Good morning/afternoon/evening everybody,
I thought I'd take a moment to apologize for being remiss in my blog posts for the last month (Its been a month since I last posted!?!?!?!). I told myself that I had to find the time to write a blog post nearly everyday and yet, it didn't happen.
Why?
A culmination of a lot of reasons:
1) Not enough hours in the day
2) No self-motivation
3) Out of topics
4) No self-discipline
5) My computer hates me
6) My dog-er-cat ate my homework
7) The stars are out of alignment
8) The library flooded (not even kidding on this one, but the water was confined to the basement... where the computer lab is, not that I use it anyway, but still scary)
9) Pandora is playing all the wrong songs
10) Too cold
And the list could go on and on, getting more ridiculous with each entry, but I can sum it all up into one thing:
I work retail and its Christmas time resulting in the lack of energy, time, braining, hope, faith in humanity, patience, and sleep.
I would really like to say "It's okay that my blog has been put on pause, I'm still writing other things."
Ha. Ha.
Nope, can't say that. This is actually the most I've written in probably 3 weeks. In fact, I actually was excited to get off work a little early so I could go to the library and work on writing prompts before my writers group meeting.
I'm writing this post instead.
Thanks to the holidays, I have too much to do, not enough time to do it in, and I know I have at least a dozen more gray hairs now than when I woke up this morning. Oh, and I'm changing positions at work so I've been trying to learn an entirely new area of responsibility while still kind of doing my old job.
I'm kind of proud of myself for NOT bringing my flask to work in order to make it through the days.
Anyway, enough of me bitching about work. The holidays are almost over, I will eventually learn my new job, and I will hopefully find the time to write again.
Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and the end is nigh, my fellow retailers.
Katherine Wielechowski: author, blogger, book lover, cat mom, wineaux, and nerd. Her multi-genre writing is available on Amazon, her mad meme game can be found on Facebook, and her random musings can be found here.
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Sunday, November 20, 2016
Celebration of Nebraska Books
A couple of weeks ago, I had the chance to attend the Celebration of Nebraska Books put on by the Nebraska Center for the Book. They judge books written by Nebraskans, published in Nebraska, or about Nebraska in categories such as fiction, non-fiction, reference, illustration, cover design, Nebraska as a Place, poetry, chapbook, etc. and choose the best one.
We got to hear from the 2016 One Book One Nebraska winner, Karen Shoemaker who wrote The Meaning of Names. One Book One Nebraska is a "reading program... [that] encourages Nebraskans across the state to read and discuss one book, chosen from books written by Nebraska authors or that have a Nebraska theme or setting." (onebook.nebraska.gov)
They also announced the 2017 One Book One Nebraska Winner which is Black Elk Speaks by John G. Neihardt. It sounds very interesting and I have added it to my "books to be read" list.
The 2016 Jane Geske Award was given to City Impact (Lincoln), Literacy Center for the Midlands (Omaha), and Platte Valley Literacy Association (Columbus). "The Jane Geske Award recognizes organizations that make exceptional, long-term contributions to one or more of these literary fields in Nebraska: Literacy, Reading, Bookselling, Books, Libraries, and/or Writing."
The 2016 Mildred Bennett Award was given to Twyla Hansen and Marjorie Saiser for making "significant contributions to the fostering of the literary tradition in Nebraska.
Most of the winners attended and they all said a little something or read something that they had written.
It was an absolutely fantastic afternoon of being surrounded by authors, illustrators, and book lovers.
Karen Shoemaker |
We got to hear from the 2016 One Book One Nebraska winner, Karen Shoemaker who wrote The Meaning of Names. One Book One Nebraska is a "reading program... [that] encourages Nebraskans across the state to read and discuss one book, chosen from books written by Nebraska authors or that have a Nebraska theme or setting." (onebook.nebraska.gov)
They also announced the 2017 One Book One Nebraska Winner which is Black Elk Speaks by John G. Neihardt. It sounds very interesting and I have added it to my "books to be read" list.
Picture from Amazon. |
The 2016 Jane Geske Award was given to City Impact (Lincoln), Literacy Center for the Midlands (Omaha), and Platte Valley Literacy Association (Columbus). "The Jane Geske Award recognizes organizations that make exceptional, long-term contributions to one or more of these literary fields in Nebraska: Literacy, Reading, Bookselling, Books, Libraries, and/or Writing."
Platte Valley Literacy Association |
Literacy Center for the Midlands |
The 2016 Mildred Bennett Award was given to Twyla Hansen and Marjorie Saiser for making "significant contributions to the fostering of the literary tradition in Nebraska.
