Friday, August 2, 2019
I Miss Camping - But so much more to do
Labels:
"Books We Love,
camping,
homes. yard work,
houses
Thursday, August 1, 2019
August New Releases from BWL Publishing and monthly Free Read
BWL PUBLISHING'S AUGUST RELEASES
visit http://bookswelove.net and click the book covers for book details and purchase information
August's free read is from Susan Calder
A Mystery set in Calgary, Alberta home of the world famous Calgary Stampede
visit http://bookswelove.net to download a free PDF of Ten Days In Summer
Wednesday, July 31, 2019
Revisiting and Revising by Prscilla Brown
From its first incarnation, this contemporary romance was ruthlessly reworked;
the character on the cover received a new name and personality.
I've been involved in a textile arts exhibition showcasing items which the artist has revisited, upcycled, recycled, remodelled, or transformed in some way. Think jeans cut off above the knee, rebirthed as shorts and decorated with bright fabric, or, with appropriate stitching, reappear
as a bag again embellished.A floral skirt way out of fashion is reconstructed into a shade for a table lamp; several kinds of textiles, fabrics, knitting, crochet, in pieces of carious sizes and colours, are hand-stitched together covering all surfaces of a second-hand wooden dining chair.
As I chopped up boring old scarves into sections and reassembled them onto a length of fabric, the new cloth to metamorphose into a wrap, I thought about how I use the rethinking terms for this kind of creativity in my fiction writing.
With all my novels, having reached what I initially consider to be the final draft, I print them out and put them aside for an indefinite time. I do enjoy editing and prefer to edit this "final version" on hard copy.
Write without fear. Edit without mercy.
(Quotation found on Internet, source unknown.)
For me, returning to a manuscript always reveals assorted plot holes, inconsistencies, repetitions,
weak characters and other glitches. Class Act (not its original name) remained in the drawer for the
longest period, four or five years. When I revisited it, I was shocked. Is this the best you can do? Too long. Too much detailed backstory. Too many secondary characters. Extraneous events and trivia. Unbelievable female protagonist (insufficient qualifications and experience for the job she's appointed to). I wrote this while I was working in the same environment as the story is set, and this version now read as if I'd wanted to include several incidents which did happen but which were entirely out of place in the novel.
A major revision was required.
The prologue had to go, all 4000 words of it. Necessary information was salvaged and worked where appropriate into the first and second chapters, which also better defined the personalities of the protagonists. Realising I was making more changes to her than to him and to some of the scenes together, I severely chopped up and altered her backstory, reassembling the pieces into a shorter and more credible version (her one-time Mexican lover was not necessary), and stitching bits into the story where relevant.
A number of secondary characters lost their places (she did not need to have a childhood nanny with whom she keeps in touch). I found several scenes which did not move the story along. Some were beyond redemption and permanently discarded (whyever did they go to the zoo?); those I had fun writing and wanted to keep received remodelling so that they did provide forward momentum (adding a thunderstorm while they were eating outside at a restaurant nudged their growing attraction up several notches); others could be reconstructed and their timewise position in the story relocated. These and many other repairs, including a re-vamped ending, in this extensive revision transformed both the energy and the length of Class Act, sending about 30 000 words to the bin.
And now, it's time to take out another manuscript from its incubation in the drawer. I'm wondering how much editing will be required for this one!
Enjoy your reading. Priscilla.
Tuesday, July 30, 2019
Bananas by Margaret Hanna
![]() |
Visit Margaret's BWL Author Page for Details and Buy Links |
Bananas!
Yes, the fruit.
Several years ago, I was
scheduled to present a paper at a conference in Winnipeg, Manitoba. In early
May.
Those of you who are familiar
with prairie weather know, only too well, that “spring” in the prairies can
bring any and all kinds of weather. Including blizzards. That’s exactly what
happened that spring.
Four days before the conference
was to begin, a blizzard hit the southern prairies. It raged for three days.
All highways, including the Trans-Canada Highway, were shut down. Nothing, not
even semi-trailers, moved. Traffic stacked up at both ends of the blizzard
zone.
By the second day, grocery
stores were running out of fresh produce. A woman roamed through my local
Safeway, crying, “Bananas! There are no bananas!” The manger informed her, “I don’t know when
we’ll get more, the trucks are stopped in Manitoba.”
The third day, the blizzard
began to blow itself out. The fourth day, the sky was blue and the highways
were clear. A friend and I jumped in the car and began the six-hour drive to
Winnipeg.
East-bound traffic was bad
enough, but the west-bound traffic was constant, and consisted mostly of
semi-trailers. Suddenly, the Safeway truck screamed past. We yelled,
simultaneously, “Bananas!” and laughed.
*
* *
Addie learned what a prairie
blizzard was like during her first winter on the homestead. Here’s an excerpt
from Chapter Nine: “First Winter” in “Our
Bull’s Loose in Town!” Tales from the Homestead.
