Showing posts with label #BestYoungAdultBook2016. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #BestYoungAdultBook2016. Show all posts

Friday, November 16, 2018

Is a big stick required? by J.C. Kavanagh



So you've read a book. A fantastic book. You immersed yourself in the characters and in the various scenes and allowed yourself to be pulled into the intricacies of the plot. The words in the book joined together like a movie unfolding in your mind - word for word, paragraph for paragraph, page by page. What I like to call a word movie. 

Finally, you flip the last page and then sit back slowly in satisfied awe.

Now what?

Well, if you really-truly-completely want to share your satisfaction and acknowledge the author's way with words, a 'thank you' in the form of an online book review is your next step.

But somehow, the book review is a step that most people skip.

It's not because they don't want to say 'thank you' for the wonderful piece of work, or 'thank you' for bringing them totally and completely into the playground of the author's mind, it's because... well, it's because it's not encouraged enough. Not stressed enough. The importance of writing a positive review makes a huge impact on a writer's audience and fan-base. Think about it. How often do you search specifically for a particular author, or for books that are 4- or 5-star reviews? All the time? Most of the time? Probably.

Some websites make it easy to write a review. Others, not so easy. It's the resolve of the reader that determines which website(s) they place their opinion and name. Mind you, not all sites require the inclusion of your real name - so some form of anonymity is allowed. I know that the anonymous review is often the crutch used by negative trolls, but I'm only speaking to the readers who truly enjoy jumping in and out of the author's page-by-page creative playground.

If readers understood how important it is to share a positive reading experience with others around the globe, there would be more 'famous' writers. Yeah, I really think so.  Then, 'unknown' writers would have their works lifted for others to 'see' the word movie that each book brings to the screen of your mind.

It doesn't take a big stick to write a review. All it takes is some good words.

That's the 'thank you' a good author deserves.



J.C. Kavanagh 
The Twisted Climb - Darkness Descends (Book 2) 
AND
The Twisted Climb, 
voted BEST Young Adult Book 2016, P&E Readers' Poll
Novels for teens, young adults and adults young at heart
Email: author.j.c.kavanagh@gmail.com
www.facebook.com/J.C.Kavanagh
www.amazon.com/author/jckavanagh
Twitter @JCKavanagh1 (Author J.C. Kavanagh)


Sunday, September 16, 2018

The wilds of Georgian Bay and the North Channel by J.C. Kavanagh


It's been a spectacularly hot and sunny summer here in Ontario and I've been fortunate to spend much of it on my sailboat, Escape Route II, cruising Georgian Bay and the North Channel. It's been said that the North Channel is the Number One destination in the world for boating/sailing. Yes, it beats the Caribbean and Mediterranean for best cruising spots.
I can attest to the fact that the water is the clearest and cleanest of all the places I've sailed (including the Caribbean). The same applies to the scenery. Rock cliffs, boulders of every size and shape, quartz covered mountains, calm waters and savage, storm-wracked waves keep the views ever-changing. Me and my partner Ian spent a month sailing from Midland, Ontario (the southern point of Georgian Bay), up to Beausoleil Island, Hopewell Bay, Parry Sound, The Bad River (where you'll find the Devil's Door Rapids I write about in my book, Darkness Descends), Killarney, Little Current (which it's not), the Benjamin Islands, Wingfield Basin and Christian Island. We anchored 29 of 31 nights. 


Ian has such a great sense of humour and is a superb captain. Being in such close quarters for a month can be trying for some couples, but not for us. Below is one example of how every day is an adventure with Captain Ian.
When I asked for more cream cheese
Yup, we like to keep things fun!
If you like to see pics of nature and the beauty around us, including native animals and birds, and believe that vacation pics are not punishment (as per Betty White), check out my photos below. You'll see from the scenery that many parts of Georgian Bay and the North Channel are still wild and untamed.


