Imagine if Queen Victoria twittered (“We are not amused today…”) or Dickens posted a Facebook Profile (Relationship Status: married with ten children, Employer: law clerk turned freelance writer) or Jack the Ripper updated his status on his MySpace page (Mood: agitated. Headed over to Whitechapel).
What if you wanted to blog about Victorian England as your character? What challenges would you face? It was a different lifestyle back then with a different manner of speech, decorum and way of life. A world without Blackberrys and YouTube, yet a very civilized and fascinating world.
And more of a challenge than I realized when I set out to write a blog in the voice of my heroine in my February 2010 Spice novel, “The Blonde Samurai,” the story of an Irish-American heiress who weds a British lord then falls in love with a handsome samurai in 1873 Japan.
I was determined to offer readers an amusing and witty look at the world of Victorian England and Japan in the late nineteenth century. “A Naughty Victorian Lady tells all…” launched at the eHarlequin.com website with A Naughty Victorian Lady’s Christmas Stocking.
Everything was going well until–
I wanted to blog about the video I made in the voice of my heroine, Lady Carlton, showcasing “The Blonde Samurai.” Not plausible, since the first celluloid film (a few seconds long) wasn’t shot until the late 1880s, years after my novel takes place.
Fortunately, the idea of “moving pictures” wasn’t as outlandish to Victorians as one might believe. Several patents were applied for during this time, including a British patent for “…moving images optically combined with a reflected ‘background’ ” and another for “Improvement in the Method and Apparatus for Photographing Objects in Motion.”
Interesting, but not the amusing and romantic tone I wanted for my blog.
What was a writer to do? Go with what I know best: romance. I combined Victorian England and Japan in a romantic setting to describe my video about “The Blonde Samurai.”
Here is an excerpt:
Believe that I have fastened together silk paintings and that I shall make them “move” by flipping through them; or that I have painted scenes on the ribs of a folding fan, then I shall open it slowly to make the scenes change from one to the next.
Imagine, if you will.
So I request that you transcend the world of London with its insufferable saffron-colored fog and the bone-chilling weather this time of year that makes you don flannel petticoats to keep the cold from darting up your backside–
And come with me back to the warm Spring of 1873 as I tell you the story of The Blonde Samurai in a most unique and charming manner…
The best movie I saw in 2009 was also the last movie I saw in 2009 – The Time Traveler’s Wife. I loved this movie!! I was a big fan of the book (once I figured out what on earth was going on, about a third of the way into the story), but I would have to say this is one of those rare occasions where the movie was arguably better than the book. My husband would never read a book like that, but he loved the movie, too. It’s funny, sad, all those great things.
Other great movies of ’09: Last Chance Harvey, Young Victoria, Ghost Town (or was that 2008?). Great movies of 2009 that I haven’t seen yet but will make sure I do: Julie & Julia, Avatar, District 9, Hangover. Movies that I had high hopes of but which disappointed: 500 Days of Summer, The Informant. Movie that I never wanted to see, but got talked into and wished I hadn’t: The Class.
What were your movie highs and lows in 2009?
As always, I’m excited to face a whole new year of opportunities. Will I achieve them?
Will you?
I just finished the rough first draft of the first book in my new mystery series about Lauren Vancouver, Pet Rescuer–a spin-off from my Kendra Ballantyne, Pet-Sitter series. I’m facing a deadline to turn it in, plus another in the series this year, as well as a Silhouette Nocturne. And, I hope, even more.
Can I do it? Sure.
What else do I want to achieve this year? Lots, including in my co-career, as a lawyer.
Another thing I want to do is to attend as many OCC meetings as I can. As always. There’s nothing greater than sharing experiences and ideas with people who are as enthusiastic as our wonderful chapter members!
I’ve blogged on my weekly blog–KillerHobbies.blogspot.com–about New Years resolutions for pets, since I tend to break mine pretty fast each year, so I’m not phrasing anything as an actual resolution this year.
How about you? Are you making resolutions? It’s now the sixth day into the New Year. Have you broken them yet?
How much writing do you intend to accomplish this year???
I rather like Deb Mullins’ idea of making All-Year’s Resolutions, especially about writing. You can read her ideas as posted here on A Slice of Orange on December 28.
By the way… Happy New Decade, too!
And as always, if there’s something you’d like me to address in a future Slice of Orange, please say so! See you here on the sixth of each month…
General Meetings are held the second Saturday of the month
at the Brea Community Center, 695 E. Madison Way, Brea, CA 92821.
For a map and directions, click here.
Meeting fees are $10 for OCC Members and $20 for Guest/Non-Members.
