Friday, January 17, 2025

Oldies But Goodies {Put This One on Your TBR List} Book Review: Odd and the Frost Giants by Neil Gaiman by Karen S. Wiesner

 

Oldies But Goodies

{Put This One on Your TBR List}

Book Review: Odd and the Frost Giants

by Neil Gaiman

by Karen S. Wiesner 

 

The day I picked up the young adult novel Odd and the Frost Giants by Neil Gaiman, read and wrote this review, the snow was coming down heavily outside just one day away from Christmas eve. This magical story was perfect for such a day spent indoors looking out at the world of chilly beauty. 

Written specifically for World Book Day in 2008, this nod to Norse mythology and the Vikings tells the story of Odd, a young Norse boy whose woodcutter father was drowned during a Viking raid. In the time since, his mother (herself a "prize" captured from just such a raid) has remarried a man with a large brood of his own children. He has no use for a crippled stepson. 

The village where Odd was born doesn't understand him. Instead of seeing him as the good luck his name is intended to be--"the tip of a blade"--they see him as, well, odd. Crippled after trying to use his father's axe, Odd decides to go away from this town where he's looked upon with disfavor and where winter is lingering overlong and the men "fight and fart and sing and sleep and wake and fight again". 

Outside his father's old woodcutting cabin, Odd follows a fox and an eagle overhead only to find a great big bear with his paw stuck in the honey-lined hollow of a tree. Odd can either leave the creature be or free it and risk being eaten after its sweet appetizer. Odd has compassion, and soon the animals reveal that they can not only talk but they aren't what they appear to be. They're gods from Asgard, transformed by a frost Giant that tricked them. Without help, they'll remain in their animal forms forever, powerless. 

I have a soft spot for Norse mythology and tales set around the characters that inhabit Asgard, so for me this was the perfect read for a snowy, pre-holiday afternoon. Odd is such a gentle, kind, inventive, and brave soul. This wonderful, light-hearted story should delight kids and adults alike. 

Karen Wiesner is an award-winning, multi-genre author of over 150 titles and 16 series.

Visit her website here: https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/

and https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/karens-quill-blog

Find out more about her books and see her art here: http://www.facebook.com/KarenWiesnerAuthor 

Visit her publisher here: https://www.writers-exchange.com/Karen-Wiesner/

Thursday, January 16, 2025

TV Series Book Adaptations

The new season of the current TV series ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL has just begun on PBS. When this remake was first announced, my initial reaction was, "Why?!" The original multi-season series, covering all James Herriot's fictionalized memoirs, was as nearly pefect as a book-to-film adaptation could possibly be. It struck me somewhat the way proposals to remake GONE WITH THE WIND have. In fact, there seems slightly more justification for the latter. A miniseries could include details from the novel that couldn't fit into even the epic-length 1939 movie, such as the subplots concerning Scarlett's sisters; also, Scarlett's two older children could appear, or at least her son, whose birth makes her ability to deliver Melanie's baby alone more plausible.

Well, we're enjoying the revamped ALL CREATURES GREAT AND SMALL anyway, and it does have fresh elements that appeal to me. James is appropriately portrayed as distinctly Scottish, and we meet his parents. The housekeeper, Mrs. Hall, gets a larger role and a backstory, involving a strained relationship with her grown son. Mrs. Pumphrey, while still doting on Tricki-Woo, has more depth as a character, although at the cost of some of the humor in the original. On the other hand, I'm not altogether happy with this portrayal of Siegfried. Why make him a morose, rather antisocial widower instead of a cheerful bachelor? Mrs. Hall's situation injects plenty of family drama already. Moreover, at the beginning of the series this Siegfried strikes me as too harsh on James and especially Tristan. He has only reluctantly hired an assistant and initially seems to be looking for an excuse to get rid of James, another example of unnecessary drama with no basis in the books. More importantly, I feel the balance between animal-centered plotlines and human-centered material tilts too far toward the latter, compared to the books and the original series.

Still, the on-location Yorkshire setting is beautiful, the characters are engagingly acted, and the stories are heartwarming, so on balance I'd recommend it to fans of the books.

