Tag Archives: literature

Writer’s Group at Cuppa Austin

I am experiencing my first Writer’s Group that Lori invited me to. at Cuppa Austin on Parmer close to Mopac. It is a nice little coffee shop. I got a breakfast taco, hot tea, and iced tea. They have a selection of loose teas to choose from and the baristas were cheerful. My kind of place.

We have a row of tables and 7 people have shown up so far. This is already more successful than any Writer’s Groups I’ve ever hosted. No one talks. They just work. It seems like a productive group. I have gotten four chapters edited. I am now halfway finished editing my BlackIce novel. Making progress!

And yesterday, my best friend Erica helped me get my website “landing” page set up so when people go to marshallpress.net they will see something (instead of a fake page.)

I Started a Publishing Business!

Marshall Press

book-1171221

Today was exhausting!  I am about to fall in bed, but must share the victories of my day.

  • Set up my address for Marshall Press at the post office.
  • Got my dba (doing business as) paperwork filed with the county for Marshall Press (which is good for the next 10 years.)
  • Opened a bank account for Marshall Press with a company VISA and everything!
  • Set up my account with my new banking information for publishing with Kindle Create / Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing.
  • Purchased marshallpress.net domain name for the next 10 years from NameCheap.
  • Created an account on Bluehost for my marshallpress website to be hosted for the next year.
  • Created an account with FreeImages to be able to use lovely images on my sites.

There is still more to do, but that is all for one day.  I am going to relax in my comfy quarters for the last night of my retreat and enjoy one more glorious morning of tea and writing when I awake.

Writer’s Retreat

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I rented a cabin on a river to do a 4-day Writer’s Retreat. I am on day 2 and have finally gotten into an actual honest-to-goodness project that resembles both productivity and creativity.

I took a break and looked back at some old posts on this blog. I found one from 4 years ago dreaming of doing a cabin in Colorado someday for the entire summer. That is still on my to-do list, but I don’t know if I would want to be without my sweet husband for 3 whole months. He has kind of grown on me.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The lighting was too bright, so I created my own stained glass window.  Intermittent rain on a metal roof has been music to my ears. 

I have a little air conditioner and two fans creating the necessary chill factor to keep me comfortable and my favorite snacks and beverages to keep me fueled.  Of course hot tea is at the ready.

Nature has invaded my domicile twice now.  I’m hoping that is as bad as it gets.  Otherwise, the accommodations are quite satisfactory. 

BlackIce mock cover                                                                                    

This is the novel I have decided to focus on as my project.  It is an old one I wrote in 2008.  A colleague made the cover.  

I am on the editing and revising stage – about 1/4 of the way through.  Once done, I have to put together the front and back matter (dedication, copyright, about the author, etc.)  Then I plan to upload my first ever book for publishing.  It is actually coming together.

I’m thinking of different names for different genres – too confusing?

R. Marshall – YA

Mrs. Marshall – Children’s Books

Juanece – Romance

  • My thinking is that kids who love a chapter book about 3rd graders won’t accidentally stumble upon a wild adult romance novel.
  • Teens looking for age-appropriate adventure won’t get tricked into baby stuff.
  • It could possibly keep my different writing age groups separate and safe.  
  • Just something I’ve been mulling over for a while now.

Julian Fellowes – (Day 28)

Today’s assignment was to research someone who seemed to be an overnight success and find out the true story.  I decided to focus on the mind behind Downton Abby Julian Fellowes.

julian

Apparently, his big break was when he was asked to write the screenplay for Gosford Park because he knew so much about social classes.  At the time, he was an actor who had published a few romance novels under the pen  name Rebecca Greville, but no major successes.  That screenplay went on to win the Academy Award.  He went on to create Downton Abby.  Very cool.

Things didn’t actually happen overnight, though.  I did a little research and discovered that he worked as a small-parts actor since 1981.  The romance novels he wrote were back in the 70’s and he didn’t try his hand at  publishing again until 2002 with Gosford Park.  Now he has written three more novels and several tv shows.  That is a ton of hard work for a very long time.  It is not just one big break.  It is a lifetime of honing a craft, acting, living story so that he can write it better.  If he can work on his craft for over 40 years and still be going strong, I have no excuse!

Translation – (Day 25)

Today’s assignment is to attempt to translate a quote from another language that I do not speak.

The quote:  “L’amour est l’emblème de l’éternité, il confond toute la notion de temps, efface toute la mémoire d’un commencement, toute la crainte d’une extrémité.”

Madame de Staël

My translation:  Love is an eternal symbol, though sometimes it feels fleeting, that begins by making memories, and turns into the ultimate expression.

Here is the actual translation:

“Love is the emblem of eternity; it confounds all notion of time, effaces all memory of a beginning, all fear of an end.”

Madame de Staël

Backwards – (Day 23)

Today’s assignment is to:

Backwards it write but books favorite your of one from passage a copy.

“Are we as – equal, feet God’s at stood we and, grave the through passed had both if as just; spirit your addresses the spirit my is it:  flesh mortal of even nor, conventionalities, custom of medium the through now you to talking not am I.  You leave to me for now is it as, me leave to you for hard as it made have should I, wealth much and beauty some w”ith me gifted had God if and!  Heart much as full and – you as soul much as have I – wrong! think you? Heartless and soulless am I, little and, plain, obscure, poor, am I because, think you do? Cup me fro,m dashed water living of drop my and, lips my from snatched bread of morsel my have to bear can and? feelings without machine a – automaton an am I think you do.”

This is from Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte.

 

Me talk Pretty – (Day 15)

Today’s assignment was to share a passage from a favorite book.  One of my favorite writers is David Sedaris.  I love his essays the most.  This one is from Me Talk Pretty One Day and is the essay by that same title.  I will share the highlights.