Marjorie Saiser |
Twyla Hansen |
The 2016 Nebraska Book Award Winners:
Lin Brummels |
Nancy Plain |
Anthology:
A Sandhills Reader: Thirty Years of Great Writing from the Great Plains by Mark Sanders
Chapbook
Hard Times by Lin Brummels
Children/Young Adult
This Strange Wilderness: The Live and Art of John James Audubon by Nancy Plain
Cover/Design/Illustration
Rodeo Nebraska by Mark Harris, Design by N. Putens
Illustration Honor
The Fishes of Nebraska Illustrated by Justin T. Sipiorski, Design by Jim L. Friesen
Creative Non-Fiction
Chigozie Obioma |
Mark Harris (speaking) and N. Putens |
The Ordinary Spaceman: From Boyhood Dreams to Astronaut by Clayton C. Anderson
Fiction
The Fisherman: A Novel by Chigozie Obioma
Fiction: Short Story Honor
A Man in Trouble: Stories by Lon Otto
Nonfiction: Current Biography
Nebrasketball: Coach Tim Miles and a Big Ten Team on the Rise by Scott Winter
Nonfiction: Historical Biography
A Sister's Memories: The Life and Work of Grace Abbott from the Writings of Her Sister, Edith Abbott by Edith Abbot and John Sorensen
Nonfiction: Nebraska as Place
Summer Miller |
Dr. Ann Coin on behalf of Edith Abbot and John Sorensen |
New Prairie Kitchen: Stories and Seasonal Recipes from Chefs, Farmers, and Artisans of the Great Plains by Summer Miller
James Hewitt |
Nonfiction: Reference
The Fishes of Nebraska by Robert A. Hrabik, Stephen C. Schainost, Richard H. Stasiak, and Edward J. Peters
Nonfiction: True Crime
In Cold Storage: Sex and Murder on the Plains by James W. Hewitt
Nonfiction: Wildlife
Authors of The Fishes of Nebraska |
A Chorus of Cranes: The Cranes of North America and the World by Paul A. Johnsgard and Thomas D. Mangelsen
Nonfiction: Wildlife Honor
Charles Peek |
Hunting for Food: Guide to Harvesting, Field Dressing, and Cooking Wild Game by Jenny Nguyen and Rick Wheatley
Poetry
Breezes on Their Way to Being Winds by Charles Peek
Poetry Honor
Quiet City by Susan Aizenberg
Paul A. Johnsgard |
Most of the winners attended and they all said a little something or read something that they had written.
It was an absolutely fantastic afternoon of being surrounded by authors, illustrators, and book lovers.
Wednesday, November 2, 2016
Love Drunk and Dragon Tears, Happy 1 Year Anniversary!
One year ago, my novella Love Drunk and Dragon Tears was published! It was very different from everything else I had published to that point, but it features one of my favorite characters.
Lydia Forrester is at the wedding of the man she is in love with, but is not the bride. Her sass and zest for life (and alcohol) leads her, the groom's brother, Burke, and the bartender, Corilinus, on a merry adventure without having to leave the reception.
Love Drunk and Dragon Tears is FREE November 2nd, 2016 only so make sure you download it now! Click the cover picture above to go to amazon.com.
Lydia Forrester is at the wedding of the man she is in love with, but is not the bride. Her sass and zest for life (and alcohol) leads her, the groom's brother, Burke, and the bartender, Corilinus, on a merry adventure without having to leave the reception.
Love Drunk and Dragon Tears is FREE November 2nd, 2016 only so make sure you download it now! Click the cover picture above to go to amazon.com.
Tuesday, October 25, 2016
Misappropriated Creativity
Confession time:
I haven't worked on my novel in such a long time that I'm ashamed to even guess how long it's been. Except for a small section that I'm not even sure will make it into the book, I haven't touched it in probably close to two months.
I'm not necessarily suffering from writer's block, (which was my first suspect) because I am writing.
I'm just not writing my novel.
I think I'm going to call it misappropriated creativity (and if that term is not copyrighted already, I claim it!).
Not to mention the non-writing-related stuff I do like work, Facebook, reading, my teacup-sized social life, and Netflix.
The me from a few years ago would say "Hey, chill out. You're still working on writer's stuff, that's good enough." The problem is, it's not good enough. November 2nd will be the one year anniversary of the last book I wrote, Love Drunk and Dragon Tears, going live on Amazon. It's been a year since I published a book. A year since I've finished writing a book.
It kind of hurts the pride a little bit.
I know that writing a novel, especially in a genre I haven't really written in before, takes more time than writing a novella with a fairly simple story-line, it's just hard to gauge how much writing I'm actually doing when it is scattered across 20 projects instead of focused on one.
Which makes me feel like I'm not doing much work and failing at writing... even though I'm not. Such is life.
Now that I've identified the problem and confessed it to the world, what am I going to do?
Probably go finish editing that short story, work on the writing prompts for next week, cruise Facebook, and call it a night.
I haven't worked on my novel in such a long time that I'm ashamed to even guess how long it's been. Except for a small section that I'm not even sure will make it into the book, I haven't touched it in probably close to two months.
I'm not necessarily suffering from writer's block, (which was my first suspect) because I am writing.
I'm just not writing my novel.
I think I'm going to call it misappropriated creativity (and if that term is not copyrighted already, I claim it!).
Not to mention the non-writing-related stuff I do like work, Facebook, reading, my teacup-sized social life, and Netflix.
The me from a few years ago would say "Hey, chill out. You're still working on writer's stuff, that's good enough." The problem is, it's not good enough. November 2nd will be the one year anniversary of the last book I wrote, Love Drunk and Dragon Tears, going live on Amazon. It's been a year since I published a book. A year since I've finished writing a book.
It kind of hurts the pride a little bit.
I know that writing a novel, especially in a genre I haven't really written in before, takes more time than writing a novella with a fairly simple story-line, it's just hard to gauge how much writing I'm actually doing when it is scattered across 20 projects instead of focused on one.
Which makes me feel like I'm not doing much work and failing at writing... even though I'm not. Such is life.
Picture from Sparklife That sounds about right. |
Probably go finish editing that short story, work on the writing prompts for next week, cruise Facebook, and call it a night.
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
What Happens at Writers Conference Goes in a Blog
This past weekend I had the pleasure of attending the Nebraska Writers Guild's 2016 Fall Conference and it was fantastic! I have never been around so many writers in one place before and was in complete awe. I'm sure it showed on my face, too, but I'm like 87.2% positive I didn't make too much of an ass out of myself.
One thing I want to say right off the bat is, I am absolutely blown away by how much talent there is in my little corner of the world. Friday night of the conference, there was an open mic event where you could come and spend seven minutes reading anything you wanted (I read the opening section of Love Drunk and Dragon Tears and got a number of compliments so I was pretty happy). While everybody who got up did wonderfully (even the lady who was absolutely terrified of reading in front of us), a few stood out.