A curious porcupine near Parry Sound, Ontario

A pileated woodpecker at Kilcoursie Bay, near Parry Sound
A pair of loons and their babies, north of Beausoleil Island
Cell Tower - they should all be made like this (outside the Shawanaga Inlet)

Granite cliffs are the backdrop to the 
Escape Route II at anchor, The Bad River 

Part of the Devil's Door Rapids at the Bad River

Mountains surrounding Baie Fine, North Channel

Beavers at dinner, Covered Portage Cove near Killarney

Executive beaver lodgings

Overlooking The Pool anchorage, North Channel.

Me and Topaz Lake
Storm threatens at the Benjamin Islands, North Channel

The Screaming Tree (not The Scream by Edvard Munch) at Covered Portage Cove

Anchored at The Cove
My 27" pike - was a yummy dinner!

Morning mist over the mountains of Killarney, Ontario

Navigating waves and the 40 knot winds. 
When you're sailing, every day is 'bad hair' day :)

Georgian Bay waves at 
Wingfield Basin near the tip of the Bruce Peninsula

Remnants of the Gargantua, 
a barge built in 1923 and sunk in 1952 in Wingfield Basin

The Gargantua in 1923





J.C. Kavanagh 
The Twisted Climb, voted BEST Young Adult Book 2016, P&E Readers' Poll 
AND 
The Twisted Climb - Darkness Descends (Book 2) 
Novels for teens, young adults and adults young at heart 
Email: author.j.c.kavanagh@gmail.com 
www.facebook.com/J.C.Kavanagh 
www.amazon.com/author/jckavanagh 
Twitter @JCKavanagh1 (Author J.C. Kavanagh)

Thursday, August 16, 2018

Driveway chicken by J.C. Kavanagh



Driving can be fun. Not like 'Miss Daisy' fun. I mean, fun in a challenging and exhilarating way. Sometimes I drive as if my car is a go-cart. Sometimes I drive like it's a Formula 1 race car (not very often). Sometimes I soldier on like it's a tank. My partner Ian has the same vision for driving.  
When we drive home in two separate vehicles, we always play the who's-gonna-park-in-the-garage-first game. It's our little driving competition. Just recently, though, our driving competition took on a more comical approach. 
We now play a new game - the Driveway Chicken game.
The idea is still to be the first to park and the first to get out of the car. But now, in the Driveway Chicken game, it's also maneuvering your vehicle to prevent the other one from sliding past and hitting the park-first jackpot.
Picture this: our home is in the country and the driveway is single lane, about 35 metres (100 feet) long. Trees line both sides of the driveway and stone surrounds the front porch. On the north side close to the garage, one-foot wooden sidewalls define a turning cut-out and prevent vehicles from traversing over. The driveway base at the house widens near the turning/parking cut-out and of course there's additional parking in front of the garage.  



The other day, Ian was just ahead of me when we got to the driveway entrance. It's our habit to back-in so Ian drove a few metres past the driveway with the intention of launching into reverse before I arrived.
Before he could launch, I drove nose-first into the driveway, accelerated down to the turning cut-out, spun my truck into reverse and began my wheel rotation with my foot on the accelerator. 
But there was Ian, his car ramped up on an angle beside my truck. I was sufficiently angled so he couldn't slide past the walls of the cut-out and he couldn't slide over the rock walls near the porch. 
I drove forward a few inches, trying to adjust my angle so I would be the first to park. 
He drove backward a few inches, looking for a way past my truck. 
We continued this zig-zag approach five or six times, like pac-man in a driveway chicken game.
That's when the laughter began. 
The ridiculousness of the situation, the intensity of the new game and then the visual of our two vehicles at impossible angles on our driveway struck my funny bone in the most delightful way.   
I laughed and laughed and laughed until the tears streamed down my face.
Ian rolled his window down and he too, joined in the laughter. 
What a delightful time. 
Laughter is good medicine, even in the driveway.
Me at the top of the driveway - winter shovel, no chicken


HEADS UP!
Book 2 from The Twisted Climb action/adventure/fantasy series
has been released!
The Twisted Climb - Darkness Descends
is available online everywhere. Next month,
paperback copies will be available through Chapters/Indigo stores.

