Celebrating – November 27, 2015


This is the Celebrating the Small Things blog hop, run by Lexa Cain and her two wonderful co-hosts L.G. Keltner @ Writing Off The Edge and Tonja Drecker @ Kidbits.



Thanksgiving was yesterday.  I spent it with my mother, enjoyed a nice meal at the ‘clubhouse’ (it’s at a senior living condo community) and last night watched a whole lot of cooking shows including ‘Chopped’.

(‘Chopped’ involves giving people a basketful of impossible ingredients – stale cheese biscuits, raspberry jam, wild boar meat, homemade pickles and leftover tomato soup – and telling them to make an entree or an appetizer or whatever in 30 minutes)

Around 10PM I put together ham and cheese sandwiches and we watched TV.  It was a very enjoyable evening.

So I’m celebrating:

A day where we actually sit down and look at what we have to be thankful for.
Television (I don’t watch it at home, but it’s fun with Mom)
Getting some editing done on my WIP, which is coming out in April, God willing.
A beautiful moon last night
Panettone in the toaster this morning.
Thrift-shopping later today (lots of fun, actually!)

And…What are you celebrating?  

A Bouquet (Celebrations Blog Hop, November 19, 2015)


This is the Celebrating the Small Things blog hop, run by Lexa Cain and her two wonderful co-hosts L.G. Keltner @ Writing Off The Edge and Tonja Drecker @ Kidbits.



Today I am celebrating two things.

First, if anyone has been following this, my mother is home, considerably improved, and talking about moving closer to her family.  She’s one of those elders who made the cross-over from being a respected parent to a good friend.


Several grownups that I knew as a child did that.  Friends’ parents who became friends in themselves, as valued as their children, my friends.  Sometimes more so.  I remember once being asked to speak at the funeral of one.   Delightful man, full of wisdom and goodness and humor, who lived to a lovely, ripe age.  I had never delivered a eulogy before.  


And a bouquet:

…this week, checking my website, which is getting an overhaul, I happened to stumble across this comment from a reader, aged 80, who had read my Egyptian series  The Memphis Cycle:

I enjoyed reading your books. They make historical names come alive. I had been to Egypt and seen the Pyramids. I was even fortunate to see the mummy of the boy king &and all the artifacts. It made me wonder how come such a well developed and great civilization came to an unknown end. How come they disappeared from the face of earth? I was always curious to know about them.Your books made me feel that they had a very similar life to ours. Thanks for writing these books.I do hope you will continue with Memphis Cycle. with regards (name)

What a lovely thing to read!  I am smiling as I write this.  …And that is why I write.  

I hope you all have wonderful weeks!


And…What are you celebrating?  

Veterans Day, 2015



        Happy Veterans Day to all who served, giving their time, and often their health and their lives, in the service of their countries. 

        Veterans Day always makes me remember something that happened when I was a Docent at the Civil War Museum in Philadelphia.  It was an interesting place, originally started by an association of retired Union Army officers, who donated their collections of memorabilia, much of it legendary. As they died off, the house in which they met was established as the museum. 

        People often came to look up relatives or ancestors (I found two of mine, and it was like meeting old friends) and research for theses or novels (as did I).   

        I enjoyed the time, and the collections themselves had interesting stories, some of them sad, some of them very amusing.

        I remember one afternoon, though, when I paused to speak with another docent.  He was laughing at something that had just happened. 

        “Oh, someone came in and wanted to look up his great-grandfather or someone.  Said he’d served in the Union Navy!  He wanted to know about the fellow, find the name of his ship.” 

        “Did you find him?” I asked, remembering how hard it had been to find Josef Myers of Ohio, my great-great grandfather. 

        “I certainly did.”  The other was laughing.  “Yeah, I found him!  Hah!  He spent the entire war assigned to a ship that stayed in Philadelphia.” 

        I frowned, but said nothing more.  I did mention it to my father, who had served as a naval officer in World War II, Korea and Vietnam.  Dad, bless him, summarized things in his usual pithy fashion. 

        “He thought that was laughable?” Dad said.  “I bet he never served.  Listen: that man went where he was sent and did what he had to do.  He had no say in whether they were fighting other ships or enforcing the blockade.  For all he knew he might have been sent into battle at any moment.  He was a veteran, with no reason to hang his head and feel foolish.  I hope that fellow was proud of his grandfather, no matter what that idiot said!”

