. The Guy (yes, Jones Minor. Or The Girl) who walked in one day, and Joe knew. Knew she (or he) could have it all—but who maybe turned out to have a glass jaw. Or didn’t work hard enough. Or one day? Or one day, they just quit. Because they all think they have it, when they walk through the door. And ain’t none of them really know how hard it is.

But Joe knows.

So maybe it went like this…

The door creaked. Joe didn’t bother to look up. Some days, creakin’ was all it did. They looked in, saw what they saw. Heard what they heard. The bent heads. The pounding keyboards. The one in the corner on his last legs, cryin’ over the beatin’ Ten Finger Simpson just gave him over too many ‘that’s’ in his draft. And those days, they didn’t even walk through. They just walked. Walked away, and maybe that was the smartest thing they ever did. Because Joe knew anyone who did anythin’ else had to be crazy. A very special kind of crazy. And maybe this one was just that. That special kind of crazy. Because this one—she didn’t look at the ones pounding keyboards. She didn’t look at the tattered and faded Form Rejections lining the walls. She just walked in. Walked in, and came right over.

“You Joe?”

The words might have been a question. But Joe knew she wasn’t askin’. Wasn’t even Tellin’ she knew who he was. She was Showin’. Showin’ she was somewhere she was supposed to be, and to hell with anyone what thought different. And all that was a good start. So he did what he always did with the ones who might Have It. He ignored her. The dumb ones never got it, and the smart ones were used to it already.

“I… I got a book.” She held out a sheaf of loose bound sheets.

Joe shrugged, even if he did it inside and his shoulders never moved an inch. So this one was a bit of both. Part dumb, part smart—and maybe just crazy enough to make it, ‘cos you had to be crazy to even try. And at least she’d written a book. There was them as wanted to and never did, and them as started and never finished, and—his eyes never moved but his mind wandered over the hunched figures pounding keyboards—them as kept startin’ and never finished nothin’. Never would—and still didn’t quit. But this one? He ignored the sheets of offered paper as much as he was ignorin’ the person holdin’ 'em—this one had finished.

Or thought she had.

Like every other time, Joe wondered what she’d say if she really knew. Knew the damn thing in her hand was just the start. The easy bit. Or not even that. Joe wondered if she knew about Queries, and Synopses. Knew about bein’ surrounded by a hundred thousand others, just as smart, just as talented, just as clever. A hundred thousand others maybe one ounce more persistent than she might want to be, in the long nights when she wondered why she was botherin’ and figured the smart thing to do was just quit. And if she Had It, knew none of that mattered a damn, ‘cos she was goin’ to carry on anyway. Joe wondered if she knew about Agents, and how little they cared she’d written something great, something amazing—and how it was right they didn’t care because all that mattered wasn’t what was great, but was what the Public wanted to buy. He wondered if she knew about No-Reply-Means-No, and Form Rejections, and Partials and Fulls and—and how none of even that maybe meant a damn, because after every one of ‘em ‘sorry’ wasn’t the hardest word at all. He wondered if she knew it was the easiest in the world most times, and one she was going to see and hear a lot, if she heard any damn thing at all, and not what Simon and Garfunkel sang about - or that Disturbed guy. Because you pretty much had to be—disturbed that is—to Have It, or even anythin' near. He wondered what she’d be like after her first time with Ten Fingers, maybe in Query Critique. Would she be a shouter, when Ten laughed at her Opening Rhetorical Question and told her he’d seen better Hooks in a crochet kit? Joe’s eyes moved for the first time as he looked over to Jack, still pounding away in the far corner. Jack, who Ten Fingers had reduced to tears when he’d torn his Query apart for the hundredth time, and told Jack he didn’t know motivation from meatloaf, and how Ten couldn’t see from the Query why Jack’s Main bothered even getting up in the morning. Mostly Joe wondered if this one knew what she was, what she was going to have to become, going to have to be. And how even if she Made It, became one of the Greats, how one day none of it would matter, all over again.

“I got a book!” She waved the sheets again, under his nose.

“Yeah.” At last, Joe looked up. “So did I once.

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