Friday Recommends

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Sometimes they’re the same thing, yeah?

But first, a repeat of a FANTASTIC tool for anybody who has to write anything. It was designed for the fiction writer, but would be great for a report, a speech, a non-fiction book, and anything else that needs to be free AND structured. You could probably use it to plan a web site. Anyway, it’s yWriter5. It’s kind of complex, but there’s an ongoing help forum on the web site, lots of help documentation, and working with it opens up its possibilities. I am SO NOT an outliner, but this program makes outlining work for me as part of the flow. It’s amazing. And it’s FREE. Did I mention it’s FREE?

If you have any questions about spelling, grammar, punctuation, capitalization, or usage, Dan Persinger is your man. He does not suffer fools gladly, but he does suffer them, which is why he tolerates me. He writes mysteries under the name of Jack Hardway. The fact that that name totally cracks me up probably says something analyzable about me. Anyway, Jack Hardway also has a blog (or, as he correctly calls it, a web log) with the subtitle A Lot Of Writers Are Dopes.

While at WordCamp last year, I met Niles Flores, a woman who loves blogging, social media, web design and Egypt, not necessarily in that order. Her business site, blondish.net, is the mostest funnestest business site EVAR.

My new BFF is HootSuite. That’s what I’m using to schedule promotional posts on FaceBook and Twitter. I can schedule three at each place at different times a day, then relax and just use the social networks to be social. I like it because it works on both networks, and I can write the promos that make sense for each. No Twitter hashtags in MY Facebook stream, (oops! I think I just did that by askident. My bad.).

[By the way, many grammarians ~waves to Dan Persinger~ dislike multiple sentences inside parentheses inside a sentence. Tough.]

My best time-waster is Pinterest. It’s invitation-only, so, naturally, Holly Jahangiri invited me in order to waste my time and distract me from the Race to the Hugo Award. Nice try, Holly. Won’t work. yWriter5 has foiled you. Ha HAAAAA!!

WRITING PROMPT: A character “wastes” a lot of time on something that becomes suddenly useful. An oldie but a goodie.

MA

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That means, “At last,” in case you didn’t know. My internet service provider has been down all morning, and I was reduced to typing messages to myself.

Anyway, here are some cool places I’ve been this week.

Because of all the SOPA/PIPA hoo-hah, I looked up some information on Intellectual Property. I also read a most interesting article by Cecilia Tan, a publisher, on Digital Book World, entitled “How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Ebook Piracy“. Intriguing title, yes?

Author Lois Winston has a good article on Five Scribes on the subject of rejection, with a list of the top 10 reasons a manuscript is rejected. Some are beyond our control, but most are not. It’s probably a good idea for all of us, whether we write or not, to take a dispassionate look at the reasons people do poorly in our chosen line of endeavor and another dispassionate look at our own practices. We don’t need to be defeatist because some things are matters of chance or circumstance until we’ve optimized everything WE can.

The How To Write Shop is chock-full of information and resources. Check it out!

Crabfu Steamworks has a super-fantastic post on how to draw Steampunk Machines. That car at the top? I have that car in a story! Only now I know how it works! Is that cool, or what?

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a cold, and I’m going to crawl off somewhere and sneeze.

WRITING PROMPT: Give a cold to a very dignified character.

MA

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Friday the 13th falls on a Friday this month, so it behooves us to beware lest we be befuddled. If you don’t know Pogo, my first recommendation to you is to read the Wiki on Pogo and then read some of the strips. You’re welcome.

flag by Nick Piche

I can’t remember if I recommended this guy before, but I’m recommending him now: Nick Piche. Besides being a fan of the Oxford comma (a comma after EVERY “and” and “or” in a series), he writes killer fiction.

If you’re seriously locavore and have the room for some structures (and your neighborhood codes allow it), have a look at Suburban Hobby Farmer by Bill Brikiatis. Lots of good stuff there!

Our #4 daughter showed me this video and I have to share it:

It snowed here overnight, so I went looking for programs to make my own snowflakes. Here’s a fun one. Or, if you’re old-skool, you can cut some out of paper with Martha Stewart. With Martha Stewart’s instructions, I mean. You wouldn’t actually use Martha Stewart in place of scissors. If she were that sharp, she wouldn’t have done time, am I right? (Sorry, Martha! I love ya, gal!)

WRITING PROMPT: If you love cold weather, write a character who hates it. If you hate it, write a character who loves it.

MA

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New follower Dean has asked for recipes for a new cook, so I’ve scoured the internet (which is more than I’ve done to my sink) and come up with these links. How you all work me! (Points to anyone who gets the reference.)

First, a list of recipes “For the Beginner Cook” from Food.com. They have a bunch on that page and more in the sidebar. They look WOW.

Lots of new cooks are students, so you might look into Student Recipes, if you can stand the “I think this funkiness will appeal to students” design of the web site. It looks pretty good, actually, very well organized and easy to use. On the first page, in the pictures on the left side, the middle picture in the bottom row, the picture of the toast with butter on it, is labeled “Quick” and takes you to a page of many quick and easy recipes. I plan to check this one out at greater length. Dude.