Maybe the creators of the show believed there would have been little point in producing another adaptation strictly faithful to the books when the earlier series did that so well it could hardly be improved upon. Similarly, after the superb Sherlock Holmes series starring Jeremy Brett in the 1980s and early 90s -- deliberately kept as true to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's works as feasible -- subsequent TV adaptations of the Great Detective have explored alternate interpretations of the character in new settings rather than trying to improve on Brett's definitive performance. I can grudgingly accept this rationale as justifying violation of my principle that the main purpose of a film adaptation of a book is to render the source text as faithfully as possible. Otherwise, why bother? -- just write your own story.

Margaret L. Carter

Please explore love among the monsters at Carter's Crypt.

Monday, January 13, 2025

Trademark Boot Camp

January is my least liked month, I think!

For authors who do business under the protection of an LLC, the procrastinators got lucky with the BOIR filings likely not to be enforced, but there are other annoyances for authors and LLC owners in January.

This is the deadline month for sending out your 1099-MISCs to lawyers, if you paid any amount to any of them. I have no idea what that says about the US Treasury's opinion of lawyers. For non-employees, if you paid them over $600, they need a form 1099-NEC. Then, you need to fill out a 1096, which is a glorified cover note, and send it, with the top copies of the forms, to the IRS.

As if we don't have enough to do, the USPTO is offering a slew of courses online. Some might be of interest to some of the alien romances blog readers, so I have copied it wholesale (except for the patent boot camps and inventor events), because I rather doubt that most of you are on the USPTO mailing list.

Tomorrow, January 14

Trademark Basics Boot Camp, Module 2: Registration process overview 2:00 p.m. ET
This event is a must for any small business or new entrepreneur learning to navigate trademarks for the first time. In this module, we'll focus on the overall trademark registration process, from filing to registration.

Name, Image, Likeness tips and strategies all student-athletes should know 5:30 p.m. ET
Are you interested in leveraging your image and influence to monetize your personal brand? This event offers invaluable insights from two former athletes to help you transform your passion into profit.

January 17

Federal trademark filing: Overview 3:00 p.m. ET
This webinar will introduce you to our new filing system in Trademark Center. 

January 21

Trademark Basics Boot Camp, Module 3: Searching 2:00 p.m. ET
In the third module of this eight-part recurring series, we'll focus on important principles related to federal trademark clearance searching and effective use of the USPTO’s trademark database.

January 23

Anti-piracy symposium 8:30 a.m. ET
Attend online or in person to learn about the challenges posed by copyright piracy. Hear from legal experts and explore piracy issues affecting industries like film, music, and publishing.

PTAB Inventor Hour - Episode 34 12:00 noon ET
This month's Inventor Hour will feature Jerry Ma, the USPTO's Chief Artificial Intelligence Officer. We'll also give an overview of how judges use evidence in PTAB proceedings.

January 24

Federal trademark searching: Overview 3:00 p.m. ET
This webinar, geared toward new users, will introduce you to our trademark search system, including why you should search and where to find help.

Just for kicks, and these are my words, if your writing career is not working out for you, and you might like a more officious line of work, the USPTO has a course for would-be Feds.

Kickstart your federal career: Hiring paths 1;00 p.m. ET
When you apply for a federal job, there are over a dozen hiring pathways available. Join this webinar and learn about the different federal hiring paths and which ones may work for you.

Previewing this is taking too long, so I will publish first and apologize later.

All the best,


Friday, January 10, 2025

Taking the Bucket Out of the Bucket List, Part 2 by Karen S. Wiesner

 

Taking the Bucket Out of the Bucket List, Part 2

by Karen S. Wiesner 

In this final of an updated, two part reprisal of earlier posts on the Alien Romances blog, I discuss the wisdom and benefits of, and strategies for, drawing up a personal bucket list as early as possible--long before the curtain of a life is drawn. Only slightly belated as you draw up your New Year’s resolutions, I encourage everyone, not just those interested in writing (or aliens!), to read this. 

 

Last week we went over what a bucket list is, and I discussed my own realizations of wanting to achieve my most desired goals early enough in life to enjoy them throughout all the days of my life that followed. Let's continue with actual strategies for forging ahead. 

Taking the Next Step--Are You Ready? 

Coming up with a formal or informal bucket list as early in life as possible will help anyone focus their time and energies in areas they're already passionate about as well as provide excitement, inspiration, and the push toward finding purpose and a sense of accomplishment long before the curtain of a life is drawn. 