Ah, Dad!  I still miss you.  Happy Veterans Day to all who served.

Insecure Writers’ Support Group November 4, 2015


Today is the first Wednesday of the month, which means it is IWSG day. The once-a-month blog hop started by Alec Cavanaugh . IWSG = Insecure Writers’ Support Group (click the words to visit)


Today’s cohosts are: Stephen Tremp,Karen Walker, Denise Covey, and Tyrean Martinson.  

They will be visiting everyone and his brother and adding useful comments (I can attest to this) and are, in addition, interesting and useful contributors in their own rights.  Go ahead and visit them.  While you’re at it, stop by the web page for the IWSG: http://www.insecurewriterssupportgroup.com/

**   **   **   **   **   **   **   


Like everyone who writes, I have spent time trying to stem the spate of fabulous (to me, at least) words that came tumbling from my fingertips (or my ball point pen, depending on where I was).  Words that said just what I wanted to, that surprised me, that were a delicious surprise and so very fitting to what I was hoping to produce.  Better, in fact.

Never mind the fact that everyone else was reacting to my (read aloud) words in a fashion that made me realize that they had ears stuffed with earwax and could not hear my wonderful words.  I  knew they were good.


And, actually, when I looked the words over and worked on them and straightened them out, they actually were pretty decent, said what I wanted to say in a way that I thought was good (you do, after all, have to have some confidence in your own ability.  Running around and saying ‘I’m just terrible!’ is no more modest and truthful than shouting that you’re the best writer ever to come along.) 

The times do come, however, when the words themselves won’t come.  When I’m too tired to write, even though I want to tell a story and have an idea where the story is going.  I”m just too tired.

That has been happening recently.  Things get in the way.  Time gets away from me.  I just don’t have the time (I think), or I just don’t have the strength.  Or – and this is a major concern for me – the two stories that I have in the works have become stale.  I just…can’t…move.

And we all, or at least I  do, need to write.  I’m a writer, aren’t I?

I joined NaNoWriMo, thinking that cranking out 50K words to flesh out one of my WIPs would be the perfect way to kick off a new, lively, vital endeavor.  1400 words per day is not bad.  Let us be reasonable, here.  1400 words equals about 6 pages of double-spaced 12 point font typing.  A piece of cake.  

The first day of NaNoWriMo, I got in late, sat down, fired up my trusty laptop, and got ready to just write.  I closed my eyes, positioned my fingers on the keyboard, and typed my little heart out.  And, ladies and gentlemen, here is a part of what I wrote, as I discovered the next day, trembling with anticipation.  I kid you not, cross my heart and hope to die:


(Note: this would be book 3 of my Memphis Cycle, set in the Egypt of Ramesses the Great)

It was midnight and he was in the library of Opet.  Room after room, filled  with the scent of parchment and ink.  Tallow-topped torches at in the brackets along the wall. The golumes stood in rows against the walls, their contents carefully noted, tyheir writers loggedin the register.  He knew there were some there written by Amunhorkhebechef, Crown Prince of Egypt He di dot try to locat them.  His memory of the dispatches he had written were devastaig to thos wh o did hot know better.je [pire dfrp the fasl at jos be;t/  oOt was

He was writing by tye light of a single lamp.  Troop movements, ,bits of wisdom from thutors Iii. This was wor that he enjoyed, but it was gruelojng  His ajestywrote I a tight hand, rigidly daoj Ahw dlla  OR DE HWWLRH, ” HW iwa deo ou

 Je njad dpe jos dit9oes [er the guidance received fro hiu pve tjselves  She was a queen, a beauty, a woje to love a follow through light.

Dang, that’s good, no?  Just makes you want to read more, right?  Rush right out and pull out eveything that Diana Wilder has written, it touches your soul so profoundly.  Yeah, I agree.  743 words of pure fabulosity!  Wow, whoopee ding!

Yeah, right…

I scrapped NaNoWriMo.  It was a rough patch for me, and I might as well accept it, thought I.  These times come.  They’re the bad times that balance the good times through which you must work.  Hitch up your courage, take a deep breath, resolve to hang in there and put out a word here, a word there…  Watch it add up…

Well, folks, let me tell you what happened today.  I was sitting at my ‘real’ job, and a sudden twist of plot popped into my head. What if…?  Hmmmm…  It was a busy day.  I paused and thought about it, long enough to make an impression so that I could remember it, and moved on.  This evening, sitting with friends, I had a sudden idea for a conversation that would follow that twist.  Perfect!  It would work!  It brought new life to the story and added depth!  I opened my purse and looked for my notebook.

