Archive for January, 2009

My Life in Books

Pam January 25th, 2009

Today I’m so happy to launch a new title and new look for my blog!

First, the new look. The talented and up-and-coming cartoonist/artist, Corinne Mucha, designed the header just for me. I love it, because not only is it a perfect fit, it’s so cool! The design, the color, the detail, I couldn’t be happier with it. Having been a librarian, teacher, and now a writer, I’m proud to say that the harried little person typing away surrounded by stacks of books is…me. Thank you, Corinne.

And thanks to my daughter Katie for having the brilliant idea to ask Corinne to do this for my birthday. Talk about a gift that keeps on giving. I also owe Katie big time for suggesting the title. My life has always been so much about books, and no one knows this better than Katie. Continue Reading »

Critique Group Welcomes the New Year!

Pam January 17th, 2009

My critique group met last Friday, our first meeting of the year. After our actual work–critiquing three picture book manuscripts–we revisited the writing resolutions we made last January, what we hoped to accomplish as writers in 2008.

Most of us (and we’re a fairly large group) achieved one or more of our goals. Here are some of them:

  • Participate in National Novel Writing Month
  • Be more diligent about submitting work
  • Create and adhere to a daily writing schedule
  • Set up an author consortium through SCBWI
  • Learn how to put together a web site
  • Query editors and agents for particular novels (several of us had resolved to do this)
  • Write at least four times a week
  • Concentrate on poetry for young readers
  • Finish first drafts for two novels
  • Read more
  • Spend 15 hours a week writing, or on writing related tasks
  • Resurrect a picture book from years ago and submit it

And this is one of my favorites: “To clarify and commit. Commit to what, you might ask? Well, that’s what I want to clarify.”

From the list of goals, it’s easy to see we’re a diverse group. Several of us have children still at home; others are grandparents. Some have full-time jobs, some are in graduate school. A few of us are retired from other careers. Most of us are now, or have been, dedicated volunteers for our Rocky Mountain Chapter of SCBWI. One thing we all share in common: our serious commitment to writing.

At the end of the meeting, we listed barriers to our writing on flash paper and set it aflame! In case you’re not familiar with it, as I wasn’t, it’s a special kind of paper that flares brightly for a second, then simply vaporizes. No ashes or residue. Through this symbolic act, we hoped to put all of our writing demons to rest.

Release of the Writing Demons

Release of the Writing Demons

Now we’re all writing our 2009 resolutions, each hoping to draw on our inner reserves of strength to reach our new goals. Individually, we can turn out pages and submit work, but there’s no one among us, even the multiply-published, who doesn’t need the support of our group.

A Curse Dark as Gold

Pam January 1st, 2009

A Curse Dark as Gold. What an intriguing title, and an intriuging read as well. I was curious about this book, because I knew it was a fantasy with the feel of historical fiction. My current project is historical fiction with fantasy elements, and I wanted to see how Elizabeth C. Bunce, the author, handled the fantasy/history combination and how the two melded in her book.

The setting is imaginary, as in most fantasies. However, it has the feel of an English village from long ago. In fact, Bunce, in her Author’s Note, says her fantasy world “…is strongly influenced by the real woolen industries of Britain and America during the early years of the Industrial Revolution (for our purposes, the late 1700’s).” Bunce’s novel shows a true understanding of not only the business end of running a mill, but a depth of knowledge about the machinery and even the cloth. Continue Reading »