Tuesday, June 17, 2014
Lists, Lists, Lists ala Janet Lane Walters
Today, I'm going to talk about lists. I love lists and making them is how I find my way around this world of writing. Do you make lists? My pleasure is in checking off what I've listed to be done. It's called organization and without my lists I would flitter about like a butterfly.
I'm at my desk with my computer and in front of me are lists, four of them. One of those lists is all about who I am where. Sounds confusing but one must always know who and where they are. Another list has the names of those who will be guests on my blog on Friday and Saturday. Mostly to remind me to make sure they have sent me the needed material. The third list is one that tells me when I have books on sale at Amazon. I try to keep them in order so I will know when the next round happens. Since I write under 2 names, this is important. The fourth list is one of all my books. If I didn't have that I might forget a book that I wrote. Imagine the amazement to be reading something and wonder who wrote this book. Could be happy or sad. I could have written one of those stories one deletes from wherever they're reading.
Those lists are just a few. I have lists for each book I work on and I really delight when I can check off a draft that I've written and can cut a few more days off my writing schedule. I make lists when I'm packing for a trip. Believe me, if it's not on the list, it doesn't get packed. This can be a near disaster when one arrives at a destination and realizes something vital was left off the list. Sometimes I make lists of lists.
Lists accompany me to the grocery story and other shopping venues. I make lists of the books I want to buy and read.
How about you? Do you like lists or do you manage to flit through life without a list to keep you grounded and organized?
Monday, June 16, 2014
A Day in the Life
Many people ask what a writer's day is like. Strangely enough, my day is anything but what the typical writer's day. At least the typical writers I've read about. I don't start the day with coffee, sit at my desk and write for eight hours. Matter of fact, I don't even sit at a desk to write. Usually, I'm on the couch with my lap top. I seldom wake up, get my coffee and begin to write.
So when do I write, you ask?
I've often woke up in the middle of the night and wrote throughout the night. I learned early on in my career not to ignore a thought. If I don't write it down immediately, it's gone. I woke up one night with a dialogue from a work in progress. Thinking I'd remember it the next day, I turned over and went back to sleep.The next morning I remembered little of it. A few words here and there. In fact, not only was most of the dialogue gone, so was the idea.
So now I get up and write it down immediately. That often leads to other ideas and hence, the reason I ended up writing all night. Fortunately, my children are grown, my husband was on the road and I didn't have to answer to anyone. If I wrote all night and slept all day no one was the wiser.
Although seldom did I sleep all day. Sleep, in my opinion, is a waste of time. I hate naps, always have. Well, as long as I remember anyway. So I'd sleep for a couple of hours and if an idea hit, I'd write all day also.
So, what is my typical writing day?
Truthfully, I don't have a typical writing day. Sometimes I write first thing in the morning, sometimes in the afternoon. Sometimes, I don't write at all. Lately, I've not written much because my characters refuse to speak to me. They can be stubborn that way.
I must have made them angry or they don't like the way the story is going. I'm sure they'll lead me in the right direction eventually. In the mean time, I'm reading what I've already written and revising/editing as I go along. I'm hoping by time I get to the point where I left off, I'll figure out which direction they want to go.
For now you can find my books at Amazon
So when do I write, you ask?
I've often woke up in the middle of the night and wrote throughout the night. I learned early on in my career not to ignore a thought. If I don't write it down immediately, it's gone. I woke up one night with a dialogue from a work in progress. Thinking I'd remember it the next day, I turned over and went back to sleep.The next morning I remembered little of it. A few words here and there. In fact, not only was most of the dialogue gone, so was the idea.
So now I get up and write it down immediately. That often leads to other ideas and hence, the reason I ended up writing all night. Fortunately, my children are grown, my husband was on the road and I didn't have to answer to anyone. If I wrote all night and slept all day no one was the wiser.
Although seldom did I sleep all day. Sleep, in my opinion, is a waste of time. I hate naps, always have. Well, as long as I remember anyway. So I'd sleep for a couple of hours and if an idea hit, I'd write all day also.
So, what is my typical writing day?
Truthfully, I don't have a typical writing day. Sometimes I write first thing in the morning, sometimes in the afternoon. Sometimes, I don't write at all. Lately, I've not written much because my characters refuse to speak to me. They can be stubborn that way.
I must have made them angry or they don't like the way the story is going. I'm sure they'll lead me in the right direction eventually. In the mean time, I'm reading what I've already written and revising/editing as I go along. I'm hoping by time I get to the point where I left off, I'll figure out which direction they want to go.
