Saturday, August 20, 2016

"Fiona the Firefly - Lost and Found" is drafted!!




Today is a sad day for me - the anniversary of my father's death.  He died very young and it still hurts on days like this... well it still hurts most days  So, to take my mind off the day, I thought I would write a quick update.

First, remember, all the illustrations by Mary Licata are copyrighted!!  Please don't copy, reproduce in any form without her written permission.

Second, my draft of the new Fiona sequel is finished.  It has gone through editing and now we are awaiting Mary's final set of illustrations.

Finally, I thought you might find it interesting that the story actually took a few unexpected turns.  I had an ending in mind, but the two characters, Lizbeth and Lucas, seemed to have a different ending in mind and since it was their story, I followed their lead.

It always fascinates me when a story I'm writing ends up in a totally different place than I thought it would.  I love that about writing.  Many writers outline the entire book before they start writing.  I can do that and have, but find it too constraining for me!  When i've done it, my story and the characters seem to have a mind of their own and a story they want to tell... so I let them.

So, as I await Mary's gorgeous illustrations, I'm already back editing another novel that I hope to have out by the end of the year!  We shall see.

I'll sign off now.

Till,
Judi

Sunday, August 7, 2016

Evoke feelings and emotions...


Well, first, if you look at the last photo I posted, you will see that in the photo above, the corn has grown so high you can no longer see the mountains -- all in a matter of weeks.  Shows how fast the summer is moving!  It is also one of the best corn crops in years... just the right amount of rain and sunshine.

Actually, what I really want to talk about is not corn, but writing emotional scenes.  In the last blog, we discussed how to write scenes that the reader can connect to.  Part of that skill is writing what the character is feeling - love, hate, sadness, even emptiness - and then analyzing what causes those feelings.   It's easy to write the cliches... "her heart skipped a beat when she saw him."  But what about him made her heart skip a beat?

One of the strongest human senses is the sense of smell.  A smell can evoke a memory of a person or place.  I was on a hotel elevator at a conference and the doors opened and a man stepped in.  We nodded and then said nothing and watched the numbers click by.  About half way down, he turned to me and said, "You're wearing X,"  I answered yes - I told him that he was very good at picking that up.  How did he know.   He said, "My girlfriend wears that perfume."  I had made him think of her at that moment.  When my mother died, I was cleaning out her things.  I came across her bottle of perfume.  I kept it.  I take it out sometimes and smell it,  It somehow makes me feel close to her.  I smell the salt air or decaying fish and shells at low tide and I return to my childhood by the ocean.  I feel an overwhelming hurt, wishing I could go back - just for a few moments.  You need to make your readers feel that when they read your words - if only I could go back.

What I'm trying to say is that you have to evoke these memories and feelings in your readers by association to an experience that they have had.  Paint a scene... he enters a room and knows that she was here because her smell lingers.  If you're a man, you will remember a woman in your life who left that lingering scent in your nose, in your head and in your heart.  Maybe it's the aroma of tomatoes, beef, and onions from your mother's beef stew recipe that causes you to picture your family around the kitchen table having dinner, talking and laughing.  Most families have those moments. If you're a woman, how about the smell of his aftershave.  It evokes the first time that you stood in the bathroom doorway watching him shave.  He stood, still glistening from the shower, a towel wrapped around his waist, slowly swiping the razor down his cheek removing the foam.  His eyes connect with yours in the mirror... and?  You can write very sexy scenes with out being explicit... make your readers feel and sense the heat.

Describe what intrigues your character... if male, maybe it's her eyes.  Maybe they are large and fringed with long lashes.  Maybe they change color with what she wears... blue to blue green to even a stormy grey when she's angry.  Maybe it's her hair - blonde and long or red and curly, with a slight scent of flowers.  He smells that flower and remembers...  If female, maybe it's the way he flicks his hair when he's nervous or maybe the way he kisses... slow and soft, or hard and insistent.   His smile that reaches his eyes and let's you know what he's thinking...

You get the picture by now... describe the scene, what the character feels and then let both your character and readers think about it - remember.

All I have for now... keep writing!  I am still making my way through the sequel to Fiona.  I think that I'm at the end point.  I hope I am.

Till,
Judi


Monday, August 1, 2016

This blog continues "A writer's dream..."


Well... it's me!  I am continuing on with my "A writer's dream..." blog under a new blog title, "A writer's dream continues..."  Why would I do that you ask?

A long story short - my computer began to act up, as all old favorite computers do.  I couldn't use Chrome fully, websites would come and go, and the computer would sporadically shut down.  My assessment was that the old Vista Operating System was not being supported by Chrome any more.  Maybe it was time to move up to Windows 10.

Alas and alack, whatever those words mean, I was only half correct.  It was not totally the OS, but also my hard disc was failing - thus the shutting down.

I had no fear of losing my files and photos - they're all backed up - but I had been lackadaisical (love that word) about keeping a current list of all my website sign-in info - email addresses and passwords, as well as many of my email addresses which were stored in an ancient copy of Eudora. Eudora could not be reloaded... so email addresses are gone, but I was able to reconstruct most of my sign-in info except for my blog  - sigh - on Google.

I also have a wonderful new Microsoft Surface Pro computer that I use when I travel, but this old trusty Toshiba is still my favorite... like the old writers with their typewriters :-)

I now have a sold state memory (not a disc) which is faster and Windows 10 which I don't mind, but still couldn't figure out my password for my blog and Google was absolutely NO help!  Even though I couldn't reconstruct the old blog's sights and sounds, the new design fits me well I think.

So we'll continue connecting through this new blog.  You can still find my old blog at http://judigetchwriter.blogspot.com/ and find me on Facebook.

More when I finally finish updating my trusty old companion.

Till,
Judi