October 31, 2012

Stop Seven: Lost in a Storm

The blog tour for The Siege of Kwennjurat was planned months ago, to begin the day after the book was released, and to run for a week, ending on Hallowe'en. The posts were written weeks ago. The hosts volunteered last week.

Today my host was supposed to be JD Savage. He lives in New York. He hasn't posted anything online, as far as I can tell, for three days. I am sincerely hoping that he is just holed up somewhere with his family, safe, snug, and dry. I am blaming his absence in hosting my blog tour on Hurricane Sandy.

It's amazing to me how interconnected the world now is, that a person from Arizona can be personally affected even in a small degree by a storm more than two thousand miles away. I'm very lucky, though. The only thing I lost is having someone else make a blog post on my behalf, which is nothing really important in the larger scheme of things.

As I post the content here on my blog, my thoughts and prayers are with the people in the eastern half of the North American continent, some of whom are still experiencing Sandy, and others who are now digging out, and those who loved the very few who will never come home.

Cover Art

My friend Paul Carroll recently posted on my blog about the technical aspects to creating cover art for novels. He did a very good job, so I'm not going to cover that part of creating cover art.

I read an article which shared the different aspects of what writers and marketers feel cover art should be. The writer wants the cover art to include specific details from the novel. They want to tell the story of the entire novel in one single photograph. To the writer, it’s extremely important that the details be exact. If the heroine has red hair and green eyes, the cover model had better match! As I read through this part of the article, I found my head nodding. "Exactly! This is what covers are all about", I thought.

Then I got into the second half of the article, explaining what marketers feel about cover art. Apparently, the purpose of cover art is not to tell the story. In fact, if the ratio is "a picture is worth a thousand words", then it would take a hundred pictures to express the content of most fantasy novels.

The cover of a book has four purposes: to identify the author, to give the title, to give the genre, and to get the browser in the bookstore to pick the book up and turn it over to read the description on the back. In online bookstores, clicking the link to go to the books page is the equivalent of picking it up and turning it over to read the back.

Identifying the author and giving the title are obvious. There have to be words on the cover with the author's name and the book's title.

Identifying the genre of the book is not something readers think about. However, both the font chosen for the author name and title, as well as the style of picture, identify the genre on a subconscious level. For example, if a book cover has an old-west wanted poster font, and a picture of a man with his horse, the reader automatically identifies the book as a Western and is either interested or dismissive depending on their opinion of Westerns.

Books with starfield backgrounds and planets floating in them are automatically categorized as science fiction, while anything with a dragon, or a large sword is usually a fantasy. A man and woman either caressing or gazing into one another's eyes is obviously a romance, and in many cases the steaminess level of the romance can be determined by how much clothing the woman is or is not wearing on the cover.

Finally, the hardest element to include is creating in the reader the desire to pick the book up and turn it over. I’ve found the easiest way to do this is by making the cover pose a question to the reader.

The front cover of my novel Deadly Gamble shows a stretch of asphalt with a chalk outline of a body. Obviously, someone is dead. The cover poses the question, "Who died and what were they gambling on?"

On the front cover of Fabric of the World is a piece of fabric. The center of the fabric has an image of the world on it. The edges however, are frayed, and some of the strings trail off in different directions. The question here is, "How is the world coming apart, and what can be done to fix it?"

On my newest book, The Siege of Kwennjurat, the cover photo is a castle courtyard, with some kind of mist or dust outside the walls. Is it morning fog coming off the river? Is it dust raised by the besieging army? You'll have to read the book to find out!

 

 

 

October 30, 2012

Stop Six: Dublin, Ireland

Stop six on my international blog tour is at Paul Carroll's place in Dublin, Ireland. Drop him a comment to let him know you've come visiting.


http://paulcarrollwriter.blogspot.com/2012/10/guest-post-by-m-jenner-its-all-in.html

The First Tuesday After the first Monday

Next week is Election Day in the United States. (I know I have international readers, but the majority of you live in the US.) Ever wonder why Election Day is the "first Tuesday after the first Monday in November"? Payday for some people used to be the first and fifteenth of the month. For others it was the last day of the month, every Friday, or every other Friday.