While I was working on this article, I was asked a couple questions that are worth considering on your own as you decide whether you're ready to take the bull by the horns yourself. 

Had I been making bucket lists since my twenties, or did I just start making them recently? All things considered, I’d have to conclude I’ve actually been making them mentally since I was 20 and I just never really realized that was what I was doing all this time.

Would I have benefited in my twenties by formally writing my goals down? Have I benefited now for writing them down versus just thinking about my plans in my head? I suppose the blanket answer to these two questions that feed into each other is about the same: It might have benefited me to formally write down my bucket list goals at any point; however, I’ve always had a mind like a relentless robot seeking out all the dark corners of my own soul. For me, it didn’t really make a huge difference to officially spell out my goals for myself. What you've seen presented in this article is what I saw in my head from the beginning. That said, I think most people probably will benefit greatly from actually make their bucket lists formal plans with loose or definitive goals. 

I have several pieces of advice to those wanting to forge ahead into a life lived with purpose:

 

A.     Choose wisely. You don't have to feel like you're required to have a certain number of goals on your list. I have four, which is a nice, even number, but if you only ever have one, that's fine. You can add to it if you want to (no pressure) at any time as you complete or become proficient at priority items. This thing isn't set in stone, nor should it be. If you discover one of your wishes isn't really something you like after all, well, you've learned something about yourself you didn't know before, right? That said, you do want to include on this list only things that you're strongly zealous about and are deeply committed to fulfilling. This is another reason why limiting the list is advisable. There's no point in having a checklist of this kind that includes a bunch of things you're not serious enough to actually make deliberate preparations in undertaking. I don't think anyone needs another random to-do list lying around collecting dust.

 

B.     Prioritize your bucket list in the order of the things you want to accomplish first and last, and don't try to take on the whole list at once. That's a recipe for failure. Start with the top one, the most important to you, and make a serious go of completing and/or developing it over time, perhaps even years. Make this part of your daily or weekly life. The whole reason for doing this long in advance of having an actual deadline (especially one as final as death!) is to accomplish things you enjoy and may spend the rest of your life taking pleasure in and cultivating. In many cases, the items on your list will require an investment: Of time, discipline, energy, money, and frequently all of the above. Trust me, you're embarking on a labor of love with any one of these.

 

C.     Make a plan for how to go about fulfilling the items on your bucket list, one at a time. Set goals over time so you're doing something toward making the wish reality. Make a commitment to forging ahead with your goals. Start small, if you need to, and make initially small investments of time, energy, and finances. Work into the passion that can motivate you to keep going bigger and better. I know a lot of people can't think of long-term projects that require large investments of time, energy, or money because their lives are busy, complicated, and/or they're financially unable. In those situations, creativity may be needed to get started. Devote just five, ten, fifteen minutes--whatever you can eke out every day or once a week to advance your project. Take free classes at your local library or online. Ask close friends and family to gift you with an item you need for a birthday or Christmas. Small, slow, and frugal can produce results eventually, too!

 

D.     Define your reasons for what you hope to accomplish with each item on your bucket list if for no other reason than that you set yourself on a path toward seeing where it's going, or where it could be going. I wanted to understand my motivations clearly from the start, whether I intended to advance in these areas for individual edification or for something more--such as, my drawing could potentially lead to an exciting new career for me in the future.

 

E.     Only you can decide if your pursuits are worthwhile. Don't let yourself or anyone else tell you that something you've chosen to do isn't meaningful or significant. The goal of personal development is valuable--whatever your chosen aspiration. At the very least, anything you achieve is one regret you'll never have to feel.

Nearly three decades after I started pursuing the wishes on my informal bucket list, I find myself realizing that as I look back over what I've managed to accomplish, I'm satisfied. If my time in this world ended tomorrow, I would feel as though I lived with purpose and that I'd accomplished something worthwhile. Instead of waiting until I was close to kicking the bucket, you might say I took the bucket out of my bucket list. I took the bull by the horns, and I'm reaching for previously categorized "don't even bother wishing 'cause they can't come true" things and I'm making them a passionate part of my everyday reality, one at a time, step by step, until my time runs out. 

If you're interested in taking the bucket out of your own bucket list, jumping in now on the things you've always wanted to do, the worksheet below might be helpful in getting you started. You can and should come back to this often in the future to revise and hone your goals, re-strategizing as you make progress from one item to the next. Remember, small, slow, and cheap still means moving forward. 