The first person to read was a guy who looked to be about 16 years old, but when he started reading, I forgot how young he was. He painted a picture with his words so vividly that I can still see them nearly a week later. I was blown away and I hope great things happen for him.
A gentleman got up and introduced his reading by saying he was a poet and he primarily wrote about his wife and their journey with her dementia. He used his poetry to keep the woman he loved alive and well in his mind. His words were beautiful and loving and even now, make my eyes well up with unshed tears.
The last woman to read started by showing us a picture that she had painted of a little Ponca girl, curled up in the fetal position. The girl's name was Water Willow and her story was what we heard. As soon as the author started reading, I was taken back in time to America's most ancient story-telling tradition, that of the Native Americans. I felt like I was there with the man on the shores of the stream waiting for his daughter's arrival and watching the star shower above. It was beautifully written and told and brought me to tears.
Saturday started with breakfast and networking then a presentation by New York Times Best Selling author Victorine Lieske on BookBub. BookBub, something I had never heard of before the conference, is a newsletter you can sign up for and it will let you know when e-books in your chosen genre(s) go on sale or are free.
It is probably something I should stay away from considering the number of physical books I have yet to read and I know I probably have twice the number waiting for me on my iPad.
But Victorine spent most of her time talking about how writers can utilize it for getting word of their books to the masses. There is a significant application process and high rejection rate, but she said it is well worth it to try.
The second presenter was Carrie Pestritto, an agent from Prospect Agency. She spent the first part of her presentation talking to us about how to create our 'brand' which is essentially who we are as an author to our readers. She also had great tips and advice for authors looking for agents and what happens after they find one. The second half of her presentation was just answering any questions the group had about the agent/publisher side of the business.
The part that scared me was that she recommend different pen names if you write different genres to help your readers keep your books straight. I understand that, but I write in nearly all the genres... that's a lot of pen names.
After lunch and more networking time, we finally got to hear from the featured New York Times Best Selling author, Taylor Stevens. The woman is just as fascinating as her thriller/suspense novels are (I'm assuming, since I'm only halfway through the first one and I am loving it!).
Due to her background, (she's very open about it and you can read about it on her website, so I'm not going into it here except to say "apocalyptic cult") she did not get into writing by any traditional path and therefore has a very unique view of books, writing, and the publishing business. I love her rules for when you get a publisher: 1) Do what they tell you to, 2) Don't be crazy!
Our final speaker was Sabrina Sumsion, author, former publicist, and social media expert (I don't know if that is one of her actual titles, but she sure deserves it if it isn't). Her presentation was all on the dos and don't of using social media as an author. She really emphasized how authors need to treat their social media presence just like a business does: know your target audience, don't make every post about you and what you're selling, be entertaining, and DO NOT bring in politics and/or religion unless that is what you write about. "Retain dignity and grace no matter what."
As an author who primarily uses social media to connect with my readers, this was exceptionally interesting to me and I definitely learned a lot.
Overall, I learned so much from both the presenters and the other writers I met. It was amazing to find out how much I still have to learn and how much I didn't know that I didn't know. If you are a writer, I definitely recommend finding a local (or not so local) writers conference and attending. It is wonderful to find a community of people from all walks of life who have this one thing in common with you.
I'll tell you one more thing, I can't wait for spring conference!
One thing I want to say right off the bat is, I am absolutely blown away by how much talent there is in my little corner of the world. Friday night of the conference, there was an open mic event where you could come and spend seven minutes reading anything you wanted (I read the opening section of Love Drunk and Dragon Tears and got a number of compliments so I was pretty happy). While everybody who got up did wonderfully (even the lady who was absolutely terrified of reading in front of us), a few stood out.
The first person to read was a guy who looked to be about 16 years old, but when he started reading, I forgot how young he was. He painted a picture with his words so vividly that I can still see them nearly a week later. I was blown away and I hope great things happen for him.
A gentleman got up and introduced his reading by saying he was a poet and he primarily wrote about his wife and their journey with her dementia. He used his poetry to keep the woman he loved alive and well in his mind. His words were beautiful and loving and even now, make my eyes well up with unshed tears.
The last woman to read started by showing us a picture that she had painted of a little Ponca girl, curled up in the fetal position. The girl's name was Water Willow and her story was what we heard. As soon as the author started reading, I was taken back in time to America's most ancient story-telling tradition, that of the Native Americans. I felt like I was there with the man on the shores of the stream waiting for his daughter's arrival and watching the star shower above. It was beautifully written and told and brought me to tears.
Saturday started with breakfast and networking then a presentation by New York Times Best Selling author Victorine Lieske on BookBub. BookBub, something I had never heard of before the conference, is a newsletter you can sign up for and it will let you know when e-books in your chosen genre(s) go on sale or are free.
It is probably something I should stay away from considering the number of physical books I have yet to read and I know I probably have twice the number waiting for me on my iPad.
But Victorine spent most of her time talking about how writers can utilize it for getting word of their books to the masses. There is a significant application process and high rejection rate, but she said it is well worth it to try.
The second presenter was Carrie Pestritto, an agent from Prospect Agency. She spent the first part of her presentation talking to us about how to create our 'brand' which is essentially who we are as an author to our readers. She also had great tips and advice for authors looking for agents and what happens after they find one. The second half of her presentation was just answering any questions the group had about the agent/publisher side of the business.
The part that scared me was that she recommend different pen names if you write different genres to help your readers keep your books straight. I understand that, but I write in nearly all the genres... that's a lot of pen names.
After lunch and more networking time, we finally got to hear from the featured New York Times Best Selling author, Taylor Stevens. The woman is just as fascinating as her thriller/suspense novels are (I'm assuming, since I'm only halfway through the first one and I am loving it!).
