Saturday, December 6, 2025
Trying Again for Jolabokaflod by Eileen O'Finlan
Eileen O’Finlan was a member of the Worcester Writers Workshop for many years and now hosts a writing group at her home in Holden.
Kelegeen, published by BWL Publishing, is her debut novel. She is currently working on the sequel to be titled Erin's Children set in Worcester, Massachusetts.
Eileen is a holds a Bachelor’s Degree in history and a Master’s Degree in pastoral ministry.
When not writing or working her full-time job, Eileen facilitates online courses for the University of Dayton, Ohio.
My December Blog by Deb Loughead
December Blog—Deb Loughead
Ever since I picked up
a pencil and started learning to make words and sentences, I began to fancy
myself as a writer. My mother read stories to me and told me stories from the
very start, mostly because I was an antsy little girl and it was the only way
she could ever get me to sit still for longer than a few minutes. Which might
explain why I always lived with an insatiable desire to create my own stories.
Inspiration was everywhere, as is evident in the poems
and stories I was writing as a preteen and have saved for posterity (just in
case I’m ever famous lol). Like so many fellow wordsmiths, I’ve always been
enthralled with the whole concept of the changing seasons, so many of my
earliest poems are based on the natural world in all its various marvelous
vestments throughout the year. But what inspired me the most was winter and
Christmas. They excited me every year and sparked the wordplay in my brain.
Snowflakes and snowscapes, bring it on! Sleigh bells and
church bells, music to my ears! Christmas trees and old Saint Nick, welcome to
December! There are so many diverse ways of appreciating the season of snow and
frost and ice. In fact a couple of my earliest published poems were winter
based. And Christmas too. I was obsessed as a child and, well, I guess I might
be called a bit of a Christmas freak. Annually by mid-November a few bits and
pieces of Christmas decor begin putting in an appearance around my house. Time
to deck the halls!
So, in keeping with the spirit of the season, here are
three of my earliest published poems.
Snow
Sliding
Swift
snow sliding,
cross-country
skis,
quite
trails through
sleepy
winter woods.
Snow
dusted evergreens
ice
crusted stream,
and
swift snow sliding…
Hush!
Into
whose realm
do
skis intrude?
With
swift silent leaps
a
red fox hurries away.
First
published in Spires magazine,
December 1978
Winter
Morn
A
frosted, glittering world
greets
the sleepy eye
the
morning after a blizzard.
A
quiet bright world.
an
unfamiliar,
muffled
white world,
where
rooftops glisten
gift-wrapped,
where
sidewalks glimmer,
fleece-napped,
where
fence posts glister,
snowcapped,
and
fir boughs low bow
with
the weight of their
sparkling
robes.
The
backyard is almost edible,
with
its gleaming ice-cream
snow
drifts,
fancy-iced
hedge cakes,
and
twinkling tree-stump sundaes—
landscape
unforgettable.
The
crisp air is alive,
awhirl
with a flurry of
shimmering
flecks.
Show
showers on a sunny winter morn—
A
winter reverie newborn.
First
published in The Atlantic Advocate,
December 1981
And There’ll Be Clowns
We’re going to the Santa Claus parade.
That jolly old elf, himself,
is coming to town.
And there’ll be brassy marching bands
and flashy floats
parading up the streets and down,
Kids decked out in costumes
shiny bright,
and there’ll be clowns…
Friday, December 5, 2025
And the Survey Says by Renee Duke
Writing for teens requires an ability to remember how
the adolescent mind works. One example: their attitude towards adult ‘probes’
into their inner feelings disguised as school surveys. High schools sometimes get
students to complete questionnaires about individual learning styles, and while
some questions might have relevance, most fill kids with an urge to answer them
something like this:
Q. Before
starting an unfamiliar task, do you prefer to have someone tell you the proper
way to do it?
A. As opposed to wading in without the vaguest
notion and doing it all wrong, yes.
