Icicles out my window

 


Icicles out my window

Originally uploaded by ladywriter47

Icicles out my window. This can’t be good. I’m sure it says something about our insulation. Maybe because we got a new roof and only have one layer now?

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Resting

Raving

When an actor is not actively involved in a production, she or he is often said to be “resting.” The word choice is apt because creative work is, by nature, a demanding mistress, and this kind of recovery time is important.

Since we got back from Vegas, that’s what I’ve been doing. I’m resting, and I  refuse feel guilty about it. It’s Christmas and I’m determined to eke out every ounce of good will I can. More importantly, I’m going to try to share that good will with others.

In addition to resting, here’s what I’ve been doing.

  • Working my normal thirty-five hours a week, but having it spill over into the weekends due to special holiday events.
  • Nagging my Grinch of a husband to get his family’s presents organized so they can be sent to England. (In his defense, he has been traveling a lot for his job and sometimes working eighty hours a week).
  • Standing in line at the Post Office and filling out every blasted form that exists to get said package to England in time for the holidays. (But I really don’t mind. By now, his family is mine too and I love them).
  • Nagging my daughter — do you sense a pattern here? — about whether or not she wants to use the idea I suggested for gifts for her friends and buying the tools and supplies when she finally managed to decide. (In her defense, she has a demanding school schedule and works as well).
  • Making cookies and fudge.
  • Baking bread several times a week. Before you get the (entirely wrong) idea that I’m too much of a chef, go to your library and get Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day. Try the basic recipe. I bet you’ll end up buying the book. If you love crusty bread — the kind you sometimes get hot from the oven in nice restaurants — you’re going to love this book. Okay, end of commercial.
  • Watching the snow fall. And fall. And fall. All twenty or so inches of it. No, I’m not exaggerating. And it’s still coming.
  • Writing “The Christmas Lineup,” a trivia quiz featuring some of the great lines from Christmas books, movies, and songs. Look for it in the NEORWA newsletter. (If you’re not a member and you really, really, want to do it, leave a comment and I’ll share it).
  • Oh, and I decorated our house, but not in the “Better Homes and Garden” style.  My decorating is more on the lines of “I like it, so it’s going up.” Works for me.
  • Listening to all my favorite Christmas songs.
  • Starting a daily “Christmas note” on my Facebook page, sharing some of the things I love about the season.
  • Wishing you and everyone you know a wonderful Christmas. If you don’t celebrate the holiday, then I wish you the same joy for a peaceful and lovely winter.
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And Now, He-ere’s Jenny….

Reading and Writing: My friend Jen is doing a blog tour for her new book, Redeeming Characters. Here’s her blurb about it.

It’s What You Say and How You Say It.

Thanks so much to my gracious hostess, Kym Lucas for hosting me during my Redeeming Characters blog tour. Here’s the blurb for the book.

Animals may bite, but people always suck. It’s the motto thirty-two year old Drue has lived by all his life. He longs for the snow to melt so he can disappear into the wild with nary a nitwit to be seen—to escape the confines of a narrow-minded and cloying society.  Yet, when he discovers an old friend has published the book he helped create, a new plan surfaces. Revenge.

Bestselling author Dakota Whitmore is in a slump. Sure, her husband is dead and she’s adopted his long-time mistress’s child, but she’s endured more difficult things.  Maybe what she needs is a little help, a beta reader who will tell her that her work hasn’t turned into a steaming cow pie. How about uber sexy Drue, the man who helped her pen her first—and only, bestseller? Nothing could possibly go wrong. Right?

This book took me three years to write—I started and finished two books in my Misadventures of the Laundry Hag mystery series between starting and ending this monster. And I’m proud of it like any mother would be with her child.

You see great writers aren’t born that way. Some of us have stories to tell, others have a way with words. Writing is a skill like any other and spending time honing that skill is vital. Yes I have other books to my credit, but this is the first one where I can say, I worked my butt off until I got it right. The story and the way it is told, the character’s inner voices and their interactions. It’s truly unique and I definitely recommend it!

And on that note, I’m going to ask Kym to select one winner from our random commenter to win a PDF copy of Redeeming Characters. Be sure to swing by www.jenniferlhart.com and enter to win the grand prize in the Redeeming Characters blog tour. May you end the year with a smile on your face!

Redeeming Characters
Author Jennifer L. Hart
ISBN# 978-1-60820-228-7 (print) $14.99
978-1-60820-229-4 (ebook) $7.99
Release Date Oct. 2010
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I Wouldn’t Bet on It: A Family Thanksgiving in Vegas

Reading, Writing, Ranting and Raving

Thanksgiving in Vegas. It sounds like the premise for a National Lampoon movie or, at the very least, an unusual way to spend a day usually devoted to overeating and football.