If Election Day is on a Tuesday, it can't be on any Friday. If it's the first Tuesday, that keeps it from being on the last day of the month. However, every so often, November 1st falls on Tuesday. The law was therefore written the "first Tuesday after the first Monday" specifically to keep it from falling on payday, because there were unscrupulous business owners who would withhold their employees' pay if they did not vote for the owner's candidate.

I don't often wax political in public, but I feel there's something which needs to be said. I won't tell you who I plan to vote for, and I won't tell you who to vote for, but I encourage you to vote based on the issues, rather than the popularity of a candidate or because his opponents have said unflattering things about him. Look at each candidate's political record, and vote for the individual you believe will best represent your values.

I believe that every election is a critical crossroad in the course of any political entity. If you don't vote for what you believe in, then those who hold viewpoints which oppose yours will change the course of your city, state, and nation in a direction you don't want it to go.

~Marie


October 29, 2012

Stop Five: An Unexpected Day at Home


Something must have gone wrong today. I have no idea what or why or how. Although I do know who, I have no way to get hold of the lady who had agreed to be my blog tour host other than the internet; and she doesn't seem to be able to get online today.
 
I was supposed to have been in Indiana today, but since it seems that this is not going to happen, I'll run with plan B. Yes, I have a plan B. I (almost) always have a plan B. In this case, plan B is that I will host myself for this installment of my blog tour. Mostly because I really want this post to be seen.
 
 

How Ebooks Have Changed Writing

 
I've had a lot of people ask me what I think about this recent craze over ebooks. They want to know how ebooks have changed the face of writing. I tell them writing has not changed. Publishing has changed a lot, and so has technology, but the art of crafting a story and presenting it in a permanent form has not changed in several hundred years.

No matter what the genre is, or the length of the story, all fiction writing has a few things in common. There must be a hero. The hero must have a goal. There must be obstacles between the hero and the goal. Some people may be surprised I don’t specify there must be a villain. There are many types of conflict and obstacles, not all of which absolutely require a villain; however, most heroes do have a flesh and blood nemesis throwing obstacles in their path.

Now, a little about publishing.

Some 700 years ago, Johannes Gutenberg put together several new technologies to create a new type of type of printing press. Before this time, all books were either written by hand or printed after a piece of wood had been carved for each page.

Somewhere around 150 years ago, Samuel Clemens is credited with being the first author to turn a manuscript in to his editor which had been written on a typewriter. Before that, all manuscripts were written out by hand. In fact, the very word manuscript means hand-written.

Some five years ago, ebooks became very popular with the invention of the Kindle. Ebooks had been around before that, but people like to carry their books around with them, and not have to sit at their desk to read them. The Kindle made the carrying-around part easy. Suddenly readers had the ability to go on vacation and take all of their favorite books with them. They would never run out of things to read.

However, because mainstream publishers were slow to make their books available in electronic format, readers became frustrated. At the same time, writers who for one reason or another were unable or unwilling to publish via mainstream companies were frustrated at the inability to get their books in front of willing readers. Self-publishing a book at that time cost a small fortune. By making ebook publishing affordable and available to all, readers and authors both found a cure for their frustration. Authors could afford to self-publish. Readers had more novels to choose from. Self-published ebooks made everyone happy except for the main-stream publishing companies who didn’t dare try the new technology.

Various inventions have changed the face of publishing over the years. The art and science of novel-writing has changed very little, however. An author still needs a hero, his goal, and a bunch of obstacles standing between the two. A good story is a good story, no matter how it’s produced, and it will continue to delight readers for many years to come. The method of its delivery to a reader’s eager eyes and hands is largely irrelevant to the writing process.

Instead of stories being written and revised and copied out by hand on voluminous amounts of paper, an ebook can be produced entirely with a computer and use no paper at all, yet still be totally engrossing to the reader. Thanks to my e-reader, I have just discovered a “new” favorite author...H. G. Wells.

Over the thirteen years I worked on Tanella’s Flight, I used a lot of paper. Many of the chapters were written in longhand, then typed into the computer. The manuscript was printed out, double spaced, at nearly a ream of paper per copy, for each revision. Ten copies were printed and sent to beta-readers. By contrast, The Siege of Kwennjurat was never on paper at all until the proof copy was printed. No paper! If you buy an e-copy, then between us we have used no trees in the production of an excellent novel. If you want a print copy, then the tree-consumption is still kept at a minimum, because only copies that are ordered get printed. There is no pile of paper books sitting in a warehouse someplace gathering dust.

