Tag Archive: Book


A county route shield for a Morris County, New...

A county route shield for a Morris County, New Jersey road (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Spider Web” is a thriller about a drug epidemic set in Morris County, NJ, told from the perspective of a police detective and a fashion model.  So far, I’ve read only four chapters, but it is a gripping novel. I like those kinds of thrillers that I put down only when more urgent matters get in the way. You know, the kind that keep you up nights, reading.

I’ve read a previous novel by R.O. Palmer, called “Picasso Prince.” Also a thriller, it takes place on a cruise ship carrying an art collection worth millions of dollars. There is an unexpectetd plot twist near the end. Highly recommended!

 

Saturday

Saturday (Photo credit: Brother O’Mara)

I can now consider myself a Weekend Novelist. There’s a book by that name (yes, it’s on my shelf).  This first draft of this manuscript was completed during NaNoWriMo 2010. I did cross the finish line with 50,000 words, but that’s as far as it went –  until last month.

One of my 2013 goals is to work regularly on “perfecting” my novel. The best solution for me now that I no longer teach on Saturdays, is to do something to move my novel along. I will never learn the craft by hoping, will I?

I’ve been digging into, studying, absorbing, making notes on a book recommended by The Writer Magazine recently, How To Write a Damn Good Thriller. I mentioned it here before.

Lest you think all I’m doing is reading about how to write instead of actually writing, I need the advice, for I truly don’t know what I’m doing. I know you need a first draft to work from, and I have done that at least.

At about 3/4 through the book; this weekend’s intention is to do more – um – reading.

And that’s the status of  my two-doughnut manuscript.

Till next week……

Spreading Too Thin

English: Moleskine notebook and diaries. Белар...

English: Moleskine notebook and diaries. Беларуская: Нататнік і штодзёньнікі Moleskine. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

It’s pretty obvious that I have been falling by the wayside on the 100 Novels Project. With so much going on right now – growing both my word business and violin-teaching business, and being my father’s caregiver, is eating a large chunk of time and brain-processing space.

So I decided the 100 Novels has to go for now. There are so many books waiting for me to read in the house and on the list in my Moleskine book journal, that I just get frustrated at not being able to do it all. *Sigh of relief*

Everywhere I turn for caregiving advice tells me the same thing – to care for myself just as much. So no more high ideals for me, just living each day. Housekeeping, bookkeeping, business-building, reading, caregiving, mothering…too many “ing’s.”

That’s better.

English: Robinson Crusoe illustration

English: Robinson Crusoe illustration (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I’ve fallen (behind) and I CAN get up!

Robinson Crusoe was August’s pick for my 100 Novels Project, but I’m getting to it a month late. Oh well! I’ll just have to make it up this month.

Who is with me for Robinson Crusoe?

I am reading Chapter Four. As each novel on the 100 Novels list becomes more and more contemporary – RC was written in 1719 – the readability seems to increase. What has made this novel endure for 300 years? Is it the engaging, first-person narrative? Is it that it’s famous for being famous? If it were published for the first time now, would it enjoy the same popularity?

Have you read it before, or (like me) is this your first time?

Read Robinson Crusoe with me this month. Post comments to discuss!

Author Laura Ingalls Wilder used her experienc...

Like millions of girls who grew up reading the Laura Ingalls Wilder books, I felt an affinity with Laura and the pioneer lifestyle. So when I saw The Wilder Life in a book store on my recent vacation, I bought it immediately.

I’ve since learned from reading it that there are actually several others books in publication exploring various means of “getting close” to Laura. Most by visiting the sites mentioned in the series, some by recreating recipes, to name a few.

What I didn’t know is that there is only one original building remaining from the emtire series of books – Almanzo Wilder’s childhood farm house in Upstate NY.