But the holiday tends to be rather under-celebrated at our house. We don’t (horrors!) watch American football, and Husband, D., is a Brit who never fully embraced the whole Pilgrim/Indian thing. Distance between my siblings is measured more by lifestyle differences than miles, which means the chances of a large family gathering are slim to none. And Slim’s gone home.  (A quote from a Dandy Daley Mackall book that I’ve always wanted to use. And now I have).

This is not to say we haven’t tried the traditional route. In years past,  I’ve stuffed and roasted the turkey, baked the yams, and invited my mother for dinner. But with only four to enjoy the feast, the day always seems to fall flat.

But this time, things were different. This time, we went to Vegas.

This may seem an odd choice for two non-gamblers and a sixteen-year-old who was not — and I can’t emphasize this enough — not enthusiastic about the idea. You may wonder, why Las Vegas?  Why not somewhere like the Mexican Riviera or even the Outer Banks?

The answer is simple. Since my current book is set partly in Vegas, this trip was research. Honest.

Although I’m usually comfortable depending on the resources of the library and Internet to explore a city,  I sensed that approach wouldn’t work for the “Sin City.”

It turns out I was right. Las Vegas can’t be faked.  From the bells and beeps of the slot machines to the ever-lingering scent of cigarette smoke and dazzling lights of the Strip, it’s a bacchanalia for the senses that can’t be imitated. Vegas stands alone.

The experience began on the plane ride.  As if everyone has agreed to forget their day-to-day inhibitions and leave real-life behind, seatmates were swapping  stories they’d be too embarrassed to tell elsewhere.

“Did you ever hear of anyone trying to cut their Christmas tree with an electric knife? I did. It looked like it would work, you know, the way the blades go back and forth? But don’t try it. It doesn’t work.”

On landing, I discovered that, yes, there really are slot machines at the airport, along with this advertisement for the Las Vegas Clark County Library (Library of the Year in 2003). I loved their nerdy little girl.

I'm serious!

However, the Eau de Tobacco fragrance didn’t kick in until we reached our lodgings. Seeing a single clerk behind a vast registration desk was enough to make me wonder if our chosen hotel was fighting a downhill slide.  (Checking out three days later, every station was in use, making it clear how wrong initial impressions can be).

Upon receiving our keys, I realized something a smarter person would have learned at the airport.  In a town devoted to gambling, you don’t go anywhere without encountering some type of gaming. To reach the elevators (and our room)  required a stroll through the casino. Hungry for dinner? The restaurants are just past the slots and gaming tables.  The path from anywhere to anywhere else is invariably routed through the casino, blocked by the hordes of people milling about, as inescapable as the sound of the machines and the smell of cigarettes.

Add in the lights of the Strip, and I was well on my way to sensory overload.  I felt like a little kid at the County Fair, opening my eyes wide in an effort to take it all in.

We took care of the  gambling experience right away. Quarter slots first night. Spent $25. Won it back and $346 more. Yes, I’m gloating. Wouldn’t you?

The whole trip felt so surreal that rather than trying to make sense of it, I’ll write my impressions as they were, random and perhaps slightly incoherent.

Talking books with the bartender. Drinks are free as long as you’re gambling but we quit while I was ahead and paid for them. The slight sixty-something-year-old  read many of the same mystery writers I do — Carl Hiaasen, Elmore Leonard, for example — and recommended a few more. But I’ve forgotten the authors’ names. Guess “What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas” means reading recommendations too!

The celebrity impersonators on the Strip and downtown. But the longest line was all men and not for Elvis or the Playboy bunnies. They were waiting to have their picture taken with a woman who was blessed (and probably not by nature) with twin attractions that were well beyond the range of normal.

M&M World. Complete mayhem and I’m still not sure why. Four floors  (we made it to two) of M&M-logo gear and tubes of colors you can’t get anywhere else.

A very nontraditional turkey dinner at the Harley Davidson Cafe. Raisins in the stuffing. Eww!

Wedding chapel after wedding chapel after wedding chapel on Las Vegas Boulevard. The best name? “Wee Kirk o’ the Heather” which claims to be the original, in business since 1940. Elvis wedding packages start at just $177 with the “Love Me Tender.” If I ever get married again, I know where I’m going! Not.

Lady at Denny’s who had clearly shaved her eyebrows. She evidently preferred them a half inch higher on her forehead. And black as night. And thin.