Katherine, So happy to meet you :) Keep on writing and keep kicking butt :) [Taylor Stevens] |
Our final speaker was Sabrina Sumsion, author, former publicist, and social media expert (I don't know if that is one of her actual titles, but she sure deserves it if it isn't). Her presentation was all on the dos and don't of using social media as an author. She really emphasized how authors need to treat their social media presence just like a business does: know your target audience, don't make every post about you and what you're selling, be entertaining, and DO NOT bring in politics and/or religion unless that is what you write about. "Retain dignity and grace no matter what."
As an author who primarily uses social media to connect with my readers, this was exceptionally interesting to me and I definitely learned a lot.
Overall, I learned so much from both the presenters and the other writers I met. It was amazing to find out how much I still have to learn and how much I didn't know that I didn't know. If you are a writer, I definitely recommend finding a local (or not so local) writers conference and attending. It is wonderful to find a community of people from all walks of life who have this one thing in common with you.
I'll tell you one more thing, I can't wait for spring conference!
Tuesday, October 11, 2016
Strength in Sisters
A while back, I was working on a writing prompt for my writer's group: "She stood there just as shell shocked as I had been. Then, she went for
the gun on the wall." The short story that resulted from my chosen prompt was a story of three sisters supporting each other through a hard time. It was partially inspired by the relationship that I have with my three sisters.
I never shared it with my writer's group because I worried the subject matter might hurt one of the people in my group... then I realized how stupid that was. Art is supposed to invoke feelings in the viewer.
So, I've decided to share it with you all.
Oh the shenanigans we have gotten into over the years. |
I never shared it with my writer's group because I worried the subject matter might hurt one of the people in my group... then I realized how stupid that was. Art is supposed to invoke feelings in the viewer.
So, I've decided to share it with you all.
She
stood there just as shell shocked as I had been. Then, she went for the gun on
the wall. “Nobody messes with our family!”
I
beat her to the old pump Remington shotgun that had belonged to our father. I
grabbed it and held it against my chest as I turned my back to the furious
woman trying to snatch it out of my hands. I’ve never been so thankful that I
kept it unloaded. “Ruth, calm down and listen to the rest of the story.”
“I
don’t need to hear the rest of it!” Ruth grabbed the stock just behind the
trigger guard and I twisted to keep it out of her hands. “Esther! Look at her
face! That man has to pay!”
“I
did look at her face!” I turned and put a hand against Ruth’s chest while I
extended the arm that held the shotgun in the opposite direction. “You need to
hear the rest of her story!”
Ruth
snarled at me but finally calmed enough to listen. She tossed her honey-brown
hair back over her shoulder. “Alright Miriam, what happened?”
Miriam
glanced up at Ruth from her seat on the couch, an ice pack pressed to the left
side of her face and a paper towel under her nose to staunch the bleeding.
Our
baby sister had always been the beauty of the family, even though she had been
sporting more makeup than necessary for the last couple of months. She was also
the rebellious one.
Ruth
and I had started quietly discussing Miriam’s condition when the cake make-up
appeared, but we didn’t want to approach her with false allegations and risk
losing her. The whole family knew Sid, her husband, was a jerk. Had known since
they started dating, but there was no talking Miriam out of it. We all silently
agreed to handle them with kid gloves and keep a close eye on the couple.
I
wish to God we had at least tried talking to her. Then maybe this all wouldn’t
have happened.
Or
it could have sent her away from us forever.
Miriam
and Sid celebrated their first wedding anniversary two months ago. Two days
later, Miriam met me for lunch wearing a sweatshirt in August and heavy
concealer that didn’t quite cover the shadow under her eye. I asked her about
it and she brushed me off with a story about tripping and how clumsy she was.
Miriam
was a lot of things, but clumsy was not one of them. For heaven’s sake, the
woman had taken ballet for fifteen years. She could probably walk a tightrope en pointe with no problem.
I
recruited big sister, Ruth, to help me find out what was going on. We
“kidnapped” Miriam from work one day and had a sister day full of pedicures and
mimosas. After a few drinks, we brought up our suspicions and Miriam denied
everything. At one point, Ruth had jerked up Miriam’s sleeve to reveal nasty
bruises that looked suspiciously like fingerprints. Ruth and I finding the
proof only pissed Miriam off and she stormed out of the spa. She hadn’t talked
to either of us, nor anybody else in the family, since.
We
probably should have just called the cops, but the prospect of catching the
bastard in the act was a little too appealing to pass up, not that we would
have known what to do if we caught him. Plus, too many years of watching cop
shows had me wanting to do a few stakeouts of my own. They are not as much fun
as one would think, but it did let Ruth and I catch up.
We
never caught Sid hitting our sister, but we did see him spending far more time
at the bar than was necessary and a whole lot of drunk driving. Ruth suggested
we ram him and call the cops so they could throw his ass in jail for DUI but we
were in my car at the time. It might not be much to look at, but it was the
only one I had.
Needless
to say, I was more than a little surprised when I found Miriam at my door a few
hours before. She was in tears, one eye nearly swollen shut, blood running out
of her nose, bruises and scrapes everywhere, clothes and hair disheveled. If I
hadn’t known better, I would have said she had been in a car accident. I got
her cleaned up a bit and settled on the couch with an ice pack, then called for
reinforcements.
“Ruth,
sit down. You look like you’re going to eat her.” I put the shotgun back on the
wall, then plopped down next to Miriam on the couch and pointed to the chair on
her other side. Ruth rubbed her face, then complied.
Ruth
took a big breath. “Miriam, what happened?”
“I
left him.”
