tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7805855555415068212023-11-17T02:16:06.504+11:00 Writers and Readers Fix Meredith Grant - Writer / ReviewerWriters-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.comBlogger81125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-47837184058691129102023-09-24T16:44:00.004+10:002023-09-24T16:50:06.721+10:00<p></p><table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><tbody><tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZNYp1mG9R1zeCfPgPzD0TiRdu9IVWMWOve_YZwSbE4OctcIxaNsnEqtrlhCI0bvm6WpBUSguvGFlrlNxy_cGPzVR04kdnf_AdwsqSWomnfb6KUphVDVuMEtg04aMcIl813-BSo_yZrG5D6mw2ECFYi8mFDBk0E355VqN09rwertZ6KRijjdr6wTNXTFcE/s1500/wb%20book%20cover.png" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1150" data-original-width="1500" height="245" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZNYp1mG9R1zeCfPgPzD0TiRdu9IVWMWOve_YZwSbE4OctcIxaNsnEqtrlhCI0bvm6WpBUSguvGFlrlNxy_cGPzVR04kdnf_AdwsqSWomnfb6KUphVDVuMEtg04aMcIl813-BSo_yZrG5D6mw2ECFYi8mFDBk0E355VqN09rwertZ6KRijjdr6wTNXTFcE/s320/wb%20book%20cover.png" width="320" /></a></td></tr><tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">MY FIRST PUBLICATION!<br />WHITE BUTTERFLY<br /><br /><p>Here it is, and yes, it's hard to believe after so many years of writing, researching, interviewing, re-writing, editing and so on, that <b><i>White Butterfly</i>, <i>A journey out of the Philippines</i> </b>has finally made it to publication. This is a self-published effort, me as the Writer/Author and Luke the Narrator of his story. </p><p>Almost six years ago I put myself to task and offered to help Luke write his story for what it was. He had already written his own diarised notes of the events that had touched both him and his family across in the Philippines. The accounts were so unbelievable that it screamed to be told so that readers could understand what goes on beyond our own shores, and how an everyday Australian can find himself so very deep within the unlikely corruption that eventually changes so many lives.</p><p>When I took on this task to place the events in some kind of order so it would make sense for the reader, it soon became apparent it was not going to be easy. Luke and I spent countless hours going over every detail, only to uncover another and then yet another, and to say this guy has lived a colourful life, would be an understatement. </p><p>During the time trying to gather all the information necessary to sort chapters and pull the story together, there were of course many roadblocks that would take much time then for researching and re-visiting with Luke to ensure I had everything right.</p><p>Although this is a story told from Lukes's perspective, I have written it trying to capture every moment as he described it happening, a hard arduous duty I hope reflects within the pages, and as such, some of the accounts will be seen as repetitious and written like that of a diary, but this has been done on purpose. </p><p><b>STORY OUTLINE</b></p><p><span face=""Amazon Ember", Arial, sans-serif" style="background-color: white; color: #0f1111; font-size: 14px; text-align: start;">When Luke returns from the Philippines to the Great Sandy Desert located in Western Australia following his marriage to Filipino wife Crystal, he finds himself caught-up in a bizarre series of life changing events that continue to haunt him.</span><br style="background-color: white; box-sizing: border-box; color: #0f1111; font-family: "Amazon Ember", Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; text-align: start;" /><span face=""Amazon Ember", Arial, sans-serif" style="background-color: white; color: #0f1111; font-size: 14px; text-align: start;">Following an unexplained text message containing a photograph of a family members deceased child, it heralds the beginning to a chain of events that lead Luke to believe he has been assigned his very own guardian angel whose powers act as a mediumship during the most desperate times of need.</span><br style="background-color: white; box-sizing: border-box; color: #0f1111; font-family: "Amazon Ember", Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; text-align: start;" /><span face=""Amazon Ember", Arial, sans-serif" style="background-color: white; color: #0f1111; font-size: 14px; text-align: start;">As his family in the Philippines endure more than forty-two kidnappings at the hands of the New People's Army and the brutal Abu Sayyaf militants, Luke must raise the money for each ransom to bring his family members home safely, holding little faith in the Anti-kidnapping Group (AKG) for help, fearful their involvement will only incite reprisal. But when there is no end in sight, Luke's life's savings quickly dissolve before he must turn to family and friends to help him, a burden that proves too much, eventually destroying the bond of both friendship and family.</span><br style="background-color: white; box-sizing: border-box; color: #0f1111; font-family: "Amazon Ember", Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; text-align: start;" /><span face=""Amazon Ember", Arial, sans-serif" style="background-color: white; color: #0f1111; font-size: 14px; text-align: start;">When things can't seem any worse, old time friend Glenda goes missing presumed dead after she is set to inherit her late father's estate worth millions, and Luke is convinced he knows who is responsible.</span></p><p><span face=""Amazon Ember", Arial, sans-serif" style="background-color: white; color: #0f1111; font-size: 14px; text-align: start;">Sounds like an interesting read, secure your own copy in either Paperback or eBook Kindle, Tablet or Phone version through Amazon.com</span></p><p><br /></p></td></tr></tbody></table><br /> <p></p>Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-23961146803153470952021-03-26T12:34:00.003+11:002021-03-26T12:35:54.437+11:00<p> <b>ANOTHER WRITING ADVENTURE!</b></p><p>Who inspires you to write, to read, to chase your dreams, to learn new things, to motivate you?</p><p></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiHMcx3Ps8Qtp0EPJ7d6okTRB8hlpTGa30BxWcXtL7nrHjtAWmFLuku124irqdhN8fsRiCbX9YnLOMeFKYdD7EN2zp_hxpSpub2VZ2MJsw8a4djQddo-qYD9CvZ4fC02w14NPJIYCqC23br//" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="" data-original-height="181" data-original-width="271" height="184" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiHMcx3Ps8Qtp0EPJ7d6okTRB8hlpTGa30BxWcXtL7nrHjtAWmFLuku124irqdhN8fsRiCbX9YnLOMeFKYdD7EN2zp_hxpSpub2VZ2MJsw8a4djQddo-qYD9CvZ4fC02w14NPJIYCqC23br/w276-h184/image.png" width="276" /></a></div><p></p><p>For me, it's often...or always stories I hear, or have read by others that have taken that first step and found their courage to do something that in turn then inspires others to do the same. It's not always the same person, but multiple people who have gone on to do amazing things, accomplished or conquered life time goals by just taking action and saying to themselves I can do this and I will do this.</p><p>The first person who comes to my mind when I think of inspiration is Cheryl Strayed, Author of 'Wild.' Ever since having read her memoir, whenever I see something published or read one of her recent Facebook posts, it reminds me of where I want to be and what I want to achieve, and how much she has changed my outlook on life and how impact just one story can make to change your out look on life...the key is to never loose focus.</p><p>2021 has reminded me not waste any more time procrastinating on what I want to do and what I want to achieve, and where my goals always fall back to what I love to do and that is WRITING!</p><p>By luck, or by chance, I fell across a post on Instagram advertising courses, writing courses...of course! As such, I literally bit the bullet and decided to immediately enrol in this course - the Copywriting Essentials Course - through the Australian Writers Centre, and I'm loving learning this new skill that will take me in so many writing directions if I allow it to...and I will.</p><p>To be motivated, to make change you must move forward, and learning new skills I have learnt gives you that push to make the necessary changes, to believe in yourself that you can do it, everyone who's been there tells you the same, we just have to take that first or second or third or latest giant leap of faith for ourselves.</p><p>So, my personal endeavour is to become a freelance writer, make a living from my writing, something I love doing to earn an income, to be my own boss, choosing my own pathway and becoming successful at the same time.</p><p>Sounds like a plan! Wish me Luck!</p>Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-21048748253063518722020-01-20T17:11:00.000+11:002020-01-20T17:11:32.296+11:00Anne Frank Recently whilst perusing the shelves in The Bookshop at Queenscliff I came across an all time classic favorite story - Anne Frank.<br />
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For me, this story will forever resonate as it was a childhood favorite, staying firm in the memory.<br />
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I couldn't leave the bookshop without buying my own copy of this children's rendition of her story. The cover is so cute!<br />
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<br />Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-70362392726908538892020-01-20T16:34:00.003+11:002020-01-20T16:34:38.393+11:00About ghostwriting <div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgnk4UdXkgis_nJMfxC3YtVSi49geoFrFgzO6wo6vIe3H7YS11sRdxC1b4HB7bId4QZH694WfJ7N98A4AzctN9MSOAT8nIgR4zLaj4tB1H47kSv01Xx8L2UV4zblyM4iWWUCVplaL3ItN_l/s1600/images+%252862%2529.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="201" data-original-width="251" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgnk4UdXkgis_nJMfxC3YtVSi49geoFrFgzO6wo6vIe3H7YS11sRdxC1b4HB7bId4QZH694WfJ7N98A4AzctN9MSOAT8nIgR4zLaj4tB1H47kSv01Xx8L2UV4zblyM4iWWUCVplaL3ItN_l/s1600/images+%252862%2529.jpg" /></a><b style="color: #cc0000;">S</b>ounds awesome, doesn't it...write someone else's story, get paid (and paid well at that), jobs done, and move onto to the next piece of work, but is that always really the case, even though it's the theory?</div>
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I never considered myself being a ghostwriter and still don't for that matter, but after some extensive research into the type of work I'm performing, I can't help but think, yes, I must be ghostwriting, the only true difference is I'm not being paid for my hard work; that's right, you heard correctly, I'm not being paid, and perhaps that's my fault more than whom I'm writing for, and here's why.</div>
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"You have to meet my mate, you won't believe the story he's about to tell you."</div>
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" You could write a book about it for him."</div>
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Well, of course like every writer on this planet, what do we like more than a story? 'A great story' a story like non-other you've ever heard, or likely to hear ever again, a story you can see selling millions of copies just like J.K Rowling.</div>
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Before I go on, I have to be honest here, the money, the accolades and the sales of millions of copies - although would be wonderful - never came into the equation when I gave serious thought into actually pursuing this project. </div>
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So, firstly, I listened intently to this story being shared with great passion by it's subject. It's not fictitious, although you could be excused for thinking it was, but you wouldn't dare tell it's subject that, for he has already contended with years of disbelievers and that's where I came into all this, I was willing to listen, to read, to investigate, research and write what I was being told for what it was, it's not my story, I am merely just the conduit in breathing life into this story that would otherwise remain untold, and as a writer I looked at this opportunity being my job.</div>
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<span style="color: red;"><b>S</b></span>o now I'm intently reading pages upon pages of true encounter's all dated and documented. I pool over them, they're confusing because I don't know and have never met these characters (people), and there are a lot of them.</div>
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It dawns on me I have indeed placed a tremendous amount of responsibility on my shoulders undertaking this project. No money has been discussed, in fact it never really entered my head when I offered to take a look at the project more deeply. I did say, <i>I can't promise anything, but I will try my best</i>, and try my best I am. </div>
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My initial thought was not to complete an entire manuscript, but instead, enough prose as a submission to a publishing house, after all I'm a writer and I'm using my writing prowess to help this story be told, to be seen and read by the widest audience possible.</div>
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I've made pages upon pages of note taking, I've done hours upon hours of research, library visits, interviewing my subject, recording, writing chapters, writing and more writing. </div>
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But here's the thing, the most difficult of things being a ghostwriter when writing factual details compared to fiction; is not knowing all the underlying facts, not having enough to go on because the details and facts are just not there, I didn't grow up with my subject, I barely know him really. In my interviews I've pulled and prodded for sensitive information, for more detail, but it just doesn't seem to be enough, so do I use creative non-fiction methods to fill the gaps, am I giving due justice and respect to my subjects work by doing such a thing?</div>
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I have a great story sitting before me, that I do recognise, but without enough detail to add the depth required to carry this off I'm worried this will rob my subject of his story, which I believe should be told and if and when it's told will capture an audience like no other, so where from here?</div>
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Yes, I'm doing this job out of love, I don't want to fail as a writer, I don't want to lose any credibility and most of all I don't want to let my subject down; ghostwriting's a tough gig.</div>
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<br />Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-35824739835955079482019-12-02T14:42:00.000+11:002019-12-02T14:42:18.785+11:00Feeling of the Day through Quotes I love quotes, who doesn't. <br />
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They allow us to resonate with our feelings the instant we read them. We uncannily think it was written for us, it must've been, why else would it suddenly appear at the very time and stage it has just when we're feeling it, living it. <br />
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It's also easy to get caught up in quotes we read. It will either make you feel better about yourself or a situation or it will catastrophise it. <br />
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I guess we can relate knowing that someone, somewhere has also felt the same intensity; after all they must've to have written it in the first place.<br />
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So here's a quote I stumbled across on Instagram, the writer is un-named but nevertheless, this sums up my feelings today.<br />
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"How they make you feel</div>
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says a lot about them</div>
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and nothing about you."</div>
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"Trust me when I say</div>
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someone who makes you question </div>
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if you are worthy of being loved</div>
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is not worthy of being loved by you"</div>
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Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-10347521128007725622019-11-28T11:20:00.000+11:002019-11-28T17:34:57.172+11:00It's been a long time<br />
Wow!! It has been a long time...<br />