My Bucket List 

Date: (may include the dates of whenever you've revised) 

What's in My Bucket 

Wishes: (listed in order of priority, #1 being the one I'm most passionate about and the one I'll get started on first) 

#1 

When and how will I begin to reach for things in my bucket?

 

a)    How long do I want to experience this goal? Circle one: Once | Ongoing | Until I'm finished

 

b)    Detail the first step to beginning:

 

c)     Describe later steps to developing my goal:

 

d)    Specify the time(s) and day(s) I'm devoting to the undertaking:

 

e)    Brainstorm strategies to help accomplish my wish:

 

f)      Identify why this is in my bucket and what I hope to get out of it:

 #2

 

When and how will I begin to reach for things in my bucket?

 

a)    How long do I want to experience this goal? Circle one: Once | Ongoing | Until I'm finished

 

b)    Detail the first step to beginning:

 

c)     Describe later steps to developing my goal:

 

d)    Specify the time(s) and day(s) I'm devoting to the undertaking:

 

e)    Brainstorm strategies to help accomplish my wish:

 

f)      Identify why this is in my bucket and what I hope to get out of it:

 

You can find a PDF of this worksheet here: https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/uploads/2/3/5/5/23554234/bucketlistcourtesyofkarenwiesnertypeb.pdf   

For those who are more goal-oriented, Type A personalities like myself, you might want an even more vigorous plan of attack. For that, I offer a more in-depth worksheet, which you can find here: https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/uploads/2/3/5/5/23554234/bucketlistcourtesyofkarenwiesnertypea.pdf, or you could even incorporate the heart of the bucket list ideals into a SMART goals program (a simple internet search will hook you up for that). 

"Seize the life and the day will follow!" ~Linda Derkez 

Karen Wiesner is an award-winning, multi-genre author of over 150 titles and 16 series.

Visit her website here: https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/

and https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/karens-quill-blog

Find out more about her books and see her art here: http://www.facebook.com/KarenWiesnerAuthor

Visit her publisher here: https://www.writers-exchange.com/Karen-Wiesner/

Thursday, January 09, 2025

Marvels of Evolution

I'm reading a recently published work by famed evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, THE GENETIC BOOK OF THE DEAD. The title refers to this book's dominant metaphor of a palimpsest, a document whose text has been written over, sometimes more than once. On a literal palimpsest, the original words have been obliterated by the later ones. That isn't the case with the genetic, anatomical, physiological, and behavioral traces that reveal the ancestral past of animals and other living creatures, so the metaphor isn't perfect (as Dawkins notes) but still makes a fruitful device for contemplating the evolution of life on Earth. As the cover blurb puts it, every creature can be regarded as "an archive of the worlds of its ancestors." What do an animal's body structure, genome, and behavior inform us about the environment that shaped it?

Naturally, it's easy to tell a herbivore's skull from a carnivore's by their teeth. We can learn much more about the past of various species by observing present-day creatures, though. A lizard with skin like rocks and sand must have descended from ancestors that lived in a desert; the forebears of insects that look like twigs must have evolved in trees. Many other types of visual deception exist, some truly weird. The "palimpsest" can tell us about animals whose predecessors left the ocean to become land-dwellers, returned to the sea, and some cases even developed back into terrestrial animals. Convergent evolution can result in animals that look uncannily similar although not at all closely related, because they've developed to fill the same kinds of environmental niches. One page illustrates a variety of marsupials alongside their placental mammal counterparts, some almost indistinguishable to a casual glance. "Divergent" evolution, on the other hand, concerns closely related species that have developed so differently in different habitats that they look nothing alike, e.g., whales and hippos. And those topics take us less than halfway through the book. In an exciting twist in the final chapter, for instance, we learn that we may have acquired a nontrivial portion of our genes from ancient viruses.

For another mind-blowing work by Dawkins, check out THE ANCESTOR'S TALE. This one adopts its metaphor from Chaucer's THE CANTERBURY TALES, which portrays a group of pilgrims coming from far and wide to unite and travel together. Beginning with modern humans, Dawkins follows the evolution of life backward by successive stages to each most recent common ancestor -- our common ancestor with other hominids, then the shared progenitor of hominids and other apes, through primates, placental mammals, etc., back to the hypothetical original ancestor of all life on our planet. Of course, as the author points out, no matter what modern-day creature we start from, we ultimately end up at the same point. He starts with Homo Sapiens simply because that's us. THE ANCESTOR'S TALE is the most comprehensive survey of the development of life on Earth I've ever read.