The publishing process of both books was different, but the writing followed roughly the same path. I have a hero...and a goal...and a whole pile of obstacles standing in his path.

October 28, 2012

Stop Four: Bayside, New York

I'm in Bayside, New York today, talking about the ins and outs of research as my international blog tour continues in support of my newest novel, The Siege of Kwennjurat. Drop by for a visit, and leave a comment or two to thank Leonard for hosting me.


http://czhorat.blogspot.com/2012/10/writing-equals-constant-research-guest.html

October 26, 2012

Stop Two: Phoenix, Arizona

 
Stop two of my international blog tour takes me to Phoenix, Arizona, the home of the IronQuill.

http://www.ironquill.net/coming-up-with-ideas/

October 25, 2012

The First Repeat Winner


Random.org picked Dani as the first repeat winner of the Great Book Giveaway. She will get the very first signed copy of The Siege of Kwennjurat in existence, considering that the book just came out today. Congratulations, Dani. If it's all right with you, I'll just slide it into the same envelope with your copy of Inherit My Heart.

I'd like to thank everyone for participating, and for helping spread the word about the book giveaway. It's been a lot of fun. I'm "leaving" today on an international blog tour for the next week. I'll be writing about the writing process, and my posts will be all over the Internet. I just now decided that I will give a prize to the most dedicated fan - Follow me on my tour and make relevant posts on the blogs where I'm guesting. At the end of the week, whoever has been on the most blogs with me will receive a free ebook copy of The Siege of Kwennjurat. In the event of a tie, I'll let random.org pick. As usual, you'll get one entry for commenting, and one for sharing; so there will be fourteen chances to enter during the week. However, the content has already been sent to the hosts, so there will not be any reminders about this contest...it will be strictly our secret. Looking forward to seeing some of you on my blog tour! I will be posting daily links here that will point you to where I'm guesting.

~Marie

First Stop, Arkansas!

Here's a link to the first stop on my international blog tour celebrating the release of The Siege of Kwennjurat!

brooke johnson's blog: fantasy world building - guest post by a.m. jenner...:

~Marie

October 24, 2012

Moms Place Giveaway

Scott Roche is giving away an ebook copy of The Moms Place on his blog this week.

Kwennjurat, Part II


My new book, The Siege of Kwennjurat, is officially published, and I feel like celebrating. Today, I’m giving away a signed copy of my new book. Here’s how to enter:

Making a comment on the blog gets you one entry. If you’re a blog follower, say so for a second entry. Tweeting and sharing to Facebook or Google+ are worth one entry each (post a link to where you shared in your comment). First thing tomorrow morning, I will put all the entries in a hat and draw a winner. I’ll announce the winner, then they can email me their real name and address, and their signed book will be on the way!

Some people have been waiting three and a half years since the publication of Tanella’s Flight to find out “the rest of the story”. In your comments today, tell me about the longest wait you had to endure. Thanks for playing. See you tomorrow with today’s winner, and happy reading!

Princess Holly Gets Crowned!



Random.org picked Holly as the winner of Tanella's Flight! Holly, email me with your address and how you'd like it inscribed, and I'll get it right out to you!

~Marie

October 23, 2012

Dani Inherits the Book!


Random.org chose Dani as the winner of Inherit My Heart! Congratulations! Drop me an email to let me know how to sign it and where to send it.

~Marie

Kwennjurat, Part I


My new book, The Siege of Kwennjurat, is scheduled for release tomorrow days from now, and I feel like celebrating. Tomorrow, I am giving away one signed book each day. Here’s how to enter:

Making a comment on the blog gets you one entry. If you’re a blog follower, say so for a second entry. Tweeting and sharing to Facebook or Google+ are worth one entry each (post a link to where you shared in your comment). First thing tomorrow morning, I will put all the entries in a hat and draw a winner. I’ll announce the winner, and then they can email me their real name and address, and their signed book will be on the way!

