VOLUNTEER YOUR WRITING
by June Shaw
I love to sell material I write. I really do. Getting to write and have something published was tremendously gratifying. It was when I first began.
Things have changed.
Yes, I'm still thrilled to learn that anyone would want to read something I create. It's especially pleasing when readers tell me or write that they enjoy my work and even ask for more. That is so exciting!
Exciting, too, is getting paid for words I write. The first essay I sold to a magazine many years ago brought me forty dollars. I was a widow with five young children, and receiving extra money, especially for words that I wrote, was unbelievable.
Over the years now I have written a number of books, had a great time doing it, and earned much more than in earlier times.
I've also enjoyed nonprofit writing. A number of years ago the president of our Chamber of Commerce asked if I would write a column on retiring in our area. There would be no pay, but I could advertise my books in my byline. It would not need to be any longer than five hundred words. "And you can write that in your sleep," she added.
She was right. I've penned "Retiring on the Bayou" for quite awhile now. I've interviewed people and told of their exciting pursuits since they left their nine-to-five jobs.
But now it's time for mine. I just finished a column for the paper and started it by saying it would be my last. They should easily find someone else to create a different column. I will have more time to write my novels--but I'll miss having so many people in town tell me how much they enjoy my columns.
http://www.juneshaw.com
Saturday, October 29, 2016
Thursday, October 27, 2016
Characters That Form Our Lives
and Later Come Alive in Our Stories
by Jackie King
One of
my earliest memories is sitting in a circle with my brother, sister and various
neighbor kids as my mother told us stories. Delia Hodges Sprague could spin a
yarn about any character or characters we might name. Let’s say that I wanted a
story about Cinderella, my sister Joan wanted the heroine to be Wonder Woman
and my brother J.D., chose Tarzan of the Apes.
No
problem to Mother. She’d create one tale using each of these characters. The
story would be exciting and it would make sense. At least to kids.
Delia
Hodges Sprague was a storyteller, an actress, a teacher and a sometimes writer.
This redheaded dynamo was smart, fun and very temperamental. My childhood was
sometimes difficult, sometimes frightening and always challenging. But life was
never boring.
Mother
taught me to read, and when there was nothing to read, to make up stories
inside my head and entertain myself with imaginary friends and foes.
Delia
Hodges Sprague is often found in my books. Sometimes she’s in the guise of a
father, a mother or a best friend. In my latest mystery, MURDER AT THE EDGE OF
NOWHERE set in the land of her childhood, the Oklahoma Panhandle, she’s walks and breathes in the
character of Winnie Doolittle.
$3.99 at Amazon Kindle |
Delia
faced real danger with lionhearted courage: she rode boxcars from Oklahoma to
New York state at the age of 20, challenged rattlesnakes in my grandparents
pasture and tarantulas in the outhouse of a country school. But small things shattered
her: imagined slights, walking into her bank to ask for a loan or having a conversation
with her own father.
When I
was a child she often awoke screaming bloody murder from recurrent nightmares;
battled depression her entire life and fought breast cancer until her death.
She was an extraordinary woman of courage. I loved her with all my heart. But
she wasn’t an easy mother to have.
To see
the best side of Delia Hodges Sprague, read MURDER AT THE EDGE OF NOWHERE, and
observe Winnie Doolittle. To see the more complicated side of my mother, notice Emily Ashcroft.
Most
everyone loved my mother—especially me. I hope you’ll enjoy her as Winnie Doolittle
in MURDER ON THE EDGE OF NOWHERE
Below
is a clipping from the end of chapter two after Liz O’Brien and Winnie
Doolittle find cousin Christabel in Liz’s garage:
“Help!” Liz screamed. “Oh, my God. Someone. Anyone. Please help.” They stretched
Christabel on the grass.
“Won’t do no good to yell.” Winnie’s voice was cold, toneless. “You know
how to do that resuscitation thing?”
Liz forced herself to press her mouth against Christabel’s cold lips.
Her gut twisted. Why didn’t someone drive by? She alternated the breathing routine
with chest compression for what seemed forever, but she knew it was useless. Christabel
was unresponsive. Liz felt for a pulse. Nothing.
“You might as well quit.” Winnie pulled at Liz’s shoulder. “She’s
dead. We’ll have to call the police and tell them she killed herself.”
“But that’s crazy. Christabel would never commit suicide.
Nothing could make me think that.”
“Oh,
hell, Liz. Don’t be stupid. I’m not telling you what to think. I’m telling you
what to say.”
Thursday, October 13, 2016
Galley Proofs for MURDER AT THE EDGE OF NOWHERE
by Jackie King
Yesterday I
received galley proofs of my latest mystery, MURDER AT THE EDGE OF NOWHERE. The
odd thing in up-to-date publishing trends, at least with my small regional
publisher, is that the ebook came out a few weeks ago. I’ve been reading this
version and have been appalled at some of the errors. Did I do that? I ask
myself, or was it the publisher’s editor, the publisher himself?
It doesn’t really
matter. It’s my book, and I accept all responsibility for any mistakes. Which
is what Galley Proofs are all about. The last ditch chance to catch and correct
mistakes.
For those who don’t
know, Galley Proofs are pages of the novel sent to me online. I print them out
on paper, or do a final $3.99 at Amazonedit on a copy online. My choice.
The good news is
that this means the paper version will soon be available.
Jackie at Work on Galley Proofs |
And that’s what I’m
doing just now—or it will be as soon as I finish this post. And according to
both my calendar and my watch, I’d better get at it. Now!
Cheers,
Jackie