I
have never seen such a beautiful smile from such a mess as I saw on my little
sister’s face at that moment.
Ruth
collapsed back against the chair. “About freaking time! But what happened?” She
pointed at Miriam’s injuries.
Miriam
checked to see that her nose had stopped bleeding and put the paper towel
carefully on the coffee table with a shrug. “I missed you guys so much. I
decided you were more important that my pride-”
“Damn
straight we are!”
“Ruth.”
I shook my head and nodded at Miriam. Ruth just shrugged.
Miriam
smiled, even though tears were welling up in the eye I could see. “So I was
packing a bag to come spend the weekend. I was going to call you both from the
car to see if you wanted to go to a spa or a B&B or just have a slumber
party all weekend at one of your houses. Sid came home early from work and saw
me packing. He thought I was leaving for good and wouldn’t listen to reason.
He’s never been this bad.” Miriam grabbed my hand then reached for Ruth’s.
“Please, believe me, he has never been this bad.”
“Don’t
defend him!” Ruth barked.
Miriam
shook her head. “I’m not. I just feel so stupid. I swore growing up I would
never be in a relationship like this, especially after watching Aunt Phoebe
suffering, but after he hit me the first time, I was so embarrassed. I should
have known better. I should have walked away that first time, but I couldn’t.
Esther, I wanted so much to tell you the first time you asked. I just… I
couldn’t.”
Ruth
sighed and took Miriam’s hand in both of hers. “How did you get away?”
“I
asked myself what my big sisters would do.” Miriam smiled through her tears.
I
laughed. “Considering we just brawled over the shotgun, I am seriously hoping
you didn’t shook him.”
“Why
not? Bastard deserves to be shot.”
I
shook my head. “Ruth, we don’t want Miriam to have to deal with the legal crap
of shooting him.”
“Open
and shut case if he’s dead.”
“Ruth!”
“Anyway,”
Miriam interrupted. “He had me by the throat against the wall so I kneed him in
the junk as hard as I could.”
“Atta
girl!” Ruth cheered. I wrapped an arm around Miriam and squeezed.
“He
let me go and I ran for the door. He grabbed my arm to stop me so I grabbed the
first thing I could get my hand on. The baseball bat he keeps next to the
door.” Ruth and I both cringed while Miriam chuckled quietly. “He’s going to
have a headache when he wakes up.”
“I’m
proud of you.” I kissed Miriam’s temple. Ruth reached over and pulled Miriam
into her arms for a long moment. “We have to take you to the police-”
“No!”
Miriam pulled away from Ruth and stared at me in shock.
“I
agree with Esther.” Ruth stood and put her hands on her hips.
“Why?”
“If
Sid files assault charges against you, it won’t look good if you didn’t report
what he did to you. You need to go in and give them your statement. Tell them
what you did and file charges of your own.”
“We
should probably get a restraining order against the bastard, too, not that
it’ll do much good if he’s determined, but sometimes it scares people off,”
Ruth added. “A gun works better.”
I
rolled my eyes at her gun comment but nodded my agreement anyway. “Then, we
need to call Aunt Leah and start getting you a divorce.” I stood and pulled
Miriam up beside me.
“Maybe
we should call Aunt Leah on our way and have her meet us at the police
station.” Ruth crossed her arms and eyes Miriam. “Too bad we don’t have
pictures from before you got cleaned up.”
I
grinned and held up my phone. “Oh, but we do.”
“You
took pictures of me?!” Miriam screeched.
“You
can thank me later.” I slung my purse strap over my head and headed for the
door. “Ruth, you driving or am I?”
Ruth
followed me across my front porch and down the stairs. “I will. Your POS is a
death trap and I think Miriam has been traumatized enough for today.”
“Hey!”
I swatted her with the back of my head.
“I
love you guys.” Ruth and I turned to see Miriam standing at the top of the
porch steps with tears in her eyes. She slowly descended and stopped between
us. “I just- I love you. I don’t know if I would’ve been able to leave him if I
didn’t have two strong sisters to turn to.”
Ruth
and I pulled her in for a group hug, tears running down each of our cheeks.
“I
don’t know how much longer we would’ve been able to leave you with him before
doing something drastic.” Ruth’s voice was thick with tears.
“A
week,” I mumbled through my own tears. “I had next Friday circled in my
calendar. If you wouldn’t leave on your own, I was coming to get you even if I
had to drug you and carry you out of that house myself.”
“Thank
you for saving me.” Miriam loosened her hold on us.
I
sniffed and wiped at my cheeks with the heels of my hands. “You saved yourself,
baby sister. We’re just making sure you stay that way.”
Tuesday, October 4, 2016
This is Partially Your Fault
Not long ago, I had the pleasure of reading the first chapter of a friend's book. He has been chewing on the story for the last few years and finally buckled down to get it on paper.
It was worth the wait.
It is a fantasy tale stretching across at least three books and is very unique. I haven't been a hard-core fantasy reader since high school, but I haven't stumbled across anything really like it before.
He has quite a task ahead of him, though. I'm not going to go into much detail because it is his story to tell, but for his first book he has chosen to world-build, have characters jump worlds, and created a mythos that is nearly as large as our universe is wide.
Oh, and there's time manipulation. Did I mention that?
He has bitten off more than I'm capable of chewing as an author and I wish him luck.
Now, to the purpose of this.
Not only did he let me read the first chapter, he encouraged me to edit it. Poor guy didn't know what he was getting himself into.
I haven't done much editing of other people's work since high school (I had a friend refuse to let me work on her papers anymore because I essentially tore them apart... nicely, I'm not a mean person), so I enjoyed the challenge.
It took me nearly 2 1/2 hours to get through the chapter.