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I can't believe it has been well over twelve months since I last blogged, it goes to show how easily things can slip and how quickly time passes by.<br />
Life has been hectic though!!<br />
One month after I last blogged I started a new position at work, it's been daunting to say the least. Then my youngest started High School, well that's a whole new story of it's own, we also had a new member of the furry kind join our household and now the race is on as to who reigns supreme between the teenager and the cat, I'd say at this stage it's even, although the teenager thinks the cat is more loved and is the favorite child...I'll leave that out for the jury to decide, but I think I'm in trouble.<br />
Mostly though my time has been absorbed studying and today I can boldly say I have successfully completed my studies and I say that with the loudest sigh, could you hear it? I'm now a fully qualified Dispensary Technician within Pharmacy and I have to say I'm quite proud to share this as it has been a long road.<br />
I feel like I've been held hostage over the last seven months of study, consuming an enormous amount of time with my head in the books and now it's back to my writing, and oh how I've missed my writing. I truly have missed just being able to sit and type away like I am now without that thought I should be doing something else.<br />
I've felt so guilty too, as almost twelve months ago I promised a friend I would help write his story. I've found it's not an easy task writing someone else's story. The research part is enlightening, learning things I would otherwise be oblivious to. Some ordinary people do have extraordinary stories to tell. So now as promised I will continue on the path of compiling his story, however I'm feeling I could've bitten off more than I can chew in offering to do so. Without living something yourself, without knowing this person for an extensive period of time all plays into how difficult it is to put words on paper and sound authentic rather than sharing just a dairy log.<br />
I'll keep everyone posted with my ideas and questions of which I would be highly grateful for suggestions from anyone who has ever endeavored to write someone else's story.<br />
Until then, happy days!!<br />
<br />Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-67598849422227271842018-07-31T12:01:00.002+10:002018-07-31T12:06:40.883+10:00Over Sixty-Shades of Gray: A Journey Through Life's Later Years<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>Here is one of the latest titles I've recently had the pleasure to review, I enjoyed this read and highly recommend it to anyone 50+</i></div>
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<a href="https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/40360840-over-sixty" style="float: left; padding-right: 20px;"><img alt="Over-Sixty: Shades of Gray: A Journey Through Life's Later Years" border="0" height="320" src="https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1528422403m/40360840.jpg" width="213" /></a><a href="https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/40360840-over-sixty">Over-Sixty: Shades of Gray: A Journey Through Life's Later Years</a> by <a href="https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/18085948.Barbara_Paskoff">Barbara Paskoff</a><br />
My rating: <a href="https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2476354263">4 of 5 stars</a><br />
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Here is a contemporary, uplifting look into the years of living sixty and beyond. Delivered with much-needed humor to lighten the load, the reader is successfully transported through the realities of getting older and how to best approach, and cope with, these changes when they arise. <br />
This comprehensive overview will open your mind to matters you may not have already encountered or thought of and where health is placed at the forefront, providing a snapshot into some of life’s more serious challenges we might unluckily be faced with at some time or another. But don’t feel completely disheartened, for it’s not all doom and gloom as you might expect. Yes, health plays a major role in ageing, we all know that, but what about the positive up-side to getting older? And, yes, there seems there is an up-side. Retirement frees oneself up. So what about all that spare time on your hands; what will you do with that now? And how about the finances? Are they all in check? These are the type of questions that will get you thinking and where basic know-how is offered to provide some invaluable forethought. And then there’s the fun part of pre-planning one’s funeral that you might not have already thought about, where author Barbara Paskoff has it all worked out: “I’m making a guest list. If your name isn’t on it, it means I wouldn’t be caught dead with you.” <br />
While each topic lends itself almost as a personal essay through the author’s own experiences, the messages conveyed remain effective, providing enough of an overview for the reader to make their own informed decisions and draw on their own conclusions, supported with both summaries and professional resources neatly tying up each chapter end.<br />
I read through this book with the greatest of interest, particularly because I’m not yet sixty and, with saying that, I believe this book is not just precise for readers of that age group, nor is it gender specific; however, I did find that the book tends to lean a little more towards female interest than male. In fact, readers in their fifties (like myself) would find this book with true appreciation, providing a much-needed and important early insight, where time is the essence and pre-knowledge could hold the key before things sneak-up announced, which might, in fact, give a greater opportunity to overcome or avoid some obstacles otherwise left too late. <br />
This a straight-forward, positive, go-to-guide that offers pre-planning and foresight on entering and living through our later years of life that will become a great resource for reference.<br />
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<a href="https://www.goodreads.com/review/list/15127999-meredith-grant">View all my reviews</a><br />
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Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-62940129109632536902018-07-24T00:10:00.002+10:002018-07-24T00:16:42.181+10:00Bryce Courtenay on Writing and other stuff<br />
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Recently I picked up a copy of Bryce Courtenay's</div>
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<i>The Silver Moon - Reflections on Life, Death and Writing.</i></div>
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<span style="text-align: left;">I have to be honest, out of eight titles I own of Bryce Courtenay's, I have only managed to read two of them from start to finish. </span><i style="text-align: left;">April Fools Day, </i><span style="text-align: left;">published in 1993</span><i style="text-align: left;"> </i><span style="text-align: left;">was one of those titles, the other was </span><i style="text-align: left;">The Power Of One, </i><span style="text-align: left;">published in 1989. </span></div>
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<i>The Silver Moon </i>is a portrait of Bryce's work where he as the title suggests reflects upon his life before, during and after becoming a popular fiction writer. You get to see Bryce not only as a writer / storyteller but as a husband, father and friend. </div>
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I loved reading through and absorbing the abundance of advice he provides for anyone who wants to be a good writer, to improve their writing and grasp the basic necessity's in understanding what is most important in being successful in storytelling. </div>
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I wish I had been fortunate enough to attend one of Bryce Courtenay's masterclasses. I think the personal gratification in meeting him and learning from his valuable lessons would've been second to none. His courses stretched out over five days within several countries including Australia - with the National Library of Canberra home to these classes. I think it would've been nice to look back, especially now Bryce Courtenay has passed away and say, I was fortunate enough to meet and learn from this guy. </div>
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Here's a quote that stood out for me. It's not just a play on words, a thought or process, but it resonates and has meaning, it's the truth and everyone can place themselves somewhere within this tier of life.</div>
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"You live three lives. </div>
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One growing up; one being responsible, paying the mortgage and having kids, and one being yourself. I'm in my third stage." he tells.</div>
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One of Bryce's teachings of writing, not just popular fiction, but any writing, is considering your reader as paramount ( treat them as a fourth protagonist) after all your telling them the story and their listening attentively, so keep their attention alive.</div>
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"Writing is about practice and practice takes time."</div>
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"Writing requires thinking at a deeper level than most things, and most writers find that they grow intellectually in the process of writing."</div>
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If you're a writer, like myself, then perhaps like me you understand the last passage. I often have people say to me I'm a deep thinker, but I've never associated that thought with me as a writer; now I do. And yes, as writers we must become more intellectual because we learn so much through writing.</div>
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<i>The Silver Moon, </i>should be every writers ambition to read at least once; for me, I believe it should be an essential addition among my books on writing, taking pride of place among the rest of them. I'm so glad I picked this book up at the library and got to read it, learn from it and gain a respect for Bryce Courtenay I wouldn't have otherwise known. </div>
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Finally,</div>
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"I'm a storyteller.</div>
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Some people are plumbers, some people are doctors, some are lawyers.</div>
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I'm a storyteller."</div>
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Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-42953513630459066362018-07-05T19:19:00.000+10:002018-07-07T14:38:58.778+10:00NEW BOOK TITLE - Our Own Little Fictions<div style="text-align: center;">
<span style="font-family: "verdana" , sans-serif;">Hi bloggers, well as you all should know by now I have an unrelenting addiction for memoir, so I have ceased the opportunity to showcase Ron Rhody's latest piece of work titled <i>Our Own Little Fictions (ironically).</i></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: "verdana" , sans-serif;"><i>Ron's book received a 4 star rating review from <a href="https://sanfranciscobookreview.com/product/our-own-little-fictions/">San Francisco Book Review</a>, which is available to read below, and available for purchase at the following link <a href="https://amzn.to/2KBfAS4">Amazon</a>, happy reading.</i></span><br />
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<b><span style="font-family: "verdana" , sans-serif;"><i><b><span style="font-family: "verdana" , sans-serif;"><i>Our Own Little Fictions </i>by Ron Rhody</span></b></i></span></b></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjeMv7za-_7Q8AmYBsY8EFj89rhyjQ8U7JCCbV7W_J_M1fA_WpK7aJQ9jVuEGRPSrtCIVwzMDlJKSfK4FmYEgNkem0voBFwkCwGEyLyCYjV38H9yxwty7186KS3qcvwz1fjl35pQ9diLVOk/s1600/Our+own+little+fictions+cover.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="500" data-original-width="324" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjeMv7za-_7Q8AmYBsY8EFj89rhyjQ8U7JCCbV7W_J_M1fA_WpK7aJQ9jVuEGRPSrtCIVwzMDlJKSfK4FmYEgNkem0voBFwkCwGEyLyCYjV38H9yxwty7186KS3qcvwz1fjl35pQ9diLVOk/s320/Our+own+little+fictions+cover.jpg" width="207" /></a></div>
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<b style="text-align: center;"><i>San Francisco Book Review – 4 Stars</i></b></div>
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<b>Book Summary</b></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">This is a story about a slice of time, and a place, and cluster of people worth remembering. It begins in a small river town in the Bluegrass of Kentucky and concerns itself with beginnings and becomings, with home places and who you can count on, and where untaken roads lead. A few early readers comments “A beautifully written remembrance of a young man lifted and loved through the sheer ordinariness of family and coming of age. Well worth the read.” - Cynthia Kasabian, CKB Consultants, San Francisco. "An unconventional book but strangely engaging. Not a 'must read.' But definitely a 'glad I did read.'" - Annette Bowen, Inside/Outside, Atlanta. “Fascinating! This book is like a conversation on paper.” - Charlie Baglan, Kentucky Afield radio, Frankfort, Ky. “Deeply personal, often moving.” - Bob Irelan, author, Rancho Murrieta. Ca. "Thought provoking. It causes readers, especially in today's all-consuming digital world, to reflect on how memories have shaped their lives." - Joseph Piedmont, Gallatin Public Affairs (Ret.) Portland, Or. Each life is a story. Each story is unique. If we don’t tell each other our stories, how will we know what life is all about? Pretend you’re listening.</span></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">According to Ron Rhody’s wife, he is not eligible for authoring a memoir. He hasn’t won an Oscar or an MVP or a Nobel prize. And yet Rhody has a story he wants, needs, to tell. His story. And so that’s how he will tell it to us: as one of Our Own Little Fictions.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">Reminiscent of Sarah Polley’s documentary Stories We Tell, Rhody meanders through his memory and down the real roads he’s traveled all over the U.S., from his beloved Frankfort, Kentucky, to California and back (via Florida and Alabama) and then back out to California. Along this circuitous route through his youth, manhood, and ancestry, we encounter all sorts of colorful characters, historical events, family triumphs, and tragedies, which in large part amount to the man whose story we’re being told.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">The place closest to Rhody’s heart is clearly Frankfort, Kentucky. It is there his father, a newspaperman, fought for civil rights and to put down roots for his forward-thinking family. Though a wanderlust would uproot the Rhodys and send them all over the U.S., Kentucky kept calling them back to the heart of the heart of their country. In Our Little Fictions, Frankfort is origin and refuge, and it serves as the Ithaca of the author’s Odyssey.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">These chronicles of Rhody contain all the joy and pain of an American life that spans the Cold War to the present. We meet his parents, grandparents, wife and children, friends and mentors. From animated anecdotes of a hard-nosed football coach doling out life lessons to the memorial for a dear friend and author of “sixteen erudite books,” we witness a life pass in time-lapse frames of laconic, Hemingwayesque prose.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">Hemingway and his suicide haunt the narrative beginning to end. On a road trip from California to Kentucky, Rhody and his son make a scheduled detour to Hemingway’s home in Idaho (where he’d put the shotgun in his mouth).<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">“It seemed wrong that Hemingway had killed himself. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">Nature should have gotten him. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">Or chance.”<o:p></o:p></span><br />
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<span lang="EN-US">Later in the
narrative and earlier in time, news of Hemingway’s suicide reaches Rhody, and
he reflects on the premature tragedy, as well as his own (missed?) calling.
