Month End Goal Check

Time to check my goals progress for 2015. I won’t bore you with my whole goals list, just the high and low points.

Progress:

  • I went on the first of two planned writing retreats.
  • I’m working on revisions for my February release.
  • I joined Weight Watchers
  • I started my promo campaign for my February release.
  • I launched my Twitter campaign, #TastingNotesTuesday.
  • I went on a date with my husband.

Need to work on:

  • Yoga once a week (my DVD player crapped out on me, but I did get in some cardio.)
  • 30 minutes “in the book” five days a week.

How are your 2015 goals/resolutions coming along?

 

The Book Report

I have always known I am a writer. Always.  Here’s an example:

In third grade, I was supposed to write a book report. I hadn’t read any books worth doing a report on, so I wrote a book report on a book I would have like to have read. I made it up. All of it. All I remember about it was there was something about fairies and ponies in it. The teacher never checked on the title, the author, or anything else. I got an A+ on the paper, too.

How cool is that?

But the night before the last day of school, my conscience starting tweaking me. Badly. After my dad left for work that morning, I crawled in bed with my mom to tell her the awful, dishonest thing I had done. She told me I needed to tell the teacher. On the last day of school. Oh boy.

Except when I got up for school a little while later, I noticed my stomach was covered in red spots. Sure enough, I had the “three-day measles.” I couldn’t go to school and confess my transgression.

I have come to terms with what I did. You know why? I write fiction.

WIP Wednesday: Alee Drake

Welcome to a new season of Work In Progress Wednesday. Today’s guest is my good friend Alee Drake. Welcome ALee!  January is National Hobby Month—what’s your hobby? How did you start?

AD: My hobby is writing and reading. I started to love reading in first grade when my teacher read Charlotte’s Web to the class…I was the only one who cried when Charlotte died. I wanted to be able to tell a story that would make readers either laugh or cry.

MJ: January is also National Soup Month—what’s your favorite soup? Do you make it yourself?

AD: My favorite soup is split pea with ham but my mother always called it ham soup, because I didn’t like peas when I was young. Yes, I make my own after a ham dinner, and a dinner of scalloped potatoes and ham….

MJ: If you didn’t write, what would be your creative outlet?

AD: Gardening is my spring/summer outlet. I would probably make primitive things, or jewelry, or be a photographer… (too many things to do, so little time).

MJ: Other than writing, what would be your dream job? Why?

AD: My dream job would be teaching children to become creative writers…OH, I did that already (I am a retired elementary library teacher). I guess it would be to have a cozy writer’s retreat/ bed and breakfast. (I currently host writers retreats at my home.) I am living my dream.

MJ: Describe your ideal/dream writing space.

AD: My office is my dream writing space. I have windows overlooking acres of fields and trees, with birds and deer . I write at an antique half-circle desk. 

MJ: What do you love most about your WIP hero?

AD: He is wealthy and handsome and is totally down-to-earth.  

MJ: What do you least like about your WIP heroine?

AD: She doesn’t have confidence in herself. 

MJ: What genre is your current WIP?

AD: Sweet romance.

MJ: How did you come up with your hero and heroine’s names?

AD: I like names that are unusual and reflect the character’s personality.  My Hero is Zayne and the heroine is Keely. My other characters are named after friends and family. 

MJ: How did you choose the setting for your current WIP?

AD: So far my books take place in upstate NY.  I have one book that starts out in a freezing wintery upstate NY setting and ends in Hawaii.

MJ: Are you willing to share the first five to ten sentences of your current work in progress?

AD: Yes. This is from His Birthday Suit.

      “Mother, I don’t dress up.  I wear jeans. You know that.  Now drop it.” Zayn Roberts stood beside the wet bar in his parents newly renovated parlor and tipped his head back to swallow the last dregs of Jack Daniels. He was tempted to pour himself another glass but refrained knowing it would be harder to stop after two and he had to drive home. Soon. 
            “Dear, don’t be so obstinate. You know that you have to be presentable at the party.”
            “Seriously, Mother. I know everyone who will attend, and they know I only wear jeans.”
            “Yes. And won’t it be lovely to surprise them by wearing a tailored suit.”
            He crossed the room and gently touched his mother’s shoulder.“Mother, what have you got up your lovely silk sleeve? I sense something deviant…something that definitely will not please me.”
MJ: I understand you had a book released earlier this month.
AD: Yes, Men In Ts by Alee Drake is available from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and The Wild Rose Press website.
MJ: And how can readers stay current with you?
AD: My blog, my Facebook page, and my Amazon author page.
MJ: Thanks again for joining me today!

Reading By The Season: January

Every January, I re-read The Cabin, by Carla Neggers.

This book is the second in a series involving Boston, Texas Rangers, and murder. I’m particularly fond of The Cabin because a good portions takes place the Adirondack Mountains of New York State. In the winter. In addition to featuring a couple of (sexy) Texas Rangers, there’s a Texas Ranger wannabe, a wife who’s not sure she still wants to be married to the man she loves, and a solid suspense plot.

Have I mentioned the brutal winter of northern New York is also a character? It’s one of the most dangerous characters in the book. And Neggers is very, very good at developing characters.

Available from Amazon

Writing Wednesday: The Power of POV

(note: this blog is repurposed from one posted June 2, 2013, called “Walk a Mile In My Shoes”.)

Image credit: andrejad / 123RF Stock Photo

As a writer, I’ve learned if a scene isn’t working, try changing the point of view (POV) in which it is written. That means to write the action from another character’s perspective; see what a character sees, hear what he hears, smell what she smells, do what the character would do; use the character’s motivations and background to filter what is happening on the page. It’s amazing how much situations can change.

I watched exactly one episode of the 1980’s TV show thirtysomething, but that episode has stayed with me. A single incident was shown over and over, but each time from a different character’s perspective. The various interpretations were wildly diverse. And eye-opening.

Law enforcement knows the same event may not be reported in the same way by eyewitnesses, which is why they prefer one-on-one interviews.

Seeing the Broadway hit Wicked reinforced my belief that POV is one of the most powerful tools in a writer’s toolkit. L. Frank Baum’s Wicked Witch of the West presented as a sympathetic character while Dorothy becomes the villain? Oh yeah. Completely.

I recently read Charlaine Harris’s Sookie Stackhouse series. Then my husband and I started binge-watching True Blood (the TV series based on the books). The first thing I noticed was that while the books are all written from Sookie’s POV, the TV program used multiple points of view in order to include multiple story threads. It was interesting to see how an incident in the books was changed for TV and which character’s POV was chosen for that particular story arc.

The next time a scene doesn’t hang true for you, try reimagining it from another point of view. You might just find the correct angle from which to tell your story.