Now, it's not because it was terrible. Quite the contrary. He can set-build (don't know if there is an actual term for it in writing, but basically where the author builds the setting in which the action is happening) exquisitely. I wish I was half as good as he is at that. The action flowed fairly well and it did a good job setting up the rest of the book.
But he had a lot of mistakes that I made when I started writing: $5 words tossed in haphazardly, wooden dialogue, words tripping all over each other, and unnecessary commas all over the place.
When I think there are too many commas, that means there is probably three times as many commas as necessary... I do love my commas... and ellipses.
He and I are both guilty of writing how it's "supposed" to be written instead of using our own voices.
Most of those things will be fixed with time and practice. Some will take some research (hello, Google, my old friend), and a lot of it will smooth into his own personal style.
I love watching authors develop their stories, characters, and voices (especially when I'm not the one writing) and I hope he lets me stick around to help when I can.
The first thing I wrote on my comments sheet was "Everything I write is suggestion and my opinion. You can use or ignore anything you want. You won't hurt my feelings. You're the author and you hold the power!"
This is something I tell everybody. I don't want to make them feel like I hated their writing or that everything they're doing is wrong. Writing is so subjective that it is difficult to distinguish right from wrong (except spelling and some grammar rules, and even those are somewhat gray).
The very last thing I want to do is crush a budding writer, especially one who has an amazing story locked inside his head.
A story that I am desperate to read so hurry the hell up, man and get it done!!
It was worth the wait.
It is a fantasy tale stretching across at least three books and is very unique. I haven't been a hard-core fantasy reader since high school, but I haven't stumbled across anything really like it before.
He has quite a task ahead of him, though. I'm not going to go into much detail because it is his story to tell, but for his first book he has chosen to world-build, have characters jump worlds, and created a mythos that is nearly as large as our universe is wide.
Oh, and there's time manipulation. Did I mention that?
He has bitten off more than I'm capable of chewing as an author and I wish him luck.
Now, to the purpose of this.
Not only did he let me read the first chapter, he encouraged me to edit it. Poor guy didn't know what he was getting himself into.
I haven't done much editing of other people's work since high school (I had a friend refuse to let me work on her papers anymore because I essentially tore them apart... nicely, I'm not a mean person), so I enjoyed the challenge.
It took me nearly 2 1/2 hours to get through the chapter.
Now, it's not because it was terrible. Quite the contrary. He can set-build (don't know if there is an actual term for it in writing, but basically where the author builds the setting in which the action is happening) exquisitely. I wish I was half as good as he is at that. The action flowed fairly well and it did a good job setting up the rest of the book.
But he had a lot of mistakes that I made when I started writing: $5 words tossed in haphazardly, wooden dialogue, words tripping all over each other, and unnecessary commas all over the place.
From Authors Pay it Forward Still better off than Yorick |
He and I are both guilty of writing how it's "supposed" to be written instead of using our own voices.
Most of those things will be fixed with time and practice. Some will take some research (hello, Google, my old friend), and a lot of it will smooth into his own personal style.
I love watching authors develop their stories, characters, and voices (especially when I'm not the one writing) and I hope he lets me stick around to help when I can.
The first thing I wrote on my comments sheet was "Everything I write is suggestion and my opinion. You can use or ignore anything you want. You won't hurt my feelings. You're the author and you hold the power!"
This is something I tell everybody. I don't want to make them feel like I hated their writing or that everything they're doing is wrong. Writing is so subjective that it is difficult to distinguish right from wrong (except spelling and some grammar rules, and even those are somewhat gray).
The very last thing I want to do is crush a budding writer, especially one who has an amazing story locked inside his head.
A story that I am desperate to read so hurry the hell up, man and get it done!!
Tuesday, September 20, 2016
Writing Prompt I: "I saw him. The boy I had to kill" (pt. 5)
Two nice humans, but I was ready to go home.
I needed to find the Bringer quickly so I
could.
I felt my energy drop suddenly and staggered
to a dark doorway. I crouched in the shadows as I pulled the cord from my
chargecell and plugged it into my disguise’s bellybutton. I watched the humans
walking by as my power was restored. Tonight, I learned that there were really
bad humans but there were also nice ones.
This gave me an idea. Would they be able to help
me find the Bringer? I had his picture. I simply had to ask. Somebody might
know where I would be able to find him. I just had to locate some of the nice
ones.
Not an easy task on this planet.
I unplugged the cord and stood. I pulled out
my communication device and found the picture of the Bringer as I stepped into
the crowd of humans. I walked a few feet, then stopped next to a male selling
those large papers with tiny writing on them and thin, shiny books with faces
on the covers. “Excuse me, might know you this person?”
The male frowned at me. “What?”
“You know him?” I held up the picture.
“What? No! Get out of here, foreigner.” The
male lashed out with one of the rolled up papers with writing on it, hitting me
hard on the forehead.
I walked away, confused by the male’s
reaction. He was hostile when I asked about the Bringer. It made me wonder if
he knew him and hated him. Surely, if I told him that I was planning on destroying
the Bringer, he would be willing to help. I turned around.
“My apologize sir,” I held up the picture
again. “But would you hate him for I must end him.”
“What? Jesus, man! Don’t go around confessing
you’re going to kill people! Now I have to call the cops on you, don’t move!”
The man ordered and turned his attention to his own communication device.
I knew from my research disks that ‘cop’ was
the police and I needed to stay away from them. I waited for the male to look
away from me so I could escape. When he did, I ran down the block and around
the corner. I leaned against a brick wall until my breathing returned to
normal. Sharing my plan with an unknown was a beginner’s mistake and I hoped
that nobody in my unit ever found out. I straightened my back and stepped away
from the wall. I needed to finish this mission without delay and with no more
mistakes.