These two time periods intermingle, and Rhody leaves Idaho with “an answer to a
question I hadn’t known I’d asked.” Authorship was an alternative path he’d
bypassed only to embark upon late in life.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">Late in life,
indeed. The long road approaches its end and the loss of loved ones is an
inevitability. Each story has the same conclusion, alas, and many of the
characters we encounter in this Appalachian saga pass on in heartrending
deathbed scenes and austere funerals. The depiction of these tragedies is
sentimental, even cliched, but anything less/more would not be true to life. It
is the commonality of these cliches that arise in endless variations, like
updates of Shakespeare.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">No, Ron Rhody
is no Prince Hamlet, nor was he meant to be, but his story of “becoming,” with
its conduplicatio, terse punch-lines, and homespun wisdom, is one that will
always be in need of telling and retelling.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-US">Reviewed By:
Steven Felicelli<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<a href="https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51hbobEXyTL._UX250_.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="Ron Rhody" border="0" height="200" src="https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51hbobEXyTL._UX250_.jpg" width="161" /></a><b>Author Bio:</b></div>
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Ron Rhody has been a reporter, a sportswriter, and a broadcast journalist before morphing into a career as a corporate public relations executive. He's done four novels. This is his first stab at a "sort-of-memoir." Find more info at <a href="http://www.outerbankspublishing.com/">http://www.outerbankspublishing.com</a></div>
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Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-54079417120668351482018-06-30T14:22:00.000+10:002018-06-30T14:22:04.183+10:00Being a good book reviewer<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjNnFglhz4eWXGS2PRGWHDgVG_giU8ij14ZZKAgnjxrmzWUhkG7VjkCFu6_Or10PqZ0OCMnWBBwLxiqY6DX56_-c1jz3U0JSmxJD1k13WLfAhEoiZPBBD4Atv1znNstyzN63_RlxEqJvFtl/s1600/bookstore-le-bal-des-ardents+%25281%2529.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="593" data-original-width="822" height="143" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjNnFglhz4eWXGS2PRGWHDgVG_giU8ij14ZZKAgnjxrmzWUhkG7VjkCFu6_Or10PqZ0OCMnWBBwLxiqY6DX56_-c1jz3U0JSmxJD1k13WLfAhEoiZPBBD4Atv1znNstyzN63_RlxEqJvFtl/s200/bookstore-le-bal-des-ardents+%25281%2529.jpg" width="200" /></a></div>
Being a good reviewer of books comes with great responsibility. I recently read that Australian book reviewers are poor at their job, perhaps not being intellectual enough to read deeply into the prose and narrative at hand, or perhaps too lazy in analyzing the writing enough; I don't know?<br />
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Considering I'm an Australian reviewer of books, I have to say I'm a little concerned, and now left questioning my own abilities as to whether I'm in fact a good or bad reviewer. So, with that said, I've done a little research on what makes a good reviewer, and luckily enough I think I'm following the basic rules in giving the books I read justice, along with providing potential readers enough guts for them to establish if these books are for them.<br />
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Here, I want to share some of the golden rules of reviewing I've learn't and continue to build on when I'm writing my reviews; after all practice makes perfect so they say.<br />
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My take on Golden Rules for Reviewing:<br />
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1. Make every review engaging, up-beat and a pleasure for others to read.<br />
2. Include, where you can, a taste of the prose and narrative (this gives the reader an idea if they would want to buy the book). I actually truly believe in this rule. For one, I always read part of a chapter of a book I think I might be interested in when I pick-up a copy in a bookshop, just so I know if I like the style of writing; this is the same philosophy.<br />
3. Understand and convey what you believe the author wishes to deliver to the reader through their writing. Here, you can provide a direct quotation.<br />
4. Don't place too much emphasis on the plot summary and never, ever give away the ending.<br />
5. Never make a review about the writer or the reviewer, a review is for the reader. It's about sharing ideas and information gathered through your reading, providing entertainment and education for the reader.<br />
6. And always provide an honest review. What I mean by honest is if you didn't think the book works or conveys what is intended, then it is your job to tell the reader why, and show them evidence of your conclusion. Your job is not, however, to criticise the writer.<br />
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Reading is such a great pleasure to so many of us, so reviewers need to be committed, knowledgeable and just as scrupulous as their readers to remain successful at what they do.Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-46031789742522418212018-06-17T17:44:00.001+10:002018-06-17T17:46:25.929+10:00Author Interview with Nancy Chadwick for San Francisco Book Review<div class="et_post_meta_wrapper" style="background-attachment: initial; background-clip: initial; background-image: initial; background-origin: initial; background-position: 0px 0px; background-repeat: initial; background-size: initial; border: 0px; box-sizing: border-box; margin: 0px; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">
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Interview With Nancy Chadwick, author of Under the Birch Tree</span></h2>
<span style="font-size: x-small;"> by <a href="https://sanfranciscobookreview.com/author/meredithgrant/">Meredith Grant</a> | Jun 13, 2018 | <a href="https://sanfranciscobookreview.com/category/author-interviews/">Author Interviews</a>, <a href="https://sanfranciscobookreview.com/category/author-interviews/written/">Written</a></span><br />
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<img src="https://sanfranciscobookreview.com/wp-content/uploads/Nancy_Chadwick_Interview_feature.jpg" /><br />
I had the pleasure of reading and reviewing Under the Birch Tree for San Francisco Book Review. Below is the written interview with Nancy on her upcoming publication this month, I hope you enjoy Nancy's insights and experiences she shares with us.<br />
<b>What first inspired you to write your story?</b><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">There was something about trees. When I was a young girl, maybe eight or ten, I was a walker who enjoyed the outdoors, just roaming around and exploring. I liked to walk around the perimeter of my house, starting and ending at the front where my favorite tree, a birch, grew. I loved that tree, especially because of how it looked with its peeling white bark and wavy slender leaves. It always reminded me of home; they were one and the same. I felt strongly about establishing one’s roots and a sense of belonging and home that my early steps around the foundation of my home became an idea worth developing.</span></div>
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</span><b>Under the Birch Tree is all about discovering connections and finding home; tell us how and why the family homes birch tree became a main source of connection and companionship for you?</b><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><div style="font-size: small; text-align: justify;">
I connected to this tree for a couple of reasons. First, I connected to it because of its very nature. The birch tree is associated with spring and new beginnings and appears light and clear and flexible and can also be reactive to external situations – water, light, temperature. That is why my birch buddy is woven throughout my story. It became a metaphor for my self-discovery for finding home. When I would spot a tree, instant memories put me back to a place I associated with comfort, security and the familiar.</div>
</span><b>How did you find the writing process for Under the Birch Tree? Did it come easily? Did you find it evoked any unwanted emotions?</b><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><div style="font-size: small; text-align: justify;">
I wrote the first draft over ten years ago and it consisted of memories of experiences. Writing the events was the easy part. The more difficult part was figuring out why I remembered what I did and what sense it made. The process was emotional and, wanted or not, it was important that all my emotions played out. My emotions were my voice.</div>
</span><b>You started the writing process for Under the Birch Tree some time ago, what motivated you to publish it now? And how did you decide on the title?</b><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><div style="font-size: small; text-align: justify;">
My goal was to not publish a book, but rather was, and still is, an intent to connect, in the large and small sense of the word, not only with myself but also with others who could identify with similar experiences. I held back in believing in my story because of the types of memoirs I saw published, something my memoir was not. I was looking for complicated significance to my story when really it was quite simple. That was my go-ahead, my motivation, when I realized story-telling didn’t have to be complicated, but could be simple too. I decided on the title, an easy decision, because what happened under the birch tree was such a loud and clear metaphor for the disconnections I faced in my life and losing my sense of place and belonging.</div>
</span><b>How did you turn your book around from almost being an autobiography to becoming a memoir? What tips can you give other writer’s facing a similar obstacle.</b><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><div style="font-size: small; text-align: justify;">
I had to focus threading my central theme consistently throughout, having a clear voice, and writing good descriptive scenes and dialogue where appropriate. My inner dialogue spoken through with reflection was also key to being authentic to my readers. My best tip for other writers would be that it’s okay for a writer to start with autobiography, to write all those things that is remembered but steps must be taken beyond that to rewrite and rewrite until a theme becomes clear and then reflections can be recorded.</div>
</span><b>You started your career completing a degree in Journalism, was it always an ambition of yours to become a writer?</b><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><div style="font-size: small; text-align: justify;">
No, my ambition wasn’t to become a writer. I wanted to be in advertising, to write mini-stories to sell products, and my studies in that field were in the College of Journalism.</div>
</span><b>What sort of editorial changes, if any, did the manuscript need to go through?</b><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><div style="font-size: small; text-align: justify;">
The manuscript went through a few editorial changes, the most common was about sequence of events and timing. I tended to move around in time, without explaining how I got to each place. I also needed to clear some contradictions (all part of finding the reflections!), and fill in gaps of badly needed inner dialogue.</div>
</span><b>How have you found the publishing process to be? Did you approach the publisher and what made you choose them?</b><br />
<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">I contacted Brooke Warner (at Warner Coaching) about four years ago with the request for a professional critique of the manuscript. As per her suggestions and comments, I rewrote the manuscript, working with a developmental editor, who asked if I was going to publish with She Writes Press. The question surprised me as I was sure the manuscript would always need work and wasn’t quite ready to be published. Brooke Warner is She Writes Press so one thing led to another, rather quickly, and the rest, as they say, was history!</span></div>
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</span><b>Can you see yourself writing another book in the near future, and if so, what genre would it be and why?</b><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><div style="font-size: small; text-align: justify;">
I am already starting on my second book. It will be another memoir with further developing themes with more inspirational insight and picking up from where I left off from book one. Book one has many legs and I’d like to take a couple of them and run with it! </div>
</span><b>Finally, what advice would you give to anyone already working on, or thinking about writing their memoir?</b><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><div style="font-size: small; text-align: justify;">