Q. Do you
think it’s important that a teacher understand the subject he or she is
teaching?
A. Now
there’s a plan.
Q. Do you
frequently like to have the significance and interdependency of supplemental
graphs and diagrams as they relate to concepts addressed in the corresponding
texts or lectures explained to you?
A. I think
I’d like to have the above question explained to me.
Q. Do you
write out your notes in paragraph form, or make graphs and charts, to help you
understand concepts better, even if the teacher doesn’t require you to do so?
A. You’ve got to be kidding.
Q. Would you
rather copy notes off the board or work with hand-outs?
A. Photocopy machines were a wonderful
invention. So were highlighters.
Q. What do you think it means if you doodle in
your notebook during class?
A. It usually means I’m bored.
Q. Are your
notes covered with circles, arrows and other symbols?
A. Yes.
Even though, by the following day, I have no idea what they mean.
Q. If you sit
near a classroom window, can you be distracted by what’s going on outside?
A. Depends if watching two crows square off over
a walnut is more riveting than Pythagoras’s Theorem. (Answer: yes.)
Q. Do you
find it easier to think when you have the freedom to move around?
A. The school rather frowns on students
wandering the halls because they’re ‘thinking’.
Q. Do you
often tap your foot or pencil when you’re thinking?
A. Doesn’t everyone?
Q. Do you get
restless if you have to sit still for an extended period of time?
A. Doesn’t everyone?
Q. Do you enjoy studying English literature?
A. The operative word is ‘English’. Things like,
“Bifil
that in that seson,
on a day,” no longer qualify as English.
Q. Do you read for enjoyment?
A. I don’t have time to read for enjoyment. I’m too busy reading assigned downers like Wuthering
Heights and wicked wastes of paper like The Metamorphosis.
Q. Do you
have trouble spelling unknown words when writing an essay?
A. If they’re
unknown, how would I know to use them?
Q. How much do
you enjoy giving presentations in class?
A. I wasn’t
aware it was supposed to be enjoyable.
Q. Do you
find it difficult to accept views opposite to your own?
A. No. The world is full of ignorant people. One has to have tolerance.
Q. Do your
parents have to nag you to do your homework?
A. I don’t
know if they have to. I think
it’s pretty much automatic.
Q. Do you resent it when teachers who have
taught your older brothers and sisters have high expectations of you?
A. Having taught my older siblings, they generally
don’t have high expectations of me.
Q. Do you find it difficult to set goals during
teacher/parent/student conferences?
A. My parents have usually made it pretty clear
what ‘my’ goals are going to be.
They don’t–or
at least, shouldn’t–answer that way of course. They’d be put down as
maladjusted and made to do six more questionnaires designed to figure out why.
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Thursday, December 4, 2025
Old is the New Pretty by Julie Christen
I've decided. I'm going to start the latest trend. Just like in the fashion world, where "Silver is the new gold," or "Leggings are the new jeans," and "Gray is the new black," I hereby declare ...
"Old is the new pretty!"
It really is just a mindset, isn't it? After every new trip around the sun, my friends tell me, "Age is just a number." I smile and nod in my typical, agreeable fashion. It's how you feel that matters, right?
Well, some days, I feel old. And some days, I look old.
I try my darndest to combat it, what with expensive wrinkle creams that promise to "take years off," cure-what-ails-you morning drink mixes that will make me "feel twenty years younger," a yoga mat laced with good intentions of helping me touch my toes again, and a LOT of BioFreeze Roll-on gel. I watch celebrities age with grace and beauty because they do "this ONE thing."
I say enough already.
When I look at my favorite antiques, I think their rust and scratches and dents and dings are part of what makes them special. The tarnish on my grandma's silver is just a coating of nostalgia that revives visions of holidays past. Those rustic, run-down buildings in the middle of abandoned farmland look like amazing stories yet to be told.
