Sunday, February 2, 2020
January Blues
Well, here it is, Christmas and New Years are over, The decorations are put away and nothing to look forward to until Spring. No wonder the animals hibernate - besides the cold weather that is. Not that we've had much of that so far. December was an above average temperature month for the most part. We had a few extremely cold days. Not that December is an unusually cold month here in Ohio anyway, but 50s and 60s? Definitely not the norm.
And January started off pretty much the same way. You might say it was a roller coaster month. If you didn't like the weather one day, wait until tomorrow.
But weather aside, there's always a let down of sorts after Christmas. All that planning for a month and then bam, like that it's over and done. All the pretty lights are gone, living rooms go back to being their blah spaces.
Okay, some people might not agree. They like the uncluttered clean look. For me, it's almost depressing. I love the lights and decorations. So much so, I leave them up until January 7th. The day after the Feast of the Epiphany, or Feast of the Three Kings, Magi, or whatever term you want to use. My mom always waited, too. So it's become a tradition for me. Not many people I know do it any more, and I guess that's okay for them. Many can't wait to put Christmas away.
But, it's away and now we settle in for the long winter days, waiting for warmer weather - at least here in Ohio. January had five Fridays, this year. And February has an extra day, being a Leap Year. Why would they add the extra day in February? Even with only 28 days, it feels like the longest month of the year already and they go and throw in an extra day. Why not add it in June, July or August. Heck even September would be better than February.
I know, it all has something to do with the earth orbiting the sun and it's all very scientific and I don't even pretend to understand it. "February 29 is a date that usually occurs every four years and is called a leap day. This day is added to the calendar in leap years as a corrective measure because the Earth doesn't orbit the Sun in precisely 365 days."
I still don't understand why they couldn't have added it to spring or summer. But who am I?
I guess I'll just have to deal with it and wait an extra day for the warmer weather. Yes, I love the warm weather. I'm a Spring/Fall kind of girl. I'm not big on hot weather either. Anything with high humidity I can live without. I'm fine up to mid 80s as long as there's no humidity. After that, I take to the inside and air conditioning.
I'm good with temps in the 30s in winter, I can even handle the snow - provided we're not snowbound. A couple inches is fine as long as I don't have to drive in it. Although, around here they keep the streets pretty well cleared. Below that, I prefer not to go out.
It's no wonder people get depressed this time of year. Cloudy skies are the norm. Bad enough it doesn't get light until almost 8 AM and dark by 5 PM, add in the clouds, and it really gets you down. I feel bad for the people who have to work, going to work in the dark, coming home in the dark.
I was fortunate when I worked, I started at 8 and came home around 3:30. Still a little daylight left.
Okay, this blog turned out to be depressing and I didn't plan it that way. I'm really in a pretty good mood. And every day gets us closer to the bright sunshine and warm weather. Only 28 days, can that possibly be true? Of course there's still a lot of cold weather after March 20th - that's my youngest daughter's birthday, by the way.
Geriatric Rebels, one of my favorite books - although I love them all and they're all my favorites for one reason or another. I love the characters.
Forced to stay in a nursing home while undergoing therapy, seventy-two year old, Mike Powell refuses to get out of bed, won't cooperate with the nurses, and won’t take his medicine. At least not until he meets Elsa. The tiny, spunky little Elsa sparks new life into him.
Seventy year old, Elsa -left in the home while her son takes a family vacation - joins forces with Mike, setting the home on its heels, and later discovers deception and fraud. Can they find happiness together?
Who says life begins at 40? Life is wonderful at any age, as long you're willing to live it. Elsa Logan and Mike Powell prove it. And I want to be just like them when I grow up! One of Roseanne Dowell's best, and my personal favorite!