Ms. McClure also writes of the disparity between the books and the TV series, the latter being good entertainment, but with few historical facts. I knew that already and had come to terms with the TV show when it originally aired. I tended to keep them separate in my mind, but enjoyed both because I have always been interested in the pioneers of the western expansion, aka the Overland Trail.

The overall gist of The Wilder Life is – like returning to your own childhood home, expecting everything to be as you remembered – you can’t conjure up the Ingalls family to make them seem more real. If you’re looking for Laura in the flesh, or at least 3-D, it’s not going to happen.

What is in the way? Too much time has passed, all of their various abodes have disintegrated, land has changed hands, commercialism has infected the historical sites. One can enter a reproduction, but not original sites, although there are museums displaying the Ingalls’ artifacts.

The truth is, Laura and her family lived a godawful life for the most part. Rose, Laura’s daughter, apparently grew up to be bitter and resentful, prone to depression and other disorders. Certainly not the nice little-girl story.

I found the be book is very engrossing. It  allowed me to vicariously explore what I would find, and the truths I would discover, if I were to conduct a similar search.

Recommended reading if you loved the Little House books and are ready to see the story through adult eyes.

Cover of "Writing Begins with the Breath:...

Cover via Amazon

I am in the middle of Writing Begins with the Breath. Now, I have a pretty large collection of how – to business and craft books on writing and its various manifestations (research, copyediting, copywriting, reporting, to name a few). I think I’m pretty set on bookish resources.

However full one’s library is, there’s always room for one more. I am very glad I decided on this book.

Laraine Herring is brilliant and insightful in her advice to writers. It is not a book on financial success from your writing career. Quite the opposite; writers write because we must. There is no other way of being. Writing is an art form. Where it takes you in life is largely a result of your relationship with it. Hard work is necessary, but secondary.

This book is quite unique in its perspective, and I have read a lot of books about writing.

Some key points covered in Part One:

Open up your body to receive and process creative energy

Be prepared to enter difficult areas within yourself that must be faced in order for your writing to be authentic

Have fun with your writing, but remember to be tough to shape it up as well

Write to discover what’s inside you, excavate the things that haunt you. This will reflect in your characters, make them real.

When we fight something within, we give it strength. When we embrace it, it no longer has power over us. Knowing this will free you for expression.

Believe you are making positive contributions to the world.

Hold writing close to your heart. When you feed it, it feeds you.

Think about your writing practice as a relationship. Personify it and make it a character in your life.

Be open to inspiration with humility. We can’t always pre-plan art and force a predetermined outcome.

Your writing contributes to the voice of humanity.

Shouting and judging create distance; speaking with someone, with empathy, creates a connection.

Personify your writing; make it a character in your life. Have a relationship with it.

There is not enough space here to go into more detail covered in the book. It has changed my perspective and relationship with my writing, for the better.

Armchair BEA

The British Empire: A survey

The British Empire: A survey (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Now that my blog is up and running, more or less, I am excited to mention the Armchair BEA blog.  BEA is Book Expo America, going on this week at the Jacob Javitz Center.

For those of us unable to attend this huge event, which brings together those in all aspects of the business of books, there is “Armchair BEA,” a blog where you can virtually attend!

As a member of Armchair BEA, here are my answers to select questions for fellow book bloggers:

1. What am I currently reading? The Princess of Cleves by Madame de la Fayette. It’s one of the books on the Crazy Reading Challenge here on my blog.

2. Where do I see my blog in five years? I want it to lead to connections between other book lovers, authors, publishers, and sellers. To spread the word about my business so it can help in the creation of “perfect books!”

3. If I could have dinner with any character or author, who would it be, and why? M.M.Kaye, because her life fascinates me. She wrote many mysteries which took me to places she lived as a child and a wife. Her father was a member of the British Raj. She immerses her readers in the culture in which she lived. After marriage, she traveled throughout the British Empire, producing many mysteries that read live travelogues.

4. One non-book related thing someone reading my blog may not know about me? There are two – I am a violinist, and I love astronomy!

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