[Note: Did you know that if you're on Twitter and you mention Lebowski, Dude, the Duderino or Duder, you automatically get a reply quote from THE BIG LEBOWSKI? I found that out yesterday.]

You can usually count on About.com to help you out, and this was no exception. They have a Busy Cook site with a Quick and Easy section.

AllRecipes has three sections that I’ve found so far: Quick and Easy Recipes, New Quick and Easy Recipes and Convenience Cooking.

The Food Network has some recipes it calls Quick and Easy, but their idea of quick and easy may not be mine. They don’t claim they’re cheap, either.

Last but I hope not least, check out my Alligator Sandwiches here on this blog. As I explained to Dean, they aren’t really recipes for alligator sandwiches. I just call them that because they’re so quick and easy you can make them when somebody says, “Let’s eat! And let’s make it snappy!”

Enjoy your weekend!

WRITING PROMPT: What is your main character so obsessed with, all his or her dreams contain some reference to it?

MA

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First, spend some time at Life Just Is. Beautiful photographs, beautiful — and sometimes pointed — musings.

Single Dad Laughing is sometimes, as the name suggests, funny, but it’s often what the French call a cri de coeur (a cry from the heart) for a better world for this dad’s child and all our children to inhabit. The Nine Words That Just Might Fix Us All is one of those posts. It’s long, but it’s worth your time.

C.M. Stewart writes wonderfully disturbing short fiction, but she also knows her way around a kitchen. Her Quick, Easy & Vegan Hot Chocolate Recipes are just what you need, with the winter moving in.

While you’re picking up tips, pop over to The Daily Buzz for these 25 clever ideas to make your life easier. Then go to their home page and look at their other great ideas for more. Their focus is on “babies, kids and maternity” but helpful tips are helpful tips, right?

Spunk on a Stick is still the go-to spot for writerly motivation, promotion advice, unique book news and writing/speaking tips.

While we’re on the subject of writing, here’s a little how-to from New Media Rights on finding images, music and video for use on a book cover and/or book trailer.

A company called DirectContactPR has graciously posted for sharing this nifty Publicity Calendar for 2012 packed with holidays, both usual and unusual, to help you in your marketing and/or blogging. Rubber Ducky Day? International Literacy Day? May 23 is World Turtle Day!

Finally, you need a laugh. You know you do. So enjoy this video. If Bud Blossom had a sense of humor, this would be Bud.

WRITING PROMPT: What does your main character care enough about to rant?

MA

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I admit it. This past week, on Tybee Island, I was not vegan. I was not vegetarian. I fell off the turnip truck so hard, Mahatma Gandhi bounced. So Imma make up for it by taking vegan dishes to Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. That way, I know our vegan daughter will have something she can eat.

What will I make? Well, maybe a bean cassoulet, though not the kind I made before, since I don’t have the same stuff in the pantry and fridge. Maybe something else.

I’ll have plenty to choose from. I found these nifty sites, great for finding recipes to please the vegan in your family or, if you’re the vegan in your family, great for finding recipes to please the omnivores who don’t know who good vegetarian food is.

Vegan.SheKnows has a selection of Top Vegan Christmas Recipes

The Veggie Table presents a full menu, with recipes, for a Vegetarian Christmas Dinner

Veg Kitchen has a variety of Vegan Christmas Dinner Recipes

If you’re British, or are partial to marmite and such, try the Vegan Family’s Vegan Christmas or Yule recipes.

And, if all those fail you, you can’t go wrong browsing Vegans Eat Pencil Shavings.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to go rummage in the kitchen and decide whether I want to make a lentil and mushroom risotto or maybe a vegetable shepherd’s pie or….

WRITING PROMPT: One member of your main character’s family has dietary restrictions. How does your main character deal with that?

MA

 

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First, I have a new short story out! It’s a hard-boiled cozy called “Crumb”, in which a tough broad who opens a tea shop (naturally, there’s a cat in it–I said it’s a cozy) is invaded by a hit-man hired by her daughter’s no-good ex. “Crumb” appears in DARK THINGS II: Cat Crimes: Tales of Feline Mayhem and Murder (Volume 2). All proceeds are being donated to animal rescue charities.

SPEC THE HALLS is still available, with my story “Evergreen Gaze” in it, benefiting Heifer International.

2012 DAILY FLASH is out from Pill Hill Press, 366 daily doses of flash fiction (Leap Year edition), containing my micro story “The Perfect Boyfriend”. Also 365 stories by other people.

And The Book Trailer Showcase is open! This site will … well … showcase book trailers. Today is the Grand Opening, so pop on over and browse around. I don’t think any of my trailers or books are up there yet, but I’m in the queue.