The “Fremont Street Experience.” Pedestrianized street of old Vegas with neon and flashing light bulbs above casinos on either side. Live shows and projected video to music overhead. Really, if you go to Las Vegas, you must visit Fremont Street. http://www.vegasexperience.com/ The website gives you a sense of what it’s like but you really need to see it.

Best deal on beer. Two Heinekens for $4 at the tacky — and I mean that in the most loving sense  — gift shop on Fremont.

Zip lining down Fremont Street. This gets a separate mention because it was the biggest risk I took in Vegas. Looked like great fun. “I’ll do it if you will,” I said to S, my sixteen-year-old daughter, not realizing that the place you are launched from is much higher than where you land. Thank God, all I had to do was sit in the harness and let them push me. I could have never stepped off by myself.  Have I mentioned I’m scared of heights?  But, it was SO FUN!!! Flying above the street, with the KISS impersonators looking up at me. It took hours to come down from the adrenaline rush. Highly recommended. http://fremontstreetflightline.com/

Bellagio Fountains to music. Every fifteen minutes. Beautiful after dark. Even in the cold.

The volcano at the Mirage. Every hour on the hour. The heat felt lovely.

The Sirens of Treasure Island. Not worth waiting twenty minute in forty degree weather, but I do admire their stamina, jumping and diving into water when it was that cold.

Gilly’s. When I was growing up, Country and Western was the only music we listened to and I still enjoy it. But I’ll never understand “Rockin’ the Beer Gut,” “International Harvester,” or  “She Thinks My Tractor’s Sexy.” Never say never, I know, but I feel confident about this.

Nor do I get why the DJ kept insisting that the man who won the bull-riding contest on the mechanical bull was guaranteed to get laid that night.  I mean, seriously? What’s the attraction? Unless it’s the $200 prize.

But I’ve got money of my own.  Did I mention I won $346 at slots?

Nice Irish boy on his honeymoon rode so his new bride could get a picture. Sweet.

Bull operator seemed to take great pride in his work. And how’s that for a specialized skill?  Very impressive on a resume. He made bull’s movement take on a different cadence when a woman was riding, with more side to side motion to cause all that female flesh to jiggle.  Sadly, the resulting male attention convinced a slightly inebriated young woman to act the fool by riding again and again.

MGM Grand lions. Sound asleep.

The Hoover Dam. Inescapable if your husband is an engineer. Massive and majestic. Worth visiting if only for all the dam jokes you can make. Dam road. Dam bridge. Dam police.  Highly entertaining for those of us with lowbrow humor. Dam.

Madame Tussaud’s. Because, hey, that’s the closest I’ll ever get to Johnny Depp or Daniel Craig. And I’ve got pictures to prove it. Unfortunately, they’re not on this computer.

Never mind. At least, I won $346.

We came home exhausted.  But  Las Vegas is  worth seeing, even if you’re not a gambler.  If you’re a writer, so much the better.  It’s teeming with humanity which means it’s also teeming with inspiration. I now have a much better feel for my main character’s experience.

Plus, on the plane, I had time to read some ARCs that have been in my TBR pile for weeks. A historical women’s fiction book by Posie Graeme-Evans called The Dressmaker which I found absorbing.  And The Other Side, which features  paranormal short stories by Mary Kay McComas, J.D. Robb,  Mary Blayney, Patricia Gaffney, and  Ruth Ryan Langan. I love anthologies but paranormal not so much. However, I enjoyed this selection more than I expected and would recommend it even if you’re not a paranormal fan.

I could even buy them for you. Since I won $346. 🙂

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Thank you

On Veteran’s Day, I join many others in asking that we all take a moment to be grateful for the sacrifices of those who have served or are serving in the armed forces of the United States.

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A Nod to the Season: Giving Thanks

Writing

I needed to write something for my RWA chapter newsletter, so I came up with this.

Giving Thanks: A Short List of Writing Tools Worthy of Our Gratitude

1. The thesaurus – Any of them, all of them. I’m particularly grateful for the online one, http://thesaurus.com/. I use it all the time, when my vocabulary exceeds my memory, and I know that I know exactly the right word but I just can’t think of it!

2. Search Engine Image searches – Google, Yahoo … whatever floats your boat. These are useful for finding pictures of items like vintage Indian motorcycles and Sears Kit Homes – making it much easier to describe them. Hey! I just found another one called PicSearch. It claims to have over a billion pictures. That means I can find lots more photos of Richard Armitage! It’s research, honest! I need them for my hero file. Maybe you should have a look. You might need some inspiration too. http://tinyurl.com/2uw5n6j.