Not there.  Dang!  I cast about for something to write on: anything at all!  And I found some cash register receipts.  The backs were blank.   I did have my trusty pen (three, in fact).  I started jotting.

My friends watched me in silence, their eyebrows raised.  One of them said “Do you want to borrow my notebook?  I have one in my purse…”  I gave her The Look and kept writing.  And here is what I have:

Not terribly legible, but it captures a bit of conversation that I can work with.  And, more importantly, it captures that spark of inspiration I had at my desk.  I am very familiar with these characters, I know their quirks, and if they existed outside my own head, I’d invite them to lunch in a little local place I discovered that makes the best BLT sandwiches and has moreover, poetry nights with open mikes.  It would be a lot of fun.  They are people of humor and substance.  And they had, somehow, stepped in and saved my story.

…And NaNoWriMo is back on.

The point to all this is that, yes, the difficult times are there.  Creating anything always involves a struggle, as a philosopher said.  We all tend toward Chaos, and creating something out of nothing is fighting against that chaos.  Or so one writer whom I really admire said.  Whatever the underlying cause, my lesson, which I pass on, is not a new one:

Hang in there.  Let things work together, do what you can – and be prepared to be surprised.

**************
Visit the other blogs on this wonderful hop.  I guarantee, the other bloggers have a lot more to say, and a lot more on point.  (Cough!)

http://www.linkytools.com/basic_linky_include.aspx?id=103850

Celebrations – October 23, 2015


This is the Celebrating the Small Things blog hop, run by Lexa Cain and her two wonderful co-hosts L.G. Keltner @ Writing Off The Edge and Tonja Drecker @ Kidbits.



It has been a long and hard several months.  Make that years.  Disappointments, the realization that certain things are not likely ever to happen, learning yesterday that a job for which I had a phone interview, for which my interviewer was very excited, already had an offer out on it, but she had spoken to them and was pushing my candidacy.  (With an offer already out there.)

It is a good thing to go along and count your blessings, but sometimes you can’t help feeling like someone standing at a gate and looking through the bars at a beautiful landscape that you can’t enter, no matter how hard you try.

Sometimes you have to accept that and move on without wincing at the cliche’.

It’s been a long haul and I am very tired.

But:

I signed up for NaNoWriMo and will be finishing my first draft of book #3 in my Memphis Cycle  series.  The chunk out of the middle.  I will keep it completely separate from the rest of the book.  50,000 words will be a goodly number to allow me to weave the threads together and bring all the characters and their conflicts and joys together at the battle itself, then, skipping one day (already written) continue until they circle around and head for home.  That story has been chiding me for years, and I will, by golly, finish it.  It has some of my best writing in it as it stands.  That will be enjoyable


And – my top celebration – my 88 year old mother, one of two very great joys and blessings in my life, came through her hip surgery on Monday, is experiencing reduced pain, and will be moving into a rehab center that she likes, attached to a community she knows and has friends in.  The grinding pain is gone.

Mom’s lack of pain and increased mobility trumps any sadness I’m feeling and, by golly, it’s worth celebrating.  Here’s to my mother.  And NaNoWriMo.

What are you celebrating?  

Shining a Light on Our Ladies



We have been speaking of ladies for the past two weeks, and will continue throughout October.
 
A popular dictionary defines a ‘lady’ as: 
a :  a woman having proprietary rights or authority especially as a feudal superior
b :  a woman receiving the homage or devotion of a knight or lover
2a :  a woman of superior social position
b :  a woman of refinement and gentle manners

As we will see, the first definition was the original one.  Anyone who reads history will encounter the Ladies of the past, women of courage, power and determination.  The heroines of legend, their realities were even more powerful.

This week we meet:

Lavinia Wheeler (Georgia, 1864)

It is May 7, 1864 in Central Georgia.   In the town of Wheelerville lying a week’s journey north and west of Atlanta in the shadow of the mountains, the magnolias are in full bloom, the cold winter has given way to spring, which is now shading into what promises to be a hot summer.   And War has come screaming into the center of the town and blown all memories of peace and heartsease away on cannon-smoke.  