Elsa Logan bears a striking resemblance to a romance writer I know who shall be nameless but whose initials are R. D. ~ Romantic Suspense Author, Gail Roughton
Labels:
cold weather,
January blues,
leap year
Saturday, February 1, 2020
BWL Publishing Inc. New Releases for February 2020
To Purchase Yvonne Rediger's Books visit her BWL Author Page https://bookswelove.net/rediger-yvonne/ |
Alicia Highmere is heading home, back to Musgrave Landing after a call from her mother’s care home. Accompanied by her bodyguard, Bryce Graham, Alicia won’t know until she gets there that Olivia Frost-Highmere is manipulating events regarding the estranged family members to suit her agenda.
Part
of the reason the family has fallen out is due to the disappearance of
Allister Highmere, some twenty years ago. Alicia’s father vanished
without a trace upsetting the family company and leaving the seat of CEO
vacant. Uncle Hugo had his eye on the power seat and accused Olivia of
murder, to get it, but is it murder if there’s no body?
When
a corpse is discovered in the family cemetery, where there shouldn’t be
one, the cold case regarding Allister Highmere is reopened. Alicia has
no idea who in the family or the Highmere estate staff is involved, but
she will find out.
Friday, January 31, 2020
Coming up in February 2020
Struggling with a tricky assignment on a wild Scottish island,
Australian journalist Jasmine's almost literal lifeline is the sexy ferry deckhand.
But is he more than he seems?
Recently
I spent an enjoyable afternoon in a large local garden which is not
often open to the public. It's on undulating land, semi-rural on the
edge of town, with numerous mature trees, both Australian natives and
others including Californian redwoods. Swathes of grassy areas are
bordered with various flowers and shrubs; there's a vegetable and herb
plot, and a 'secret' walled garden. Several benches invite relaxing and
enjoying the ambience. Paths meander throughout; following one towards
the boundary, I came to a coppice which thinned out to reveal a shady
seat with an expansive view down over farmland to distant hills.


In
my contemporary romance novels, several main characters have
interesting gardens, and I enjoy researching these in person, from
books, magazines, travel brochures and the Internet; as I write, I
picture them in my head. I have been lucky with some personal research,
combining this with my love of travel. However, a visit to the Grenadine
islands, not planned for research as I did not have a West Indian
location in my story bank, resulted eventually in Where The Heart Is,
and Cameron's island garden. In this story, his and Cristina's garden
in country Victoria (Australia) couldn't be more different. His, 'a
tangle of jungle geraniums, buttercup bush and oleanders...a confusion
of trees tousled with dazzling climbing plants' contrasts with hers, 'a
teeming beauty of flowers with their faces to the sun, their zigzags of
colours cascading and blending...honeysuckle on the fence smells so
sweet and the air is full of bees'. (I am so envious of her garden!)
In Dancing the Reel, the
above-mentioned deckhand tends a garden warmed by the North Atlantic
Drift which enables palm trees to grow. My visit to a Scottish island
inspired the inclusion of such a garden into the story, though on my
trip no sexy deckhand/gardener appeared so I had to invent him (and gave
him more background that these occupations).
And
now, I must pay attention to my garden, specifically to dig up weeds
which seem to pop up overnight. After admiring the result of my effort, I
will spend time outside working on the next chapter in my current work
in progress.
Enjoy your reading.
Wednesday, January 29, 2020
The Trials of a Fluffy Kitty
First of all, Happy Birthday to Alexander H., born on Nevis January 11, 1757. To begin, I will post a quote of his that feels utterly relevant.
"...a dangerous ambition more often lurks behind the specious mask of zeal for the rights of the people than under the forbidden appearance of zeal for the firmness and efficiency of government. History will teach us that ... those men who have overturned the liberties of republics, the greatest number have begun their career by paying an obsequious court to the people; commencing demagogues, and ending tyrants." ~~The Federalist Papers
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The trials of a fluffy kitty...
Here is the "Fluffy Kitty" the day she came to us as a baby, a bitten-up kitten who had just been to the vet so he could drain an abscess from a bite.
My husband and I have learned a lot about her over the years both by observation and by inference. Kimi is the only one who could call us on any of these suppositions, but she's not talking, except for the ever-useful word "meow."