J.C. Kavanagh
The Twisted Climb, voted BEST Young Adult Book 2016, P&E Readers' Poll
AND
The Twisted Climb - Darkness Descends (Book 2)
Novels for teens, young adults and adults young at heart
Email: author.j.c.kavanagh@gmail.com
www.facebook.com/J.C.Kavanagh
www.amazon.com/author/jckavanagh
Twitter @JCKavanagh1 (Author J.C. Kavanagh)






Monday, July 16, 2018

Mercy or kindness, by J.C. Kavanagh




Mercy - the Canadian Oxford Dictionary explains the noun as: 1. compassion or forbearance shown to a powerless person, esp. an offender or one with no claim to kindness. 2. the disposition to forgive or show compassion; mercifulness. 3. an act of mercy.

Kindness - definition also from the Canadian Oxford Dictionary: 1. the state or quality of being kind. 2. a kind act.

The act of mercy and bestowing of kindness are linked. But is it compassion or is it empathy that compels the giver-of-mercy/kindness to act? Or both? In the sequel to my novel, The Twisted Climb - Darkness Descends, the 18-year-old main character Jayden is placed in a situation where she can justifiably walk away and provide no kindness, no mercy. But the situation involves her mother. Her demanding, alcoholic mother. The gut-wrenching scene depicts Jayden's mom in a bitter and alcohol-fueled rage as she destroys an item of value. Jayden, who is also a demanding and often bully-ish person, must make a choice. Be bully or be nice? Should she extend mercy to her mom - who does not deserve a merciful act of forgiveness? Or should she respond with similar brutality and unkindness. 

This was one of the toughest scenes to put together. Most of The Twisted Climb series involves action and adventure, while the drama revolves mainly around Jayden's home life with her mom. So, what would you do? Show mercy or dole out retaliation? 


HEADS UP!
Book 2 from The Twisted Climb action/adventure/fantasy series
has been released!
The Twisted Climb - Darkness Descends
is available online and later this summer
through Chapters/Indigo stores.
Make sure to ask for it!


J.C. Kavanagh
The Twisted Climb, voted BEST Young Adult Book 2016, P&E Readers' Poll
AND
The Twisted Climb - Darkness Descends (Book 2)
Novels for teens, young adults and adults young at heart.
Email: author.j.c.kavanagh@gmail.com
www.facebook.com/J.C.Kavanagh
www.amazon.com/author/jckavanagh
Twitter @JCKavanagh2 (Author J.C. Kavanagh)



Saturday, June 16, 2018

Skinny-fat, by J.C. Kavanagh

http://www.bookswelove.com/authors/kavanagh-j-c-ya-urban-fantasy/
Voted BEST Young Adult Book 2016,
P&E Readers' Poll
 
Father's Day is tomorrow and it's one of many special occasions that bring to mind my dad, may be rest in peace. Dad was from Dublin, Ireland and he brought to Canada all the curmudgeonry (did I just make up that word? Yup, to be added to the Urban Dictionary: Curmudgeonry; the amalgamation of sweet and sour personality traits) with him. He passed away in 1995 and I still think of him with fondness, despite his affinity for curmudgeonry (yah, I'm going to use that word over and over hehehe).
 
Dad had a penchant for greasy, fatty foods. He would fry bread in bacon grease (bacon-fried bread actually tastes pretty good) and occasionally spread bacon drippings on fresh, white bread. According to my father, only white bread would do because whole wheat bread was for "tree-huggers and nudists." No sure where the 'nudists' came in, but that's what he said. He was raised in Ireland during World War II. Even though Ireland was not at war, errant bombs would drop across the country and wreak havoc and destruction. Scarcity of food was the norm and with that, bacon grease replaced butter.
 
