Wednesday, October 5, 2022

Thoughts About Writing Novels by Rosemary Morris

 

To learn more about Rosemary's work please click on the image above.

If I had a pound from every person who said he or she could write a novel it would add a worthwhile sum to my income. At a party, a man I met for the first time found out I am a published novelist. He pursued me relentlessly to find out how to be published. Years ago, he wrote a textbook and now wants to write fiction. I became more exasperated by his belief that I could give him the means to write a novel and find a literary agent or publisher.

“There is only one way to succeed,” I said, trying to conceal my irritation.

“What?” he asked eagerly, obviously thinking that I have a magic formula.

I resisted the temptation to say: ‘Get on with it instead of talking about it’.

“Write,” I told him.

Writing is demanding work. It requires dedication. Except for Christmas Day, I get up at 6 a.m. With a short break to eat breakfast I work until 10.a.m. After dealing with mundane tasks, working in my organic garden, and cooking, etc., I write form 4pm to 8p.m. with a short break for afternoon tea.

During the hours set aside to concentrate on my career as a novelist, I divide my time between writing, research, dealing with business, receiving, and answering e-mails, working with on-line constructive critique partners, and publicising my books.

Among other activities related to writing, before covid struck I attended a writers ‘group where I met published and unpublished writers. Members read extracts from their novels, non-fiction, poetry etc., and received useful feedback.

If someone chats to me about finding time to write, my advice is to have a routine, whether it is as little as fifteen minutes every day carved out from a busy life, or time set aside to write once a week. The important thing is the routine which separates real authors from would be ones.

Rosemary Morris’s novels

 

Medieval novels set in Edward II’s reign.

Yvonne, Lady of Cassio

Grace, Lady of Cassio

Early 18th century novels set in Queen Anne Stuart’s reign, 1702-1714.

Far Beyond Rubies

Tangled Love

The Captain and The Countess

The Viscount and The Orphan to be published soon.

Regency novels.

False Pretences.

Loosely Connected series which do not need to be read in sequence.

Sunday’s Child

Monday’s Child

Tuesday’s Child,

Wednesday’s Child

Thursday’s Child

Friday’s Child

Saturday’s Child

 

The first three chapters of each novel may be read on my web site. www.rosemarymorris.co.uk

 

Links to online bookstores. http://bookswelove.net/authors/morris-rosemary


Monday, October 3, 2022

Sunday, October 2, 2022

Meet BWL Authors - Diane Scott Lewis and Joan Soggie

Introducing 

Diane Scott Lewis

Diane is a BWL Author from Pennsylvania

 Diane Parkinson (Diane Scott Lewis) grew up near San Francisco, joined the Navy at nineteen, married in Greece and raised two sons in Puerto Rico, California, and Guam. She's a member of the Historical Novel Society and wrote book reviews for their magazine. She’s always loved travel and history and has had several historical novels published. Her most recent is the Revolutionary War novel, Her Vanquished Land.

Diane lives with her husband and one naughty puppy in western Pennsylvania.

For more on her books visit her website: www.dianescottlewis.org

Diane Parkinson
writing as Diane Scott Lewis - Facebook - Facebook Fan Page - Twitter @DSLewisHF  - http://www.dianescottlewis.org

Two of Diane's novels are featured below. Visit her Author page for more https://bookswelove.net/lewis-diane-scott/ 

 

 

Introducing Joan Soggie

Joan is a BWL Author from Saskatchewan 

 

 

Joan Soggie’s lifelong curiosity about her homeland has led her to explore the native prairie, the centuries-long relationship between the land and First Nations, and her own family’s settler history. Her 2014 non-fiction book, Looking for Aiktow, garnered praise from academics and general readers. “Beautifully told and filled with fascinating stories.” (Rick Book, author of Necking with Louise and Christmas in Canada.)   “The sort of plains history I particularly appreciate.” (Dr. David Meyer, professor emeritus, University of Saskatchewan.)

 

The prairie and all its creatures are her inspiration. Her family is her joy. She and her husband, Dennis, enjoy travelling and treasure days with their children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.  Joan Soggie lives and writes in rural Saskatchewan

 For more about Joan's novels visit her BWL Author Page

https://bookswelove.net/soggie-joan/

  

 

Saturday, October 1, 2022

BWL Publishing Inc. new releases for October 2022

 Visit our website for links to these novels and their BWL Author pages

https://bookswelove.net 

Desperate to save her people from the Marauders swarming her space freighter, Kefira prays for a miracle. Blake Volkov, legendary captain of the Blue Phantom hears her plea and deems her and her refugees worthy of his help. Grateful for the rescue, Kefira finds his price shocking. But despite his glowing wings, handsome looks and impressive abilities, Blake admits he is no angel… although Kefira’s feline bodyguard strongly disagrees.

Meanwhile, an old enemy bent on revenge unleashed an unspeakable evil on the galaxy. Time to face past mistakes… time for innocent blood to flow. Nothing prepared Kefira for the upheaval ahead.

Can Blake find redemption? Can Kefira save her people? Can she ever trust and love again?

 

Friday, September 30, 2022

Oh Baby: Eden Monroe

 

Click link to Eden's BWL Webpage

Giving birth to more than one baby at a time is known as a higher-order birth and the more babies there are, the greater the rarity.