Some animals and plants are so odd -- to human observers -- that an SF author wouldn't need to search far to discover concepts for bizarre aliens right here on our world. Reverting to THE GENETIC BOOK OF THE DEAD, I find the chapter on convergent evolution particularly interesting. It's often claimed that if life exists on other planets, the inhabitants won't look anything like earthlings. But why not? If we discover a planet with geography, climate, gravity, and atmosphere similar to Earth's, couldn't those environmental conditions lead to the development of organisms that strongly resemble the plants and animals we know? Biological constraints work the same everywhere on Earth, so why not on other Earth-like planets? There could even be humanoid or quasi-humanoid intelligent beings on such a world.

Margaret L. Carter

Please explore love among the monsters at Carter's Crypt.

Saturday, January 04, 2025

Old Wives' Tales

This is said to be a sad time of year, as in S.A.D. or Seasonally Affective Disorder.

Laughter is the best medicine, some say. My inner skeptic assumed that those who said so were mostly professional comedians, authors of humor, and cartoonists, but I did some research and found some laughter enthusiasts in the medical field,  including Lawrence Robinson, Melinda Smith, and Jeanne Segal.

See here: https://www.helpguide.org/mental-health/wellbeing/laughter-is-the-best-medicine

Others say that food is the best medicine. Of course, that does not mean any food, and in the instance of food, quality beats quantity.

See here: https://time.com/longform/food-best-medicine/

I created a recipe this morning which I should like to share. It could be way less expensive than a trip to a urologist, and quicker to prepare than a trip to a pharmacy.  Try it at the first hint of a tickle when you tinkle.

Small saucepan, preferably glass.
Large teaspoon.

Bag of dried cranberries. (you will need a generous cupful)
Bag of Pearl Barley (you will need a handful.... this is not scientific)
Heaped teaspoon of Braswell's Jalapeño jam (Braswell's Red Pepper jam will do)
Hot water
Cupful of water in which you previously boiled beetroot (and set aside for any sediment to settle).

Put everything in the saucepan and boil for 15 minutes or longer depending on how soft you like your barley.
Serve warm in a bowl, with spoon.

Reheat later in the day, serve warm again.
You can buy Braswell's jams from Amazon.

If you have gout, add dried cherries, or make with all cherries.

Why? Barley water is an old British wives cure for UTIs. Eat the barley and you add very special fiber which will help with regularity. Look up Lemon Barley water. 

Cranberries are an old American wives cure for bacterial issues in the bladder. Some say they coat the bladder and prevent bacteria from getting a foothold, or whatever kind of hold bacteria get when they set up a squat inside a body.

Water is good for flushing out the bacteria that you wish to eject before they can multiply.

Beetroot water is not essential for the recipe, but if you are starting an infection, your BP may be raised, and beets are high in folate and  nitrates which turn into nitric oxide which relaxes the blood vessels and lowers blood pressure temporarily (without enriching Big Pharma). Beets also fight inflammation.  For other benefits of beets, see here: https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/benefits-of-beets

Since it is a red concoction owing to the cranberries and the jelly, a bit of beet in it goes down a treat.

There's no real reason to add the sweet heat of jalapeño or red pepper jam, except that it is good, and healthy for some folks. I like to boil my beets and then slice and reheat them in the oven with olive oil, a shake of chili powder, and a loving spoonful of Braswell's jelly. I put jelly on halved, microwaved sweet potatoes, too. The jelly is also good slathered on salmon while it bakes.

If it is the only sugary stuff you have all day, you can afford it.

All the best,

Rowena Cherry



Friday, January 03, 2025

Taking the Bucket Out of the Bucket List, Part 1 by Karen S. Wiesner


Taking the Bucket Out of the Bucket List, Part 1

by Karen S. Wiesner

 

 

In this updated, two part reprisal of earlier posts on the Alien Romances blog, I discuss the wisdom and benefits of, and strategies for, drawing up a personal bucket list as early as possible--long before the curtain of a life is drawn. Only slightly belated as you draw up your New Year's resolutions, I encourage everyone, not just those interested in writing (or aliens!), to read this.