 
'Fat' prevailed in other ways, too. On most Sundays during my childhood, mom would cook a roast of beef (leather-style, which is probably why I love my beef cooked 'rare'). My dad would cut the roast prior to dinner and with the utmost precision, he'd cut off the outer fat. That chunk of fat would then be carved into four portions: one for him and one for me and my two sisters. But this fat wasn't like any other fat. Oh, no. This was skinny fat.
 
With an impish grin as if he just found a leprechaun's pot of gold, my father would hold aloft the carving fork, four fatty slivers impaled to its prongs, and ask, "Who wants skinny-fat?"

Me and my sisters couldn't respond fast enough. "Me, me, ME!"
 
My mom would shake her head. "Skinny-fat, indeed. That rubbery chunk is fat - plain and simple."
 
But not for us. I realize now that skinny-fat and bacon drippings were a sweet/sour memory for my father, reminding him of how tough times can be glossed over with edible ecstasy. To this day, I keep a cup of bacon drippings in my fridge. It's my 'secret' ingredient to the best roast potatoes ever! Because I believe that everyone deserves a little skinny-fat now and then. Thanks Dad. I miss your curmudgeonry.
 
 
HEADS UP:
Book 2 from The Twisted Climb action/adventure/fantasy series
is set for release on August 1!
The Twisted Climb - Darkness Descends
will be available online and
through Chapters/Indigo stores.
Make sure to ask for it!
 
 
J.C. Kavanagh
The Twisted Climb
BEST Young Adult Book 2016, P&E Readers' Poll
A novel for teens, young adults and adults young at heart
Twitter @JCKavanagh1 (Author J.C. Kavanagh)





Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Laying low with a new enemy - Sciatica, by J.C. Kavanagh

WINNER Best Young Adult Book 2016, P&E Readers' Poll
WINNER, Best Young Adult Book 2016
P&E Readers' Poll
Well, a delightful spring season has finally arrived here in Ontario. We jumped from snow and ice in early May, to a summer-like spring this past week. Yay! I've been busy with yard work and raking and trimming, etc. etc. My property has a variety of areas: grassy, treed, trails and woods. It requires many hours of maintenance but I've always loved the outdoors and my partner feels the same way.

But all of this physical work comes with a price.

In my case, it's the price of back pain.

It began during the first two weeks of May, I spent most afternoons raking and then transporting via wheelbarrow, the leaves and debris that accumulate over the winter months. Yeah, I felt good! Until my next-to-last wheelbarrow load. I bent over to pick up the pile of leaves and somehow twisted the wrong way. And that was all it took. Sigh.

So for the last few days, I've been walking just like the alien guy in District 9. Have you seen that movie? It's a sci-fi about space ships from a dying planet that find their way to earth, only to hover above cities until humans 're-locate' them to a type of refugee camp. There, the creatures love to eat cat food (only a writer would think of that hehehe). The gait of these creatures is identical to mine: a combination of stiff leg and waddle.

Cutting down the bamboo stalks

Inserting nasty killer vine into the wood chipper

Snow boulder Queen: the snow/ice storm in mid-April 2018
I want to be 39 again. My mind tells my body that every day. So, I'm thinking that pain is your body's way of snickering at your mind. "Who's 39?" my body asks. And then laughs and laughs and laughs.

The sequel to The Twisted Climb - Darkness Descends will be published this summer. Stay tuned!

For now, I'm on the hunt for some elegant, yet tasty, Fancy Feast.

J.C. Kavanagh
The Twisted Climb
BEST Young Adult Book 2016, P&E Readers' Poll
A novel for teens, young adults and adults young at heart
Email: author.j.c.kavanagh@gmail.com
www.facebook.com/J.C.Kavanagh
www.Amazon.com/author/jckavanagh
Twitter @JCKavanagh1 (Author J.C. Kavanagh) 
 

Monday, April 16, 2018

Drunk on a slinky, by J.C. Kavanagh


Winner, BEST Young Adult Book, 2016

P&E Readers' Poll

I've been on a two-month mission to finish the sequel to my book, The Twisted Climb, and I'm thrilled to say it's complete! First draft done and now I'm in editing mode. In celebration, I'd like to share a portion of the story..... in this chapter, the three main characters have 'crossed over' to the dream world and have travelled to the edge of a narrow volcano vent. They're on a mission to rescue Connor's little sister, Georgia, who is lost in this moonlit scary world.
If you recall my March blog, I wrote about the killer vines on my property. It is because of these tree-sapping, strangling killers that I wrote this 'cross over' adventure in this book.