Today I’m giving away Tanella’s Flight. This fantasy is the first half of the Kwennjurat Chronicles. You’ll want to read this before the sequel, The Siege of Kwennjurat comes out tomorrow. The heroine of this book is a princess. In your comments today, tell me when in your life you most felt like royalty. See you tomorrow with a new giveaway and the announcement of today’s winner.

Wonky Ruminations

According to dictionary.com, ruminate has two basic meanings; chewing cud, and thinking something over. Officially, no one knows how the two are connected, but I have a personal suspicion that it’s because when a cow is laying there chewing her cud, she looks like she’s thinking over a very serious and complicated problem.

If something is wonky, it is shaky, unsteady, or crooked, and likely to develop a problem or break down at any moment.

Take some time today to ruminate over the wonky things in your life. See if you can fix them before they actually break!

~Marie

October 22, 2012

A Magical Win


Random.org picked DzrtBxr as the winner of Fabric of the World! Drop me an email with how you'd like it inscribed and your address and I'll get it right out to you.

~Marie

A Great Inheritance


My new book, The Siege of Kwennjurat, is scheduled for release three days from now, and I feel like celebrating. For the next three days, I am giving away one signed book each day. Here’s how to enter:

Making a comment on the blog gets you one entry. If you’re a blog follower, say so for a second entry. Tweeting and sharing to Facebook or Google+ are worth one entry each (post a link to where you shared in your comment). First thing tomorrow morning, I will put all the entries in a hat and draw a winner. I’ll announce the winner, and then they can email me their real name and address, and their signed book will be on the way!

Today I’m giving away the romantic suspense Inherit My Heart. In this book, strange things start happening in Katrina’s life shortly after a lawyer appears uninvited on her doorstep. In today’s comments, tell me your best (or worst) lawyer story. See you tomorrow with a new giveaway and the announcement of today’s winner.

October 21, 2012

Diamonds for Kaaren!


Random.org picked Kaaren as the winner of A Heart Full of Diamonds! Email me with your address and how you want it inscribed and I'll get it right out to you!

~Marie

The Fabric of Quibell's Life


My new book, The Siege of Kwennjurat, is scheduled for release four days from now, and I feel like celebrating. For the next four days, I am giving away one signed book each day. Here’s how to enter:

Making a comment on the blog gets you one entry. If you’re a blog follower, say so for a second entry. Tweeting and sharing to Facebook or Google+ are worth one entry each (post a link to where you shared in your comment). First thing tomorrow morning, I will put all the entries in a hat and draw a winner. I’ll announce the winner, and then they can email me their real name and address, and their signed book will be on the way!

Today I’m giving away the fantasy Fabric of the World. The hero, Quibell, can see the fabric and threads the world is made of, and manipulate them. To other people, it looks as though he is practicing magic. My most magical moment was the instant they laid my new daughter in my arms. In your comments today, share the most magical experience of your life. See you tomorrow with a new giveaway and the announcement of today’s winner.

October 20, 2012

A Down-to-Earth Winner



Congratulations to Lulahe, the newest winner in the ongoing Great Book Giveaway! Drop me an email with your address and how you want it inscribed and I'll package it right up for you.

~Marie

Not All That Glitters is Diamonds


My new book, The Siege of Kwennjurat, is scheduled for release five days from now, and I feel like celebrating. For the next five days, I am giving away one signed book each day. Here’s how to enter:

Making a comment on the blog gets you one entry. If you’re a blog follower, say so for a second entry. Tweeting and sharing to Facebook or Google+ are worth one entry each (post a link to where you shared in your comment). First thing tomorrow morning, I will put all the entries in a hat and draw a winner. I’ll announce the winner, and then they can email me their real name and address, and their signed book will be on the way!

Today I’m giving away the romantic suspense novel A Heart Full of Diamonds. In the book, Marilee runs away from her husband when she finds out he’s going to have her killed. In your comments, tell me about a time when you felt like running away. See you tomorrow with a new giveaway and the announcement of today’s winner.

October 19, 2012

Hosmers' Gamble Paid Off!


Random.org picked Hosmers as the winner of Deadly Gamble. Drop me an email telling me how you want it inscribed and where you want it sent, and I'll get it out to you as quick as I can.

~Marie

Where on Earth?