The Dionne quintuplets, Émile, Yvonne, Cécile, Marie and Annette, were indeed such a rarity. Born prematurely on May 28, 1934 near Callander, Ontario, all originated from one fertilized egg; “the quintuplets arising through the repeated twinning of the early single embryo”, according to Britannica.com. That means Elzire Dionne was actually carrying three sets of identical twins until Cecile’s twin was miscarried during the third month of pregnancy. The average estimate of spontaneous conception of quintuplets is extremely rare; the average estimate is one in over sixty million births says verywellfamily.com.

Twins are actually the most common multiple birth, and in Back in the Valley, Kane and Jessica Davidson welcomed identical twin boys, Jack and Tommy, during a late March blizzard:

Kane couldn’t speak for a moment and Bea understood, carrying the conversation until he eventually found his voice.

“You have every reason to be proud, and I’ll bet you’ve bought out the entire supply of baby boy cigars at the gift shop too.”

“Not yet,” he said as he wiped tears away with the back of his free hand, “but I’m about to. Oh Mum, I just can’t describe how it felt to hold my boys for the first time. It was the best day of my life.”

Fraternal (dizygotic) twins are more common than identical (monozygotic) twins. Fraternals can happen more than once in a family if the mother is prone to hyper ovulation (releasing more than one egg at a time), but more than one set of identical twins can also be born into the same family, although the chance of that happening are about 12,500 to one.

Nevertheless, the odds were in the Davidson’s favour in Back in the Valley:

“Did you say baby? Not baby, Kane, babies. We’re having twins again.”

“What!” Kane held Jessica at arm’s length so he could see her face. “You’ve got to be kidding me! Are you sure about that?”

“In addition to the exam the doctor did a blood and a urine test and both had elevated hCG. When I was pregnant for the baby we lost, my hCG levels were up, but with the twins it was really high – and now it’s really high again. Dr. Lafferty said there’s a very good possibility that this will be a multiples pregnancy too. Twins, maybe triplets.”

“Triplets! Come on, Jessica. No way. Triplets! We’re fertile, babe, but not that fertile.”

So who is most likely to have identical twins? As set out in verywellfamily.com: “Contrary to popular belief, the chances of having monozygotic twins are most often not related to your family history. If there is more than one set of identical twins in a family, it is probably due to luck or external environmental factors. Some genetic mutations have been identified that increase the chance of monozygotic twins, but these are very rare.

 


“However, dizygotic twins do run in families. This is mainly thought to be due to genes that increase the number of eggs released.

“Interestingly, in vitro fertilization (IVF) appears to increase the likelihood of having monozygotic twins.”


Markers that could influence fraternal twin (and sometimes triplet) conception include the mother being taller than average; having a higher BMI (body mass index of 30 or more); being thirty years of age or older (more likely to hyper ovulate as you grow older), or family history. Race is also a factor.  

“African-American women are more likely to have twins than any other race. Asian and Native Americans have the lowest twinning rates. Caucasian women, especially those over the age of 35, have the highest rate of higher-order multiple births (triplets or more).” (Beaumont.org/conditions/multiple-birth-about)

Igbo-Ora, a community in Southwestern Nigeria, is known as the twins capital of the world. (reuters.com) There, the incidence of twins is in fact the highest in the world, and diet could be a factor says Jean Carper, author of The Food Pharmacy, Dramatic New Evidence That Food Is Your Best Medicine, and a former senior medical correspondent for CNN in Washington:

“Some authorities, including Dr. Percy Nylander, a professor at the University of Ibadan in Nigeria, suspect that going heavy on yams could promote the birth of twins. That’s because the Nigerian Yoruba tribe he has studied has by far the highest rate of double births in the world – twice that anywhere else. And the Yorubas who eat prodigious amounts of yams, a staple of the tribal diet, have an even higher rate. The theory goes this way: yams are rich in hormone-like substances that trigger the release of other hormones, including one called follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). This FSH, found in extremely high levels in Yoruba mothers of twins, is thought to stimulate the ovaries to release more than one ovum, setting the stage for double conception. Dr. Nylander also notes that the wealthier Yoruba people who have given up the tribal yam-dominated diet for Western fare have fewer twins.”

Another commonly held theory in Igbo-Ora that accounts for the high rate of twins there, is the consumption of the okra leaf popularly used to make stew “that should be eaten immediately and never stored.” (reuters.com)

Oyenike Bamimore of Igbo-Ora believes she’s living proof that the okra leaf results in the conception of twins. “Because I eat okra leaves a lot, I gave birth to eight sets of twins,” she said. (reuters.com)

However it’s unlikely that okra or yams were the principal diet eaten by the queen of multiple births, and not just twins. We have to step back to the 1700’s to meet the peasant woman who lived in Shuya, Russia. Her name was not recorded, other than she was the first wife of a Mr. Feodor Vassilyev. As set out in www.guinnessworldrecords.com/, Mrs. Vassilyev, through twenty-seven pregnancies, gave birth to sixteen pairs of twins, seven sets of triplets and four sets of quads for a grand total of sixty-nine children. Village records also indicate that when Mr. Vassilyev married for a second time he fathered eighteen more children. No mention was made of additional multiple births.

 



Popular Posts

Books We Love Insider Blog

Blog Archive