About 10 years ago, I sort of watched the movie The Bucket List out of my peripheral vision. My husband is fond of watching movies on one of our TVs while I play videogames on the other. Condensing the theme of that movie, two terminally ill, older men come up with a wish list of things they want to do--and, in an abbreviated amount of time, they attempt to fulfill them--before their time on Earth literally runs out. My first thought in response to the theme of this film was, Why would anyone want to do this when they're old, tired, dying, and it's nearly too late? Why not do the things you're passionate about long before there actually is a countdown to death and while young enough to truly enjoy the adventure(s) undertaken? Few questions have ever motivated me more than these two. 

As far as the internet can tell, the term "bucket list" was either created or popularized by that 2007, so-named movie. A bucket list is believed to relate to the idiom "kick the bucket", which is a term that originated in the 16th century. Be prepared to cringe: The wooden frame that was used to suspend slaughtered animals was called a bucket. I think you can guess what happened after they were hung up by their hooves. Yikes. Long story short, there was a lot of kicking done just prior to death. A bucket list, then, is created to clarify what one wishes to accomplish either in a specific timeframe (as in, "one and done" tasks completed in a short amount of time) or by the end of a life (long-term projects). Bucket list wishes can be self-actualization goals or ones you've set for endeavors such as charity work, career, or family or friend-related purposes. 

While at that time I didn't really sit down and write up a formal bucket list of my own, I thought long and hard about which goals would make mine. The most important factors in doing this, for me, were, first and foremost, that I would be able to enjoy them all throughout the rest of my life, and, only slightly less important, that I'd be able to accomplish my personal goals earlier in life than "at the end". 

My list actually wasn't that difficult to come up with, as I'm sure other people will discover as well, because many of these were already passions I was unwilling or unable to indulge in thus far in my life. In the process, I formulated a list of four things I'd spent my lifetime up to that point dreaming about but not believing I could do. My reasons for not doing them stemmed from a) the expense involved, b) the lack of time to undertake them, and c) being very aware that it takes me a long time and a whole lot of effort to learn new things (in part because I was already 45 years old when I embarked on this). 

Unofficially, I suppose the first real bucket list wish I made started with writing. I wrote (and illustrated) my first story when I was eight, and I always knew that was what I wanted to do more than anything else. There was little if any encouragement around me for this endeavor but, in the defense of my friends and family, becoming a success in this field isn't exactly a stable environment or income. When I was 20, I was determined to make a go of it regardless. My first book was published when I was 27…just after I'd made the heartrending decision to quit writing because I'd already invested nearly a decade attempting and failing to get published. Sometimes it takes that kind of irony to kick you in the pants and inspire you to reach for more. I spent the next 27 years of my life setting goals and pouring my all into making something of my writing. As I near the end of my writing career at the age of almost 55, my published credits in most every genre imaginable have passed 150 titles and these have garnered nominations or wins for over 130 awards. 

The bucket list of lifelong passions I officially came up with after watching The Bucket List was quickly assembled (written down here years later in all the detail I imagined from its origin), prioritizing my wishes according to my deepest desires: 

#1: Learn to play piano. I've loved music all my life. I can't stand silence so music fills all my waking moments. I wasn't allowed to learn an instrument in school, and I'd wanted to from the moment the possibility was brought up. My goal in doing this wasn't fame or to perform in a professional setting. It would only ever be for private enrichment and perhaps to accompany family and friends--many of them musicians. 

I started small with the first Alfred's Piano instruction book and my son's discarded keyboard. I practiced every day, teaching myself from the manual and asking my guitar- and saxophone-playing husband (who was part of the praise team band at our church) for help whenever I needed it. Naturally, that keyboard quickly didn't have what I needed to advance (88 keys and pedals), but a generous gift allowed me to purchase my first beautiful piano. I also started taking piano lessons nearly a year into my efforts and took them for more than four years. When my instructor moved away, I went back to teaching myself. 

At the time I started, I committed myself to this, my #1 bucket list priority, and I was disciplined in daily practice and learning as much as I could about all aspects. I knew going into it that it would be the biggest challenge of my life, and, boy, was (and is) it. But it's worth it. Nearly a decade in now, I'm still learning, still developing, still passionate about it, and it's something I'll do, and enjoy, until the day I die. 