My new book, The Siege of Kwennjurat, is scheduled for release six days from now, and I feel like celebrating. For the next six days, I am giving away one signed book each day. Here’s how to enter:

Making a comment on the blog gets you one entry. If you’re a blog follower, say so for a second entry. Tweeting and sharing to Facebook or Google+ are worth one entry each (post a link to where you shared in your comment). First thing tomorrow morning, I will put all the entries in a hat and draw a winner. I’ll announce the winner, and then they can email me their real name and address, and their signed book will be on the way!


Today, I’m giving away my science fiction novel, Assignment to Earth. I’ve always been fascinated with anything to do with space, and at one time wanted to be an astronaut when I grew up. My earliest memory of space-stuff was when my mom woke me up at the age of four to watch the moon landing. In your comments, share your favorite space-related memory. See you tomorrow with a new giveaway and the announcement of today’s winner.

October 18, 2012

Bubbaloo Gets a Clue!


By virtue of being the only entrant yesterday, Bubbaloo Magoo's persistence finally paid off. Let me know how to inscribe the book and where to send it, and it will be on its way, bubs!

~Marie

A Life or Death Gamble!


My new book, The Siege of Kwennjurat, is scheduled for release seven days from now, and I feel like celebrating. For the next seven days, I am giving away one signed book each day. Here’s how to enter:

Making a comment on the blog gets you one entry. If you’re a blog follower, say so for a second entry. Tweeting and sharing to Facebook or Google+ are worth one entry each (post a link to where you shared in your comment). First thing tomorrow morning, I will put all the entries in a hat and draw a winner. I’ll announce the winner, and then they can email me their real name and address, and their signed book will be on the way!

If you've already won, you can still enter. I have nothing against repeat winners.
 

Today I’m giving away a copy of Deadly Gamble. Since the murder victim in this suspense novel was a gambler, tell me in your comments what was the biggest gamble you’ve ever made in your life? It doesn’t have to be a money wager. See you tomorrow with a new giveaway and the announcement of today’s winner.

October 17, 2012

Moms for Mama

Random.org picked tiggermama as the winner of The Moms Place. Drop me an email and let me know how to sign it and where to send it.

Also, for the record, if you've already won a book, you are still elegible to win another one, just be sure to enter each day. In other words, Goofy Girl and tiggermama can enter again tomorrow and have the same chance of winning as anyone else who enters tomorrow.

~Marie

Get a Clues!


My new book, The Siege of Kwennjurat, is scheduled for release eight days from now, and I feel like celebrating. For the next eight days, I am giving away one signed book each day. Here’s how to enter:

Making a comment on the blog gets you one entry. If you’re a blog follower, say so for a second entry. Tweeting and sharing to Facebook or Google+ are worth one entry each (post a link to where you shared in your comment). First thing tomorrow morning, I will put all the entries in a hat and draw a winner. I’ll announce the winner, and then they can email me their real name and address, and their signed book will be on the way!

Today I’m giving away Clues to Food, a cook book full of yummy tried-and-true recipes along with a little tom-foolery. One of my favorite recipes is for my great-great grandmother’s spice cake. It reads: “To your basic white cake recipe add 1/2 tsp. ground cloves, 1/2 tsp. allspice, 1/2 tsp. ground nutmeg, and 1 tsp. cinnamon.” Please include your favorite recipe in your comments. See you tomorrow with a new giveaway and the announcement of today’s winner.

October 16, 2012

And the Winner is...

Random.org picked Goofy Girl as the winner of the signed copy of the reading sampler. Email me with how you want it signed and where to send it, and it will be on the way!

~Marie

Giving Away Moms


My new book, The Siege of Kwennjurat, is scheduled for release nine days from now, and I feel like celebrating. For the next nine days, I am giving away one signed book each day. Here’s how to enter:

Making a comment on the blog gets you one entry. If you’re a blog follower, say so for a second entry. Tweeting and sharing to Facebook or Google+ are worth one entry each (post a link to where you shared in your comment). First thing tomorrow morning, I will put all the entries in a hat and draw a winner. I’ll announce the winner, and then they can email me their real name and address, and their signed book will be on the way!