The bodies of the slain lie in windrows along the grassy-banked roadway leading from the heart of town toward the gracefully sprawling white house.  The battle has moved south and east, but the sounds of pain and death echo in the air.  A Union surgeon pauses to take a needed break from the squalor and stench… 

          He stepped from dim cacophony into bright chaos, the pepper-sharp sting of drifting gunpowder catching at the back of his throat. He coughed, drew a deep breath, held it, and expelled it, feeling the sun-warmed air fill his lungs. It seemed, somehow, to lessen the noise behind him, screams, bitten-off curses and prayers. The dull rasp of a bone saw brought more shrieks, spiraling up higher than his ears could hear. 

          He grimaced and stepped farther into the sunlight.
          The fighting had been hot and furious along this roadway, the artillery hurling shells into masses of gray-clad bodies that had turned to make a stand and then fallen back under the assault. Now the dead lay in rows as they had fallen, beneath the shattered branches of an alley of willows that led up to a house that seemed to stand empty and somehow silent in the hectic sunlight.
He drew another breath and looked down at his reddened hands. He would have to wash them before he returned. It didn’t matter what the others said, clean hands led to better results, and he needed everything he could find to tip the scales in favor of the lives he was trying to save. He would need to find water, to have a bucket brigade set up to bring it to the hospital tent…
          He turned to peer back over his shoulder at the hospital tent, caught a glimpse of the dim interior, more horrible than anything Dante could have conceived. He wouldn’t return just yet. He needed the breather to give him some strength before he resumed command of the field hospital.
          He raised his head and gazed down the alley of willows, his tired eyes fixing on the gracious lines of the house set between them. A house would most likely have a water source. A house this size would have a considerable water source; he only needed to send some men to find it.
          Movement in the distance, somehow foreign to the carnage before him, made him pause to push his spectacles up on his nose and look more closely. Movement again, a flicker of color that resolved itself into a woman.
          He stared, saying the word to himself. A woman, here in the middle of hell.
          He could see her clearly now, the silhouette of a wide crinoline skirt, a small waist; a small woman, in fact, with a shawl draped over her shoulders. She was pale, disheveled, and clutching a bucket.
          He watched her stoop to give water to a wounded man, touch him lightly on the forehead with a movement that spoke clearly of grace and compassion. She rose again to give more water, looking around her with a sort of dazed pity.
          A lady, he thought.
          He could see the men on the ground motioning to her, calling to her, and she turned to offer more water before straightening again. She motioned to one of the orderlies, who had paused before her. He could see her lips move. The orderly, inclining toward her in an attitude of respect, turned, looked toward the tent, and caught sight of him.
          The orderly’s expression eased. He turned back to the lady and spoke to her.
          As the surgeon watched, she set the bucket down, gathered her skirts and, after one last glance over her shoulder at the big house, turned back toward him, squared her shoulders, fixed her eyes on his, and moved resolutely toward him.
          He faced her, inclined his head to her, and waited as she approached him..
.

The surgeon has just had his first sight of Lavinia Wheeler, the owner of the town of Wheelerville. And Lavinia Wheeler, the descendant of Yankee merchants who settled in the growing city of Savannah, Georgia, has just finished her first experience of war, which had started with the large oak tree in front of her house exploding into splinters, followed her as she and the rest of her household who had not fled huddled in the root cellar and listened to the crashing and screams above them as it built to a crescendo and then faded to silence.

Lavinia is descended from merchants who sailed to the coastal city of Savannah and settled there amassing a fortune in trade.  As the only surviving child of her father, she manages the family’s trading ventures, administers their holdings, and holds a position of respect in Savannah society.  She has watched the progress of the war, calculated the likelihood of Southern success, and sold the family’s Confederate bonds at thirty percent below their face value, buying gold with the proceeds.  It has been a good investment.  But even gold fades before the realities of war.

          Lavinia gathered her skirts and set a foot on the stairs. “I’ve told Bathsheba to warm the sheets for you,” Callie said behind her. “Heaven alone knows what we’d have done if she’d run off like the rest!” 

       Lavinia smiled wearily at her. “We’d have managed,” she said. 

        “Just barely,” Callie said. “The good Lord said we wouldn’t be overcome, but He didn’t say we wouldn’t be beaten half to death before we triumphed. Well.” Her expression softened. “Good night, Lamb,” she said.

