Blog Schedule

I post on Monday and Thursday with an occasional random blog thrown in for good measure. I do my best to answer all comments via email and visit around on the days I post.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

A Reflecting Survivor Continues Break


I'm supposed to reflect on the A to Z Challenge, and tell you all something about the experience.

This was a fun challenge for me and I'm not sure I'll ever be able to do much better... I had my theme figured out at the end of last year's so I never felt rushed. Plus, I started working on my posts by the end of February, scheduling two to four every week-end.

But a lot has happened between the end of April and the first week of May. On Thursday, the 2nd, I became violently ill and had to go to the hospital. Four days later I was released. Without going into details, I'm getting better,  but I'm weak and tired and don't seem to have any desire to hang out on the blogs.

So... I'm going to take the rest of May off. I need time to rejuvenate, to heal.

Thanks to EVERYONE who visited my blog during the challenge. I appreciate it more than you can know.


Many thanks to Barbara over at March House Books for giving me the Sunshine Award. As you might imagine, it came at the right time.



Monday, May 6, 2013

Adverbs and Cliches in a Nutshell

Today I'm excited to help out Jessica Bell with her latest book, ADVERBS AND CLICHES IN A NUTSHELL. I'm sure every writer has done battle with the pesky things and wouldn't mind getting some extra help. So let's give up for Jessica! *crowd cheering*

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Too many adverbs and clichés in your writing? I've got just the fix for you.
by Jessica Bell

Writers constantly have rules thrown at them left, right, and center. Show, don’t tell! Stop using so many dialogue tags! More sensory detail! More tension! Speed up the pace! Yada yada yada ... it can become overwhelming, yes? I used to feel overwhelmed by it all too. In fact, I still do sometimes. It’s hard enough to get the words on the page, let alone consider how to put them there.

In Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird, she says that in order not to be overwhelmed, a writer needs to focus on short assignments. She refers to the one-inch picture frame on her desk and how that little picture frame reminds her to focus on bite-sized pieces of the whole story. Basically, if you focus on one small thing at a time, the story will eventually come together to create a whole. I believe the same applies to learning the craft of writing. If writers focus on one aspect of the craft at a time, the process will seem less daunting and piece by piece it will come together.

My name’s Jessica Bell, and my own struggles with feeling overwhelmed inspired me to write the Writing in a Nutshell Series of pocket-sized writing guides. So you can learn to hone your craft in bite-sized, manageable pieces. In the first book of the series, I focused on demonstrating how to transition “telling” into “showing.” In Adverbs & Clichés in a Nutshell: Demonstrated Subversions of Adverbs & Clichés into Gourmet Imagery, I deal with another of the most common criticisms aspiring writers face: to absolutely avoid adverbs and clichés like the plague. But see, right now, I just used one of each. I also used a couple in the first two paragraphs of this post because they come naturally, and we utilize them frequently in everyday speech. But in fiction, too many adverbs and clichés weaken your prose. It’s considered “lazy writing,” because it means we don’t have to show what’s happening.

If your manuscript has too many adverbs and clichés, it most likely means that the emotion you felt while writing it is not going to translate to the reader in the same way. So how exactly can we approach the subversion of adverbs and clichés? For starters, play around with simile and metaphor when you’re trying to convey emotion, and for action, use strong verbs to show it happening in real time.

The key? Think smaller details rather than the bigger picture.

Need some help and inspiration?

In Adverbs & Clichés in a Nutshell: Demonstrated Subversions of Adverbs & Clichés into Gourmet Imagery, you will find thirty-four examples of prose which clearly demonstrate how to turn those pesky adverbs and clichés into vivid and unique imagery. Dispersed throughout are blank pages to craft your own unique examples. Extra writing prompts are also provided at the back of the book.
“Jessica Bell's latest pocket guide, Adverbs & Clichés in a Nutshell, will inspire you to leave bland behind and pursue your creative best. With force and clarity, she demonstrates how adverbs and clichés hobble vibrant writing. She then marks a course toward unique expression and provides workouts that will help writers at every level develop a distinctive voice.” ~Laurel Garver, freelance editor, author of Never Gone and Muddy-Fingered Midnights
Purchase links:
Amazon US | Amazon UK | Amazon Ca | Kobo


Bio: The Australian-native contemporary fiction author and poet, Jessica Bell, also makes a living as an editor and writer for global ELT publishers (English Language Teaching), such as Pearson Education, HarperCollins, Macmillan Education, Education First and Cengage Learning.

She is the co-publishing editor of Vine Leaves Literary Journal, and the director of the Homeric Writers’ Retreat & Workshop on the Greek island of Ithaca.

For more information about Jessica please visit:
Website | Blog | Twitter | Facebook


Thursday, May 2, 2013

Taking a Breath

April has come and gone and boy was it busy. Next Thursday I'll be posting about my experience with this year's A to Z Challenge.