Today I’m giving away The Moms Place, a sweet romance. What is the most romantic thing your husband / boyfriend has done for you? I thought it was extremely romantic when mine got up in the middle of the night to change a pretty toxic diaper. If you don’t have a romantic person in your life, feel free to make something up. See you tomorrow with a new giveaway and the announcement of today’s winner.

Devising a Device

Devise is a verb that means you are coming up with a plan to make or do something. It is the planning stage of any project. You can devise a plot for a book, or devise someone's murder...which would make a good plot for a book, come to think of it.

Device is a noun. It is a tool of some sort.

You might use many devices to carry out the plan you devised. Remember them this way: a tool is a concrete thing. You can pick it up and hold it in your hand. Device has a “c” for “concrete”. An idea is abstract. If you tried to pick it up, it would slip through your fingers. Devise has an “s” in it, for “slip through your fingers”.

~Marie

October 15, 2012

Today Only, Free Sampler!


My new book, The Siege of Kwennjurat, is scheduled for release ten days from now, and I feel like celebrating. For the next ten days, I am giving away one signed book each day. Here’s how to enter:

Making a comment on the blog gets you one entry. If you’re a blog follower, say so for a second entry. Tweeting and sharing to Facebook or Google+ are worth one entry each (post a link to where you shared in your comment). First thing tomorrow morning, I will put all the entries in a hat and draw a winner. I’ll announce the winner, and then they can email me their real name and address, and their signed book will be on the way!

Today’s book is my Reading Sampler, full of sample chapters from six different novels. That’s right, six for the price of one. That’s a pretty good bargain, so in your comments, tell me about the best bargain you ever made. See you tomorrow with a new giveaway and the announcement of today’s winner.

October 09, 2012

King vs. king

Nouns come in two basic varieties. Proper nouns are the names of people or places. All the rest of the nouns are called common nouns. Proper nouns are always capitalized. Common nouns are not capitalized.

The rule is easy enough with words that are always one way or the other. No one would forget to capitalize a person's name, such as John Smith, Sarah, or Jane. Likewise, no one would forget place names, such as Canada, Kentucky, or Topeka, Kansas.

It's also easy to know not to capitalize common nouns like dog, train, or camel.

The complications arise when there is a word that is sometimes capitalized and sometimes not, like river, king, or princess. Here's how to remember when a sometimes word gets the royal treatment. It all depends on usage.

If you are referring to that river over there, or any river, a river is a pretty common thing. It's a common noun and it gets no capital. If you are talking about a particular river, and the word river is part of the name of the river, then you use the capital letter. For example, you would write the river flowed past the campground, when it could be any river and any campground. In referencing a specific river, you would write In places, the Mississippi River is more than a mile wide. In this context, the word river is part of the name of the Mississippi River, and it gets its proper capital letter, because it is a proper noun.

The same rule-of-thumb applies to royalty and other titled personages. The princess crept quietly through the woods. However, Princess Tanella stopped for lunch. Likewise, a king can sit on his throne, but only King Fergasse can pass judgment on the people of Jurat.

~Marie

October 04, 2012

Exciting New Video!


More exciting news related to the October 24 release of The Siege of Kwennjurat. I wanted to share the video trailer with you, so you can see a little more what the book is about. Remember, The Siege of Kwennjurat is the sequel to Tanella's Flight. If you haven't read Tanella's Flight yet, there's still time to get it so that you’ll be caught up with the story when it comes out.

Marie



October 03, 2012

Composite Characters


Today I'm pleased to introduce Gabriel Fitzpatrick, author of the digital Romance, Rmnce, who has dropped by to teach a little about creating composite characters.
 

They say that creating characters from real people lies at the vertex of laziness and subliteracy. And when I say “they,” I mean the Bitchy Goblins That Live in my Head. Yet at the same time, a composite of a dozen people becomes more than the sum of its parts, or else less than the sum of its parts. In either case, there is art in it, beauty of an open and apparent kind. More over, in an attempt to capture the mind of a generation, it pays to take a few pieces from the individual, as well as from the collective.

Britney Morgan, the female lead of Rmnce, is one of those characters. She combines a sequence of men and women whose mannerisms were unique enough to remain steadfastly in my mind, some of them for years past our parting, whose tendencies and paradigms were both a product and a mockery of those people. The irony in this is that the character came out decidedly unlikeable. She demonstrates the point of the work as well as I could ever hope for, serving her purpose flawlessly and without alteration.