          Lavinia smiled back at her. “Sleep tight, Callie,” she said, and went up the stairs to her bedroom.  She had moved into the large bedroom that her parents had once shared, leaving her narrow, whitewashed bed without a moment’s regret. A large armoire stood against the far wall. She went to it and opened it and looked within as though it held in its shadows the key to her strength. 

        The shelves that had once held lavender-scented linens and petticoats were now crowded with pottery of all shapes and heights, all the colors of the earth. A forest of faces gazed back at her, and ranked before and behind them were ramekins, plates, cups, tankards, all formed of the earth, and all very, very old.
          She took the largest one and touched the rough glaze. One of the settlers had dipped this in the James River and drunk from it. He and his family had probably sat of an evening and gazed into the fire, and maybe set this jug on the hearth to warm the wine that was in it. It must have been a hard life, as she had said to General Stanley. Hard, exhausting, frightening at times. But surely, surely nothing like this time of trial that had overtaken her world and split it apart!
          She sighed and held the jug closer. Everything had changed so terribly that she felt lost. All the set phrases, all the carefully choreographed motions of life had broken down and fled before the maelstrom. Now it was important to bring some ceremony, some sanity back to everyday living. One clung to what was decent, one did what was right. But it was proving to be a strain.

Sometimes fairy godparents exist.  A Union general, touched by Lavinia’s generosity, has given some orders, as Lavinia learns when she pauses to feed the estate’s chickens the next morning.

        A lone horseman was approaching her across the lawn. The rider sat still and square in the saddle with only a slight motion of his hips cushioning the movement of his mount. The sun, hovering behind his left shoulder, turned him to a black silhouette against the bright sky. He paused, then touched the horse lightly with his heels. His mount tucked its chin in and ambled toward her.

         He drew rein before her. The tall chestnut mare, stretching down out of the sun to nuzzle her shoulder and then snuffle at her skirt, was firmly called to order and nudged sideways with a touch of the man’s heel so that Lavinia did not have to peer up into the sun. He was no longer a shadow in the morning, but now the light picked out alarming details of brass, yellow braid, leather and steel. 
        A steel-sheathed saber was strapped to his saddle beneath his left thigh, and a carbine hung from a heavy leather strap at his right. His cap was adorned with a brass badge shaped like a pair of crossed swords, and the amount of yellow braid on his dark blue, high-necked jacket seemed to indicate some sort of rank: three rows of braid made a V just above his elbow, with three arcs of braid set above them. A diagonal stripe of red-edged yellow slanted across his right sleeve from the inner corner of his cuff to halfway up his forearm. A sling hid his left arm. 
        “Good morning, Ma’am,” the man said, touching the leather visor of his cap with a gauntleted finger. His voice was deep and gentle, with the touch of a twang. “Is this the Wheeler house?”         She had been too busy staring to answer him; he repeated the question.She blinked, pushed her hair out of her eyes once more, and looked up past the row of gilt buttons and the slanted leather strap into a lively pair of hazel eyes that were subjecting her to exactly the sort of appraisal she had been giving him. The man’s straight mouth quirked as his eyes warmed in a way that Lavinia instinctively understood.
         He was pleasant looking; Lavinia had no trouble applying the term ‘handsome’ to him. Her color rose. “Why-yes,” she said. “Yes, it is.” She added, “I am Lavinia Wheeler.” 
        He nodded, slid his boot toes from the leather-hooded stirrups, swung his right leg across the cantle of the saddle, and dismounted. “Then Sergeant Major Asa Sheppard reports himself as arriving for duty, Miss,” he said.  
       “What?” she gasped.

The Safeguard follows the story of the Southern Lady, Lavinia, through the final years of the Civil War as her people and the Safeguard assigned to assist her deal with skirmishes, slaughter, murdering renegades and suspicious irregulars under Lavinia’s able leadership.

I am also giving away two signed paperback copies of The Safeguard.  Leave a note on the comments section along with your email address (which I will delete) and I will have a third party who does not write and is good at reaching into bowls to retrieve pieces of paper select the winners.

If you would like to read more about The Safeguard and my other books, visit my website at THIS LINK which will take you to The Safeguard.


Ladies to inspire and to enjoy:

This hop highlights other ladies of different times and different circumstances, all ladies indeed, all fascinating to follow:



Elizabeth Revill follows the life of Carolyn Llewellyn in her splendid Family saga that follows Carrie from her tragic childhood through to her time as a District nurse during World War II:

http://www.elizabethrevill.com/blog/shining-a-light-on-our-ladies


(Click below for the International links to the books)

My very special lady is Caroline Llewellyn known by her relatives and friends as Carrie and by her nursing pals as Lew (no first names for the nurses!)