3. Grammar websites – Because I, for the life of me, can never remember when I’m supposed to use “which” and when I’m supposed to use “that.” So, sites like Grammar Girl are invaluable.  (http://grammar.quickanddirtytips.com/) Seriously, I want to be Grammar Girl’s BFF. My readers would be so grateful.

4. Okay, this one has little to do with writing, except for articles like these. It’s http://tinyurl.com. It takes a great big url like: http://www.picsearch.com/index.cgi?start=41&size=1p&width=1024&q=richard%20armitage%20actor and turns it intohttp://tinyurl.com/2uw5n6j which means it fits much better into a newsletter article. How cool is that?

5. The Bookshelf Muse – I don’t know who these writers are, but I love them. Not enough to leave my husband – that would take Richard Armitage – but I love them. They are Fabulous, with a capital “F.” The blog’s subtitle is “Writing tools and musings about reading, writing and other randomness,” but what I like most are their specialized thesauri. They include emotions, settings, symbolism, and colors, textures and shapes. These are invaluable in helping a writer (like oh, say, me) show rather than tell. Take a look at “anger.” The authors list begins with the following, “clenching/unclenching fists; nails biting into one’s palms; pounding fists against thighs, table, wall; slamming doors, cupboards, drawers; punching, kicking, throwing things,” and continues from there. Now, tell me you can’t use a resource like this one. I dare you! All right, tell me and, this time, don’t lie. But, first check it out at: http://thebookshelfmuse.blogspot.com/.

So, go on. What are you waiting for? I’m hoping at least one of these tools was new to you. If not, at least you got to check out Richard. And, that’s something to be thankful for!

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Not a Poster Child

Writing

I’m not a poster child. I don’t post often enough here to qualify for the title, though my intentions are always good. Sometimes life gets in the way.

And when it”s a choice between posting or writing my book, the book wins, hands down. Because, along with good intentions, I do have priorities. Besides, I like to at least make the attempt to be clever and entertaining, even if I’m not always successful. Lately life hasn’t been that entertaining.

I considered writing about how high school homecoming dresses have become alarmingly minuscule, but was afraid I’d wander into the land of snark and never return. So, I skipped it.

But, if you have a girl child about the age of twelve, you might want to start shopping now. Unless you want her to look like a hooker. Whoops. Snark. (I warned you).

A week or so ago, I coined what I thought was a witty phrase, and thought about sharing it and others, but then decided to save them for the book. I’m selfish like that.

However, just to be fair, I’ll share that particular phrase. It was,  “Seduction as the better part of valor.” You understand now why I didn’t pursue the idea. At least in a book, I’ll hopefully have an editor to tell me when I’m not funny.

Oh, and my hero and heroine are staying in a really cool place in the middle of Pennsylvania. Do you remember when one could find accommodations  in a “Motor Court”? Probably not, huh? Let me explain.  Motor courts were like motels, except instead of rooms, you stayed in little cabins. Well, they were so small, they should be called cabin-ettes really, but that might sound confusing.

Anyway, for some reason, when I was writing this part, I remembered this kind of lodging and wondered if there were any still around. Turns out there are a few and I found one that was similar to the one I pictured in my head. Here’s a link to it, the Lincoln Motor Court, also in Pennsylvania.  http://www.bedfordcounty.net/lincoln/ Check it out, especially if you’re ever in Manns Choice, Pennsylvania. Someday, maybe I’ll get there too.

Oh, and one last thing, although if you’re male, you should probably skip this one.  For those who like Regency romances, and enjoy audio books, get your hands on the three Georgette Heyer ones read by Richard Armitage. Now, I won’t go into my middle-aged crush on Richard here except to say that, yes, I know I’m way too old for him and he’d never be interested in me. That’s the point of having a crush!

But, he does a fabulous job reading Heyer although, sadly, Naxos saw fit to make the recordings abridged.  And, if you want to understand my vastly inappropriate crush, check out this link to Richard’s IMDB page. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0035514/ .

That’s it. Cheers. Next time, I’ll try to do better. And thanks to Clare, my darling sister-in-law for the key chain so I can always have Richard with me. Sigh.

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At Home with Bill

Raving About Reading: An Unabashedly Enthusiastic Review of Bill Bryson’s New Book

A disclaimer: I love Bill Bryson. Oh, not in a carnal way — I doubt either of our spouses would stand for that — it’s his writing that I’m smitten with.  So I make no promises that this review will be impartial in any way. Also, I was fortunate enough to receive an advanced reading copy — thank you Doubleday — so the final publication may differ from the one I have reviewed.