For now you can find my books at Amazon
Labels:
author,
Roseanne Dowell,
writing
As the second youngest of six children, I always had a vivid imagination and loved to make up stories. I often sat and daydreamed about imaginary characters and lost myself in books and make-believe worlds.
My love of writing began as a teenager, but only recently pursued it seriously. With encouragement from fellow book-club members, NEORWA and my husband, I began writing and submitting my work.
Although Satin Sheets was my first published novel, I have over forty articles and stories published in magazines such as Good Old Days, Nostalgia, and Ohio Writer along with several online publications.
Besides teaching three writing courses for Long Story School of Writing, I taught a writing course at Cuyahoga Community College.
In my spare time, I enjoys spending time with my six children, fourteen grandchildren and great grandchildren. My hobbies include ceramics, knitting, quilting, and jewelry making. But after my family, my first love is writing. I reside with my husband of forty-eight years in Northeast Ohio. You can visit my website at: http://www.roseannedowell.com
Sunday, June 15, 2014
Did you know ...
By Michelle Lee
BWL Art Direct and Resident Bio-Geek
Following up my summer reading list, I wanted to take a moment and share some fun biological facts with you. Some are interesting, some kinda gross, and a few are in the category of what the heck? You have been warned.
Those that are on the BWL Facebook Group might have seen a couple of these already ...
There are going to be a lot of links provided in this post to fact based sites. To make reading the post the most enjoyable, stop and click the links where provided.
* * *
Fun Fact 1: You know that long 'kee-eeeee-arr' sound that a Bald Eagle's make in commercials?
Like this one ...
That sound that has become an almost iconic Bald Eagle sound ... isn't actually an Eagle. Bald Eagles have a weaker, whistling or thrilling call.
So if it isn't a Bald Eagle, just what are you hearing? It's a hawk of some kind, normally a Red-tailed Hawk.
* * *
Fun Fact 2: The chemistry of fireworks
What makes fireworks so breathtaking is the various different colors they come in. What makes those color possible is the different color certain elements produce.
"Sodium produces yellow/gold colors. Barium creates green, copper compounds produce blue, strontium salts give you red and titanium metals give you silver colored sparks.
Other commonly used chemicals are carbon which provides the fuel, oxidizers which produce oxygen for burning, magnesium which increases the overall brilliance and brightness, antimony that gives you a "glitter" effect and calcium which deepens the colors." ~ Science Is Awesome
For more information on the colors and what element they are created from check out:
* * *
Fun Fact 3: Lobsters
BLUE LOBSTERS
That's right, the lobsters that we consider a food of the rich (which used to be considered trash food, or food for the poor, and there were laws about how often someone could feed them to their servants - little tid-bit for you history buffs) have a 1 in 2 million chance of a mutation that gives them blue pigmentation.
It is a mutation that causes an overly large amount of a specific protein that combines with the red carotenoid molecule, turning the lobster blue.
for information on Toby, a blue lobster that found a home at the National Aquarium in Washington DC.
Other color variation are:
Orange at 1 in 10 million odds
Yellow at 1 in 30 million odds
Orange and Black calico at 1 in 30 million
Split color varieties at 1 in 50 million
White at 1 in 100 million odds
For you history buffs, check out the history of the Lobster
For more information on the biology of a lobster
As if that wasn't enough to blow your mind about lobsters, how about this?
TWO-TONED LOBSTERS
It is believed that this occurs when the egg is first fertilized. Often times, the lobster will show characteristics of both genders.
It's believed that odds of a lobster being two-toned are about 1 in 50 million, maybe even 1 in 100 million.
Links for more info:
Nat Geo: Halloween Lobsters
NBC News: Two Toned Lobster
* * *
Fun Fact 4: Two-Gender Animals
As mentioned in the fact about the two-toned lobsters, some animals can show characteristics of both genders. Now I am not talking true hermaphrodites. I am looking at something else called Bilateral Gynomorphs - where an animal is literally half male and half female.
What is believed to happen is that two embryos, with unique DNA, fused together and developed as a single fetus, resulting in an individual with two sets of DNA in a single body; sometimes the two embryos are the same sex/gender, and other time ones is male and one is female - which is what results in such breathtaking color/morphological contrasts - such as these butterflies.