#2: Develop my drawing and artistic skills across many types of media. I've been writing children's books as long as I can remember, but finding someone to illustrate them hasn't been easy. I've had many stories that I've written that I couldn't get anyone to provide artwork for so they're sitting in my story cupboard, unpublished. In the past, I often wished that the fledgling talent I've had all my life in this field could be cultivated and honed into true ability. While I didn't at first intend to make illustrating children's books a career, when I made my decision several years ago to retire from writing soon, I realized that it was exactly what I wanted to do once I'd completed the last of my 16 book series. 

I started slow and cheap. Using inexpensive pencils and drawing pads or typing paper I already had lying around the house, I randomly drew whatever inspired me whenever I had downtime from writing. In the first year I undertook this, I produced a few good things. I wasn't trying to do anything serious beyond seeing what I could accomplish and what my strengths and weaknesses were. I knew if I let myself get too excited, it would interrupt my writing, and I didn't want to do that, considering I was counting down to completing my last several novels. I wanted to devote myself to making those stories the best they could be. 

Finding myself slowing down in general with nearly everything in my life, recovering from writing projects became much more difficult for me. I needed longer breaks and other ways to relax in between projects. I invested a bit more time and money into my artistic endeavors. I found a place that offers affordable DVD/streaming courses taught by some of the best experts in their respective fields and purchased three art classes on drawing, pencil coloring, and painting. These could be done as I had time and I could set my own pace. I purchased artist grade pencils, paper, and other supplies and equipment. Additionally, I reworked my daily and yearly goals to include times of writing and times of art. I also decided to bring along my readers on this endeavor by posting my art (such as it was) on my Facebook page. The response has been both motivating and moving. 

As my artistic abilities grow, I'm finding the process hard, but also realizing I can do things I could never have imagined I was capable of in the past. At the moment, I'm still reining in how much time and effort I devote to these endeavors, but, as of late 2024, I'd finished the final books in my last two series. By the time I'm ready to get started illustrating my first children's book, I'm hoping I'll have a wide variety of mediums I'm skilled enough in to utilize. Now that I'm completely done writing, all I have to do is wait for the last ten of my books to be edited and published. It's full-speed ahead on art while I wait.

#3: Learn a second language. I took a year of French in high school and I was actually really good at reading and writing the language, just not speaking it. When it started getting mathematical (the way they do numbers is hard!), I dropped out. I've regretted my decision not to continue. Also, I used to have a friend who spoke native Spanish, and I always wished I could understand her when she talked to her family in the language. That would have been the perfect time to start learning, as I could have gotten real feedback and help in learning, but I wasn't motivated at that time. My husband is very good at languages--he taught himself ancient Greek and he's using a program that makes learning a language fun and easy to advance for Spanish. He's constantly asking me to join him in the program, but with writing, piano, and art in my daily life taking up most of my time and energy, I'm spread a little thin. In mid-2024, I started using this language program. My Spanish "score" is currently at 20. Six months ago it was 0.) 

#4: Learning. Just learning. Like most people, I have a lot of random interests that I've never had a lot of time to explore--learning to sing professionally (I do have natural talent in this regard, luckily) as an accompaniment to playing piano, professional photography to help my illustrating, finding out more about unique periods of history (Medieval specifically), geography, space, art culture, and science. The place where I got my art DVDs offers courses in a lot of these disciplines that interest me. I don't currently have a lot of time, but I've already mentioned that I don't care for silence. Usually I fill it with music or art lessons. However, there are frequent slots in my day where I could easily be listening to a lecture, learning more about any one of these random interests. I always want to be learning new things that may inspire any of my other abilities to new heights of creativity.

Next week we'll talk about strategies in taking the next step toward achieving the goals in your life you're most passionate about seeing fulfilled. 

"Seize the life and the day will follow!" ~Linda Derkez  

Karen Wiesner is an award-winning, multi-genre author of over 150 titles and 16 series.

Visit her website here: https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/

and https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/karens-quill-blog 

Find out more about her books and see her art here: http://www.facebook.com/KarenWiesnerAuthor 

Visit her publisher here: https://www.writers-exchange.com/Karen-Wiesner/

Sunday, December 29, 2024

Character Building

What builds character?

