These are the fall and winter releases from Books We Love.
Sunday, December 25, 2016
Friday, December 23, 2016
Finding History In Canada by Victoria Chatham
In school, history was never my favorite subject. I couldn’t remember dates.1066 and 1492 are ingrained in me, but don’t ask me about the succession of kings or when the Industrial or French Revolutions began.
It wasn’t until I was in my late twenties that I read Jean Plaidy’s The Sun in Splendour. What a difference that made. I could see the characters in history, the people behind the words on the page. I scrambled to read all I could, both fact and fiction, about the Plantagenets, the Tudors and the War of the Roses. My history teacher would have been proud of me.
Today I write historical romance set in my favorite eras, the Regency and the Edwardian, but I still read historical novels from any period. History comes alive for me between the covers of a good book but I do understand that it is subjective.
What happened yesterday, a minute or an hour ago becomes history and we all have our own. My history is growing up in Clifton, a suburb of Bristol, England. Today it’s known not only for its Regency era architecture but also the palatial homes built by the merchant venturers of Bristol, a society of businessmen formed in 1552.
When I immigrated to Canada in 1990, I frequently had people tell me ‘you won’t like it here, we’re not old enough’, or ‘Canada has no history’.
I will admit my ignorance at that time. After all, what did I know about Canada other than it’s a very big country, the Mounties always get their man (or woman) and it’s cold in winter. After nearly twenty-five years I am happy to beg to differ with those early and misleading statements. Well, maybe not quite so happy about the cold.
While Canada may not have 8th-century churches and medieval castles, it has its own history. I’ve been lucky to see some of it first hand; black and ochre pictographs on cliff and canyon walls, dinosaur remains, glacial erratics and First Nations teepee rings, hunting grounds and totem poles. I’ve visited restored forts and trading posts and learned that the Hudson’s Bay Company, incorporated by Royal Charter in 1670, extended every bit as far and wide as did the East India Company, established earlier in 1600 also by Royal Charter.
I’ve had a trail guide point to a stretch of prairie and tell me to close my eyes and picture it not green but brown, a veritable tsunami of thousands of snorting, bawling buffalo. He also told me about the African-American cowboy, John Ware. Renowned for his ability to ride and train horses, Ware was also known for his strength and work ethic. He drove cattle from Texas to Montana and then, in 1882, further north into what is now Alberta where he and his wife settled.
I’ve visited forgotten mining towns to wonderful little back-road museums and loved those magical Heritage Minutes, those sixty-second vignettes illustrating important moments in Canadian history. Who knew that in 1789 Britain and Spain nearly came to blows after disputing their settlements in Nootka Sound? Or that one thousand years ago the Vikings settled L’Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland and Labrador? Or that in 1857 Queen Victoria chose Ottowa (formerly known as Bytown) as the capital of the Province of Canada?
And then I discovered Canadian authors. Having been brought up on Shakespeare, Austen, and Dickens, these new-to-me authors were like a breath of fresh air. Starting with Pierre Berton, I devoured Klondike Fever, The Last Spike, and The Great Lakes. I read Margaret Attwood, loved Margaret Laurence’s characters Hagar Shipley (The Stone Angel) and Morag Gunn (The Diviners). I learned about life on the prairies from W.O. Mitchell and at a book-fair picked up The Whiteoaks of Jalna by Mazo de la Roche. It, and other titles in the series, gave as a good a picture of life in Ontario from the 1850’s to the 1970’s as did any of R.F. Delderfield’s books of life in England for much of the same era. And then a helpful librarian recommended I read Alice Munro.
Jesse Kornbluth, writing in the Huffington Post in October 2013 says of Munro, ‘The lives of little people. We see them on the street, and, if we are curious, we wonder about their lives. Alice Munro does our homework for us -- she inhabits those lives. Her judgments are sure. And tough. And also... human.’ That humanity is what gets to me with every Munro story I have read and re-read.
Canada’s history is as rich and varied as anywhere else in the world and I had only scratched the surface of it when I began writing my Canadian Historical Bride book, Brides of Banff Springs. I delved into the history of 1930's Banff as I used it and the Banff Springs Hotel as my setting. The librarian at the Banff Public Library not only allowed me to use her surname for my heroine, Tilly, but also suggested reading materials. So much so that I went home with two bags of books.
Early summer was spent reading and researching. I had no clear idea of what I wanted, only that if I had a good understanding of what went on in and around the town of Banff at that time, some of it would gel enough for me to pick the right information and events to flow together into a story. I tried to include some of the social problems of the times without dwelling on them too much, but the primary focus of the book is the bride, so I had to work in the romance. By the middle of the book, Tilly and her sweetheart Ryan, had become real, living breathing characters and I couldn't wait to get them married off.