* * *
Fun Fact 5: Placobdelloides jaegerskioeldi
What the heck is that? It's the elusive Hippo Leech.
There is actually a leech that is found in the last 10 cm of the rectum of hippos. Yep, you read that right. There is a butthole leech for hippos. Ever wonder why they are in such a bad mood? LOL Well wonder no more.
While it is the dream of many field biologists to discover a new species, I am just not sure I could enjoy that claim to fame.
Parasite of the Day: Hippo leech
Hippo Leech Revisited
* * *
If you enjoyed this post, stay tuned for more bio fun facts to come.
Labels:
bio fun facts,
Michelle Lee
Born to ride on the back of dragons, to journey among the stars in a ship traveling faster than light, or to dance the night away in the arms of a mysterious vampire, Michelle Houston willingly shares the worlds in her mind in an effort to bring them to life.
Writing everything from short and sweet stories, to hot and spicy tales of kink, from contemporary tales of romance to erotic romances featuring Greek Gods, vampires and were-creatures, she has crossed sexualities and has gone wherever her mental muse has guided her. A journey she has never regretted.
Just who is Michelle Lee ...
It has been suggested to me that you might like to know a little bit more about me. I am not sure that I agree, since I am a fairly boring person. I am a true introvert, with a healthy dose of shy added on just for good measure. But in a series of posts over the next little while, I am going to attempt to give you a glimpse of BWL's OZ, the woman behind the cover art curtain.
So, why do a say I am fairly boring? Well, to give you a hint, my idea of a good time is reading scientific journal articles and books. Now don't get me wrong, I like reading fiction books. Love them in fact. I am a voracious reader, and can put down 3-10 fiction books in a week, depending upon what I have going on in my life.
But I am also a bit of a geek. Ok, so remove 'bit' and sub in 'enormous' and you have a better reflection of me. So really, it should come as no surprise then that I have a few summer reading books that aren't fiction.
To put things into perspective for you, I am currently working on my Masters in Biology, with a focus on ecology and bird survival rates. My undergrad is in Biology Education. My favorite animal group are birds (Class Aves).
So now that you have some background about geeky me, you'll understand a little bit more when I share my summer reading list.
(If you have an interest in any of these books, the covers link to the books on Amazon where you can find more details out about them).
Ready?
If I still have time, I plan to then get into a specific set of bird, my absolute favorite - OWLS.
In addition to OWLS OF THE WORLD, I also have several other owl books focusing on specific regions of North America. But I figure that is about all I will get to this summer. Ah well - there is always next year.
Now, if you like birds and have an interest in my suggestions for the best reading for an Amateur/Beginner Birders, just let me know in the comments.
So, why do a say I am fairly boring? Well, to give you a hint, my idea of a good time is reading scientific journal articles and books. Now don't get me wrong, I like reading fiction books. Love them in fact. I am a voracious reader, and can put down 3-10 fiction books in a week, depending upon what I have going on in my life.
But I am also a bit of a geek. Ok, so remove 'bit' and sub in 'enormous' and you have a better reflection of me. So really, it should come as no surprise then that I have a few summer reading books that aren't fiction.
To put things into perspective for you, I am currently working on my Masters in Biology, with a focus on ecology and bird survival rates. My undergrad is in Biology Education. My favorite animal group are birds (Class Aves).
So now that you have some background about geeky me, you'll understand a little bit more when I share my summer reading list.
(If you have an interest in any of these books, the covers link to the books on Amazon where you can find more details out about them).
Ready?
I plan to start with TAKING WING, which examines the evolution of bird flight. So from the first "known" bird ancestor to modern day.
But you can't look at flight itself without also considering one of the most important aspects that allows it - the FEATHER.
So next on my list is a fascinating look at FEATHERS.
After that, I am going to take a step back and look THE ORIGIN AND EVOLUTION OF BIRDS.
After that, it is a toss up. I will probably read both of the following books at the same time, since one is more of a birder guide companion and the other is a textbook.
If I still have time, I plan to then get into a specific set of bird, my absolute favorite - OWLS.
Now, if you like birds and have an interest in my suggestions for the best reading for an Amateur/Beginner Birders, just let me know in the comments.
Labels:
bio fun facts,
biography,
Michelle Lee
Born to ride on the back of dragons, to journey among the stars in a ship traveling faster than light, or to dance the night away in the arms of a mysterious vampire, Michelle Houston willingly shares the worlds in her mind in an effort to bring them to life.