For more enjoyable reading, click here: http://www.elizabethrevill.com/blog 



…And we have a Lady from Jane Austen’s world:


Regina Jeffers
Regina Jeffers and her Regency characters…

Who has not enjoyed the stories of Elizabeth Bennett, daughter of a humorous gentleman and a scatterbrained lady, sister of four, witty opponent and resourceful, though proper protagonist?  Regina Jeffers takes us into the universe of Pride and Prejudice, opening sidelights, telling the tales of other characters who played a fleeting part, but have left the reader liking them and wondering where their paths will take them,
Regina Jeffers has spun wonderful stories to show us the ways those beloved characters have gone and the adventures that have followed them.  And she has just published the latest of her stories:

Elizabeth Bennett has said that Mr. Darcy is the last man she would want to marry.  …But is he? Can Elizabeth Bennet come to terms with the fact the one man she most despises is the one man who owns her heart? Find out and win a giveaway book! 


https://reginajeffers.wordpress.com/2015/10/13/shining-light-on-our-ladies-blog-tour-elizabeth-bennets-less-likable-qualities/





Our Hostess speaks of Ladies who bore the same name – Edith – and shaped history:

Edith number one: the love of King Harold’s life – a woman who walked the battlefield at Hastings in 1066 to identify his mutilated body, and Edith number two, Harold’s own sister who despised him…

Click to buy I am The Chosen King 



Helen Hollick lives on a thirteen-acre farm in Devon, England. Born in London, Helen wrote pony stories as a teenager, moved to science-fiction and fantasy, and then discovered historical fiction. Published for over twenty years with her Arthurian Trilogy, and the 1066 era, she became a ‘USA Today’ bestseller with Forever Queen. She also writes the Sea Witch Voyages, pirate-based fantasy adventures.
As a supporter of Indie Authors she is Managing Editor for the Historical Novel Society Indie Reviews, and inaugurated the HNS Indie Award.

http://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/shining-light-on.html

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Next Tuesday – Shining Light on some more Ladies! We meet a woman who walked a knife edge between the demands of her dangerous family, and those of her own conscience, King Arthur’s women and a former Praetorian Guard sent to Berlin to investigate silver smuggling,..

Come back and join us!

…and if you were not able to read last week’s posts, here are the links
:

Hellen Hollick – Queen Emma of Normandy   ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.co.uk/ 
Patricia Bracewell   patriciabracewell.com/blog/
Inge H. Borg   devilwinds.blogspot.com/
 * * *
PLEASE TWEET:

#LightOnOurLadies

Lost In a Sea of Excellence IWSG, October 7 2015


Today is the first Wednesday of the month, which means it is IWSG day. The once-a-month blog hop started by Alec Cavanaugh . IWSG = Insecure Writers’ Support Group (click the words to visit)

The name of this group is the ‘INSECURE’ Writers Support Group.  I think joining the words ‘insecure’ and ‘writers’ is sort of an oxymoron.  I don’t know any writers who aren’t, in some way, insecure. 


They worry about (pick one or two or three): 


  1. Whether they really have any talent
  2. Whether people are going to buy their books
  3. Whether people are going to read  their books, even if they buy them
  4. Whether the beta-readers, editors, friends, fans, facebook friends, whoever, are saying good things about them just because they feel sorry for them
  5. Whether what little talent they have is fleeting and being corrupted by time, senility, work concerns, and general burnout 
  6. They see other writers and, if the others are halfway good, fear that they (the insecure, angst-ridden writer, I mean) will look like complete, talentless doofuses (‘doofi’?) and be required to repair to their private places of solace and fade out of public knowledge.

Well…  I’m overstating things, I admit.  But sometimes you have to, to make a point. 

I write Historical Fiction, sometimes with an alternative slant, sometimes with a touch of fantasy, often with a tinge of romance.  I actually read my own books (after a year or so has passed) for enjoyment.  I published fairly late after being shelved for fifteen years due to the actions of an agent who features rather prominently in Preditors and Editors.   

I look around and see fabulous people, traditionally or independently published.  I see a torrent of talent, wondrous works of imagination, humorously, delicately, rowdily written.  Literally works of art.  They are wonderful.  And I look at my own and see…  What?  Am I too close to be able to see? 