The first blizzard came in early
January. The wind had been blowing from the southeast for a couple of days – a
keening wind that didn’t stop day or night. It whistled and whined around our
house and went straight through you. Abe brought extra coal into the house and
banked snow around walls. He strung a rope from the corner of the house all the
way over to the stable. “When the blizzard starts, sometimes the storm is so
bad you can’t see more than a couple of feet. People can get lost trying to
cross the prairies in a blizzard.” At first, I thought he was joking but he
certainly sounded quite serious. I began to get a little worried.
The day the blizzard hit started
off nice enough. There was hardly any wind and the sun was shining. “Seems that
blizzard you promised has decided to stay away,” I teased.
“Just you wait, it’ll be here
sometime today. Now come help me put extra bedding in the stable.”
We walked the few hundred yards
to the stable and pitched a wagon load of straw and extra feed in for the
livestock and chickens. It took only an hour or so, but the world changed in
that time. The wind was stronger, from the northwest, and it sent snow snaking
across the ground. And it was cold, much colder.
Then I saw the clouds, grey
ugly-looking things coming in fast. They hung low over the world and looked
angry. I wondered if this is how the last judgement would begin. The first
snowflakes were not those huge soft things that fall like feathers; they were
hard, stinging pellets that cut into your skin.
“It’s going to be a bad one,”
Abe said as we scurried back to the house.
Monday, July 29, 2019
Sympathy for the Devil
![]() |
http://amzn.com/B00P9TW046 |
In college, I read translations of
the Icelandic Eddas. These stories have none of Wagner's Ring Cycle Victorian
romantic overlay and many more god/demon characters. From these, I learned more
about Loki, one of those ambiguous, powerful trickster figures that inhabit
mythology world-wide. Loki, it seems, could be male or female at will. Sometimes, in the stories, he's helpful, usually pulling the wool over some
antagonist's eyes to help out a more obviously central figure, like the Father
God, Odin.
Loki, in different forms, had a
whole series of monster children. As a mare, he conceived Odin’s horse, the
eight legged Sleipner, but let’s not get bogged down in the fascinating details
of that story. J
The ones I’d like to discuss are Fenrir, a kind of wolf on steroids,
Jormungandr, a serpent—also on steroids—and a little girl, Hel. Hel would be
beautiful, if half of her face were not a skull. Hel gave her name to our Christian
Hell.
![]() |
http://amzn.com/B00FKKAN98 |
Fenrir is just a puppy when he is
taken. He longs for his mother and he longs for someone to love him, as puppies
do. The gods are all afraid of him, however, because of the prophecy. Only the
God Tyr is brave enough to feed him and be kind to him, and so Tyr becomes the
only god poor Fenrir trusts. The snake,
Jormungandr, Odin tosses into the ocean, but this doesn’t get rid of him or his
propensity to grow. Jormungandr goes on growing until, hidden beneath the sea,
he encircles the entire earth. Earth becomes his adoptive Mother, and he
becomes her secret protector and friend.
Meanwhile, Fenrir goes on growing. More
and more afraid of him, the gods go to the Dark Elves for a special magical chain
capable of holding him. When they return, they pretend to play a game with
Fenrir, putting on different chains and encouraging him to demonstrate how
strong he is by snapping them. Every time he does do, they clap exclaim at his strength
and power. At last, they bring out the Elven chain, but Fenrir senses their
duplicity. He refuses to allow them to put this one on until Tyr puts his sword
hand in Fenrir’s mouth as a show of good faith. “If you cannot break this
chain, you may do with me as you will.” Such a heart-breaking story! Tyr has sworn
loyalty to his master Odin but he’s also bonded with the wolf and he knows full
well when he puts his hand in that hot mouth, what is about to happen.
The great wolf, trusting Tyr, allows
the gods to “try out” the strength of their new chain. This one, so full of
magic, cannot be broken. Tyr loses both his sword hand and his monstrous
friend, while the hatred of Fenrir for the gods who have so abused him will now
grow ever stronger. This is one of the saddest tales in the long string of the broken
oaths and broken friendships which litter the ancient story.
Actions have consequences, although
it seems the gods have so far believed these could be avoided. Too
many rules have been broken, too many laws disregarded, and the finely balanced harmony
of the universe goes spinning out of control. The time comes when Fenrir, as
foretold, at last breaks even that magical chain. Then, he will kill the
oath-breaker Odin and finish his vengeance by swallowing the sun. Jormungandr will arise,
carrying the ocean over the land. Hel will unleash her army of the dead and the
world-wide apocalypse the Norse called Ragnorak will bring utter ruin to gods and men.
When I was younger, I remember only
being afraid of Fenrir, Jormungandr and Hel, those black monstrous terrors, that break down of order. The rationalizations
presented for Odin’s actions: “the ends justifies the means” seemed an inevitable
part of the cruel, cynical "realism" that was part of adulthood.
Now, re-visiting the story, I have had the dizzying experience of seeing the
old black and white change places. My heart breaks for Fenrir and the other stolen
children; I can better understand the natural forces they represent. With a shock of recognition, I see Odin’s lies, his self-service, his delusion of total control, and also have a spine-tingling vision of how some
forces are too huge for gods—or men—to imagine they can command.
Labels:
apocalypse,
books we love,
chaos,
Juliet Waldron,
Loki's children,
Norse myth,
Ragnarok,
Roan Rose,
Zauberkraft: Black

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