That's what she said to my friend Patti who found her on the porch of her Palmyra house on a cold December day. Kimi was hungry and cold and Patti could see her ribs through the fluff, and also see that she'd been hurt. Hundreds of $$ of vet bills and a few days later, Patti brought Kimi to me. Patti already had three indoor cats in her double wide. She was was still covered with ticks, in her ears, her paws and just everywhere. Patti and I stopped counting after we'd removed thirty.
Life for her improved after that, for, with antibiotics and wounds stitched, she was already on the path to better health. We had a set-back, though, when the abscess had to be drained again. My husband and I soon learned that this little girl had been badly handled by whoever had originally “been responsible” for her -- before they'd decided to throw her away.
I've come to believe that this is her story. As little kitten, she must have been a yellow fluff ball, looking more like a stuffed toy than a living being. This had led some cat-ignorant people to treat her like one. They'd probably allowed their children to tease her, chase her, and handle her far beyond her ability to endure. If Kimi was already a shy kitten, (and some kitties are emotionally fragile) this man-=handling must have pushed her beyond endurance. She became the hissing, clawing, fearful little girl who first came to live with us.
Kimi was definitely not a fan of being touched, not unless she initiated contact herself. If you reached out to pet her, you'd better come at her slowly and touch gently. Otherwise, there there'd be a steam-kettle worthy (dragon worthy?) hiss and she'd speedily decamp, glaring over her shoulder at the clod human who'd displeased her. She distrusted our other cats too, unsurprisingly, as she'd been beaten up and bitten while trying to get food at some stray cat feeding spot.
None of the other cats who lived here liked her. She wouldn't play, she wouldn't accept an introductory sniff or lick; she wouldn't play or share the food bowl or space on the couch or be any fun at all. She was just plain scared, and her obvious fear made her a target for our top cat, a large streetwise male. There were periods when she spent most of her time hiding out in a grungy pile of rags in a basement box. In fact, she came darn close to becoming known as "Basement Cat."
I began to coax her to come upstairs and sit with me, and then into accepting grooming, which her long hair definitely required. I bought a wide-toothed dog brush to start, so that it would pass easily through her thick, matted fur without tugging. This way we began to break the ice.
Gradually, she began to believe my intentions were good. After all, her fluff was too dense for her to care for by herself. As all cat owners should know, hairballs are a standard problem for cats. Nature obliges felines to groom thoroughly every day. All that hair goes in, but if it doesn't come out one end or the other, then the cat will be sick, sometimes fatally. Brushing and combing are a daily must, especially for such a fluffy kitty.
We'd brush until we'd get a growl. Nail clipping was the same--a few at a time. At first, these beauty treatments were all trials for Kimi, but slowly this necessary handling became routine.
We still wait until she approaches us for attention and then obey the message of the tail lash which signals "ENOUGH." Her only significant daily trial is Anthony. He arrived last year, absolutely certain that all the other cats must be dying to play with him—and if they refused, he’d chase them all over the house mercilessly. I think, however, that "still he persisted" might win the day, even faced with her determined suspicion.
Who can say? She may yet learn to enjoy the company of the other cats.
~~Juliet Waldron
Labels:
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#Juliet Waldron,
Alexander Hamilton,
cat care,
cat psychology,
cat rescue,
cats owner,
historical novels,
kittens

Tuesday, January 28, 2020
The Princess in the Tower—Suburban Version by Connie Vines
The Princess in the Tower.
I’ve always been drawn to stories where the princess is trapped in a tower. After all, the standard place to imprison damsels in distress and overthrown princes is a tower. Preferably on top of the tallest tower, in the biggest castle, on the highest hill, in the most dangerous land in the whole wide world.
“Rapunzel" (/rəˈpʌnzəl/; German: [ʁaˈpʊnt͡səl]) is a German fairy tale in the collection assembled by the Brothers Grimm, and first published in 1812 as part of Children's and Household Tales. Is one story which comes to mind.