I now have my first print copies of Brides of Banff Springs and can honestly say I am absolutely thrilled. Cover designer Michelle Lee did a marvelous job of blending the bride's image with that of the Banff Springs Hotel. I am now looking forward to reading all of the books in this series and learning more about the country I call home, cold weather and all.
Thursday, December 22, 2016
The Muse Inside (Or How Come I'm Not Locked Up Yet?)
Click Here to Purchase From Amazon |
The Muse Inside (Or How Come I'm Not Locked Up Yet?)
People ask why I
write or where I get the ideas for what I do write? Well that is a complex
question to an author. Anyone ever ask Beethoven why the 5th
symphony and where did that come from? Or did anyone ask Charles Schultz what
possessed him to put a beagle on a rooftop with a typewriter and a little
birdie as a sidekick?
I’m sure most
would reply it’s the muse that whispers to writers and artists inside their
heads. Perhaps this is our constructive way of dealing with voices inside our
heads, which for most others would get you locked up, sedated and the key
thrown away.
I was recently
asked why, as a Caucasian do I write novels involving first nations, native
gods and legends? The dedication I wrote for my next novel, Thunderbird’s Wake
might answer that question.
“In honor and memory of all the ancient
native oral storytellers the K’aygang.nga (Haida), and the Sway’ xwiam (Sto:lo)
before us. The few whose words were recorded on the carved lips and eyes of the
totems and monuments still remaining and have gone on to become the echoes in
the forest and the hush of mists sliding along mountain slopes.
Voices that now whisper to
the minds of some of us listeners (Gyuu k’iiga) still today.”
I remember in one
of my first visits to BC and Victoria, back when I lived in Alberta. I went to
the provincial museum and simply stared at the carved totems and log poles
there. My wife at the time had wandered off and all I could hear as I stood
there by myself was voices. Whispers and tales all around me. I remember asking
her, “do you hear those voices in the background?” She thought I was nuts. But
all the way back to my campsite and on the journey home I could see the ovoid
eyes and the wooden lips whispering.
The Haida mount on
most of their totems, three squatting figures, they call the Watchmen, who are
meant to watch out for enemies approaching. But I recon they also silently call
out to those that hear, those that have the muse inside, “come, tell us about
they that dwell under us and listen to the voices of those that have preceded
us.”
So later when I heard the bizarre news
story about a rare golden spruce tree cut down in protest of logging, the
whispers became nudges and twitches of a pencil that couldn’t remain quiet any
longer. Guided by ghosts of legends from a culture that only had oral
storytellers and no written language. Somewhere in the air all those whispered
words circulate and somehow they call to me, from there came the novel, Raven’s Lament. Yeah, maybe like my first wife said, I am
nuts. Don’t care, I write; the tales come. Simple. That is what dwells in my
soul. Words awaiting to come out.
This spring my
next novel to be published by Books We Love, Thunderbird’s Wake, comes out. Another tale of a nuttier man than
me that breaks into a penitentiary in order to deal with an awakening god.
That and a native
sprite that needs a human to bring justice to her soul.
Have a Great
Christmas and to all of those writers reading this.
May the muse
reward you with lots and lots of whispers. So keep those pencils sharpened over
the holidays.
Sincerely
Frank Talaber
Frank Talaber’s
Writing Style? He usually responds with: Mix Dan Millman (Way of The Peaceful
Warrior) with Charles De Lint (Moonheart) and throw in a mad scattering of Tom
Robbins (Even Cowgirls Get The Blues).
PS: He’s better looking than Stephen King (Carrie, The Stand, It, The Shining) and his romantic stuff will have you gasping quicker than Robert James Waller (Bridges Of Madison County).
PS: He’s better looking than Stephen King (Carrie, The Stand, It, The Shining) and his romantic stuff will have you gasping quicker than Robert James Waller (Bridges Of Madison County).
Or as is often said:
You don’t have to be mad to be a writer, but it sure helps.
Writer by soul. Words born within.
Karma the seed. Paper the medium.
Pen the muse. Novels the fire.
My novels on Amazon are at (copy and paste
link): https://www.amazon.com/Frank-Talaber/e/B00UC407R0
https://www.facebook.com/Frank-Talaber-805296946204873/
Twitter: @FrankTalaber
Thunderbird's
Wake (out this spring from Books We Love LTD)
A penitentiary is a dangerous place and into the
world of the criminal enters a saint. Well, bearing rattles and guardian
beasts, the native born find him a saint. To the rest he's more nuts than a squirrels
winter stash. There's a god asleep, awakening. Humans that seek justice and a
sprite that needs justice from humanity.
So what makes you want to break into one? You can ask Charlie, but he
ain't telling. And if he did you wouldn't believe it in a dozen lifetimes. Come
enter, the madness this spring.
Click Here To Purchase From Amazon |
Shuttered Seduction
No woo woo stuff here, just a good old fashioned romance. Well except for the grizzly bear and the bungee jumping.