I was recently approached by a wonderful writer and a fabulous lady who writes splendid historical fiction, has done a lot of good and has energy that I truly envy.  She had been directed to a post on my blog by a dear friend who also blogs, liked it (it was about 9-11) and, after speaking with my friend, invited me to participate in an unusual blog hop highlighting historical fiction with women as the main characters.   

There were medieval queens, women who sailed, women who faced hardships, who lived through wars (modern and ancient), who lived in alternate historical timelines and had gritty, beautifully written adventures.  I had heard of a good many of these people.  And, it seemed, I had a book, set in the American Civil War with a Southern Lady as the protagonist, that fit the features they were highlighting.  Would I like to participate? 

Who, Ma’am?  Me, Ma’am?
Me?  Would I?   

Of course I would, after my initial astonished delight.  It is a joy to ‘meet’ these people and share common ground and – dare I admit it? – celebrate my own Lady (you’ll meet her next week).   

We are all writers.  One writer whom I interviewed, Hart Johnson, put it so beautifully, I can do no better than to cut and paste her comment:

If we just keep working at it long enough, we will eventually be good enough to share… And not only that, it is one of the few undertakings that somebody ELSE creating something fabulous doesn’t threaten us. In fact it helps us. Because the more great stories there are out there, the more readers there will be looking for still more stories. So we can love and support each other in earnest. 

…About that Blog Hop… 



Here is the first post in the blog hop, with links to the other featured writers this week:

It is an honor to be part of it!  And maybe – maybe – I do belong.

What has you feeling insecure?

The Bloghead Bone Hop… Err… That is…


 
 
 
THE BONEHEAD BLOG HOP!
 
Welcome to the third Bonehead Blog Hop!  This is the (very) original idea of Cherdo, who makes you laugh and then think, and once you click away, think  She sure is NOT a bonehead!
 
(Official disclaimer: we’re laughing at ourselves: why don’t you join us?)
 
Your hosts are Cherdo, of Cherdo on the Flipside.
And me (Diana Wilder)
Our motto: 
“Confession is good for the soul…it may not 
be your soul, but trust me – it’s good for someone’s soul.”
 
So…  What boneheaded thing should I confess to this time?
(The easier question is ‘what boneheaded thing should I not confess to?’ )
I BEG your pardon!

Telling the grandmother of a friend, who was proudly showing me the granny square afghan that she had made for my friend, in cathedral window colors, which, she said, ‘I want her to have something to remember me for!’ and responding with a gracious smile, “Oh, you won’t be hard to forget!”  and wondering why the smile had faded from the sweet lady’s face.

 
There was a time, a while back, when I did some part time work for Bloomingdale’s department store.  It was Christmas season, and I needed the money for gifts.  I was young(er), healthy, and a little oblivious.  To get into and leave Bloomies, we had to go in through a steel door on the side of the building (it involved climbing up a flight of outside metal steps) and flashing our badge as we went in.  We left the same way.

We were told, by the way, that we had to park at the very edge of the supermall parking lot.  I told them that I would do nothing of the kind, since I didn’t want to get mugged leaving at 11:30 PM on a holiday season night.


Eating what?

At any rate, I happened to notice bags of rolls and pastries when I was leaving each night, and I thought, “Oh, how generous!”  and helped myself to one every time as I left.  The security staff gave me ‘the hairy eyeball’, but no one said nothing until one day, a week and a half in, a coworker (in her case ‘cow orker’) said, “Why are you eating that?”


“They’re left-overs for the staff,” I said.  At her expression I said, “…aren’t they?”
“No, they’re not!  They’re to be taken to homeless shelters!  You could be arrested!”

Mouth-palm.  Worse than face-palm.

Well, we live and learn.  Dad might have laughed.  Or not.  He might, actually, have asked where his sweet roll was.

*sigh*


Go visit the hop!

http://www.simply-linked.com/listwidget.aspx?l=64D9E1B9-9C54-4E05-905B-7E58CF1B028C

Celebrating Laughter and a Hero


This is the Celebrating the Small Things blog hop, run by Lexa Cain and her two wonderful co-hosts L.G. Keltner @ Writing Off The Edge and Tonja Drecker @ Kidbits.