Among the earliest examples of this theme are Perseus and Hercules saving princesses from hydras or sea creatures. In Yamata no Orochi, a hero also saves the princess from a type of hydra, which could be considered a primeval dragon.
“Beauty and the Beast” (Disney version) This is pretty similar to La Belle et la Bête, the French fairy tale (minus the animated furniture).
Why am I drawn to these stories?
It sounds gloomy. . .even hopeless, without a chance of a HEA (happily ever after ending). Unless, your version of the story is set in the suburbs.
Think about this for a moment, or two.
Life in the suburbs is hectic without a moment of down time. Ever.
However, in the Tower there is:
Room Service. All of your meals are prepared for you. Clean bedding and clothing are provided (after all, you are a princess).
View from the Window. Think of your beautiful view. Clouds, forests, beaches. A fresh breeze to tangle your freshly washed hair.
Solitude. You could read an entire novel without interruption, play an instrument, or journal to your heart’s content.
Uninterrupted Sleep. Unless, you have a fire-breathing dragon guarding the entrance (this could present a problem).
Exercise. With all those stairs, cardio will be a breeze.
Visitors. Of course, but none will be a shouting solicitor trying to sell you lame horse or home improvement contracts.
Pets. It wasn’t unheard of for a woman to be allowed to keep her small dog. (Anne Boleyn had a dog—well, perhaps that’s not the best case in point. . .)
And since this tower is in the suburbs, imprisonment wouldn’t be enforced for very long.
This does sound like a nice weekend get-away or perhaps, a B & B (Bed and Breakfast).
What is your favorite princess fairy tale?
Your favorite setting?
How do you feel about dragons?
Happy Reading,

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Shop for my novels:
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Chanel, dressed as a princess |
I’ve always been drawn to stories where the princess is trapped in a tower. After all, the standard place to imprison damsels in distress and overthrown princes is a tower. Preferably on top of the tallest tower, in the biggest castle, on the highest hill, in the most dangerous land in the whole wide world.
“Rapunzel" (/rəˈpʌnzəl/; German: [ʁaˈpʊnt͡səl]) is a German fairy tale in the collection assembled by the Brothers Grimm, and first published in 1812 as part of Children's and Household Tales. Is one story which comes to mind.
Among the earliest examples of this theme are Perseus and Hercules saving princesses from hydras or sea creatures. In Yamata no Orochi, a hero also saves the princess from a type of hydra, which could be considered a primeval dragon.
“Beauty and the Beast” (Disney version) This is pretty similar to La Belle et la Bête, the French fairy tale (minus the animated furniture).
Why am I drawn to these stories?
It sounds gloomy. . .even hopeless, without a chance of a HEA (happily ever after ending). Unless, your version of the story is set in the suburbs.
Think about this for a moment, or two.
Life in the suburbs is hectic without a moment of down time. Ever.
However, in the Tower there is:
Room Service. All of your meals are prepared for you. Clean bedding and clothing are provided (after all, you are a princess).
View from the Window. Think of your beautiful view. Clouds, forests, beaches. A fresh breeze to tangle your freshly washed hair.
Solitude. You could read an entire novel without interruption, play an instrument, or journal to your heart’s content.
Uninterrupted Sleep. Unless, you have a fire-breathing dragon guarding the entrance (this could present a problem).
Exercise. With all those stairs, cardio will be a breeze.
Visitors. Of course, but none will be a shouting solicitor trying to sell you lame horse or home improvement contracts.
Pets. It wasn’t unheard of for a woman to be allowed to keep her small dog. (Anne Boleyn had a dog—well, perhaps that’s not the best case in point. . .)
And since this tower is in the suburbs, imprisonment wouldn’t be enforced for very long.
This does sound like a nice weekend get-away or perhaps, a B & B (Bed and Breakfast).
What is your favorite princess fairy tale?
Your favorite setting?
How do you feel about dragons?
Happy Reading,

Remember to sign up on Facebook to join our Reader Page and more!