Meeting Schedule for Saturday, January 9, 2010:
9:30 am: Doors Open / Ask an Author
10:30 – 10:45 am: Announcements
Morning Workshop: CAROL HUGHES—From Inspiration to Publication
11:50 – 1:00: Lunch Break (Lunch Orders available)
12:30 – 1:00: Book signings TBA
1:00 – 1:30 pm: General Meeting and Announcements
Afternoon Speaker: ESI SOGAH—Associate Editor-Avon Books
3:00 pm: Meeting Adjourns
Attention: OCC Members Attending the Meeting–Monthly Critique Drawings!
Other Important 2010 Dates to Remember:
January 9, 2010—27th Annual Orange Rose Contest for Unpublished Authors opens.
(Rules and entry forms available at www.occrwa.org.)
January 15, 2010—BBB (Book Buyers Best) Contest Entry Deadline (extended from January 9th).
January 11-February 6, 2010—Online Class: The Purpose Driven Scene with Lynn Kerstan.
February 13, 2010—OCC General Meeting
February 15-March 13, 2010—Online Class: “Fast draft and Revision Hell†with Candace Havens
For current Online Class Schedule and registration information, please visit http://www.occrwa.org/onlineclasses.html.
For more chapter meeting information visit OCC’s website at http://www.occrwa.org
Every January 1, people make a New Year’s resolution. They’re going to lose weight or quit smoking or finish that book. New gym memberships soar at the beginning of the year, as do registrations for weight loss programs and courses to walk away from those cigarettes for good. But there is no such animal for finishing a book that stretches over the long term.
I should mention that there are some tools out there for completing a book in a short amount of time, such as NANOWRIMO (http://www.nanowrimo.org), which is National Novel Writing Month. It occurs every November and encourages writers to complete their book over the course of that month. There is also Book In A Week by author April Kihlstrom (http://www.sff.net/people/april.kihlstrom/), which teaches a method of planning out a book over the course of four or five weeks and then actually writing the first draft in a week’s time. (I’m considering using this method myself for my February deadline.) These are excellent programs, which can encourage a writer to put themselves into the chair and make writing a priority, even if just for a short period of time.
But what about the rest of the year?
Very often, more than half the people who sign up for those gym memberships and weight loss plans and kick-the-smoking courses will drop out before Valentine’s Day, even if the change still needs to be made. Everyone knows their list of “shoulds.†I should lose weight, I should get more exercise, I should quit smoking.
I should work on my book.
The truth of the matter is that all of these changes—weight loss, exercise, quitting smoking, finishing that book—can only happen when you’re ready for it to happen. It requires dedication and a desire to want that change more than anything. To want it so much that you are willing to throw away that last opened pack of cigarettes or walk away from those home-made chocolate chip cookies or get on that treadmill.
That you are willing to do things like get up an hour earlier or miss your favorite TV program to make time for your writing. That you are willing to join a critique group and put your writing out there for evaluation, or drive over an hour to your writers’ meeting.
If you want something badly enough, you know you will do what it takes to get it. How many of us have stood in line for an hour to get on a ride at an amusement park or for tickets to a movie or concert we really wanted to see? How many of us have braved the airport or the highways during the holidays, dealing with airline delays and bad weather and congested traffic because we wanted to be with loved ones on that special day?
Why not put your writing at the top of your list of things you will make a priority from now on?
It’s not such a lofty goal. The average mass market paperback is about 365 pages long. That means if you write one page a day for one year, at the end of that year you will have a book.
That doesn’t sound like much, does it? The average word count for one page of a manuscript is 250 words. You probably write emails longer than that. But if you manage one page a day for a year, you will have a completed first draft of a book before the ball drops in Times Square the following year.
Now it’s hard to make long term change without accountability. Get your writer friends and your critique partners involved. All of you can set goals and check in with each other. Get together after the writers’ meeting or start a Facebook group or, for those of you on Twitter, follow trending topic #writegoal, where you can post your writing goals for the day and then later post again when you have completed that goal. (I find this very useful for keeping up with my own deadlines.)
Forget the New Year’s resolution. Let’s go for the All-Year’s resolution and keep that dedication going long after the confetti has been cleaned up and the champagne bottles have been recycled.
The power is in your hands to make it happen.
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Kyla James is a beautiful, confident woman. She has two vices, champagne and sex with married men.
More info →A soldier and a nun discover forbidden love in war-torn Italy during the winter of 1943.
More info →A Slice of Orange is an affiliate with some of the booksellers listed on this website, including Barnes & Nobel, Books A Million, iBooks, Kobo, and Smashwords. This means A Slice of Orange may earn a small advertising fee from sales made through the links used on this website. There are reminders of these affiliate links on the pages for individual books.
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