Memoirs get such a bad rap sometimes. Memoirs can be pigeonholed into what they are and/or are not so much so that this can be discouraging for a writer to let it all out, questioning if they, indeed, have a memoir. There’s no right or wrong. I happen to have a quiet memoir, untraditional to the traditional single-incident story of something horribly tragic, abuse of some kind, a health issue, death, to name just a few. I write about my experiences that most can identify with and because of this, I hope my reader can see her own self-discovery through the narration of my own. Lastly, I tell to-be memoirists to just write. Get your thoughts and feelings and emotions down into words. Write as if you are talking to your best friend, your confidant. It’s not as a daunting task as you would think.</div>
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Thank you for the opportunity to read Under the Birch Tree, which has been a joy and one in which I have been able to find a real personal connection with. I wish you every success with your upcoming publication.</div>
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif; font-size: x-small;"><img src="https://sanfranciscobookreview.com/wp-content/uploads/Nancy_Chadwick-300x300.jpg" /></span></div>
NANCY CHADWICK got her first job at Leo Burnett advertising agency in Chicago. After ten years there, she couldn’t get to where she wanted to be so she turned to the banking industry. Then, after another ten years, she realized she wasn’t a banker―so she quit and started to write, finding inspiration from her years in Chicago and San Francisco. Her essay “I Called You a Memoir” appears in The Magic of Memoir, an anthology published by She Writes Press. She and her husband enjoy traveling, cooking fine dinners, and chasing their beagles in circles.<br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;">Connect with Nancy:</span></div>
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<span style="font-size: x-small;"><a href="https://nancychadwickauthor.com/">Website</a> | <a href="https://www.instagram.com/nanceepics/">Pinterest</a> | <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/nancy-chadwick-burke-32814867/">LinkedIn</a></span></div>
Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-64191052739911346792018-05-09T22:36:00.001+10:002018-05-09T22:36:25.333+10:00Picnic At Hanging Rock<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZmiO0yjanX7VuaRq1BDUxwfnbl2MfHzij1dYsWbHLDXJi_8iSrFL669cmFinLjxGNBuls_lsi2msAP9WMya1MrCKpZiYGmSynPkiEFCz5Uuqi34P2Uxl2Zu41MSN8hYvbyxPSVntuHUjv/s1600/images+%25282%2529.png" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="287" data-original-width="176" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZmiO0yjanX7VuaRq1BDUxwfnbl2MfHzij1dYsWbHLDXJi_8iSrFL669cmFinLjxGNBuls_lsi2msAP9WMya1MrCKpZiYGmSynPkiEFCz5Uuqi34P2Uxl2Zu41MSN8hYvbyxPSVntuHUjv/s200/images+%25282%2529.png" width="122" /></a><i>The return of an all time classic, Picnic At Hanging Rock, has now been </i></div>
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<i>re-mastered and made into a mini-series that has everyone talking.</i></div>
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<span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;"> The story revisits when a private girls boarding school in Victoria in 1900 plans a picnic on St Valentine's Day at Macedon's Hanging Rock. Following lunch amid the afternoon, four of the girls, Miranda, Edith, Irma and Marion, set off to explore and climb the Hanging Rock with their teacher Ms McCraw. In an unexplained dream-like event, everyone except Edith vanishes 'into the rock'.</span></div>
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<span style="letter-spacing: 0.18px;"><span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">The biggest mystery is when Edith returns to the group in hysterics and can't detail or explain what happened, sending the surrounding town into mayhem.</span></span></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgdEoLHciXRgDj6eNEZQpyfLsJxHQYtjD_LEuLEnt6S2eofFPApMQs8jBQkjsZuriqV9YZirAN0n7szPDU4i14ga7sgdM9loQPAQ8tc3KwLw9jIWQxNrY9NiirbYNXNG1uEi2cFouB0aZWu/s1600/1525409661240_MV5BZDM0YjQ3NjYtM2UzYi00MjA5LWFkNzktNzUwZGRlYTE5Y2YwXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMjkwOTAyMDU.V1SY1000SX1500AL.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="615" data-original-width="922" height="212" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgdEoLHciXRgDj6eNEZQpyfLsJxHQYtjD_LEuLEnt6S2eofFPApMQs8jBQkjsZuriqV9YZirAN0n7szPDU4i14ga7sgdM9loQPAQ8tc3KwLw9jIWQxNrY9NiirbYNXNG1uEi2cFouB0aZWu/s320/1525409661240_MV5BZDM0YjQ3NjYtM2UzYi00MjA5LWFkNzktNzUwZGRlYTE5Y2YwXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMjkwOTAyMDU.V1SY1000SX1500AL.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
<span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">When the public and police search for the missing girls; Irma is found unconscious but unharmed at the rock. From there the story takes on major twists and plots including students and staff leaving unexpectedly; a schoolgirl committing suicide and the headmistress jumping off Hanging Rock, killing herself.<br />What is left for the reader to determine is if Joan Lindsay's 'Picnic At Hanging Rock,' is a work of fiction or fact? What do you think?</span></div>
Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-58185674857299448332018-04-14T13:25:00.000+10:002018-06-23T17:37:01.863+10:00How to be a book reviewer by Allena Tapia<ul class="comp list article-content expert-content" id="list_1-0" style="box-sizing: border-box; line-height: 27px; list-style: none; margin: 0.5rem 0px 0.2em 120px; min-height: 30em; padding: 0px;">Hi bloggers, I am currently looking at book reviewing as my most current interest topic of writing, and came across this article by Allena Tapia which I found to give some very sound advice as far as starting out on the book reviewing platform. I wanted to share this as well as keep it close on hand for reference. If this is an area you're also interested in I hope it helps. Reviews can of course be new titles and older, I guess the focus would be on newer titles, but older titles / classics are in my opinion just as good to plug a book that resonates with you and could offer another reader some great reading. Start your platform with Goodreads and build your audience. Hope to hear from you guys on these platforms. Meredith
<br />01 First, Act Like a Book Reviewer: Review Books, A LOT<br /><a href="https://fthmb.tqn.com/KvCNPUD-9nNQzdr3IKO4FWfXnlU=/300x0/filters:format(webp)/young-beautiful-woman-waiting-for-phone-call-176625373-5725757c3df78ced1f0cec77.jpg"><img border="0" src="https://fthmb.tqn.com/KvCNPUD-9nNQzdr3IKO4FWfXnlU=/300x0/filters:format(webp)/young-beautiful-woman-waiting-for-phone-call-176625373-5725757c3df78ced1f0cec77.jpg" /></a>Being a paid book reviewer likely sounds like a plum job for many writers, who generally love reading as much as writing. Despite this, it's certainly not a pipe dream. Seriously, I'm a real person, and I do it every day. There is indeed paid work available for book reviewers.<br />The first step is to obtain books on your own (at your own expense) and publish reviews on open platforms like Goodreads or Amazon. This helps the writer in several ways. First, it keeps you on top of the recent releases in your interest areas and genres. This is important because reviewing focuses on recent releases (with a few exceptions). It also teaches you the process of <a href="https://www.thebalance.com/how-to-write-a-book-review-1360677">writing a book review</a>. Interacting with other writers, reviewers and readers will help to shape your prose. You'll also get the chance to observe their review styles. Last, you may begin to develop a following of fans who appreciate your reviews and <a href="https://www.thebalance.com/freelance-consulting-4074015">writing style</a>. It is from this following that you build your audience for later endeavors.<br />02 Develop Your Own Book Review Outlet <br /><img src="https://fthmb.tqn.com/9k5frJO0Lydn4NhJLaqXH-4b3G8=/300x0/filters:format(webp)/GettyImages-500816693-5759ff195f9b5892e88f4bc3.jpg" /><a href="https://www.thebalance.com/how-to-be-a-book-reviewer-for-pay-6-easy-steps-1360678#"></a> •••<br />Once you've got the hang of reviewing books, you'll want to develop a site or niche where you can publish your work yourself, such as a fan page or a blog. It helps to establish you as an expert, and puts the focus on you as a reviewer/brand, as opposed to Amazon reviews, which people may not associate as much with the review authors. It also serves to gather your prose/writing in one area/profile, which you can then use later on as evidence of your beautiful prose style and sparkling reviewer's wit. At this point, you are still generally shouldering the cost of the books yourself. However, there are platforms and site such as <a href="http://www.booksneeze.com/">BookSneeze</a>, which gives free books to some bloggers in exchange for published reviews. Personally, I recommend starting a book review blog, as you are in full control, and may even be able to monetize the site and begin earning pay for your reviews that much earlier. Also, you can then open your blog/site up to authors who are seeking reviews or doing blog tours. It might mean that you'll then start getting your books for free from the author/publishers. It also means that you'll be privy to brand new releases- ones that may not even be available to the public yet. Again, this will serve to underline you as an expert. Another bonus is that you begin to build relationships with those authors/publishers. Often, the books that you receive from these relationships and from places like BookSneeze are <a href="https://www.thebalance.com/arc-what-is-an-arc-advanced-reader-s-copy-1360460">Advanced Readers Copies</a>. It is a "rough draft" of the book produced for first readers and reviewers. These ARCs costs less to produce and can be sent out early, even if the final book isn't completely done. Also, ARCs can't be sold/resold on Amazon.com. It helps keep the new releases under wraps and keeps the profits with the publisher! If you can cultivate a relationship with a publisher at this point, you may have the good fortune of being put on their marketing/publicity list. It means that they'll send you emails or catalogs asking you which of their new releases you'd like a copy of. What a book lovers dream!<br />03 Gather Your Documents Together <br /><img src="https://fthmb.tqn.com/PmlteKgoEQ4diAMNfZTmNyAMMf4=/300x0/filters:format(webp)/cheerful-high-school-student-using-laptop-for-making-homeworks-518954186-572576b13df78ced1f0eaa0c.jpg" /><a href="https://www.thebalance.com/how-to-be-a-book-reviewer-for-pay-6-easy-steps-1360678#"></a> It is now almost time to start chasing those paid opportunities. But, you need to prepare! Gather together your best reviews- the ones in which your prose just flows, and your passion is evident. Format them attractively and save them as a PDF. Also, if this particular review is on a site, save the URL, too, as some book reviewing jobs ask for links.<br />Next, prepare a resume focusing first on your book reviewing credits and skills, and second on your other writing credits and skills. Yes, it's true, some outlets who are in a position to pay book reviewers may request a traditional resume. However, they're not looking for a list of every job you've had in the past 5 to 10 years. They're looking for evidence of your writing/reviewing ability. Be sure to learn about <a href="https://www.thebalance.com/writing-publishing-resume-examples-2063606">how to write a job resume</a> if you need help with this step.<br />Your last document will be a cover letter. It will generally be the text of an email responding to open jobs/projects. Put together a basic cover letter for a generic book review position, and then slant it for each potential project.<br />04 Pursue Paid Book Reviewing Jobs/Projects <br /><img src="https://fthmb.tqn.com/uNdrBIWV4e4iSDNCnZmy_h6NXgg=/300x0/filters:format(webp)/GettyImages-479977833-5759ff583df78c9b4643d93b.jpg" /><a href="https://www.thebalance.com/how-to-be-a-book-reviewer-for-pay-6-easy-steps-1360678#"></a> It's time to start making some dough. Even if you're hoping to focus on reviewing for specific magazines, or reviewing for a particular leader in the industry, I still recommend that you build up your credentials and give yourself some monetary encouragement by getting some paid work. Look for specific freelance writing jobs that ask for book reviewers. Yes, there are a few here and there. I run into this request at least once a month through my established <a href="https://www.thebalance.com/freelance-writing-telecommuting-jobs-1360402">freelance writing jobs</a> lists. If you find an opportunity that you want to take up, respond specifically (tailor your cover letter) and quickly (as these guys get inundated fast). Don't be discouraged if you don't get a response. It is a volume game. When someone puts such an attractive job out there on the WWW, they likely have their pick of the litter. Keep trying.<br />You may pick up some regular clients in this manner, which is always good, since, hey, you've reached your goal! You are now a paid book reviewer! (But read on anyway.) Generally, these companies, sites, or publications have a relationship with the publisher, so you'll likely receive the review copy from your new client. It may vary, though.