Shop for my novels:
books2read
Monday, January 27, 2020
US Space force – the race is on - by Vijaya Schartz
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Check out Vijaya's Sci-fi on BWL HERE |
As a sci-fi author, I am fascinated by what’s happening right now concerning space.
On December 20, 2019, the US government announced the creation of a new branch of the military to operate in space, called the US SPACE FORCE. The new logo, however, is eliciting frowns. Star Trek fans say it was ripped from their beloved Starfleet badge. Judge for yourself.
But why to go space? And why now?
The official answer is to protect our communication satellites and the International Space Station… but could there be other reasons?
Does the government fear an attack from space?
Is there an asteroid threatening our planet?
Scientists say it’s not a matter of if but when it will happen… and we are overdue. Remember the end of the dinosaurs?
Or is it a race for dominance in Space? The Chinese declared a space race for the moon and have already landed equipment on the dark side. They also have satellites in moon orbit. It didn’t make the headline news, but it was confirmed by NASA. And India just announced plans for its first human space mission.
This month, SpaceX celebrated the successful test of Crew Dragon Capsule that will carry NASA astronauts. Which means, no more using the Russian rocket.
Or was this decision for a new US SPACE FORCE made in order to protect the private companies who are preparing to harvest a wealth of minerals in space? These private companies are already launching their own rockets. First the moon, then the asteroid belt. Like in the old West, there are fortunes to be made. Space has become the new frontier, the new opportunity for those daring enough.
Space is also a new place to expand for the ever-growing population of Earth that is quickly destroying our planet. Earth cannot sustain the growth rate of our population. Pollution is a direct byproduct of overpopulation. More people means more exhaust gas, more manufacturing, more garbage, more fishing, more plundering of our natural resources.
Some say the race is for alien first contact, in order to benefit from their technology. Or has it happened already? Former astronauts have been warning us for decades that we are not alone in the universe. Now, the scientific community agrees, and recent government leaks informed the world that contact and exchange of technologies already happened with ET races at the highest levels.
Some even say the US already has a military force in space that needs to be legitimized. Others talk about shadows around the Mars Rover on NASA pictures, suggesting a human presence on Mars. Do we already have people there? Or did some alien humanoid help unstick the Mars rover?
Most of us think we would know if that were the case, but sci-fi authors and fans will tell you we would be the very last to know. Remember Stargate? Military secrets are extremely well guarded. And as for the topic of aliens, governments have become masters at systematic debunking, and misdirection.
One might wonder if there suddenly is a reason to legitimize what is already going on in space, or maybe to provide more funding for new space projects.
In any case, I will be keeping an eye on what’s developing in space. That’s where we are headed, that’s our future, and I feel lucky to be alive now, at the beginning of what can only be a great adventure.
Meanwhile, I’ll keep writing, and researching. This new phase of our evolution is bound to inspire many stories. Maybe you would like my Byzantium space station series. Here is the latest:
AKIRA'S CHOICE
Byzantium Book 2
by Vijaya Schartz
When bounty hunter Akira Karyudo accepted her assignment, something didn't add up. Why would the Galactic Trade Alliance want a young kidnapped orphan dead or alive?
She will get to the truth once she finds the boy, and the no-good SOB who snatched him from a psychiatric hospital. With her cheetah, Freckles, a genetically enhanced feline retriever, Akira sets out to flush them out of the bowels of the Byzantium space station. But when she finds her fugitives, the kidnapper is not what she expects.
Kazmo, a decorated Resistance fighter, stole his nephew from the authorities, who performed painful experiments on the boy. Stuck on Byzantium, he protects the child, but how can he shield him from the horribly dangerous conditions in the lawless sublevels of the space station?
Akira faces the worst moral dilemma of her career. Law or justice, duty or love. She can't have it both ways.