Writing everything from short and sweet stories, to hot and spicy tales of kink, from contemporary tales of romance to erotic romances featuring Greek Gods, vampires and were-creatures, she has crossed sexualities and has gone wherever her mental muse has guided her. A journey she has never regretted.
Behind The Cover: Romance Heat Levels
BWL Art Director
At BWL, part of the book information an author provides is a genre designation and if it involves a romance, either as the main genre or a sub-genre, they also include the romance heat level. Now this throws off many people, especially since heat levels, just like comfort levels, vary from author to author, and reader to reader.
Something to consider, I started my career in the erotica field of the spectrum, so my 3 probably differs from someone who has never even read an erotic romance's definition of a 3.
So I have a basic scale that the authors are provided.
1: Sweet --- 5: Melt your screen HOT
I had hoped that would be enough, but I forgot, not everyone is as comfortable with my level of screen melting. So for some people, screen melting might be fairly tame to me. So I still find at times, that authors have problems deciding what deserves a 3, versus when does it tip into a 4. This isn't through any fault of their own - so please, don't read that into what I am saying. It all has to do with our own perceptions of things.
So here in plain terms, is what I think of with each heat level designation.
1. We are talking sweet or inspirational romances, or those that only hint at a romance subplot, etc.
Cover results ... NO nudity or any kind! Full clothing, no embraces that even hint at passion or lust. Maybe dreamy eyes or holding hands, but that's it.
2. Close the door romances, and those with a bit more of a romance subplot, where a kiss is really all the readers are privy to.
Cover results ... Maybe a shoulder, bare male torso, or a soft kiss. Nothing majorly scandalous.
3. Now we are getting somewhere - bedroom door is open, but details are flowery or fairly sparse in detail.
Cover results ... Bare skin, maybe an embrace with a more passionate kiss.
4. Details are flowing and clothes are flying. Yeah baby!
Cover results ... Nudity alert! Might have a partially nude couple, bare torsos on guys, suggestive images, etc on the cover.
5. These are generally spice releases, but I have seen a couple some through with a heat rating of 5 for a non-spice (generally because the romance is a sub-plot but it is still explicit!).
Cover results ... No holds barred, anything and everything goes on the cover, which matches the characters. *wink, wink*
Can we tell what covers I still enjoy creating?
Labels:
Behind the Cover,
Cover Art,
Michelle Lee
Born to ride on the back of dragons, to journey among the stars in a ship traveling faster than light, or to dance the night away in the arms of a mysterious vampire, Michelle Houston willingly shares the worlds in her mind in an effort to bring them to life.
Writing everything from short and sweet stories, to hot and spicy tales of kink, from contemporary tales of romance to erotic romances featuring Greek Gods, vampires and were-creatures, she has crossed sexualities and has gone wherever her mental muse has guided her. A journey she has never regretted.
Dear Artist: Favorite Styles
Dear Artist
Do you have a favourite style? I know you produce wonderful covers for BWL and I am sure that they are always the absolute best you can do based on the writer's requirements, but you must have favourites. What do you consider to be a five star design for a cover with regards to layout, colour, content, background etc?
UK Lady
* * *
Dear UK Lady,
Thank you for taking the time to ask such a fun question. Really, it all depends on the genre of the book.
When it comes to anything from sweets to erotic romances, I like covers that actually clue in to heat level. I don't like to see, or create, a cover that is sweet at best for a smoking hot story. Flipside, when a cover is hot enough to melt my monitor, but the story is lukewarm at best.
For softer historicals, I am a fan of the older Julie Garwood time period style covers - with a castle, a flower, etc. I LIKE those covers for soft historical romances. That said, for the hotter works, I HATE that style of cover. For hotter historicals, I like the ones with a couple on them.
Paranormal and Suspense romances should most definitely be evocative of the genre. If there is a wolf shifter who is the main love interest, then either the title or the cover should express that in some way. Same for if the book is set in the year 3125 on a far-away planet.
I am not much into straight horror and suspense and all, because I never feel like I am pulling it off well. I am a 'fluffy bunny' cover artist - I like creating light, fun, sexy, covers. So I don't have much insight to offer there.
Young Adult should be FUN and to some degree flirty, even if there isn't a strong romance. The cover should flirt with the reader ... so a person, or an object, is fine either way on those.
Fiction, just general fiction - either historical or modern chick lit, etc should also be fun or somber, sexy or spooky depending upon the sub-genre. Again, either people or objects look good to me.
