Sunday, November 30, 2008
Friday, March 07, 2008
Saturday, February 09, 2008
Thoughts on Douglas Preston's BLASPHEMY
Otherwise life would have no meaning."
Blasphemy, Douglas Preston, 2008
I found this a profoundly disturbing novel. I've been reading Mr. Preston's works coauthored with Lincoln Child since Relic and relish their series containing Pendergast. This is one of Mr. Preston's sole-authorship novels. A second-generation supercollider is constructed under a mesa in Arizona to discover the "truths" of the Big Bang at the creation of the Universe. Not far into the story, science and religion collide in a drastic and tragic fashion. Very disturbing book-very thought-provoking.
Friday, February 01, 2008
The Standwood Station GA Chronicles Blog
For frequent insight into the progress of my Writing Life-
and to learn what's going on in that locked virtual vault where I keep the all-new poetry, short stories, and novels-in-progress sent in the Spooky Supernatural milieu of Standwood Station, Georgia-
pop on over to my Other Blog at-
http://www.Writing.Com/authors/fantasywrider/blog
-and delve into Another Dimension.
National Wear Red Day: Women's Heart Disease Awareness
Celebrate Women's Awareness of Heart Disease with the Red Dress Symbol
http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/hearttruth/wrd/
Women and Heart Disease:
"It's Different for Women"
http://heartdisease.about.com/od/womenheartdisease/a/heartdisease_wm.htm
Heart Disease Newsletter/About.com:
http://heartdisease.about.com/gi/pages/stay.htm
Friday, January 25, 2008
Stephen King, Duma Key (2008)
"I know that when it comes to art, it's perfectly okay to paraphrase Nietzsche: If you keep your focus, eventually your focus will keep you. Sometimes without parole."
http://www.stephenking.com/
Flannery O'Connor
"People are always asking me if the Universe stifles writers. I reply that it hasn't stifled enough of them. There's many a bestseller that could have been prevented by a good writing teacher."
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
"An Afternoon at the Exposition" wins 1st Place in Historical Short Story Contest at Writing.com
On Dec. 10, I was awarded a History Merit Badge with my first-place win in a Historical Short Story Challenge held over the weekend at the Writing.com Angel Army, of which I am a proud member.
My story is "An Afternoon at the Exposition," set in the Columbian World Exposition in Chicago in 1893, the Chicago World's Fair which honoured the sisters from Louisville who penned the tune and lyrics that were soon adapted as "Happy Birthday to you."
The song was written by the two, principal and teacher, as "Good Morning to You," for the classes to sing.
My story is "An Afternoon at the Exposition," set in the Columbian World Exposition in Chicago in 1893, the Chicago World's Fair which honoured the sisters from Louisville who penned the tune and lyrics that were soon adapted as "Happy Birthday to you."
The song was written by the two, principal and teacher, as "Good Morning to You," for the classes to sing.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Nov. 28: Post-NANO
Well, having ushered Mary at the Old Railroad Trestle into the stable (lacking only a few scenes of dialogue and a final ending) it's time to shift gears a few years into the future (from Mary's standpoint) and across the Big Pond: from 1911 in South Alabama to 1914 Edinburgh/Dover/France, and from YA quality to sweet romance but with an 18+ level concept. This new one is a short story of my conception; I've been asked to author one for an upcoming (Spring 08) charity anthology. How utterly cool is that? I'm truly honoured. This new story came to me fully plotted in only two sleepless nights, so it's ready for dictation through my tapping fingers and into the PC.
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