When I pull on a pair of old, out-of-style jeans and they curve loosely around my rear and bear memories of caught fences, party stains, or glitter craft remnants, why would I ever say goodbye?
When I run my hand along the sway back of an old horse, the gray muzzle of a senior dog, or the mottled fur of an aging cat, all I see are the sure-sign markings of beloved, faithful friends who have gifted endless smiles, wisdom, and comfort.
That's pretty.
So when I feel aches and pains, I will celebrate the hard work I'm still capable of doing that makes them so. When I look at my reflection, where some would see blemishes, I will choose to see beauty marks. When I draw a comb through gray hair and see crinkles at the corners of my eyes, where some would see flaws, I will choose to see high fashion. When I hear creaks in my bones and pops at my joints, I will choose to hear the rhythm of time and the wisdom that comes with it.
So say it with me, and repeat it often.
"Old is the new pretty!"
And we will consider ourselves in good company.
Click HERE to see all BWL Publishing has to offer!
I live in central Minnesota and have all my life. I have taught 8th grade English plus 6th and 8th grade health in the same room in the same district for 30 years. Some say I have “staying power”. I am fiercely dedicated to the things in life that make my heart happy – books books books, my family, my animals, and my writing. My husband and I ride a Harley and our horses when we’re not working on some part of our hobby farm. I have way too many hobbies, but they bring me joy and, I think, help keep me young.
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
Research like a detective by Donalee Moulton
Hung Out To Die- A Riel Brava Mystery, by donalee Moulton — Books We Love Publishing Inc.
In historical settings, investigators often have limitations modern detectives don’t—and this goes well beyond technology. Everything from restricted travel, class barriers, rigid gender roles. These limitations can be opportunities to connect with your reader. Lean into them; they nudge creativity and add tension.
The sleuth’s personality and background should also reflect the era while also offering traits—curiosity, stubbornness, empathy—that transcend time.
Research like a detective, not an archivist
If your detective needs to walk down a street in 1912 Montreal, you should know what that street smelled like, whether cobblestones rattled under carriage wheels, and how likely your character was to meet someone selling newspapers on the corner.
Sources for rich and authentic detail include:
Newspapers and periodicals from the time (full of language, concerns, and advertisements)
Diaries and letters for personal perspectives (where possible)
Historical maps for accurate geography
Material culture research—what fabrics, foods, and objects were common
The goal is to take readers into this world by recreating it for them without overwhelming them with facts that will weigh your story down and bore readers. Instead, let historical details work like seasoning—enhancing the flavour without overpowering the dish.
Layer in historical conflict
The best historical mysteries don’t just place a modern crime in an old-fashioned setting—they weave the mystery into the fabric of the time. A theft in 1920 might be tied to Prohibition smuggling. A murder in 16th-century Spain could intersect with religious persecution. These historical tensions add stakes and make the story more than a puzzle; they transform it into a lens through which readers experience the era.
Make dialogue a cornerstone
Language is one of the quickest ways to immerse readers in the past, but it’s also a common pitfall. Too much archaic phrasing can make dialogue stiff and hard to follow, while overly modern speech breaks the illusion.
The key is selective authenticity:
Use period-appropriate vocabulary for objects, occupations, and social customs.
Avoid slang that didn’t exist yet (dictionaries can help here).
Keep sentence structure readable for modern audiences.
Keep pacing tight
While the past moved at a different pace, your plot shouldn’t drag. Balance richly detailed scenes with moments of action and revelation. In historical mysteries, tension often comes from the slow build—delays in communication, the time it takes to travel, the risk of misinformation spreading—but every delay should raise stakes, not stall the plot.
End on a deeper note
When the mystery is solved, consider how this crime fits the morality of the era. Would a killer from a higher social class face justice? Would certain motives be more understandable—or unforgivable—back then? The ending of a historical mystery should leave readers feeling they’ve solved more than a crime, but that they’ve understood something about the world that once was.
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