DRAFT - Darkness Descends (part of Chapter 16)
 
Max lay on his stomach and examined the portion of the bridge that was visible through the steamy mist. The base of the walkway was made from loosely braided vines and he could see the flakey brown bark interwoven in an imprecise pattern, all originating from the vines tied around two pine trunks at the vent’s edge. The hand rails were also made from the slender growth and every few metres, a length of vine branched downward to connect to the walking base. That section was tied at the base before looping upward and around itself in a continuation of the hand rail. Max turned his attention to the start of the bridge, focusing on the base of the snapped tree trunks. His hands followed the contours of the vines wrapped around them, feeling them for breaks or tears. Their flexible ends were tied in macramé fashion, one set holding the walking base and the other set the upper hand rails. “It’s secure,” he muttered. They were the only materials keeping the ‘bridge’ suspended.

Max scrambled upright, an ecstatic grin on his face. “It’s so simple!”

“No, it’s so sketchy,” retorted Jayden.

“It’s the way across,” Max insisted. “I don’t think we have a choice.”

Connor surveyed the woods behind them and then turned toward the steaming vent, uncertainty written over his face. “The steam makes it difficult to see to the other end of this contraption but it can’t be more than 30 metres across.” He took hold of one of the vine hand rails, pulling it and then shaking it side to side. The bridge swayed gently but remained intact.

“Yeah, I’m not sure about crossing this thing, either” Jayden remarked. “Those braided base vines are set so far apart, it’ll be like walking on live snakes.” She shuddered, recalling the snake she had grabbed in the canoe.

Connor shook his head at Jayden in disagreement. “It’s going to be tricky but Max is right – we don’t have a choice. Georgia has to be close by and we can’t stop now.” He tossed the walking stick/weapon over the edge and leaned forward, listening. Jayden held her breath and Max cocked his head to one side. Five, six, seven seconds elapsed. A faint ‘thunk’ floated up when the stick finally struck bottom.

Connor’s face was grim. “No matter what,” he said, “don’t fall.”

They started across, Connor in the lead followed by Max and then Jayden. Connor held each hand rail tightly, attempting to maintain his balance and prevent the bridge from twisting from one side to the other. The mist from the vent made the rail vines slick with moisture and the wide spacing between the braided vines at the base made it difficult to gain a foothold. Every time one of them took a step, the bridge twisted to the opposite side. They lurched like three inebriated pedestrians on a moving slinky.

“Wait!” Jayden’s voice was urgent. They had clutch-walked about five metres. “We won’t make it like this. Connor, every time you take a step, Max loses his balance and when he flip-flops, I do too. So we have to walk together, in sync!”

“Okay,” he agreed.

“On my mark,” said Jayden. “Right foot forward – now!”

The bridge wavered crazily with all their weight moving simultaneously. It swung back and forth several times and then slowly came to a stop. Jayden breathed a sigh of relief.

“It’s working! Okay, get ready guys... left foot forward – now!”

The bridge careened crazily once again, and all three reacted by gripping the hand rails and planting their feet as tightly as they could in the loosely braided base.

“I don’t like my idea anymore,” muttered Max. “Are we there yet?” He peered ahead but the mist was too thick to see more than a few metres ahead. He steadfastly refused to look below the bridge, convincing himself that there were no heights involved and that the stick falling for seven seconds before it hit bottom actually meant nothing.

They continued in measured step-by-step fashion for another dozen paces, with Jayden barking out orders for each movement. The farther they travelled across the bridge, the hotter the temperature. Misty vapours from the vent clung to them like a wet cloth. It was just as hard to hold on to the vines as it was to breathe.