<br />One side note here. There are often authors or companies that pay reviewers for positive reviews. It is an ethical consideration for you if you want to continue and be accepted in the book reviewing field. Generally, a reviewer is thought to be an impartial source.<br />Check out this <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/26/business/book-reviewers-for-hire-meet-a-demand-for-online-raves.html?pagewanted=all">New York Times article</a> on paid book reviewers for more information.<br />05 Pitch to Magazines, Journals and Newspapers <br /><img src="https://fthmb.tqn.com/LkW19D5puv8zi9XKkmWsysUV-KY=/300x0/filters:format(webp)/GettyImages-457207765-5759ff9c5f9b5892e89014fa.jpg" /><a href="https://www.thebalance.com/how-to-be-a-book-reviewer-for-pay-6-easy-steps-1360678#"></a> Now that you're an established book reviewer with a few (paid) <a href="https://www.thebalance.com/editorial-clips-2315996">clips</a> in your <a href="https://www.thebalance.com/your-writing-portfolio-1360707">portfolio</a>, the next level could be getting your reviews placed in publications- both print and online. It might net you a wider audience, and certain publications net you some cred as a writer/reviewer. Also, print publications may pay a bit better, too.When I say "publications," I am including the big guys here: Booklist from the ALA, Kirkus Reviews and Publisher's Weekly. Of course, you may want to start smaller, such as with a regional rag, and build up to the power players, right?<br />I've covered <a href="https://www.thebalance.com/how-to-write-a-query-or-pitch-letter-1360448">how to query magazines</a> extensively on this site, and the process is similar to book reviews. However, there might be a bit of variety. For example, some editors may want to see the review in total, as opposed to pitch or query letters. Some may list you as an ongoing potential reviewer, one in a pool, and send you books that match your stated interests or expertise areas every so often. Some may come to you with potential titles, whereas some may let you pitch titles that you think their readership would like.<br />Finding outlets that accept book reviews is similar to finding magazines to publish your other written work: start with the Writers Market or visit the magazine's website.<br />06 Keep Current and Get Educated <br /><img src="https://fthmb.tqn.com/sRl4kijnXjQlhTR1QkV_Norg3tA=/300x0/filters:format(webp)/GettyImages-555798991-5759ffd43df78c9b46449723.jpg" /><a href="https://www.thebalance.com/how-to-be-a-book-reviewer-for-pay-6-easy-steps-1360678#"></a> Retain your status as a paid, professional book reviewer by staying current and relevant in the field. Keep on top of new releases, specifically those in your favorite genres. In addition, most major book sites like Amazon and Barnes and Noble have sections regarding upcoming releases. Following publishers on Twitter, or signing up for their marketing emails may also result in insider scoops.<br />In addition, consider joining the National Book Critics Circle, a professional association for book reviewers. They offer education and networking resources for reviewers, along with updated listings of potential outlets. Wondering why this recommendation is at the end of your process? It's because the NBCC is open to professional reviewers who can show published review clips. Now, t<br />BY <a href="https://www.thebalance.com/allena-tapia-1360149">ALLENA TAPIA</a> <br />Updated November 12, 2017
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Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-58656054317309743072016-07-23T21:41:00.001+10:002018-06-22T21:49:50.210+10:00New book review - 'Wild' by Cheryl Strayed<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj3hmycrPCqKVfFZZwd_J2YhptzcJfkD63F1eNQ-mVh3eUrCL4MsJJIIEXjMkW6HzYI34tYZb34Fb_x02RGcDMlXUYUi7HY5dNo-IWzA3c274nBI3DrsGDBNSQC5l9azfhxV_Bn2Gml8CjS/s1600/wild.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj3hmycrPCqKVfFZZwd_J2YhptzcJfkD63F1eNQ-mVh3eUrCL4MsJJIIEXjMkW6HzYI34tYZb34Fb_x02RGcDMlXUYUi7HY5dNo-IWzA3c274nBI3DrsGDBNSQC5l9azfhxV_Bn2Gml8CjS/s200/wild.jpg" width="129" /></a><br />
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Hi everyone, just letting you know I have posted my review of Cheryl Strayed's 'Wild.' To find it just head over to <i>Reviews. </i>Hope you enjoy it.Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-52137962074606346352016-07-07T20:58:00.000+10:002016-07-07T21:37:55.425+10:00The Little Library - Melbourne<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">Stumbled across this unique idea through a facebook post by Humans in Melbourne. </span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">Yes, it's a community library where any one can visit, sit, read, relax, meet other people, talk, learn and borrow or swap books all on an honesty system.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">Although it's not purely just for those who may be homeless, it certainly breaks down barriers allowing anyone from any walk of life to go in without feeling as though they don't belong, or can't afford its luxury.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><span style="background-color: white; line-height: 16.08px;">Located within Melbourne Central, on Lev</span><span class="text_exposed_show" style="background-color: white; display: inline; line-height: 16.08px;">el 2, you could be excused for almost passing without noticing; myself included.</span></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><span class="text_exposed_show" style="background-color: white; display: inline; line-height: 16.08px;">Inside you'll see what looks like a bookstore, but it is so much more. </span></span><span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;"><span class="text_exposed_show" style="background-color: white; display: inline; line-height: 16.08px;">The Little Library is a place where absolutely anyone can come and borrow or swap a book for free. There is no membership, there is no shopkeeper or security guard, it is all done on honesty.</span></span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">I would hope every major city could invest in utilising a space to provide this same concept for their own locals. Wow, what food for thought!</span>Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-4001283570433380922016-05-29T21:04:00.003+10:002016-05-29T21:39:36.875+10:00SHORT FICTION - LOCAL COLOR<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">Recently I was lucky enough to try my hand at a new technique of writing called <i>Regionalism and local color in short fiction</i>. </span><br />
<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">I hope that wasn't a sigh I heard? </span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">Anyway, this new opportunity meant research, another new concept for me for most of my writing is strongly non-fictional, but I was ready for something different, ready for a new challenge and who knows I might pull something great off.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">For those who don't know what 'Regionalism and local color' writing is, here's a little bit about it. </span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">By definition, local color is defined as the characteristics and traits that make a location unique, like the gold fields - as I happened to choose for my story. It's about the food shops and attitudes of the people in a town.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">Local color stories concentrate on landscape, dialect like that found in Mark Twain's <i>The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn</i>, it's about customs and folklore specific to geographic region or locale. It's said that the setting can be so integral to the story that it sometimes becomes a character itself.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">Thematically, many local color stories share an aversion to change, a weakness for sentimentality or nostalgia for the anachronistic beliefs of a past. It's a place where characters adhere to traditional gender, ethnic and social economic roles - so it's like keeping things real. But when it comes to plot, often very little happens for the storytelling itself revolves mostly around the community and it's rituals rather than one character's experiences.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">Local color taught me a thing or two other than writing in a new genre, it taught me the importance of accuracy in research and how I was able to manipulate what I found to structure my own story and characters in a way I visualised. It allowed me to have fun with characters, setting and dialect, so much so perhaps my story wandered more towards character than locale - I don't know - I'll leave that for the judges to decide. </span><br />
<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif;">Regardless, this new sense of short-fiction writing brought new life and interest for me personally, I really felt my character's come alive more than ever, I could really see them living how I plotted their lives and most importantly it gave me a far more thorough understanding of my own locale I never knew existed. It presented an opportunity to visit local cemeteries and historic land marks, such as old mines I never would've otherwise. It gave me the in-depth knowledge needed to understand local history and then translate that into something inspiring through my penmanship. </span><br />
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I've added a few paragraphs of my local writing in my page titled 'Writing Stuff,' please head over and have a read, tell me what you think.Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-26692557393235611072016-01-13T14:45:00.002+11:002016-01-13T14:45:14.743+11:00Bookshop of Kabul- Bookshops Of the World<br />
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEho60zKYEac-u8so94L6kPeO3pqWpQ9nnreDwRj_n9C_xPtLWVjb9F6FsSK_H8221ZWhOWaQ3PgVXvOiFDLghTTcAepZwdaPw7hm0fA4Eh8lRkquV3Z84cgj8S6UiLhY1u3mOMmt76619fE/s1600/image004.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEho60zKYEac-u8so94L6kPeO3pqWpQ9nnreDwRj_n9C_xPtLWVjb9F6FsSK_H8221ZWhOWaQ3PgVXvOiFDLghTTcAepZwdaPw7hm0fA4Eh8lRkquV3Z84cgj8S6UiLhY1u3mOMmt76619fE/s1600/image004.jpg" /></a><br />
<i>The Bookseller of Kabul</i> was one of many books listed on my bucket list of books to read and quickly became one of my many favorite reads.<br />
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This post was inspired by<i> The Bookseller of Kabul, </i>with real photo's of the bookshop itself. Pictured opposite is the real man behind the story Shah Muhammad Rais.<br />
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Yes it's an International bestseller, but what I've come to learn since having read this extraordinary book first published in 2002 is how much controversy the Author Asne Seierstad caused due to telling the story of Sultan Khan (Shah Muhammad Rais).<br />
It surprises me that Shah Muhammad Rais found this account of his life so incorrectly depicted, especially when the Author shared four months of her life in Shah's home to write of his and his families experiences as Afghani's. How welcoming they had been, how open, honest they were with Asne, and how careful Asne consciously made the effort in telling their story through their own words and feelings.<br />
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Asne writes the foreward appearing to be so aware in maintaining anonymity, telling a story as she puts it, in literary form, while based on real events. <br />
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It's easy to read this story wondering if it's actually fiction or fact; sign of a good writer many would agree! <br />
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There's always two sides to every story though isn't there? <br />
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It's reported that Shah Muhammad Rais and his family sought asylum in Norway as political refugee's after things revealed about them from the publishing of the book made life in Afghanistan unsafe. Shah then went on to publishing his own book, <i>Once upon a time was a bookseller in Kabul,</i> which tells his own story. <br />
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Extract:<br />
September 10 2003<br />
LET THERE BE LIGHT<br />
By: Shah M Rais<br />
It was my heartfelt desire to come to Norway and say hello to newfound Norwegian friends who had read a book, which was supposed to accurately depict my lifelong struggle against fundamentalism, tyranny and illiteracy in Afghanistan from the window of Asne's home. I never dreamed that the opposite circumstances would have arisen, circumstances that I never could have imagined when I extended to her my hospitality, precious time, and the benefits of my experience during a moment of tragedy and crisis for my country and the world. Instead of writing a true portrait of my family, my country, and myself she has closed the window on truth, defaming all of us in her cold desire for money, believing that the low and the salacious would sell better than the high and the honest. In this she has proved temporarily correct, but there is too much light flowing through the many windows opened by honest people during the global ordeal that terrorism has caused for such a hollow victory to last.<br />