I’ve moved to Paris with hopes of learning the language…The first day of class was nerve-racking because I knew I’d be expected to perform.  The teacher marched in…spread out her lesson plan and sighed, saying “…who knows the alphabet?”

…Though we were forbidden to speak anything but French, the teacher would occasionally use us to practice any of her five fluent languages.

“I hate you,” she said to me one afternoon.  Her English was flawless.  “I really, really hate you.”  Call me sensitive, but I couldn’t help but take it personally.

After being singled out as a lazy kfdtinvfm, I took to spending four hours a night on my homework, putting in even more time whenever we were assigned an essay.  I suppose I could have gotten by with less, but I was determined to create some sort of identity for myself:  David the hard worker, David the cut up.  We’d have one of those “complete the sentence” exercises, and I’d fool with the thing for hours, invariably settling on something like “A quick run around the lake?  I’d love to! Just give me a moment while I strap on my wooden leg.”  The teacher , through word and action, conveyed the message that if this was my idea of an identity, she wanted nothing to do with it.

…Before beginning school, there’d been no shutting me up, but now I was convinced that everything I said was wrong.  When the phone rang I ignored it.  If someone asked me a question, I pretend to be deaf.  I knew my fear was getting the best of me when I started wondering why they don’t sell cuts of meat in vending machines.

My only comfort was the knowledge that I was not alone.  Huddled in the hallways and making the most of our pathetic French, my fellow students and I engaged in the sort of conversation commonly overheard in refugee camps.

“Sometime me cry alone at night.”

“That be common for I, also, but be more strong, you.  Much work and someday you talk pretty.  People start love you soon.  Maybe tomorrow, okay.”

Unlike the French class I had taken in New York, here there was no sense of competition.  When the teacher poked a shy Korean in the eyelid with a  freshly sharpened pencil, we took no comfort in the fact that, unlike Hyeyoon Cho, we all knew the irregular past tense of the verb to defeat.  In all fairness, the teacher hadn’t meant to stab the girl, but neither did she spend much time apologizing, saying only, “Well, you should have been vkkdyo more kdeynffulh.”

Over time it became impossible to believe that any of us would ever improve.  Fall arrived and it rained every day, meaning we would now be scolded for the water dripping from our coats and umbrellas.  It was mid-October when the teacher singled me out, saying, “Every day spent with you is like having a cesarean section.”  And it struck me that, for the first time since arriving in France, I could understand every word that someone was saying.

Understanding doesn’t mean that you can suddenly speak the language.  Far from it.  It’s a small step, nothing more, yet its rewards are intoxicating and deceptive.  The teacher continued her diatribe and I settled back, bathing in  the subtle beauty of each new curse and insult.

“You exhaust me with your foolishness and reward my efforts with nothing but pain, do you understand me?”

The world opened up, and it was with great joy that I responded, “I know the thing that you speak exact now.  Talk me more, you, plus, please, plus.”

 

 

Random Googling – (Day 6)

I am thinking about doing a mystery/thriller course with James Patterson even though I’ve never written anything mysterious or thrilling in my life.  My next assignment is to randomly search stuff in Google and write down the auto suggestions.  I thought it might be interesting to see what happens if I search some of my ideas or terms related to this topic.

Mysterious:  skin, universe, serum, stranger, challenger

Thrilling:  adventure, intent

Missing:  you, plane, money, at 17

Fearful:  symmetry, avoidant attachment

Confusion:  hill, matrix, poem

Mystery:  room, men, movie, science theater 3000

Thriller:  lyrics, Netflix, Michael Jackson

Shadow:  doubt, Colossus, hunter, dancer, run

Dark:  side, horse, place, moom

the:  usual suspects, wall

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Romeo & Juliet

r and j

Today in summer school I am teaching Romeo and Juliet to a group of teenage girls.  My presentation is not the romantic drivel most of them have heard before.  We examine the play through different lenses and it becomes a fabulous cautionary tale.  Each scene is analyzed for thinking errors on the part of the characters:  Romeo’s impulsivity, all-or-nothing thinking, keeping score, and catastrophising; Tybalt’s overgeneralizations, one-upmanship, and uniqueness (thinking he is better than everyone else); Friar Lawrence’s magical thinking, grandiosity, sneakiness; etc.

The girls open to a whole new perspective when looking at these characters’ flaws and seeing their own behaviors in comparison.  This is a school in a residential treatment center, so the young ladies I am working with have seen some stuff in their lifetimes.  Many of them have attempted suicide (often over a lost love), have run away from their parents or their problems, have had numerous sexual encounters in over their heads and unprepared for the emotional fall-out at such a young age, and have been betrayed or misled by the adults in their lives who should have been better role models.

My favorite discussions with them involve re-imagining the scenes using healthy thinking, coping skills, support from trusted people, accessing available resources, etc.  If just one person had done something different in this play, something productive, something thoughtful and helpful, it might not have ended in such tragedy.  There are always more options.  “To be or not to be” (to quote Hamlet) could be a much longer list.  To be healthy, to be at peace, to understand, to be open…not to be afraid, not to be alone, not to be abused, not to be so hard on yourself.

Juliet was 13 for goodness sake.  So much more happens in life after 13.  I’m in my 40’s, have been through a marriage, divorce, children, grandchildren, and have just now found my Romeo. Building a good life takes time, learning from experiences, and resilience.  I wish for each of my students today a new critical perspective that makes each of them a “master of her own fate.” *

*from Invictus by William Ernest Henley

juliet  #

#from Gnomeo & Juliet (Juliet kicking ass)