Non-fiction can also go either way.
As for what makes a 5-star cover (to me), well ...
* The font has to match the images, and the images needs to convey/fit the genre
* The images need to actually look good together! I can't express that enough. Poor quality photo morphs where images of different characters are just slapped together without blending them into each other in a cohesive fashion just don't work for me. And let's be real, there are a ton of them out there like that.
* The cover should absolutly, without a doubt, clue the reader in to the truth of the story. There should be nothing misleading about it (unless the point is misdirection).
* The color choice needs to fit - in all details.
Like always, this post is just my opinion, so mileage can and will vary from artist to artist (and reader to reader).
* * * ~ * * *
If you have a question that you would like Dear Artist to answer, you can leave it in the comment section and it will be addressed (reasonably) soon.
Labels:
Dear Artist,
Michelle Lee,
Sheila Claydon
Born to ride on the back of dragons, to journey among the stars in a ship traveling faster than light, or to dance the night away in the arms of a mysterious vampire, Michelle Houston willingly shares the worlds in her mind in an effort to bring them to life.
Writing everything from short and sweet stories, to hot and spicy tales of kink, from contemporary tales of romance to erotic romances featuring Greek Gods, vampires and were-creatures, she has crossed sexualities and has gone wherever her mental muse has guided her. A journey she has never regretted.
A Study of Men's Facial Hair in Honor of Father's Day
By Michelle Lee
BWL Art Director
If you've been on facebook in the last year, then you have probably seen the results of a study that had been done on men's facial hair and what women find attractive. Given that the results were only gathered in one country, the scientist in me questions a little bit the overall validity of it, since each culture (and sub-culture, as well as each country) has their own ideas of beauty and what is attractive. Other "groups" since then have conducted their own "studies", but I am not going to go into all of the various different findings.
Instead ... let's take a look at some different images and see what we, as authors, readers, and cover artists from all over the world think is sexy (or attractive).
Exhibit A:
This is one of the images used in a study of men's facial hair. Which option, 1-5, do you find the most attractive?
Exhibit B:
How about in this image, between options 1 and 4?
Exhibit C:
This is one of my favorite images for looking at a contrast between clean shaven, stubble, and a mustache. Although the study didn't address mustaches, when looking at male facial hair, it needs to be considered (I think).
Well? Which one?
Ok, so let's consider a few different examples, shall we?
How about Ben Afleck?
Ryan Gosling?
George Clooney?
Well?
Some articles on the study: Article 1 * Article 2 * Article 3
If you are interested in reading the actual study article, here is the citation information.
The role of facial hair in women's perceptions of men's attractiveness, health, masculinity and parenting abilities, Evolution and Human Behavior, Volume 34, Issue 3, May 2013, Pages 236–241.
One final thought ...
BWL Art Director
If you've been on facebook in the last year, then you have probably seen the results of a study that had been done on men's facial hair and what women find attractive. Given that the results were only gathered in one country, the scientist in me questions a little bit the overall validity of it, since each culture (and sub-culture, as well as each country) has their own ideas of beauty and what is attractive. Other "groups" since then have conducted their own "studies", but I am not going to go into all of the various different findings.
Instead ... let's take a look at some different images and see what we, as authors, readers, and cover artists from all over the world think is sexy (or attractive).
Exhibit A:
This is one of the images used in a study of men's facial hair. Which option, 1-5, do you find the most attractive?
* * *
* * *
Exhibit C:
Well? Which one?
* * *
Ok, so let's consider a few different examples, shall we?
How about Ben Afleck?
Bradley Cooper?
Ryan Gosling?
George Clooney?
Liam Hemsworth?
Well?
Some articles on the study: Article 1 * Article 2 * Article 3
If you are interested in reading the actual study article, here is the citation information.
The role of facial hair in women's perceptions of men's attractiveness, health, masculinity and parenting abilities, Evolution and Human Behavior, Volume 34, Issue 3, May 2013, Pages 236–241.
* * *
One final thought ...
Labels:
facial hair,
father's day,
Michelle Lee,
trends
Born to ride on the back of dragons, to journey among the stars in a ship traveling faster than light, or to dance the night away in the arms of a mysterious vampire, Michelle Houston willingly shares the worlds in her mind in an effort to bring them to life.