In the fictional sense, I used to assign a star sign and read my fictional character's horoscope and all their astrological compatibilities and incompatibilities. I also put a lot in store by what he had in his pockets or she had in her handbag or purse.

I've got a new one. Just as there are said to be--in fiction--Twenty Master Plots, some psycho-therapists claim that there are sixteen personality types.

You can take a test to find out what your own type is:

If that is too much trouble, you can reverse engineer this example:

As for character in real life, according to Hillsdale College, character is built from the study of the highest things, of the great, the good, and the beautiful in art and literature and philosophy.

"The Bible has a lot to say about how suffering produces godly character. In Romans 5:3-4, it says, “We can rejoice, too, when we run into problems and trials, for we know that they help us develop endurance. And endurance develops strength of character, and character strengthens our confident hope of salvation.”

https://www.str.org/w/suffering-adversity-and-character-development

Suffering, adversity, endurance, being misunderstood certainly make for a hero or heroine's interesting back story.

I rented INVICTUS last night (on Amazon Prime TV). I've seen it 3x before, but it is quite the study in character, inspiration, and the power of forgiveness and kindness.... also, how supporting a nation's sports team can unite a divided nation.

Happy New Year to everyone.

All the best,

Rowena Cherry

Friday, December 27, 2024

{Put This One on Your TBR List} Book Review: The Wood at Midwinter by Susanna Clarke by Karen S. Wiesner

 

{Put This One on Your TBR List}

Book Review: The Wood at Midwinter by Susanna Clarke

by Karen S. Wiesner

 

 

Susanna Clarke is the author of Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, an enormous, epic fantasy that was the author's debut novel. More of that world is explored in the author's short story collection, The Ladies of Grace Adieu and Other Stories. I reviewed both of these previously. You can read them here: 

Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2023/09/book-review-jonathan-strange-mr-norrell.html 

The Ladies of Grace Adieu and Other Stories https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2023/11/karen-s-wiesner-put-this-one-on-your_02046837301.html 

Clarke's first novel in this alternative history world felt incomplete to most who read it because it ended on what I consider a cliffhanger. The author intended a sequel set a few years after the first. Though readers had to expect the follow-up to take a long time to write (Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell took ten years to complete), we later learned Clarke is plagued by chronic fatigue syndrome. She's reported that the fate of the sequel is still “a long way off” but may also never be finished because of her condition. I truly hope she someday has the strength to complete it. In the meantime, we've been given a new story set within that magical world, The Wood at Midwinter. I purchased the hardcover as soon as it was published in 2024 (it was read on BBC Radio 4 around the time of Christmas 2022). Illustrations were done by Victoria Sawdon (I couldn't find out much about her online, though she's seems to be active on several social media sites I'm not subscribed to). This tale is so brief, anything I said about it would be to practically tell the whole story, so it might be best to just include the back cover blurb as a summary: 

Nineteen-year-old Merowdis Scot is an unusual girl. She can talk to animals and trees--and she is only ever happy when she is walking in the woods.

One snowy afternoon, out with her dogs and Apple the pig, Merowdis encounters a blackbird and a fox. As darkness falls, a strange figure enters in their midst--and the path of her life is changed forever.


The illustrations are elegant, delicate, and pivotal to the story (which makes it a little sad that the illustrator's name wasn't on the cover!). Grounded in folktale, this charming fable sets the scene for winter's frozen beauty. Slightly sad and very sweet, it would make the perfect gift for Christmas. Also, I tried to view it as a simple children's story. In that way, it doesn't require any aspect to be fleshed out more than it is between the few words and breathtaking illustrations included. If you don't go into it expecting more than that, you won't be disappointed. 

If not for the author's afterword (nine pages out of a total of a mere 60), there's simply no way to link this to the world of Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell beyond the very tenuous connection to "magic in the midst". As Susanna Clarke is also the author of one of my favorite stories of all time (Piranesi--read my review here: https://aliendjinnromances.blogspot.com/2023/10/karen-s-wiesner-put-this-one-on-your_0415966123.html), I'll gratefully take this and any story from her. 

Karen Wiesner is an award-winning, multi-genre author of over 150 titles and 16 series.

Visit her website here: https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/

and https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/karens-quill-blog

Find out more about her books and see her art here: http://www.facebook.com/KarenWiesnerAuthor 

Visit her publisher here: https://www.writers-exchange.com/Karen-Wiesner/