Yet, as I touched on in hated characters, she exists in my mind, a personality which I could almost put in place of my own were I to choose, and perhaps part of the reason she eats at me like a Herculean poison is that she exists as an unnatural aberration, a creature of a certain sort of beauty which nonetheless simply ought not be.

Beauty in all things. So chew on that, Bitch-Goblins.

Gabriel’s new book, Rmnce, hits digital shelves October 1st! Find it on Amazon, B&N, and Smashwords.

Rmnce series is a love story told in 4 parts. It follows a couple from the first drunkenly passionate days of their college romance all the way through a life together, often tumultuous, always overwhelming, and overridingly disquieting as only true love can be.

Rmnce is not, however, your traditional love story. Or perhaps more accurately, it does not appear to be your traditional love story. It is written entirely through the communications of the couple. Text messages, emails, and even a few old-fashioned letters make up the entirety of a story, what one early reader termed "A story not so much written as formed organically in the negative space."

It is, in short, a commentary on love in the digital age, a tribute to the great love affairs of the digital generation, romance not lost in the sea of text-speak and instant gratification, but merely obscured from the prying eyes of those too far removed from its cultural roots.

 

October 02, 2012

The Bare Naked Bear

I know I spend a lot of time here defining pairs of homonyms, but there are so many of them that get abused and confused, and I feel I need to defend them. Most of the sets I write about are prompted by seeing them misused, generally in people's message board posts or on one or another of the websites I frequent.

Today the homonyms are bear and bare.

Bear, as a noun, is a large furry animal which may or may not be interested in ripping you to shreds on sight. That was one big, ugly bear! As a verb, bear means to hold up or support something, to bear a burden, or carry an object, to bear the Olympic torch, or to bring forth young or fruit to bear a child, or a tree which bears fruit.

Bare as an adjective means naked (bare legs), without the usual coverings (bare walls), or unadorned (the bare truth). If you look at all of these meanings, they can all be replaced with the word naked. The girl's naked legs, the naked walls, the naked truth. They are all without anything extra added.

Remember the difference this way: if you can substitute the word naked, use bare. Both of these words  have an e at or near the end. On the other hand, you would never say an ugly naked, and you would never consider carrying the Olympic torch naked. If you wouldn't do it naked, get the e as far from the end as possible...spell it bear.

~Marie

October 01, 2012

Resolution Update

My goals for this year began as:
  • Graduate from college. (Accomplished)
  • Write a new manuscript, something I haven't had time to do since I started college. (Accomplished)
  • Take a vacation someplace out of Arizona. (Accomplished)
  • Hug my daughter every day. (In Progress)
  • Learn how to make book trailers and post them to YouTube. (Accomplished!)
As I continue through the year, my evolving list of goals reads:
  • Hug my daughter every day.
  • Support my daughter as she takes her turn at college. (Accomplished)
  • Finish editing The Siege of Kwennjurat and get it published.
  • Reformat all ebooks so they look better. (Accomplished)
The hugs continue at an accelerated rate, which is good for both of us.

My daughter has decided that, despite the support, an academic education is not what is right for her, and has left school. We are all happy for her mature decision. While college can be quite useful, it is not for everyone. We're happy that she has realized this, and chosen not to waste any more money, time, and extreme frustration trying to live up to cultural expectations. She is getting a lot of love and support now as she forges her own path in life.

The Siege of Kwennjurat is completely finished, and will be released on October 24th. There's going to be a lot of blog activity this month, with book giveaways and other pre- and post-release activity. I'm so happy to finally have finished this exciting two-volume tale after some sixteen years of combined work on the two books.

Last month I reported success with creating my first-ever video trailer, for Tanella's Flight:


This month, I have doubled my trailers, by adding a new one for The Siege of Kwennjurat. Although they are companion books, the feel of the two trailers is really very different. I think they each fit their book, though.



I finally finished the pair of socks last night. Due to my increasing arthritis in my hands, this will very likely be the last hand-knitting I will ever do. I also finished the quilt. I laid it on the couch to take the picture of it as promised.



I only finished a dozen books this month, but my page total is 5756. They were thicker books than last month.

~Marie