Fortnightly Story: Lying On A Beach Towel

Author Libby Sommer shares a chapter of her novel, A Year with Sammy, with us. I have read this book and can tell you it is a wonderful depiction of family dynamics in a household of which a child with Autistic Spectrum Disorder is resident. Written as though being told over a cup of coffee (or tea) at a kitchen table, the book is a quick read filled with the full spectrum of emotions as shared across the cozy setting of a friendly kitchen.
Read on.
Libby, thank you for sharing this chapter! Such a wonderful introduction to all that comes after!

Libby Sommer's avatarLibby Sommer, Author

palm trees, grass, ocean at Bronte Beach on sunny day

This short story is the first chapter of my debut novel, My Year With Sammy published in December, 2015 by Ginninderra Press :

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Writing Competition

As promised, Esther Newton has released a new mini writing competition. Enjoy!
Thank you, Esther!

Esther Chilton's avatarEsther Chilton

As promised, here is the first in my new series of mini-writing competitions.

Prizes:

1st: £20 plus a copy of my book of short stories, The Siege

Two runners-up: A copy of my book of short stories

All three stories will be published on my blog

Entry fee: FREE

Entries are accepted from all corners of the globe

Writing prompt: Entries of up to 500 words, excluding the title, are required on the following theme: The discovery

Please post your entries below in the comments box, or e-mail them to: esthernewton@virginmedia.com

Closing date: 31st October 2016

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friends

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The Ultimate Guide – Chapter 16

Trying to decide whether or not to self-publish? (Or “independent publish”, as Don prefers.) Read on for some interesting information.
Thanks, Don!

Unknown's avatarDon Massenzio's Author Site

snobPhoto credit: www.businessesgrow.com

The Snobbery of Traditional Publishing

During a recent weekend, my seven year old daughter had an event with her dance group at a local street festival. As we walked around and looked at the various tables, we happened upon an author of children’s books who had some of her work displayed on a table. My daughter saw the books and we stopped at the table and listened to this friendly, grandmotherly figure tell us about her books.  They were based on the antics of her grandson and looked very nicely illustrated.

SPBHPhoto Credit: www.creativereview.co.uk

We were about to move on when my wife blurted out that I had written some novels.  The author’s first question was not about the genre or the titles. Her first question was, “who’s your publisher?” Before I could get the words DSM Publications (my initials are DSM) out of my mouth, my wife told…

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5 ways to promote your blog for free & efficiently — Roberta Pimentel

Author Libby Sommer reblogs Roberta Pimentel’s advice on promoting your blog.
Thank you for sharing this, Libby!

Libby Sommer's avatarLibby Sommer, Author

Blogger Roberta Pimentel shares some excellent tips on ways to increase traffic to your WordPress blog site:

It has been a while since I have given tips and advice to my readers but now I have scheduled advice and tips to be on Wednesdays. I am really exited about the new schedule since I am also challenging myself to do something new for my readers but off course I do learn a […]

via 5 ways to promote your blog for free & efficiently — Roberta Pimentel

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5 ways to promote your blog for free & efficiently

Promote your blog! Roberta Pimentel tells you how.
Thank you, Roberta!

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Markets For Writers

New Writer’s Market post from Esther Newton. September 28, 2016.
Thank you, Esther!

Esther Chilton's avatarEsther Chilton

This week’s market is for the non-fiction writers. The Ouen Press Short Story Competition is calling for true travel tales. Here are the details for you:

Prizes:

1st Prize: £300

Runners-up x 2: £100

Highly commended entries will be recognised

Entry fee: FREE

Word limit: Between 3000 – 10,000 words

Closing date: 31st October 2016

For more information, please visit the competition page

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today

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The Writing Life

Libby Sommer shares one of her favorite books on the writing process with us. Read on!
Thank you, Libby!

Libby Sommer's avatarLibby Sommer, Author

Book cover 'The Writing Life' by Annie Dillard

Another of my favourite books on the writing process is The Writing Life by Annie Dillard, a small and passionate guide to the terrain of a writer’s world.