I remember as a little girl I always loved to watch a cartoon called ‘Yogi Bear’, featuring a rascally bear who lived in Jellystone park.  One day my father called to my brother and me, saying that we needed to some in and watch Yogi Bear.

We came pelting inside only to stand and stare at some fellow in a baseball uniform.  Yogi Bear?

“That’s his name,” Dad said.  “Well… Yogi Berra.” 
We grimaced in disgust (I preferred football, myself) and went back out to play.

Over the years I began to smile at the things Yogi said and, ultimately, admire him.  His turns of phrase were guaranteed to make me laugh, and while people talked about it being an inherent goofiness in the fellow, I thought it was the comedic gift coming out.  What is more enjoyable than watching someone pulling another’s leg?

And when the AFLAC (disability insurance) ad came along featuring Yogi Berra I sat back with a grin.  It’s one of my all-time favorite commercials:

He was a great catcher, a great athlete, a good man…and I learned that he was one of those at the Normandy landing on D-Day  The last Yogi-ism of his that I heard, just recently, was this: 

I sit and I thank the good lord I was in the Navy. We ate good, clean clothes, clean bed. You see some of these Army men, what they went through, that’s the one I felt for.

I hadn’t known.  Like a lot of his generation, he did not brag.  So I celebrate a good guy who made me laugh, made that AFLAC duck squawk, and quietly did his duty during the war.

Celebrations are everywhere, if you know where to look.

What are you celebrating?  

Celebrations September 25, 2015 – Finding a Home: Welcome



This is the Celebrating the Small Things blog hop, run by Lexa Cain and her two wonderful co-hosts L.G. Keltner @ Writing Off The Edge and Tonja Drecker @ Kidbits.



I love this hop, though I can’t always participate.  It is wonderful to see through others’ eyes and understand the various reasons for either outright joy or subtle smiles.

I’ve been busy with various things, some good, some not so good, but nothing horrible (something to celebrate in and of itself.)

On a message board that I regularly frequent, the talk turned to politics.  This is generally my signal to depart but I stayed where I was and reviewed the messages.  One caught my attention, something about returning immigrants to their countries of origin. 

Now, I don’t discuss politics on my blog, my website, any of my social media.  I have opinions, as everyone else does, but I don’t choose to proclaim them.  I imagine that if people want a dose of politics they can read The Congressional Record or any one of a good many major newspapers

The comment, however, made me think of my own family, and the voyages of various of my forebears to what we call the United States.

Lafayette, I can’t recall the word…

We have a fellow from France, a Protestant who left around 1770 and came to what would become the state of Connecticut.  His name was François, from the part of France that borders what we now call Germany.  He spoke excellent English.  Some years later he served in the Continental Army during the American Revolution.  He was tapped to serve as an interpreter to one Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier de Lafayette, known as the Marquis de Lafayette, who came with the French forces to support the American Revolution.  He spoke broken English.  I suspect François made himself useful.

There’s another family that left Normandy in the train of a man who was once known as William the Bastard.  They came to England, ended up settling in Ireland around 1100 AD.  They had the surname ‘Savage’ from ‘Sauvage’.  One of their descendants, married to a man from an old Irish family – the Hickeys, from the city of Cork – came to the United States around 1840.

Their daughter married a fellow who came from Alsace (France) in 1848.  This man, Josef Myers, enlisted in the Union Army at the start of the American Civil War, served through the major campaigns, with a stay in the notorious prison of Andersonville, escaped, was sheltered by a family of slaves for a time and finally returned to his unit, serving to the end of the war.  Discharged in New York, he came through Philadelphia and met a young lady of Irish descent.  They homesteaded in North Dakota when veterans were given a grant of land.

All of them newcomers to America, all of them arriving on the shores of North America and registering to become citizens of the United States.


Immigrants.

The discussion took an unpleasant turn on the subject of immigrants.  I didn’t participate.  I did, however, remember two quotes: 

Remember, remember always that all of us, and you and I especially, are descended from immigrants and revolutionists. (President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, addressing the Daughters of the American Revolution)

And this, written by Emma Lazarus, inspired by the Statue of Liberty:

“Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”
We all have journeys behind us, journeys from persecution, from poverty, following dreams or necessity.  All of us.  It is, in the final analysis, something to celebrate.  


What are you celebrating?  

Paving My Author's Road

...one writing step at a time

Only for the Brave - Diana Stout, MFA, PhD

Musings of an author, screenwriter & blogger.

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