I walked a few meters down the street and
stopped a female pushing a cart full of strange items. “Ma’am, might know you
him?” I asked, showing her the picture.
“My baby! It’s my baby!” She screamed as she
threw her arms around me.
She smelled terribly and I did not appreciate
being accosted a second time that day. I carefully untangled myself from her
grasp and walked quickly away. If she thought I was her offspring, I did not
want any information she might have on the Bringer. It would probably be
incorrect.
Suddenly, I recalled the old female the
Bringer had bowed to. Surely she would know where I could find him. I spun in a
circle-only getting hit by humans twice-to get my bearings, then set off in the
direction I thought the small shop the female had occupied was in. After
wandering the area for nearly an hour, I realized I did not remember exactly
where the shop was located and that most of the businesses around me were
closing.
I sped up my search. I did not know how long
the female would be in the shop, but I did not want to be on this planet one
moment longer than necessary.
I was just beginning to worry that I was lost
yet again when a wave of smells hit me and I sneezed. I looked up through
leaking eyes to find myself in front of the exact shop I was looking for.
The old female was at the front window turning
a placard to ‘Closed.’ In my desperation, I pushed on the door. When it did not
budge, I knocked, trying to get her attention.
The old female waved her hands at me so I
waved again. She marched to the door, turned a knob and pulled it open a few
inches. “I’m closed. What do you want?”
I was temporarily distracted by her garments.
They were brightly colored and covered with small, shiny disks. She also had a
piece thrown over her shoulder almost like what the humans with special
abilities wore in the research disks, but hers was much smaller.
“What do you want?!” She nearly shouted at me.
“My apologize.” I held up my communicator so
she could see the picture of the Bringer. “Might know you where I find him?”
“Why are you looking for Akhilesh?”
“I need him to find.”
The female frowned, her brown, wrinkled skin
somehow became wrinklier. “You need him to find what?”
I stared at her, not completely understanding
her question. “I must him find.”
“You need to find him?” The female glared at
me.
I nodded. “Yes. I must him find. You know
location of him?”
Her eyes narrowed. “What do you need to find
Akhilesh for?”
I shook my head at the frustrating female. Why
would she not tell me what I needed to know? “I must him find,” I repeated.
“Akhilesh is a good boy! I will not have him
getting into whatever you are doing! Criminals coming around trying to get
Akhilesh to carry their drugs or to steal things for them!” She waved her hands
in front of my face before shoving me away from her door and slamming it shut.
I stumbled down the step and fell into the
street. I heard a tearing sound and knew that I had ripped my newly cleaned
garments. I turned to look back at the female. She was pointing a finger at me
and looked very angry.
“He’s going to college! He is doing great
things with his life! Go away!” She yelled through the glass hand waved her
hands at me again before turning and disappearing into the dark store.
I carefully got to my feet, worried I had hurt
myself in my fall, but thankfully nothing hurt too badly. I felt better than
when the two men had accosted me earlier in the night.
This planet is not a safe one. It was a wonder
that any humans survived more than a few days. I turned, not paying attention
to where I was walking, I just knew I had to stay close to the shop. The angry
old female seemed to know the Bringer and was trying to protect him from
somebody called ‘Criminals.’ I would have to find him before ‘Criminals’ did to
complete my mission so I could leave.
I was lost in thought when a loud sound coming
from one of the human’s large transportation vehicles startled me. I realized
that I had just stepped in front of it and it had nearly run me over. It will
be a good day for the universe when the humans discover hover technology and
stop relying on gravity and wheels for general transportation.
I backed onto the curb to wait for the traffic
to subside when a male wearing a blue garment on his head across the street
from me caught my eye.
It was him. The Bringer. I finally found him.
I closed my eyes and bowed my head, giving
thanks to the Supreme Being for letting me find him and bring an end to this
trip.
I looked up, half expecting the Bringer to
have slipped away from me once again, but no, he was still there but he was
moving away from me. I would not let him escape again. I felt an uncustomary rage
build up inside of me at everything I had endured on this trip. All thoughts of
a quiet kill burned away in my anger. I pulled my weapon from my pocket with my
right hand and took ahold of the transcarrier around my neck with my left.
I ran into the street, dodging transporters
and ignoring the loud beeps they were making. I plowed through the crowd, not
caring how many humans I hit or angered. Finally, he was close enough that I
could touch him. I raised my weapon instead.
“Bringer!” My yell was loud and full of hate.
The humans around me stopped and stared at me, including the Bringer. “Bringer!
You will not end my people!”
“What?” The Bringer looked around, as if I was
talking to someone else.
“You will not end my people!” I shouted and
pressed a button on my weapon. A blast of energy hit the Bringer in the chest
and he vaporized. I activated my transcarrier and was back on my ship before
the other humans could react. I stumbled to the navigation panel and slammed my
hand onto the blue panel that would take me home. I collapsed to the floor as
my ship broke through the roof of the police’s shelter and into the stars.
My people were safe and I was going home.
Home.
The End.
Tuesday, September 13, 2016
Writing Prompt I: "I saw him. The boy I had to kill" (pt. 4)
For the first time since I landed on this
planet, I felt visible to every human I passed. Females were covering their
noses and hurrying away, males were frowning at me, all avoided coming in
contact with my filthy garments.
“Oy!”
I heard a man yell the unfamiliar word and
assumed he was ordering me away from him, but he stepped in front of me and
would not let me pass. “Excuse me, sir.” I attempted a second time to step
around him but he moved with me, refusing to let me go.
“Boy, you reek to high hell.”
“Apologies.” I exhaled. I had never felt lower
than I did and this human telling me I smelled bad was not helping. “I was
accosted and my garments were ruined, but I have not money and males hit me.”