But today, I pausing to take a breath. And to that end, I thought I'd pass these one to you.

Squall on the ocean.

Sunset over Magen's Bay.

Beauty in a storm cloud.

Relaxing at the end of the day.

 Split screen sunset.

Do you have a favorite picture of clouds or a sunset? Where was it taken?

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Z is for Zootenvaal Estate

For this, my fourth year doing the challenge, I've decided to share place names from the Virgin Islands. For such a small spot in the ocean, it seems like every rock, cove, hill and house has been christened. The names are a unique mix of Spanish, Danish, French, Dutch, English, and African to name a few.

Zootenval Estate, St. John A place to get away from it all. You can check out a video HERE.

Other Z Names:
 Zambee, St. Thomas A area up on Crown Mountain Road

My thanks to everyone who stopped by to take this little tour of the Virgin Islands. I hope you enjoyed your visit!

Monday, April 29, 2013

Y is Yacht Haven

For this, my fourth year doing the challenge, I've decided to share place names from the Virgin Islands. For such a small spot in the ocean, it seems like every rock, cove, hill and house has been christened. The names are a unique mix of Spanish, Danish, French, Dutch, English, and African to name a few.



Yacht Haven, St. Thomas
Back in the 1950s Yacht Haven mostly consisted of a labyrinth of narrow wooden finger piers and was home to many, many sailboats and houseboats. At the end of one of those piers was a palm thatched bar. It was a community with its fair share of characters. In 1995, a hotel that had been built was destroyed by  Hurricane Marilyn. Now it is a marina for the wealthy who have private yachts and simply must run to the Gucci store for a new purse.


Here's bit of conspicuous consumption. Notice it carries its own private helicopter.


Other Y names:
Yawzi Point Trail, St. John. There's a nice video of the trail and the swim at the end HERE. It can get hot on the trail so it's advised to bring water.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

X is for X Marks the Spot!

For this, my fourth year doing the challenge, I've decided to share place names from the Virgin Islands. For such a small spot in the ocean, it seems like every rock, cove, hill and house has been christened. The names are a unique mix of Spanish, Danish, French, Dutch, English, and African to name a few.


Marks
the Spot!
What with pirates roaming the area there are tales told of treasure, though I'm not sure any has ever been found. And then there's the story about a cay named Dead Chest in the BVI. The story goes that Blackbeard marooned several of his crew on the island with only a cutlass and bottle of rum each, leaving them to battle it out.  "Sixteen men on a dead man's chest, yo ho ho and a bottle of rum." Although I've never been able to verify it,  supposedly Robert Lewis Stevenson sailed through the islands, heard the story and was inspired to write, Treasure Island.

Here's my treasure map of St. John, with an X marking one place near and dear to my heart. Many of the places that I have featured or mention during the A to Z Challenge are on this map.



Friday, April 26, 2013

W is for Whistling Cay

For this, my fourth year doing the challenge, I've decided to share place names from the Virgin Islands. For such a small spot in the ocean, it seems like every rock, cove, hill and house has been christened. The names are a unique mix of Spanish, Danish, French, Dutch, English, and African to name a few.





Whistling Cay, St. John
Whistling Cay is on the north side of St. John just off Mary's Point. Two British islands are visible in this picture. To the left you can see a bit of Jost Van Dyke. To the right is Thatch Cay. There is is also a Thatch Cay off St. Thomas. Because of the proximity to the British islands and the large amount of trading that went on, the Danes built a guard house on Whistling Cay to keep an eye on things as well as trying to prevent slaves from escaping.

This is the ruin of an old guard house on the cay.

Within a few months of arriving in the islands, our very first adventure was getting in a boat we called 16 Tons and going out to Whistling Cay and having a picnic. That's Mom, me and my sister Erva. I'm already running around barefooted.


Other W Names:
Waterlemon Cay, St. John: Take a look at the lovely picture of the cay, Waterlemon Bay and Leinster Bay
Water Island became the fourth U. S. Virgin Island in 1996. It got its name from fresh water ponds that were once found there and became a frequent stop for pirates and other sea-faring peoples.


White Cliffs, St. John. Don't need to go to Dover, England. We have our own.

The West India Dock. This picture was taken from a seaplane when I went over to St. Croix. The Dutch West India Company had a long history in the Virgin Islands, including the fact that it was the company that took possession of the island and settled it in 1671. For more history go HERE.

Whim Estate, St. Croix is the only preserved sugar plantation in the islands. The great house, pictured below, is a kind of long oval, with rounded walls. The rooms are airy and furnished with period furniture. You can see pictures of the interior HERE and HERE.


 Me, at Whim Estate, leaning against an ancient tamarind tree with the windmill behind me.