Annie Dillard has written eleven books, including the memoir of her parents, An American Childhood; the Northwest pioneer epic The Living; and the nonfiction narrative Pilgrim at Tinker Creek winner of the 1975 Pullizer Prize.  A gregarious recluse, she is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

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A Post about Zentangle from My Other Blog

Today, I posted on my  other blog site. The post isn’t about writing, unless you count an example of poor writing. Instead, it is sort of about how I got into Zentangling. If you have followed my blog for a while, you might remember my series of posts on learning about Zentangle primarily by using the book, One Zentangle a Day, by Beckah Krahula. (And you’ve seen the Zentangles I include with posts on other topics.) The One Zentangle book was great, but I was a bit frustrated because of my hand tremor. Interestingly, I would have saved a bunch of money if I had gone with the official Zentangle Primer from the official Zentangle.com site from the beginning. I received my copy of the Primer about a week or two ago. Was that ever an eye-opener! 

Rather than repeat myself here, read about my reaction here

(http://wp.me/p4Cywt-8w)

Happy tangling!!

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My Weekly Writing Challenge – With A Twist!

No more weekly challenges from Esther Newton, BUT there will be something new–mini competitions with prizes! Read on for more information as well as submissions for last week’s challenge.
Thank you, Esther!

Esther Chilton's avatarEsther Chilton

This week’s challenge is a little different – there isn’t one! Instead, from next week, I’m going to be setting some new mini competitions with prizes. I hope you’ll give them a go. Watch this space for news…

Now, on to last week’s challenge and the fantastic writing I received in response.

OPTION ONE was to write a fifteen-word story with the words THUNDER, TRUMP and TIARA in it somewhere.

Sanfranciscoatheart sent in a wonderfully topical story:

Hillary trumped Trump to steal the thunder and wear a presidential tiara!!

Rajiv Chopra always amuses:

Trump put a tiara on Hillary. The Republican thunder suddeny rolled loudly across the Nation!

OPTION TWO was to write a poem or limerick on the theme of SORROW.

Keith Channing takes my breath away with his brilliant limerick writing abilities:

According to Henry Dave Thoreau,
We can make a better tomorrow.
If life is promotive

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Forecast: Partly Cloudy, Chance of Eerie 

It was that kind of day. 

It started off well enough– sleep hadn’t eluded me, so I awoke well-rested and smiling. Physical therapy went splendidly, leaving my body more relaxed than it had been for quite some time. Instead of going straight home, I decided to drive into town to check if any packages had arrived at our mail pick-up service. 

As I drove the main road from our village to the small town of Simpson Bay, light reflections off the bay to my right and the lagoon to my left tickled my peripheral vision. Perhaps it was the difference in the composition of the water in the two views, but I found myself gazing at one side then the other, noting striking contrasts. In over three years of living on this island, I had never noticed just how different the two bodies of water are. I guess I never looked at them together before, merely studying one or the other without making much of a comparison in my mind. At least, I may not have been very observant on similar days. But there it was. On this partly cloudy day, the light on the lagoon was soft, unfocused; while the sun and cloud reflections off the briny bay were sharp and harsh. The water in the lagoon was a green-gray, murky concoction exhibiting small gauzy blobs of light; the bay was swirls of blue and turquoise, with stars sparking like fireworks on the surface. My mind told me that the lagoon water should have been in the ocean and the bay water should have been contained inland. A disquieting scene, but nothing to ponder for long. I simply hadn’t paid enough attention to my surroundings before.

Once I noted the contrasts, however, my eyes found other discrepancies. The clouds were so striking in their cerulean setting that they seemed artificial–as though someone had painted them much too “real” on a theater backdrop. They looked like crisp cut-outs of paperboard pasted onto a brilliant blue board, with the white too bright and the deep grays too silver-edged.

And the sounds… Lack of them, I should say. There were no other cars on the road or boats on the water for at least a kilometer in any direction. No flights were leaving from or approaching the airport behind me–hadn’t, in fact, since I left the clinic. No wind or breeze whistled past my ears, although the air was not still. There were no sounds of birds, either. The ever-calling gulls were silent. The smaller birds that should have been chirping from the scraggly shrubs were absent, or perhaps hiding and unmoving. No bird hawk circled in that jewel-toned sky. No gnat or mosquito flattened itself on my windshield as I drove. 

The silence was my first clue. I shivered as an eerie realization crept up my spine. Where I was I couldn’t fathom, but I knew I was no longer on the island. Was I even on Earth? 

From that moment, the day went from light and lovely to shadowy and surreal.  

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Sharing a Zentangle tile to break the melodrama. 😉


Happy creating!

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