Friday, December 30, 2011

And a Happy New Year

I'm hoping that everyone reading this enjoyed the first holiday of the season and was able to spend some time with family and/or friends.  Now on to New Year's.

Some years back, I learned about the Scottish celebration of Hogmanay.  It's one of those odd holidays where they can't tell you exactly how it started or what it means, but one of my favorite definitions is that the word is a derivation of "hug me now."  There are many customs, both national and local, associated with Hogmanay. The most widespread national custom is the practice of 'first-footing' which starts immediately after midnight. This involves being the first person to cross the threshold of a friend or neighbour and often involves the giving of symbolic gifts such as salt (less common today), coal, shortbread, whisky, and black bun (a rich fruit cake) intended to bring different kinds of luck to the householder. Food and drink (as the gifts) are then given to the guests. This may go on throughout the early hours of the morning and well into the next day (although modern days see people visiting houses well into the middle of January). The first-foot is supposed to set the luck for the rest of the year. Traditionally, tall dark men are preferred as the first-foot.  One of these days that might just make a good setting for a story, eh? I have friends who have spent hogmanay in Scotland - sounds like a good enough reason to go back (as if I need a good reason).

Meanwhile, I'm making excellent progress with Living Canvas. It should be ready in time for the Chicago writer's conference.  And in case I haven't mentioned it lately {G} the tenth anniversary edition of The Treasure of St. Paul, retitled Touched by the Sun, is available for e-readers (Kindle, Nook, Sony, etc.) and a hard copy will be available by the first of the year (if not sooner). I've included links below . . .

Click here if you have a Kindle.

Click here if you have a Nook.

And click here if you have another e-reader.

To purchase a paperback copy, click here

(this concludes the commercial portion of this post).


Happy New Year!

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Merry Christmas!

It's here!  Touched by the Sun - the 10th Anniversary Edition of The Treasure of St. Paul is now available for e-readers.  You can find it at BN.com (click here) or at the Kindle Store, and also available for Sony Readers and in other formats (including downloadable PDF) at Smashwords (click here).  The paperback version should be available at Amazon after the first of the year.  Spread the news, tell all your friends and for those folks that get an e-reader for Christmas (or are giving an ereader for Christmas), make sure you download a copy!

Now it's full speed ahead with Living Canvas.  I'm grateful for the editor who is working with me, and there will obviously be some delay through the holidays as we all take time to spend with our loved ones, but I'm excited to be moving forward once more. 

I'd like to take this opportunity to wish everyone a Merry Christmas, Happy Hannukah (Today!), Happy Holidays, Happy New Year.  May our lives be filled with peace, love and joy in the upcoming year. 


Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Forward ho!

Progress!  And on many fronts at once.  When it rains it pours, and in this case, the rain is warm and cleansing!  No, not literally raining . . . although it is literally raining.  Am I rambling?

To clarify, the weather outside is frightful - sound like a Christmas carol yet?  But the writing is so delightful.  Edits to St. Paul are significantly finished and the file is reformatted to submit for ebook distribution.  All that remains is one last look-see from me to make sure I haven't misspelled any more words or unintentionally omitted something, etc.  Woo Hoo!

Additionally, I'm moving forward with the edits on Living Canvas.  I'm working with an editor who keeps saying nice things about it, so the extra shot in the arm is motivating me to get that story done.  The end still needs significant improvement, but knowing what's going to happen will move that along fairly easily, I'm thinking.

Christmas shopping is done.  DH is back from his extended business trip - he was able to come home early.  Counting my blessings, I am.  All too soon the pace of life is going to speed up again, but until then, I'm going to enjoy this moment.

Enjoy your Christmas "present".

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Ho-ho-holidays

I was given a gift of free time, and what happened? 

I got sick.

However, I'm on the mend and I did not squander all the time.  St. Paul is significantly updated and pending one last round of comments from a fellow critiquer, hoping to get the conversion to e-book started shortly.

Living Canvas has survived it's own round of rewrites, and I'm a full 2/3 the way through that and chugging forward.  I'm excited to have made contact with an editor who will hopefully help me make that one saleable shortly, and with that completed and "off the shelf," I'm looking forward to starting one of two new stories that I've outlined (but first things first).  That's the exciting news on the writing front.

On the homefront, as my friends know, I normally like watching holiday movies, etc., and this year I'm sorely disappointed by some of the really bad quality of the newer holiday movies.  I watched one last night that felt like a train wreck.  The plot was implausible, the actors were not talented or even terribly attractive, the story line didn't flow . . . and yet I watched to the bitter end.  ICK.  That's all I can say.  The themes don't vary much, and I don't imagine they can, although I saw a different take on the "It's a Wonderful Life" tack by taking a woman and fast forwarding her ten years instead of showing her how her life had impacted people in the past.  I didn't finish that one but will later tonight (DVR is a wonderful thing).

This has been a year of growth and revelations for me.  Life changing in some ways (without being too dramatic).  In line with that, the Christmas story I've been wanting to write forever has finally taken on a solid outline.  It comes as a culmination of life events this year and movies I've seen this year that I liked, maybe identified with just a little, but hoped for a more realistic angle.  It's a different kind of happily ever after - and I'm actually pretty stoked to put it to paper.  Again, first things first.  The story isn't going anywhere, and I'm pretty confident I can get it done for next year Christmas even with the speedbumps that slow me down over the course of a year (including getting Living Canvas into publication!).

So time to break out the Christmas carols, sip some eggnog and enjoy some quiet time.  I think I'll stick with the old classics when it comes to the movies - Christmas in Connecticut, White Christmas, maybe even a While You Were Sleeping for something a little more au courant.

How do you get in the holiday mood?