She has told the press that she has written or said nothing to put me in danger.Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-5921562718317562032016-01-04T10:00:00.000+11:002016-01-05T20:27:34.051+11:00Bookshops of the World <b>Shakespeare & Company Paris</b>- Most photographed bookstore in the world!<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg2kmcenALZ9dXzBtXYx9UQqQ-z5s47BnhUOP_Wv3S22YR9GbhbJSVnhi7SzYlDqgqKZK9yq0Ov2rJFSuCWAdiVHPLBs0P94xbd0ZpFIiQfXRx554lsDzAflDYICCNjRqskXGWXZP0fiTQO/s1600/14354270945_49bfc70f71_k-1024x678.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg2kmcenALZ9dXzBtXYx9UQqQ-z5s47BnhUOP_Wv3S22YR9GbhbJSVnhi7SzYlDqgqKZK9yq0Ov2rJFSuCWAdiVHPLBs0P94xbd0ZpFIiQfXRx554lsDzAflDYICCNjRqskXGWXZP0fiTQO/s320/14354270945_49bfc70f71_k-1024x678.jpg" /></a></div>A Brief History of a Parisian Bookstore <br />
"I created this bookstore like a man would write a novel, building each room like a chapter, and I like people to open the door the way they open a book, a book that leads into a magic world in their imaginations." —George Whitman<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgc-tvVcIih-p03-hvm5_p_tyIT9hUd65TOj_bJglKXSPNXREJm1AWwey0lUjO4Ix23skvvbIhsbCluhyphenhyphend6s9DbMVLtA9lMEISqKa2H9Y2woo0FYsxrPx4Lbq0dt8mRNcUR5JI2CZwxmXdA/s1600/shakespeare-and-co-240.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgc-tvVcIih-p03-hvm5_p_tyIT9hUd65TOj_bJglKXSPNXREJm1AWwey0lUjO4Ix23skvvbIhsbCluhyphenhyphend6s9DbMVLtA9lMEISqKa2H9Y2woo0FYsxrPx4Lbq0dt8mRNcUR5JI2CZwxmXdA/s320/shakespeare-and-co-240.jpg" /></a></div>I just love George Whitman's definition of how he came to "create" this bookstore, it conjures an immediate imagination of your own, one where you can see rooms filled with favorite genre's, favorite all-time classics just waiting for your presence, to spot them silently awaiting your perusal, your excitement in meeting them, in stepping through into a universe of it's very own - and how wonderful does that feel. <br />
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhcxYva_xf30-oLfDk-x2k3cGaUJv2Wu0EDCL-VmLkqcx2m89t6a5ZaWF-H47XEIENq7kNFS6nV69o1gqZ0FHH6ZqLf_vVQv9nmuCPFY1y8QbkZ6o2N11903Dn5QZkeowFYQXAzBOBdNUCM/s1600/inside-shakespeare-and-co.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhcxYva_xf30-oLfDk-x2k3cGaUJv2Wu0EDCL-VmLkqcx2m89t6a5ZaWF-H47XEIENq7kNFS6nV69o1gqZ0FHH6ZqLf_vVQv9nmuCPFY1y8QbkZ6o2N11903Dn5QZkeowFYQXAzBOBdNUCM/s320/inside-shakespeare-and-co.jpg" /></a></div>Shakespeare and Company is an English-language bookshop located in the heart of Paris, on the banks of the Seine, opposite Notre-Dame. Since opening in 1951, it’s been a meeting place for English speaking writers and readers, becoming a Left Bank literary institution.<br />
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The bookshop was founded by American George Whitman at 37 rue de la Bûcherie, Kilometer Zero, the point at which all French roads begin. Constructed in the early 17th century, the building was originally a monastery.<br />
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When the store first opened, it was called Le Mistral. George changed it to the present name in April 1964—on the four-hundredth anniversary of William Shakespeare’s birth—in honor of a bookseller he admired, Sylvia Beach, who’d founded the original Shakespeare and Company in 1919. Her store at 12 rue de l’Odéon was a gathering place for the great expat writers of the time—Joyce, Hemingway, Stein, Fitzgerald, Eliot, Pound—as well as for leading French writers. <br />
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From the first day the store opened, writers, artists, and intellectuals were invited to sleep among the shop’s shelves and piles of books, on small beds that doubled as benches during the day. Since then, an estimated 30,000 young and young-at-heart writers and artists have stayed in the bookshop, including then unknowns such as Alan Sillitoe, Robert Stone, Kate Grenville, Sebastian Barry, Ethan Hawke, Jeet Thayil, Darren Aronfsky, Stephen Rea, David Rakoff, and Linda Grant. These guests are called Tumbleweeds after the rolling thistles that “drift in and out with the winds of chance,” as George described. A sense of community and commune was very important to him—he referred to his shop as a “socialist utopia masquerading as a bookstore.” <br />
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Three things are asked of each Tumbleweed: read a book a day, help at the shop for a few hours a day, and produce a one-page autobiography. Thousands and thousands of these autobiographies have been collected and now form an impressive archive, capturing generations of writers, travelers, and dreamers who have left behind pieces of their stories. <br />
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In 2002, at the age of twenty-one, Sylvia Whitman, George’s only child, returned to Shakespeare and Company to spend time with her father, then eighty-eight years old, in his kingdom of books. In 2006, George officially put Sylvia in charge. On the shutters outside the store, he wrote: “Each monastery had a frère lampier whose duty was to light the lamps at nightfall. I have been doing this for fifty years. Now it is my daughter’s turn.”<br />
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Sylvia introduced several new literary endeavors. In June 2003, Shakespeare and Company hosted its first literary festival, followed by three others. Participants over the years have included Paul Auster, Will Self, Marjane Satrapi, Jung Chang, Philip Pullman, Hanif Kureishi, Siri Hustvedt, Martin Amis, and Alistair Horne, among many others. <br />
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In 2011, with the de Groot Foundation, Shakespeare and Company launched the Paris Literary Prize, a novella contest open to unpublished writers from around the world. In recent years, the bookstore’s had cameo appearances in Richard Linklater’s Before Sunset and Woody Allen’s Midnight in Paris. Shakespeare and Company also continues to host at least one free literary event a week, and has been delighted to welcome young and emerging writers along with today’s leading authors.<br />
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The shop’s latest projects include a Shakespeare and Company publishing arm and an ongoing search for a farm and writers’ retreat in the countryside around Paris.<br />
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Although George Whitman passed away on December 14, 2011—two days after his 98th birthday—his novel, this bookshop, is still being written, both by Sylvia and by the thousands of people who continue to read, write, and sleep at Shakespeare and Company. <br />
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If I ever visit Paris, this will be a must visit on my bucket-list of places to see before I die.<br />
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<i>Notes shared in this post have been resourced from Shakespeare and Co's website titled "History." </i><br />
Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-22363708812503051092016-01-02T10:00:00.000+11:002016-01-05T20:27:03.371+11:00January's Author Spotlight <div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhA3cCgmc1Ud_MRcK5Ai0qdpj_LymhMNs6U62Xc9ZdNNVDod0jSEwSP1dl58XWRXuAg0lHEF_t2-t-kvo8pYf2PDyPmBcej9UlMcyEnMAQc7LAbDi2F5RWVz52B9tpxktd03eAOiASgkEd8/s1600/B1dUUfB4XIS._UX250_.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhA3cCgmc1Ud_MRcK5Ai0qdpj_LymhMNs6U62Xc9ZdNNVDod0jSEwSP1dl58XWRXuAg0lHEF_t2-t-kvo8pYf2PDyPmBcej9UlMcyEnMAQc7LAbDi2F5RWVz52B9tpxktd03eAOiASgkEd8/s320/B1dUUfB4XIS._UX250_.jpg" /></a></div><br />
Each month I hope to introduce you to a special author whom I've come to love and perhaps even resonate with his or her writing on a very personal level; it might even include an author I have either just experienced or endeavor too via spotting a read of new interest. Some of you may already know some of these authors from having already read their books. Some authors we may get to know together for the first time, sparking a common interest in wanting to read something completely different to the usual genres we're use to. <br />
Either way I hope you enjoy this new addition to my blog for 2016.<br />
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Just for the record, Paulo Coelho has become one my most read and favorite authors. His writing brings deep emotional attachment and thinking, it makes you want to live a better, fuller life; a purposeful life. After reading one of his books, I'm left pondering my own life's purpose, life's value and I feel much alive with this experience I never want to let go.<br />
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Brazilian author Paulo Coelho is considered one of the most influential authors of our times, he's also become one of my all time favorite authors having read a huge line-up of his books including 'The Pilgrimage' and 'The Alchemist.' His books have sold more than 165 million copies worldwide, have been released in 170 countries and been translated into 80 languages; what author could ask for anything more. <br />
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Born in Rio de Janeiro in 1947 he soon discovered his vocation for writing. His career includes working as a director, theater actor, songwriter and journalist. His collaboration with Brazilian composer and singer Raúl Seixas gave some of the greatest classic rock songs in Brazil. <br />
In 1986, a special meeting led him to make the pilgrimage to Saint James Compostela (in Spain). The Road to Santiago was not only a common pilgrimage but a turning point in his existence. A year later, he wrote 'The Pilgrimage', an autobiographical novel that is considered the beginning of his career. <br />
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In the following year, Coelho published 'The Alchemist'. Slow initial sales convinced his first publisher to drop the novel, but it went on to become one of the best selling Brazilian books of all time much to Coelho's surprise. The story of Santiago is a testament to how powerful our dreams can be and the importance of listening to our hearts. It really is a must read for any avid reader, believer or anyone looking to transform or add true meaningfulness to their lives. <br />
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Other titles include 'Brida' (1990), 'The Valkyries' (1992), 'By the River Piedra I Sat Down and Wept' (1994), the collection of his best columns published in the Brazilian newspaper Folha de S. Paulo entitle 'Maktub' (1994), the compilation of texts 'Phrases' (1995), 'The Fifth Mountain' (1996), 'Manual of a Warrior of Light' (1997), 'Veronika decides to die' (1998), 'The Devil and Miss Prym' (2000), the compilation of traditional tales in 'Stories for parents, children and grandchildren' (2001), 'Eleven Minutes' (2003), 'The Zahir' (2005), 'Like the Flowing River' (2006), 'The Witch of Portobello' (2006), 'The Winner Stands Alone' (2008), 'Aleph' (2010), 'Manuscript found in Accra' (2012) and 'Adultery' (2014).<br />
You'll love them all!<br />
Coelho has received numerous prestigious international awards, amongst them being inducted into the Brazilian Academy of Letters in 2002 and Messenger of Peace by the United Nations since 2007. In 2009 he received the Guinness World Record for the most translated author for the same book (The Alchemist). <br />
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This title is one I have not yet read, however will make it one of my priorities for 2016; here's a little look at what it's all about. If you've already read it please leave your comments and thoughts.<br />
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjh5KFmAuoCWd_Xh8sfbqEISkBuKQPvBpjSr6pY56zzmEz4_FlGvgo-ThcAoBwcj8fl87XHrpbd4rlwTD9WJNxqjFp_A5lS5JvYuhYC2UdwS66tVu8MZnpoV2QJo3qO7NfCdtt52o7Reg2k/s1600/9780007551804.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjh5KFmAuoCWd_Xh8sfbqEISkBuKQPvBpjSr6pY56zzmEz4_FlGvgo-ThcAoBwcj8fl87XHrpbd4rlwTD9WJNxqjFp_A5lS5JvYuhYC2UdwS66tVu8MZnpoV2QJo3qO7NfCdtt52o7Reg2k/s320/9780007551804.jpg" /></a></div>Synopsis by Foyles Bookstore London<br />
The new novel from internationally acclaimed author Paulo Coelho - a dramatic story of love, life and death that shows us all why every second of our existence is a choice we all make between living and dying. Veronika has everything she could wish for. She is young and pretty, has plenty of boyfriends, a steady job, a loving family. Yet she is not happy; something is lacking in her life, and one morning she decides to die. She takes an overdose of sleeping pills, only to wake up some time later in the local hospital. There she is told that her heart is damaged and she has only a few days to live. The story follows Veronika through these intense days as to her surprise she finds herself experiencing feelings she has never really felt before. Against all odds she finds herself falling in love and even wanting to live again...<br />
Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-57889880045560274452015-12-28T17:45:00.001+11:002015-12-28T23:38:03.817+11:00Bookshops of the World <br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhsrDX4t05YV3eevYc-quM4xCUDekc53_tIwFdte63bFnvgdBRIrrDlLhzji0Rex7dTLGfwwWdE8AHbw2Qt-QeL1IdfmjucvPFkVz2zcAzMGF9s_dRg5AVf-mPous6EOZQKV3eLNAN9OGJr/s1600/Bookshops.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhsrDX4t05YV3eevYc-quM4xCUDekc53_tIwFdte63bFnvgdBRIrrDlLhzji0Rex7dTLGfwwWdE8AHbw2Qt-QeL1IdfmjucvPFkVz2zcAzMGF9s_dRg5AVf-mPous6EOZQKV3eLNAN9OGJr/s320/Bookshops.jpg" /></a></div>I stumbled across this bookstore while googling 'bookstores of the world', it appealed to me immediately probably because one, it's outdoors, two it has that Mediterranean feeling of being on holidays and reading books, and three it's something vastly different to anything I've seen before. Bart's Bookstore located in California is the largest outdoor bookstore in the world, boasting an extensive range of rare books - a definite for my list of bookstores to visit before I die. <br />
I don't know what it is but unusual shops like this gets my heart rate going in a good way, especially when it houses books. <br />
My favorite all-time bookstores are those old stores - not the musty, smelly types, but the old-style that surround you in all their glory of colorful jackets lining the walls from floor to ceiling, boasting new titles you've not seen before or perhaps have forgotten about until now. <br />
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One of my all time favorite stores like this is The Hill of Content Bookstore located in Bourke st Melbourne. It wasn't until I'd visited the Reading's bookstore at the State Library Melbourne that I learnt of this quaint bookshop after a staff member kindly referred me there.<br />
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgzHMNDoKxchSPm6ltQpenzSxfNn2PZa6q_HU5ewxpe_bDHybjczr-7x8wRwrYN5B051qcKAYwJw62TDGz3u3Xj7RJREYROrLF9kS2Xnkq4DjNRD1yfZ8V2RQIq-LyXo0sLpxjqEMQHhTfR/s1600/bookshop.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgzHMNDoKxchSPm6ltQpenzSxfNn2PZa6q_HU5ewxpe_bDHybjczr-7x8wRwrYN5B051qcKAYwJw62TDGz3u3Xj7RJREYROrLF9kS2Xnkq4DjNRD1yfZ8V2RQIq-LyXo0sLpxjqEMQHhTfR/s320/bookshop.jpg" /></a></div>You'll find this bookstore just a short stroll from the Treasury Gardens and Parliament House which dates back to the gangster days of Squizzy Taylor an Australian-based career criminal in the 1920s, famous for his pick-pocketing, arm robberies and murder. ( A bit of history folks)!<br />
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Yep, this bookstore is as good as they can get. I don't know about you but I can't get enough of being surrounded in books and this is what you get when you visit the Hill of Content bookshop. In my opinion nothing can beat an old style book store either, with a rickety sweeping stair-case taking you to a new level of more books; more books! You can also find the often very hard to get journals like The Australian Book Review. I usually visit this bookstore with a list in hand of titles I'm keen to take home and more than often I leave with titles I never came out looking for - but never disappointed in doing so. Who would go to Big W to buy a copy when they could spend a few lazy hours perusing the shelves here?<br />
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If you haven't yet been fortunate enough to visit this bookstore I highly recommend that next time your in Melbourne include a visit here. Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-75016035035193327212015-11-27T22:56:00.001+11:002015-11-27T23:40:12.019+11:00Teenage Depression<br />
August seems so long ago when I last posted and there's been a million and one things been going on since. Over the past few months I have reached the low of all lows life could've thrown my way, but more so, life has thrown my son the hardest, darkest lessons ever imaginable. <br />
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It's alarming yes, even more so when confronted with the fact your own flesh and blood is suffering a disorder you have very little control over; in fact you don't have any control over. It comes as a shock, the most terrifying reality any parent could be confronted with, yet the reality is there are hundreds of thousands of families facing this ordeal every day, every night of their lives, and it's one of the most scariest notions to ever have to contemplate. <br />
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Our story started as you might remember back in August with what was an eating disorder. This eating disorder is not uncommon among our young adults, in fact 1 in 16 young adults, approximately 180,000 young people suffer from some type of disorder between the ages of 16-24.<br />
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The problem is complex with no one particular reason why it affects so many. Perhaps self-image is the major player in this, our kids are so caught up with how they should look, comparing themselves too much with role-models, with favorite actors or actresses; hero's. <br />
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Surely this couldn't account for a whopping one-quarter of all young Aussies? <br />
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Sadly, it does. <br />
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<a href="https://www.youthbeyondblue.com/home"></a>Our kids are mostly concerned with school and study, with being able to cope with stress and their body image.<br />
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When we first sought professional help for my son, one of the first questions asked of him was, <br />
'Are you happy with your current weight?' <br />
His answer was simple, 'no.'<br />
<br />
In fact he said he hated his body, he hated that his body showed signs of maturity beyond his years. Hair growth, acne, deep voice. He was uncomfortable being a boy suddenly plummeting into a man's world without any introduction; preparation. <br />
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Sitting alongside a child who is in the prime of his youth, who should be glistening with health, whose developing body should be displaying some kind of maturity, it instead projected a pasty, unhealthy reflection of someone you would've thought had been convalescing from illness. And perhaps he was.<br />
<br />
My son's life and purpose deteriorated rapidly, who knows why?? Even he found it hard to pin-point any one factor, and looking back there was no 'one' factor, it was a number of things, things that had compounded so profoundly that it became too much for such a young man to deal with.<br />
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He found himself trapped in his own world of sorrow, his own world of despair; He could see no alternative, no end to this debilitating feeling that was consuming him and like so many other young people, he too could only find refuge in the ideal of taking his own life.<br />
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Alarmingly, suicide is the biggest killer and accounts for more deaths of our young people than that of car accidents. <br />
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You must think I'm crazy when I say this, but we're lucky; lucky my son had great friends and access to networks that I strongly believe helped save his life. And I think that's the answer, if people are vigilant enough to see signs that ring alarm bells, that cause uneasiness, that are out-of-character, abnormal and to not only identify these changes but be quick to act on them, seek help, advice, to let peers know something is not quiet right.<br />
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We will be eternally grateful to my son's friend who was strong enough to step-up and let us know he was scared for his mate and scared for himself. He didn't know what to do, who to talk to. He must have fought with the idea of betrayal, going behind his friend's back by telling his mate's parent's of every move, every discussion that took place inside and outside school. He was our watch dog, our surveillance and without him I strongly believe the outcome would've have been very different. Social media can be a hindrance, but it can also be a savior, for us I think it was a mix of both.<br />
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As a parent my darkest day was sitting alongside my son as his mental health was reviewed with him openly admitting to his plot to kill himself. It was the most confronting thing I've ever had to encounter to say the very least and just writing about it brings tears welling back to my eyes causing my heart to grow heavy once again. <br />
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I'm not naive, I know now we will live with a constant fear of 'What if this feeling ever returns?' I will always be sleeping with one eye open, and my ears pricked to the most minute sound that beckons investigation.<br />
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I'll always, forever be mindful of triggers, yet know life still has to move on at the same pace, maybe now just with a little bit more caution for everyone's peace of mind. <br />
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The truth is we will have to be forever vigilant for our son, always on the look out for changes in his mood, his desires, his over-all well-being. But that's a small price to pay to keep him here. <br />
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<a href="https://www.youthbeyondblue.com/home"></a>Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-1729889750110547312015-08-24T21:48:00.000+10:002015-08-24T21:48:39.116+10:00Life's little curve balls<b><br />
anorexia<br />
</b>ˌanəˈrɛksɪə<br />
noun<br />
lack or loss of appetite for food (as a medical condition).<br />
an emotional disorder characterized by an obsessive desire to lose weight by refusing to eat.<br />
noun: anorexia nervosa<br />
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Recently I was confronted with the alarming fact that my fifteen-year-old son might be suffering from an eating disorder or worse a mental health issue. <br />
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While I've never been concerned with his eating habits of the past, I have been aware of his increased seclusion from the outside world mainly due to playing on-line computer games which I likened to being "normal" teenage activity. <br />
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His changes in appearance I've put down to growing-up and puberty. He's got tall for fifteen, he has body hair that perhaps far exceeds many others of his friends the same age, he likes his own space; his privacy. His appetite has decreased, not a little, but a lot. His moods swing from being talkative to the verge of becoming a recluse. He doesn't share his thoughts, feelings, ambitions, in fact he doesn't have any ambitions now or for the future, another sign I thought would change over time as he matures. His self-esteem is low, he tells me he hates his body, but he's always been self-conscious. He says his quads are too big, but they are skin and bone and I can't understand where on earth he would get the idea they are otherwise. <br />
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It wasn't until I sat beside him at the dinner table and noticed him struggling to consume 1 meat pie with chips and eggs, that I asked him what was wrong. <br />
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He pats his stomach suggesting he's full while an entire meat pie sits untouched in front of him. I make a joke you'll become anorexic, he replies, <br />
"Probably."<br />
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It's a shock, an instant hit of reality and I would be lying if I said the condition anorexia had never crossed my mind before now.<br />
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Have I been naive to think these changes he's been displaying are normal; acceptable? <br />
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I'm worried sick; I google 'Anorexia,' and I'm still not convinced this is what he might be heading for even though some signs point to early diagnosis. I'm not in denial, or am I? <br />
I don't want to believe this could be reality, that this is affecting my son who always had such a healthy appetite as he was growing up. <br />
I open pages of <i>Strictly Parenting</i> written by Michael Carr-Gregg, Australia's leading parenting expert. I read the section on anorexia which predominately points to adolescent girls. <br />
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I visit websites and take particular note of physical signs, and now it starting to become more clear and make sense of ailments he's displaying, but I had never associated with an eating disorder.<br />
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Yes, he feels tired, but isn't that because he plays on his X-box so much?<br />