Writing everything from short and sweet stories, to hot and spicy tales of kink, from contemporary tales of romance to erotic romances featuring Greek Gods, vampires and were-creatures, she has crossed sexualities and has gone wherever her mental muse has guided her. A journey she has never regretted.
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Have Lipstick, will travel!
Choosing a blog topic is complicated. At one time I used to promote fellow authors on my blog. It kept it live and made the featured writer happy but it ate into my writing time in a big way, so now I mainly tweet their book links instead.
I sometimes blog about my own books of course but there is only so much I can say about them before self-aggrandizement sets in, so for a while I’ve been stuck for a topic. Then, yesterday, I had an inspiration. My website strapline is ‘A ticket to Romance’ because so many of my books are loosely based on the countries and places I’ve visited. For example Cabin Fever is set on the cruise ship that took me from Auckland in the North of New Zealand right down to Sydney in Australia, whereas Reluctant Date takes place in a small town in Florida where I had one of the best holidays of my life.
As well as being hugely enjoyable, travelling, meeting new people and experiencing new cultures has changed my perspective on life. To quote Mary Anne Radmacher, ‘I am not the same having seen the moon shine on the other side of the world.’
I’m not, however, going to turn my blog into a travelogue. Anyone who is interested in the places I write about in my books can find out about them on the Internet. Instead, I’m going to talk about the flip side of travellings - the many things that went wrong, or made me laugh, or cry, or both, because ‘Travel is glamorous only in retrospect’ ― Paul Theroux.
This means that I have no choice but to start with India and the two weeks I spent travelling between Delhi and Amritsar with no luggage, not even a change of underwear. It was New Year so the shops were closed - well the shops that sold western clothes were - and I would have looked ridiculous in a shalmar kameeze or a sari because I am so obviously from northern Europe. I worried too about offending the Indian families I was going to visit, some of whom lived in remote villages where many of the inhabitants had never seen a white face. I might upset them by choosing a wrong colour or an inappropriate style.
Fortunately, because it was winter I was travelling in layers, so my solution was to wash the sweater while I wore the blouse, and vice versa, while the jeans, boots, woollen jacket and cape were easy to dress up with scarves and cheap jewelry, things that I was able to acquire. At night I festooned our various hotel bathrooms with drying lingerie while I went to sleep in a pair of my husband’s pajamas. I also borrowed his socks.
The experience had a profound effect on me. Once I’d accepted that the airline really had lost my luggage I was able to enjoy the trip in a way I’ve never experienced before or since. While others were busy unpacking or repacking their suitcases, I went sightseeing or talked to strangers. While they prepared for each formal visit or outing, I could only brush down my jeans, shrug on my jacket and think about the day ahead. In those two weeks I saw more, heard more, learned more, and worried less. It was totally liberating and I also learned that in the wider scheme of things, a suitcase full of clothes, a hairdryer and a change of shoes is neither important nor necessary. I learned that it really is possible to travel light.
Oh, I forgot to say...my lipstick was in my handbag. Now if that had gone missing it might have been different story!
Friday, June 13, 2014
Friday The 13th by Joan Donaldson-Yarmey
Friday The 13th
By Joan Donaldson-Yarmey
Friday the 13th. Ah, that dreaded
unlucky day when everyone treads carefully, avoiding ladders and black cats.
All I can say about the day is that so far in my life I've been lucky--
nothing bad has ever happened to me on a Friday the 13th (knock on wood).
Neither has anything good. So today should be like any other day. What
does this have to do with writing? you ask. Well, sometimes in order to find
the right publisher, a great deal of luck is involved.
I took a few writing courses
and began my published, writing career (as opposed to my unpublished
writing career) with a short story titled A Hawk's Reluctant Flight, in a small magazine called Western People. With that as my resume, I had travel and historical
articles accepted by other magazines, one of which didn't pay
anything to the author. Then I took another writing course and one of the
speakers was Grant Kennedy owner of Lone Pine Publishing in Edmonton, Alberta.
At the time Alberta was divided into
tourist zones and I had been thinking about doing a book on what there was to
see and do in each zone. I sent a query letter to Lone Pine Publishing and the
senior editor responded with a phone call. We set up a time for me to go to the
city and meet with her and Grant Kennedy.
I
outlined my idea and Grant said yes it was a good one but he thought that the
books should be more on the people and culture of each zone. He liked his idea
and I liked mine so we decided we couldn't work together. As I stood to leave I
said. "Well, at least as I research the zones I will see all the backroads
of Alberta." He replied. "I've always want to do a book on the
backroads of Alberta." I sat back down and that was how I began my
backroads series. Over the next ten years I travelled through and wrote two
books on Alberta, four books on British Columbia, and one on the Yukon and
Alaska.