Connor’s arms were shaking with the effort of keeping the hand rails aligned and rigid. His thighs were ready to explode from maintaining a crouched, balanced position. Perspiration dripped through his scalp and down his back, joining the creek of sweat trickling between his shoulder blades. He shook his hair and blinked back the sweat from his eyes. The mist was fading ahead of him and he could see that the incline of the bridge was becoming steep again. “There’s good news!” he hollered.

“I’m ready for some!” replied Jayden.

“I think we’re at the lowest, saggiest part of the bridge!”

“Great! Onward and upward?” Jayden asked.

“Onward and upward!” Connor responded.

Max released his hold of one handrail and wiped the sweat off his brow with the sleeve of his t-shirt. The action caused him to lean forward a tad too much and he hastily over-corrected his posture. But by jerking to the right, the base of the bridge lurched to the left and the vines on the handrail responded in a caterpillar-like jig. In horror, Max watched as Jayden reacted to the caterpillar-jig with her own slow-motion floppy dance. A moment later, Connor mimicked her movements. They were trying to regain their balance by reacting to the surging movement of the vines like an alpine skier would – bending knees up, then knees down – but they were, in fact, encouraging a forward surge, like a child pumping on a swing. Max jerked again to his right, swinging the crook of his arm around the handrail and narrowly preventing a fall. Just when he thought he was balanced, both feet slipped then separated around one section of the braided base and he fell through. He took a breath to cry out but before he could make a sound, his groin slammed into the fleshy part of the braid. Internally shrieking with pain and with his splayed legs hopelessly dangling, Max grabbed two of the braided vines around his torso. He tried to pull his legs up, but the vines were greasy with moisture and rippling with movement as the others continued to undulate in a crazy balancing dance. The pain from his groin was overwhelming and Max did the only thing his brain told him to do to make it stop. He grabbed Jayden.

“Noooo,” she screamed. Jayden was in mid-motion, caught between meeting her knees at her chin and holding the handrails rigidly by her side. She buckled backward with the force of Max’s pull and her butt hit him squarely in the chest. He fell back on the walkway but Jayden ricocheted to the right. The bridge’s rippling momentum kicked her off the braided walkway like a novice rider on a wild horse. Jayden flailed her arms, reaching for the rails – the base – anything. Connor had no time to think. He released the handrails, turned and dove toward Jayden. He managed to hook his right arm around the walkway base and the left underneath Jayden’s armpit before he slammed face-down on the braided vines. He quickly straddled the outer portion of the walkway with the topsides of his feet, lying as rigidly as he could. Jayden had one arm wrapped around the vine base and the other hooked around Connor’s neck. Her body dangled below. Their faces were inches apart and both were panting heavily.

“You saved me,” whispered Jayden. Her green eyes glowed with gratitude and she adjusted her hold on the walkway. Connor clenched his teeth and braced his back, neck muscles straining with tension as he held on to the walkway and Jayden. The bridge stopped its slow heaving surge and Max very carefully pulled himself to a sitting position.

A prolonged creaking sound from the bridge compelled Max to stop moving. “Something’s not right,” he said. “We’re not balanced.”

Jayden kicked her dangling legs, trying to elevate them so she could straddle the walkway. The bridge shuddered in response and began a twisting, rotating motion.

“The other way... move the OTHER WAY,” Max shouted.

But it was too late. The handrails began to twist and before anyone could react, the bridge had flipped over. And they were falling.
* * *

The sequel to The Twisted Climb - Darkness Descends will be published this summer. Stay tuned for more excerpts.

J.C. Kavanagh
The Twisted Climb
BEST Young Adult Book 2016, P&E Readers' Poll
A novel for teens, young adults and adults young at heart
Email: author.j.c.kavanagh@gmail.com
www.facebook.com/J.C.Kavanagh
www.Amazon.com/author/jckavanagh
Twitter @JCKavanagh1 (Author J.C. Kavanagh)

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