"Wow! If readers want to see and feel and believe they are in deep space, then ‘Akira's Choice’ is the perfect choice! With a touch of romance, the vivid descriptions and beautifully developed characters masterfully presented by Schartz create a virtual world that invite the reader not merely to observe, but to walk amongst them and participate... This is a delicate art, and Schartz wields her weapons with precision and skill. Banzai!" 5 stars - exceptional - recommended read - Ind'tale Magazine
"A captivating story with interesting, appealing characters. Being a cat lover, I found the relationship, with its psychic element, between Freckles and Shane absolutely captivating. As always, Ms. Schartz’s solid plot and crisply-written prose incorporates a good blend of action and intrigue... This story can easily stand alone... but I believe you’ll enjoy this exciting Sci-Fi series much more if you start reading it from the beginning... a must read for all fans of Sci-Fi romance. Go pick them up and settle into your favorite armchair for some entertaining reading." 4.5 stars - Manic Readers
Keep reading!
Vijaya Schartz, author
Strong Heroines, Brave Heroes
Sunday, January 26, 2020
When did chivalry die? Tricia McGill
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Find all my books here on my BWL page |
Was there really an “Age of Chivalry” and if so when
did it die, for die it certainly did. It never occurs to most men to open a
door for a woman nowadays. A smile and a thank you go a long way to making
someone’s day more pleasant.
The following is one of Edmund Burke’s quotes in his
“Reflections on the Revolution in France” written many years ago.
“The Age of Chivalry is gone. That of sophisters,
economists, and calculators has succeeded; and the glory of Europe is
extinguished forever. Never, never more, shall we behold the generous loyalty
to rank and sex, that proud submission, that dignified obedience, that
subordination of the heart, which kept alive, even in servitude itself, the
spirit of an exalted freedom. The unbought grace of life, the cheap defence of
nations, the nurse of manly sentiment and heroic enterprize is gone!”
More of his amazing quotes can be found here:
I learnt about Sir Walter Raleigh at the primary school
I went to in London many years ago, but mainly I remember that he was a
favourite of Queen Elizabeth the first and was well-known to have laid his
cloak down over a puddle so she would not get her dainty feet muddy. I didn’t
know in fact that he was beheaded for treason. To me, as a child, I thought
what he did for his Queen was very polite and chivalrous. You can learn more of
him here:
I am of an age when I am entitled to grumble about
the poor manners of the young people of today. In fact, to meet someone under
30 with perfect manners is such a rarity that it is a pleasure when you come up
against one. We were taught as children that we did not interrupt adults when
they were talking, but every day I come upon a child who thinks nothing of
tapping his mother on the arm constantly while she is in conversation, and she
does not reprimand him/her.
My list of bad manners in today’s society is very
long, and shared by all my contemporaries.
I love my mobile phone and would not be without it
in case of emergencies, but one thing I would never do is answer it while
waiting in a queue, while sitting in my Doctor’s waiting room, while on
transport—the list goes on. Why do some people have the notion we wish to be a
part of their conversation? Why do you need to tell your boy/girlfriend, husband/wife
that you have just arrived in the supermarket or just got onto the train home,
or worse still tell them all about your problems that should be discussed in
the privacy of your home.
In the process of relocating last year, I had to sit
in the waiting room of a Government office where out of work people go to sign
on to collect dole money, etc. In my instance the government needed me to go in
person, as for some reason it proved too difficult to change certain details
over the phone (Insert big sigh here). Anyway, for the entire hour I had to wait
for the interviewer, I was forced to listen to a young girl’s endless chatter
on her phone to first one friend then another about her problems with her car.
Unfortunately, if I had complained to the person about her bad manners I would
doubtlessly have been confronted with a bad-mouthed response about minding my
own business.
I am tired of hearing about people being booked by
the police for using their phones while driving, this is not only against the
law, it is downright dangerous and another case of senseless rudeness and
inconsideration for others—in fact bad manners. Turn your phones off or to mute
while driving why don’t you?
Don’t get me started on drivers these days. One day
while in my hairdressers a young girl was bragging about the thousands of
dollars in speeding fines that she had accumulated. When someone told her she
could end up doing jail time she thought that hilarious. Let’s hope she is now
sitting in a cell somewhere meditating on her stupidity.
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Tricia McGill web page |
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