The man put a hand on my shoulder. “Robbed eh?
Well, here, get to a laundromat- there’s one down the block- and get cleaned
up.” The man put some scraps of paper in my hand and turned me to face the
direction I had just come from.
I recognized the paper as Earth currency but I
was not familiar with ‘laundromat.’ I turned to ask for clarification but the
man was gone. I shrugged, much liking the human gesture and started walking. He
was one of the first nice humans I had encountered and at that point, I was
willing to trust somebody. I walked, trying to ignore the human’s reactions to
my condition and stopped when I found glowing letters spelling ‘laundromat.’ I
pulled open the door and was greeted by loud machinery and a clean, perfume
smell.
I looked around and saw two females around my
disguise’s age putting garments into a large white cube. An older male was
pulling wet garments from a similar cube and putting them into a larger cube
with a clear door on the front. I was far from the mood to attempt to figure
out the machines myself to keep up my disguise.
“Might, please someone assist me cleaning
garments.” The old male ignored me but the two females glanced my way. One
laughed and shook her head, the other shrugged and walked over to me.
“Where is your laundry?” She stared at me for
a moment. “You’re wearing it, aren’t you?” She exhaled and led me to a white
cube in the corner. “It’s kind of private back here, strip down. Do you have
quarters and soap?”
I frowned at her, confused. “Quarters of
what?”
She pulled a handful of silver disks out of
her pocket that I vaguely recognized as a form of Earth currency.
“Oh, I have not quarters.” I held up the paper
the man had given me. “Will work this?”
“Sure, I’ll get you quarters… and some soap.”
She pulled the paper out of my hand and walked to a machine near the door.
I carefully started removing my garments,
hoping my disguise would still work without them. I was glad that I remembered
a short research recording featuring someone named Mark who would go out with
undergarments showing or I would not have known that humans wore clothing under
their clothing. I had gotten a pair of undergarments like the ones Mark had
warn. They were like close-fitting pants but stopped at the tops of the legs.
Not the most comfortable things, but it was what humans wore.
I was embarrassed at being unclothed. It was
my understanding that humans did not go out in public in just undergarments and
my removing my outer garments did not follow their social rules. But I did not
think I would fit into the white cube to wash my garments without taking them
off.
A human had ordered it and I had no other
choice so I did as directed.
I removed my shirt and pants and placed them
into the large cube. Thankfully, my undergarment seemed to have remained
cleaner than my outer garments during the incident and did not need to be
cleaned. I pressed a few of the buttons on the cube, but nothing happened.
“Soap helps when you’re doing laundry or your
clothes will just be wet and not clean.” The female laughed as she returned
with an orange packet and silver disks. “Plus, you have to pay.” She ripped
open the orange packet and dumped white powder on my garments inside the white
cube, then closed the lid. She put four of the silver disks into a drawer on
the top of the cube and pushed the drawer into the machine. It clicked and I
could hear a rushing sound. She pushed two buttons on the control panel. “Wash
your clothes in cold unless you’re doing underwear. It’ll keep your regular
clothes from shrinking too much.” She leaned against the cube and crossed her
arms. “This’ll take about an hour and then just put it in the dryer.” She bit
her lip as she studied me. “Just call me over and I’ll help you.” She held out
her hand. “I’m Daisy.”
“My appreciative, Daisy.” I looked at her
hand, not sure what she was doing.
“Not from around here, are you?” Daisy laughed
as she grabbed my hand and moved it up and down a few times before releasing
it.
“No. I am from France!” I may have spoken too
loudly in my panic because her eyes widened slightly.
“Cool. I spent last summer in Paris. It was
pretty awesome.” She stared at me and I stared back at her, not sure what she
wanted. “Alright, well, just call my back when this beeps.” She walked across
the room back to her companion.
I stared at the white cube, unsure what to do
next. The old man had finished moving his garments into what I assumed was what
Daisy called a dryer and had sat down on a bench with a large paper covered in
tiny writing. I had no large paper, but there was a bench nearby. I sat and
made sure nobody was watching when I pulled my communication device out of my
leg. I tapped the screen a few times and read about what was happening on
Ooden. I was caught up in the news from my home planet that I nearly yelled
when the large cube holding my clothes beeped loudly. I pressed my
communication device back into my leg, stood, and walked over to the cube. I
looked up to call Daisy but she was already walking toward me.
She opened the cube and pulled my shirt and
pants from it. They looked cleaner and smelled better than before, so I
approved of the cube.
“Now, for the dryer, it can be a little testy.
As long as you don’t put your clothes in here for too long, you’ll be fine.”
She pulled a door open on one of the larger cubes nearby and shoved my garments
into it. She closed it, dropped three silver disk into a shelf like what was on
the smaller cubes, pushed it in, and turned a dial on the front. “Since it’s
such a small load, 30 minutes should be fine. A larger load will take longer.
Don’t ever put wool in a dryer. Here.”
She ended her instructions with a smile as she
dropped a handful of the silver disks onto my palm.
I held out my empty hand like she had done. “I
appreciative this very lot.”
She took my hand and moved it like she had
done before. “No problem. It’ll take some time and a few ruined bits of clothes
to learn how to do laundry, but you’ll get there. Good luck.” She patted my
bare shoulder then walked back to her companion. They both picked up large
white boxes with holes in them full of clothing and left the laundromat.
Two nice humans in a row. Maybe this planet
was not all bad.
I resumed reading about Ooden on my
communication device until the dryer beeped. I was not as startled this time. I
pulled my garments back on. They were warm and it felt good being clothed once
again. I put my communication device in one pocket, the silver disks in the
other, and left the laundromat.
Two nice humans, but I was ready to go home.
I needed to find the Bringer quickly so I
could.
To be continued...
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