Frank Talaber, Writer by Soul.
A natural storyteller, whose compelling thoughts are freed from the depths of the heart and the subconscious before being poured onto the page.
Literature written beyond the realms of genre he is known to grab readers; kicking, screaming, laughing or crying and drag them into his novels.
Enter the literary world of Frank Talaber.
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
Writers, Readers, and Chocolate: a Sweet Relationship, St. Augustine, FL Chocolate Factory Tour
Hello and welcome to the Books We Love Insiders blog. My name is J.Q. Rose, author of the recently released romantic suspense, Dangerous Sanctuary.
In December 2014, we visited St. Augustine, Florida, the oldest European continuously occupied city in the USA. We fell in love with the beautiful city founded 452 years ago. The history, cultures, waterways, the Christmas lights, and music all blended into a great get-away.
Dangerous Sanctuary by J.Q. Rose Romantic suspense Available at amazon |
In December 2014, we visited St. Augustine, Florida, the oldest European continuously occupied city in the USA. We fell in love with the beautiful city founded 452 years ago. The history, cultures, waterways, the Christmas lights, and music all blended into a great get-away.
Writers and readers love snacking on chocolate,so today I'm taking you on a tour of the Whetstone Chocolate Factory. According to their website. the story of the establishment of this chocolate company is a story of a dream fulfilled for a hard-working, dedicated couple, Henry and Esther Whetstone. They first opened their small ice cream store on St. George Street in the historic business district of St. Augustine in 1966. Henry and Esther entered the chocolate market when they created a home-made fudge recipe in the family’s kitchen.The kitchen was the original Whetstone Chocolate factory and they were the only workers. You can read more about their amazing growth at the Whetstone Chocolate website.
The tour costs $8.00 and is worth every penny of it, especially when Ty was our guide. He was an elementary school teacher for 36 years! He brings all the energy and enthusiasm he used to teach kids to the tour presentation. Kudos to Ty for his fun tour of the factory. (Of course, how can you NOT have fun when eating samples of delicious chocolate?? We were pretty wired by the end of the tour!!)
The factory. Yes, I was expecting conveyor belts, clanging bells, a frenzy of machinery, and lots of workers. But no, only about three people working at quiet machines that you will see below. |
Ty introduced us to Miss Nan (forgive me if I don't have her name correct). She is bagging their delicious foil-wrapped candy shells and placing them in the boxes. |
Dark chocolate. Yes, they push the health benefits of eating DARK chocolate. |
The mold and the finished product, a hollow football complete with white chocolate laces! Beautiful! No,Ty didn't make this one.... |
Miss Nan revs up the machine that wraps foil around the chocolate shells. |
Miss Nan loads the shells into the machine. Ty explained the path the candy took through the gears and belts with a patter that a rap star couldn't have done better! |
Success! Look at the parade of red foil-wrapped candy which Miss Nan will bag later. |
Yes, we re-enacted the candy wrapping scene from the I Love Lucy Show. You can't tell I have the candy stuffed in my mouth and down my bra, just like Lucy. LOL!! |
The chocolate factory scene from the I Love Lucy Show. The real actors in I Love Lucy. Have you seen this episode? It's a classic. |
I bet with the holidays upon us, you'll get many chocolate treats whether candy or desserts. Take time to really taste them and feel the joy this small morsel can bring to us.
Photos by J.Q. Rose
Photos by J.Q. Rose
Poinsettia--the traditional Christmas flower |
Wishing you joy, peace, hope, and love this Christmas season
and for the New Year 2017!
About J.Q. Rose
After writing feature articles in magazines, newspapers, and online magazines for over fifteen years, J.Q. Rose entered the world of fiction. Her published mysteries are Deadly Undertaking and Dangerous Sanctuary released by Books We Love Publishing. Blogging, photography, Pegs and Jokers board games, and travel are the things that keep her out of trouble. She spends winters in Florida and summers up north camping and hunting toads, frogs, and salamanders with her four grandsons and granddaughter.
Labels:
and Chocolate: a Sweet Relationship,
FL Chocolate Factory Tour,
readers,
St. Augustine,
St. Augustine Florida,
Whetstone Chocolate Factory,
Writerrs
Whether the story is fiction or non-fiction, J.Q. Rose is “focused on story.” She offers readers chills, giggles and quirky characters woven within the pages of her mystery novels, but truth in her memoir, Arranging a Dream.
JQ presents workshops on creative writing and life storytelling and takes the podium to encourage attendees to take the time now to write their legacy stories.
Blogging, photography, board games
and travel are the things that keep her out of trouble. She and her husband spend winters in Florida and summers up north with their two daughters, two sons-in-law, four grandsons, one granddaughter, two grand dogs, four grand cats, and one great-grand bearded dragon.
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