Yes, he never has any energy and is often lethargic, his facial features have changed, his skin pale and pasty, his eyes sunken with dark circles, he has vomited on occasions following dinner, putting it down to eating too much. He has no muscle, he is skin and bone with no definition. <br />
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So now there is a real chance my son maybe suffering from not just an eating disorder but much more. Resources will now become my valuable friend, my source to determine if or when I might need to get my son professional help. <br />
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I've listed below some resources I've found in a short time and still reading through. <br />
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National Eating Disorders Collaboration<br />
http://www.nedc.com.au/anorexia-nervosa<br />
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Anorexia Nervosa | Eating Disorders Victoria<br />
www.eatingdisorders.org.au <br />
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Anorexia nervosa | Better Health Channel<br />
www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au <br />
Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-92070634556895947902015-08-02T21:07:00.001+10:002015-08-24T21:54:07.957+10:00We're all artists<br />
I'm watching the <i>Voice</i>, there's cheering, there's coaching, there's artists fighting for their places, to show their talent, to be heard, to tell their stories, to prove their right; and their not dissimilar to us writers are they. <br />
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Singers, dancers, musicians, writers, they all need to learn their craft and we are all apprentices at some point in our careers. As writers we want to entertain our readers, we want to leave them at some point cheering, crying or laughing from the experience they just had, much like other artists. <br />
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And as a writer our craft is complex, it's not just a matter of putting words down (or is it)? We need to take into consideration a lot of things, things as simple as sentence length and structure, capitals, comma's and spelling.<br />
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiYb2hKyUXY8UFThO8k_GXWEQMUpPe8ah424sbAu08t-1wFOYvi_cweGz5fzJei4n4FZqf8VsZCjxIWeR2O5T-nQu7Optxo6OzlzdiIa1yB1giVnGMUqbxZ_LS0gjXMCQ_S5xMCNvh0v2zf/s1600/images.png" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiYb2hKyUXY8UFThO8k_GXWEQMUpPe8ah424sbAu08t-1wFOYvi_cweGz5fzJei4n4FZqf8VsZCjxIWeR2O5T-nQu7Optxo6OzlzdiIa1yB1giVnGMUqbxZ_LS0gjXMCQ_S5xMCNvh0v2zf/s320/images.png" /></a></div>Then there's things a little more complex like knowing nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions and interjections, and knowing how and when to use them correctly.<br />
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As we progress through our apprenticeship we might try our hand at understanding how dangling, squinting and misplaced modifiers can change how a sentence is interpreted. We might then need to take into consideration fragments and run-on sentences, we need to use these skills and use them to write short stories, articles, essays, interviews, memoirs, poems, novella's novels, biographies and columns. <br />
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It might take some of us longer than others to learn this craft, to become proficient; to become published, much like our counterparts making it on the big stage. And as writer's, yes, we too want to make the big stage, we strive for that big break regardless what our genre is or expertise. We want our stories to touch hearts, to leave impressions -some everlasting - much like a musician. We want our readers to feel, to be moved regardless how we make that happen. <br />
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We writer's must keep plodding along as artists, improving, growing. We must believe in ourselves, in our stories, in our audiences, and while one story might not make the grade, the next will. Our stage is huge where we get to showcase our art in journals, newspapers, blogging, on-line, periodicals, magazines, anthologies, competitions and through self-publishing. <br />
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Our art is hard, but it's also rewarding and yes rewards are out there to chase, some are small and some big, perhaps the biggest for most is publication while others chase smaller dreams, it doesn't matter what your dream is just chase it and the rewards will follow. Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-33831147937012003692015-07-24T21:12:00.000+10:002015-07-24T21:12:42.446+10:00Where I write<br />
Perhaps this is a tad pretentious of me, but hey, it might be a bit of fun after having read dozens of 'where I write,' columns in the <i>Writers'</i><i> Forum</i> magazine, who follow authors such as short story writer Steve Beresford, crime writer Bill Kitson and columnist and non-fiction writer Penny Legg just to name a few.<br />
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So firstly I don't have the luxury of Bill Kitson's, where I get to write from locations across the Mediterranean, soaking in bayside views from islands across Greece; but then again I'm not a famous novelist either. <br />
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While most admit to writing from locations such as the kitchen, dining room, coffee shops, sunrooms and under umbrella's on patio's (not forgetting luxurious island locations), they all still seem to have a dedicated office where they can retreat to perform their writing when they need to. <br />
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I too have tried writing from many locations much of which is already listed, and in agreement some locations work better than others depending on the day, your mood and time permitting. <br />
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My Home office<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjILPXpDvl9x7VS0yoAPuW1N8DLeSiW258ET-tNuxnmE7hOf07timhZzgssXBU2-RatYjzvzoq2mqXNevwZGC_VX4uWfgw7jzGbunvR1jzP9_0f6wAeucFxpH1BXQ1lO7_63EExDOMvCwx0/s1600/june+15+photos+403.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjILPXpDvl9x7VS0yoAPuW1N8DLeSiW258ET-tNuxnmE7hOf07timhZzgssXBU2-RatYjzvzoq2mqXNevwZGC_VX4uWfgw7jzGbunvR1jzP9_0f6wAeucFxpH1BXQ1lO7_63EExDOMvCwx0/s320/june+15+photos+403.jpg" /></a></div> <br />
Yer I know, it's not very inspiring, but then again should it be? Isn't it a good thing to have office spaces that can't detract us writer's from our train of thought; that doesn't distract us with interesting items placed around us? <br />
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Just outside beyond the tiniest frosted glass window that sits to the left of my office, is a rural setting that whether in winter or summer is filled with inspiration. Teaming rain fills the house with a deafening roar upon the tin roof in winter, while families of Rosella's and Honey-eaters fight over lunch, hopping from shed roofs to the bare branches of the Mt Fugi, all invisible from my work station. <br />
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In winter I write better from places that provide warmth and that's definitely not my office. Most of the time I'll sit up at the kitchen bench under the heater with my laptop. Other times when I don't want any distractions such as phone calls, pantry's and fridges, housework, dishes, washing, walking the dog and thinking about preparing dinner or cooking muffins or cup-cakes for tomorrow's school lunches, I'll go to the local library. <br />
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Like Steve Beresford I can't write if there is music, TV noise or conversation around me; it just completely destroys any concentration I might have. <br />
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My Whiteboard / noticeboard<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjrlO3VGQKJnWTiwHChdhbcHktxXnVIS1ODZy17RMCzvlopaMcxktTb9WIy2DTWKQb7zmG2-Ad7C-zGJQB9_u61R-UDeq4rP1l37f2fl5QBTVWefxmD0fVku6j8hzJYDEXV8fO0c-NVHmXC/s1600/june+15+photos+388.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjrlO3VGQKJnWTiwHChdhbcHktxXnVIS1ODZy17RMCzvlopaMcxktTb9WIy2DTWKQb7zmG2-Ad7C-zGJQB9_u61R-UDeq4rP1l37f2fl5QBTVWefxmD0fVku6j8hzJYDEXV8fO0c-NVHmXC/s320/june+15+photos+388.jpg" /></a></div><br />
Here I keep track of all writing commitments like competition deadlines, anthologies and opportunities among a few other things like a portrait of myself and my daughter, a palmistry guide; another past-time of mine, and my horoscope. <br />
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While most of the author's interviewed in <i>Writers'Forum </i> are full-time writers, writing anything from six to fifteen hours a day, I scramble to find a few precious uninterrupted hours a week to produce my work, but all-in-all it's enlightening to know that most of us writers whether well-published or not, all work much the same; some days we will produce great work while others are merely used as stepping stones for future works and there's nothing wrong with that. <br />
Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-780585555541506821.post-51036420556078874422015-07-06T20:51:00.006+10:002015-07-08T12:09:15.086+10:00Why would anyone suggest to Rob a Bank?<br />
I know, it sounds ludicrous doesn't it? But hey, it sells, trust me, read on.<br />
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Today I was killing time so speak in Collins Booksellers. It was one of very few occasions that I have gone into a book store without an agenda. I had time to mull over the genres, places I would less frequently explore, and what happened next was like stumbling over a lost fortune. <br />
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEidrFRGEnEZ_zxk1EeF1jekJl1U9HVPA039Ik0KwNdoS7JOvPHZ_Klx4mNNeih88wvSbFzNtD4vyAw6eyGx3p40WjxvMCL4Hn7-25wriPIN5UsdXgOB0OTJY6_TsLupuCJCkD7daPtiBJfN/s1600/9780099466734.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEidrFRGEnEZ_zxk1EeF1jekJl1U9HVPA039Ik0KwNdoS7JOvPHZ_Klx4mNNeih88wvSbFzNtD4vyAw6eyGx3p40WjxvMCL4Hn7-25wriPIN5UsdXgOB0OTJY6_TsLupuCJCkD7daPtiBJfN/s320/9780099466734.jpg" /></a></div>Firstly, I found some classics, like <i>To Kill a Mockingbird</i>, which as we all know has made a huge come back on the brink of the anticipated publication of, <i>Go Set a Watchman</i> by Harper Lee. <br />
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Lingering on lower shelves, places not met with the occasional eye as those placed above the mid-drift, were copies such as Miles Franklin's <i>My Brilliant Career/My Career Goes Bung</i> and <i>The Chant of Jimmy Blacksmith</i> by Thomas Keneally, which I read in high school. <br />
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<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjW8mkZUangMny4UpRT8EaRxOlYsbKIKzyoOfR69SYb6fK1XvFDLazQWc3INK7jM-n7Tk9cudfr0azq2rh84Fd_v59scGR7dTg4-PAJ9eejFYsT7vzb4LvL0lOv5aLWDu38ZWuXswToMgeD/s1600/WhenToRobABank_3D.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjW8mkZUangMny4UpRT8EaRxOlYsbKIKzyoOfR69SYb6fK1XvFDLazQWc3INK7jM-n7Tk9cudfr0azq2rh84Fd_v59scGR7dTg4-PAJ9eejFYsT7vzb4LvL0lOv5aLWDu38ZWuXswToMgeD/s320/WhenToRobABank_3D.JPG" /></a></div>But it was this book <a href="http://freakonomics.com/2015/04/16/read-an-early-excerpt-from-when-to-rob-a-bank/"><i>When to Rob a Bank</i></a> by co-authors Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, that caught my undivided attention. Why, I'm not completely sure? I'm not an economist, or know about economics by any stretch of the imagination, in fact, when I got home I googled the definition 'Economics' just to make sure I was on the right page and everything. <br />
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No doubt it was the title that intrigued me, and with further investigation I found the co-authors were bloggers like myself - okay - they're better bloggers - that's a given. These guys have blogged over a decade with more than 8,000 blog posts - what an effort. They built their blog following the publication of their first book <i><a href="http://freakonomics.com/">Freakonomics</a></i> which by the way sold more than 7 million copies, hence they have never looked back. <br />
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It would be an understatement to say these two guys have a passion for what they do. Their successes have kept them blogging with their own admission, <br />
<blockquote>...there wasn't any evidence the blog helped sell more copies of our books. In fact it may have cannibalized sales, since every day we were giving away our writing. </blockquote><br />
I can't wait to read past the intro of <i>What Do Blogs and Bottled Water Have in Common?</i><br />
I'm un-willing to do a spoiler alert on this one; you'll just have to read the book like myself to find out the answer. <br />
And if I have learned one lesson today, then I've learned several. Blog well, not just good content, but relevant content; great content). Blog like there's no tomorrow, be savvy, be unpredictable, and you too might very well publish your own book one day from blog posts. Writers-fix.blogspot.comhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08765278181489800129noreply@blogger.com0