My
favourite books to read have always been mystery novels and after much
thought I decided to write one. Since one of the mantras of writing is to write what you know I made my main
character a travel writer. She was headed to southern Alberta to do research
for a magazine and was drawn into the mystery of a skeleton found in a
septic tank. When I was finished I sent it out to a few publishers. One wrote
back that they liked it but my travel background was coming out and I had too
much travel information in it. I was asked to remove some. So I did and resent
my manuscript. Again, I was asked to cut back on the travel info. Again I did.
The third time I was told that this was a mystery and I should stick with the
mystery and leave out the travel stuff. I wrote back and said that the main
character is a travel writer and is working on an article. She is not going to
drop that and concentrate on solving the murder. So needless to say we parted ways.
I sent out the manuscript again and another publisher said
they were interested in publishing it. They had one stipulation and that was
that I should add in more travel information.
I sent the second novel of what I was calling my Travelling
Detective Series to the same publisher. After about a five month wait I
received a letter that told me the publishing house had been bought out by
another one and that my manuscript and all my information had been sent to
them. I waited a few months the emailed
the new publisher to find out what was happening. A couple of days later I
received an email stating that they had no record of my manuscript. My heart
sunk. But a few days after that I received an email from another editor at the
publishing house stating that they had found my manuscript and they wanted to
publish it.
However, in the time between that email and the publishing date for my
novel, the publishing house was sold again. The new owner was going to honour
my contracts, but in the future wasn't going to publish mysteries. I knew there
was no use sending my third manuscript to that publisher and after checking
around I sent it to Books We Love. They immediately accepted it and e-published
it. After two years of talking with my old publisher I was able to get the
rights to my first two novels of the series and now all three are published
with Books We Love Ltd.
So on Friday the 13th that is my post of the luck that has brought me to
where I am today in my writing and publishing career. And being an optimist, I
am off to buy a lottery ticket on Lotto Max which is worth $10,000,000. Wish me
luck.
Books of The Travelling Detective
Series:
Illegally Dead
The Only shadow In The House
Whistler's Murder
I was born in New Westminster B.C. and raised in Edmonton.I have worked as a bartender, cashier, bank teller, bookkkeeper, printing press operator, meat wrapper, gold prospector, house renovator, and nursing attendant. I have had numerous travel and historical articles published and wrote seven travel books on Alberta, B.C. and the Yukon and Alaska that were published through Lone Pine Publishing in Edmonton.
One of my favourite pasttimes is reading especially mystery novels and I have now turned my writing skills to fiction. However, I have not ventured far from my writing roots. The main character in my Travelling Detective Series is a travel writer who somehow manages to get drawn into solving mysteries while she is researching her articles for travel magazines. This way, the reader is able to take the book on holidays and solve a mystery at the same time.
Illegally Dead is the first novel of the series and The Only Shadow In The House is the second. The third Whistler's Murder came out in August 2011 as an e-book through Books We Love. It can be purchased as an e-book and a paperback through Amazon.
i live on a small acreage in the Alberni Valley on Vancouver Island.
Thursday, June 12, 2014
LET YOUR CHARACTERS LIVE THROUGH YOU ~ BY RITA KARNOPP
To create exciting strong scenes – make sure they vary from
quiet to loud. Lackluster to exciting. Emotional to in-control. Highs to lows. Happy to sad.
Yet, they all must fit together like pieces of a puzzle. Everything should snap into place and fit –
nothing should stick out at odd angles.
Every part of the story should contribute and move the story forward, making
it complete.
I don’t know about you, but I like to put myself in my
character’s body, living the scene with his/her baggage, experience, flaws, and
attributes. Do the situations or
challenges feel ‘real’? What doesn’t
feel believable? You will know what
needs changing by running your scenes through your mind like a movie – you are
the character – living, breathing, and experiencing each scene you’ve
created.
You’ll find yourself rewriting - adding spontaneity from the
character you’ve become. You’ll make
changes that transition the story better.
Step-by-step, you’ll feel, hear, touch, taste, and see yourself in the
scenes of your character. Do you believe
them? Did you miss any of the
senses? Add them in and you’ll be
surprised how this will improve your story.