Lots of good newses, yes? :)

WRITING PROMPT: Send a character to a Grand Opening. What is it the Grand Opening of? A hardware store? An opera? A death-pit?

MA

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I’m languishing here in durance vile on a beautiful island where the Christmas lights are strung on palm trees, eating crab by the pound and working on my writing. It’s a tough life, but I know I have to suffer for my art.

Meanwhile, Holly Jahangiri has been posting at The Next Goal about the qualities of a winner. I recommend them to your attention.

She takes as her text the Boy Scout Law.

A Scout is:

The words aren’t all links to posts because some of them are grouped together in one post, but they’re all covered. And, of course, a winner follows the Boy Scout Motto: Be Prepared.

I’m sorry, Holly, but it’s inevitable that I add this:

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to do some more tough research for a story I’m writing about a woman trapped in Paradise.

WRITING PROMPT: Did your main character belong to a youth organization like the Scouts? Why or why not? If so, what did he or she learn from it?

MA

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Click to enlarge, click back arrow to return to post.

I’m lucky enough to have grandchildren, so I’ve never had to outgrow my love for what we, when I took a Library Science class, called “Kiddie Lit”. Oh, who am I kidding? I never did and never will outgrow my love for kids’ books. I love ‘em, from picture books to Young Adult. I even liked the first book in the Twilight series. What was the name of that book? Oh, yeah–TWILIGHT. Duh.

ANYWAY, one of the things I love about picture books is — guess what? — Yeah, the pictures. One of my favorite illustrators is Raymond Briggs, who did the earthy yet ethereal pictures for THE SNOWMAN. I recommend it to your attention.

Now comes Helen Ward, who studied under Briggs (among others), with an enchanting book called, in America, after the main character, SNUTT THE IFT. The original British publication was called WONDERFUL LIFE, but the American publisher may have been afraid that Americans are too stupid to know the difference between a watercolor painting of an imaginary creature on an alien planet and Jimmy Stewart.

Be that as it may, SNUTT THE IFT is purely beautiful, or as purely beautiful as anything can be which also contains little bits of mischievous humor. When you look at these illustrations, as Joanna Carey of The Guardian put it, “you think about where illustration stops and fine art begins.”

Miss Ward reminds me, warranted or not, in her Guardian interview, of a certain Miss Potter in her retiring self-effacement and in her love of animals and the outdoors. In contrast to Miss Potter, she prefers her animals to look and dress — or, rather, fail to dress — like animals.

Miss Ward wrote WONDERFUL LIFE / SNUTT THE IFT as well as illustrating it. The subjects it addresses, directly and indirectly, are dear to my heart: the beauty of diversity, the importance of mindful presence, the necessity of connection and the transcendent joy of friendship.

But don’t just take my word for it.  Get a load of this:

This is a book to add to your library, whether you have a child in your life or only in your heart.

You can buy it at Little Pickle Press. Aaand, this just in from the promotional Pickle: “Be sure to enter the grand prize drawing for NINE Little Pickle Press books including the two foreign-language titles. What a great gift for some lucky child. Just sign up for the newsletter at http://www.littlepicklepress.com to automatically be entered. While you’re there, look at all the award-winning books. Good luck!”

WRITING PROMPT: What was your main character’s favorite picture book when he or she was a child? What was yours? Why?

MA

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Not a list of things I love, in order from most to least. You tryna get me in trouble, or what?

Anyway, here are some things I ran across this week that I thought I’d share. In fact, I didn’t just think it — Imma do it.

First, I had the second-best meal I ever ate at The Green Door in Corydon. The only meal I ever had that was better was in The English Grill in the Brown Hotel in Louisville, Kentucky. And the only reason that one was better was that it was salmon. If there is reincarnation, I hope I come back as a salmon so I can be a cannibal and eat my own kind. What bliss!

ANYWAY, Mom and I and a group from my church, Corydon Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) — don’t you just love a church with a parenthetical phrase in its name? — ate at The Kintner House Inn in Corydon, and there we met Joyce Oglesby. Joyce is a writer, radio show host and a minister in her own way (she’s married to an ordained minister), helping men, women and families navigate relationship and economic problems from a Biblical perspective. As I always say, whatever works. (No, Joyce would say, NOT “whatever works”!) She’s a charming person, and her website has recipes on it! Hurrah!

~~THIS JUST IN! My fabulous-abulous friend Jane sent me this link to an article that says: Mission Could Seek Out Spock’s Home Planet! Who else is geeking out about this? Coincidentally, one of my fellow G-plussians posted this link to a Christmas Spaceman video which I totally LOVE! Watch it and see if you agree. We now return to our regularly scheduled nonsense.~~

I was going to buy myself Scrivener writing project organizing software, but I decided to try freeware first. I found yWriter5 and downloaded it. I haven’t used it yet, but it looks MOST useful.

See you tomorrow!

WRITING PROMPT: If your main character found — and believed — that the literal factuality of his or her faith had some serious gaps, would that weaken the faith?

MA

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