At Home: A Short History of Private Life by Bill Bryson

I’m not the kind of person who looks at a fork and wonders why they have five tines. And it would never occur to me to think about why lawns are so much more common in the US than in the UK.  As long as my flatware is effective at shoveling, er, raising food to my mouth, and I don’t have to mow said lawn, I’m not too concerned.

Bill Bryson is. Or perhaps “concerned” isn’t quite the right word. It’s more that he has an abiding curiosity about why things are the way they are, and this interest shines through in many of his books. Take, for example, A Walk in the Woods, Bryson’s travelogue about hiking the Appalachian Trail. As he walks the path, Bryson serves up a hefty dose of information about the Trail and its plants and animals,  presented in the most interesting way imaginable.  In fact, whenever I recommend this book to someone at my library, it’s always with a warning.  Don’t read it in a public place unless you’re prepared to brazen out the odd looks that will come your way when you start giggling to yourself.

Bill Bryson  has the mind of a researcher, which, luckily for us,  is paired with a keen eye for the ludicrous. Perhaps due to his newspaper background, he is also a wordsmith, seemingly able to write about anything in a clear, concise manner.

At Home is a tour of Bryson’s own, home, a 19th century rectory in Norfolk, England. Each room serves as a jumping-off point to explain some facet of private life. Packed with details about everything from clothing to food to toilets, this book contains of wealth of information and could be a goldmine for writers of historical fiction.

In the dressing room, for instance, we read the story of a prince who employed four valets to powder his wig, each in a different color.  Unwilling to be upstaged, another nobleman promptly hired five men to look after his hair, and yet another hired six.

The scullery and larder serve as an opportunity to enlighten us about the lives of servants. Here we learn about a working day that typically ran from 6:30 am to 10:00 pm, unless, of course, there was an evening social event. When we move to the drawing room, Bryson shares his take on the history of architecture. And so we continue the tour throughout the eighteen rooms that make up the Bryson domicile,  discovering in each, the history of a different aspect of private life.

Because the rectory is in England, where the author has lived for most of his adult life, the book focuses primarily on English home life. But much of recent English history is intertwined with “the colonies,” and there’s a fair bit of American lore included.

While not as laugh out loud funny as his travel books, Bryson has once again managed to put a human face on a part of history that many of us know little about. If you are a lover of history, or a historical fiction writer, I’d definitely recommend taking a look.

At Home doesn’t have an index, something the librarian in me cries out for. But as a reader, I recognize that the book wasn’t probably intended as a resource for historical research. That said, there is a lengthy bibliography which should be useful.

http://www.borders.com/online/store/TitleDetail?sku=0767919386 is the link to the Borders record of the book which comes out in early October 2010.

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A Well-written Book Is Like a Roller Coaster

Raving About Reading and Writing

Yesterday, we went to Cedar Point.

For those who are unfamiliar with  amusement parks, this one’s nicknamed  the “Roller Coaster Capital of the World.”

If you’re looking for a thrill, it’s is the place to be, with seventeen rides listed as coasters on the official Cedar Point website (http://www.cedarpoint.com/public/park/rides/coasters/index.cfm). True, two are geared toward children, but I’ve ridden that “Woodstock Express,” and it was still an adventure, albeit a mini one.

So, what does this have to do with writing? Well, in the course of our day at the park,  I noticed that all the roller coasters seem to have one thing in common. The first hill is  always a doozie. By bringing the cars up to speed, it makes it possible to whip riders through the rest of the unexpected — occasionally inverted — turns and loops  before returning them safely home.

Think about it. When you’re clack, clack, clacking up that initial incline, your heart is in your throat because you know something big is about to happen. Then, boom! You’re at the top, looking down, and there’s barely time to scream as you fly down into the bends and twists that you’ve paid good money to enjoy.

Now, consider a good book. Its first scene will  grab you, building tension just like that hill, and then dropping you  into the middle of the story. Before you have a chance to protest, you’re hooked.  The plot twists and turns. Sometimes you see what’s ahead and sometimes you don’t.  That mixture of the “I knew that was coming” and the “Gosh, I never expected that!” keeps you reading until the conflict is resolved.

And, like a good coaster, when you shut that book, you want to go back and do it again.

Unless, of course, you want to puke.

Even I can’t find a constructive way to fit that  effect into the writing analogy. And I worked at Cedar Point one summer which gives me a working knowledge of just how often it happens.  Urrgggh!

I’d love to hear about your amusement park memories, both favorable and not, so leave a comment if you’d like.

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Jane Austen’s Fight Club

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r2PM0om2El8&feature=related

Found this on Elizabeth Bluemle’s Publishers Weekly blog. It’s too funny not to share. Check it out!

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