If a scene feels confusing or uncomfortable – fix them. Never leave them in hopes the reader won’t
notice – believe me, they will. Add deep
internal emotion and allow your characters to have flaws that hinder their
goals . . . making them realize they must change to have what they need or want
by the end of the book.
You should laugh, cry, and get angry if that’s what the
character experiences. If the words you’ve
written don’t evoke the emotion or reaction you want . . . rewrite . . .
rewrite . . . and rewrite until you find yourself crying . . . laughing . . .
and ticked with the world if need be. If
you don’t feel it when you write it – the reader won’t feel it when they read
it. It’s as simple as that.
Grab your reader right from the beginning . . . and don’t let go
until you type ‘the end.’
Whispering Wind ~ Montana Territory 1865 – Pregnant and alone,
Tsopo, Wind, leaves her Blackfoot
people to save her lifelong friend, Kom-zit-api,
An Honest Man, from untrue accusations.
Kom-zit-api
finds Wind and asks her to be his sits-beside-him wife. Before she can give him an answer, he dies
saving her from Crow warriors. Trapper,
Jake McKinney hears her cries and finds her down on a ledge, birthing a child
that has arrived too soon. Now Wind
finds herself at a crossroads.
Ashamed
and confused, she accepts McKinney’s offer to go with him to the Big Belt
Mountains, where his Confederate war buddies are prospecting for gold.
They meet brothers, Tucker and Alexander Walsh on the trail. McKinney, with his valuable bales of furs and
buffalo robes, and the Walsh brothers, with their four wagons of supplies,
strike a partnership. They’ll start up a
general store for miners on the east side of the Missouri River near Diamond
City.
Wind reveals possession of a gold nugget the size of her thumb. Her
father gave it to her, and she knows where in Confederate Gulch it was
found. The men make her an equal partner
in their business they are now calling Whispering Wind.
Nothing
like her peaceful village, Wind finds herself among ramshackle clusters of
tents, lean-tos, and crude log cabins.
The main street is a knee-deep mud trail mixed with horse manure, lined
with make-shift stores, hotels, rowdy saloons, and a single assayer’s
office. Wind aspires to find love and
happiness where greed rules actions above common sense. Dressed like a white woman, hiding her part
Blackfeet blood, she faces being one of a few women in a wild, lawless mining
territory. Who can she trust? Can she
survive where so many men have failed?
Summer Timber Wolf, Nii’ówa Ómahkapi'si, is disenchanted with life in general. Ashamed of being Blackfeet, yet broke and
alone, she goes to Browning, the Blackfeet Reservation in Montana she swore
she’d never return to or call home.
Angry with
her decision to quit college, her parents give her the task of caring for her
eighty-year-old grandmother, Kimi’Aki, Secret Woman. It sounds like an easy alternative to getting
a job.
By the time
Summer realizes this means she’ll be living in the mountains in the ways of the
old ones, in a tipi, with no more modern support greater than a boiling pot,
it’s too late to go back.
In this primitive
setting she realizes there’s more to being Blackfeet than just being called
Indian. Although she fights anything to
do with her ancestry, she is quickly caught up in a world of whispering spirits
and a journey that teaches we must understand and find pride in where we’ve
come from . . . in order to know where we’re going.
Multi-published author
Rita Karnopp knew at a very young age she wanted to be a writer – and penned her
first story at age sixteen. She is drawn to the history of the Native American
and strives to bring alive the authenticity of a time past. Whether writing
suspense, Indian historicals, or contemporary romance, Rita enjoys bringing
excitement and the enduring power of love to her
stories.
Rita currently resides in Montana with her husband and
their loveable Cockapoo named Gema. When she isn’t reading, writing or doing research,
Rita enjoys making dream catchers, gold panning, crystal or sapphire digging,
rafting, fishing, canoeing, and spending time with her children and
grandchildren.
Also find Rita at:
Website: http://ritakarnopp.com
Facebook: rita.karnopp@facebook.comBlog: http://mizging.blogspot.com/
Contact her at: ritakarnopp@bresnan.net
Website: http://ritakarnopp.com
Facebook: rita.karnopp@facebook.comBlog: http://mizging.blogspot.com/
Contact her at: ritakarnopp@bresnan.net
Labels:
Beginning Writers,
books we love,
Indian Historicals,
Let Your Characters Live Through You,
Rita Karnopp
I would say writing is my passion . . . I see a story in just about every situation. I love Native American history and all the lessons it has to offer.
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