#BlogBattle: flower

January 2019 Blog Battle

Our word this month is:

Flower

BlogBattle for January 2019

Here’s a little something I wrote just for #BlogBattle

Blue Ribbons and Flowers

Her anxious face turned to me, eyes dark and cheeks still rounded with childhood.

“Is it okay if I pick flowers, Mama?”

I looked around at the city street, wet and barren. The struggling plants next to the sidewalk were covered in small blossoms. Geraniums. Their bright red flowers must have caught her eye.

I shrugged. “Sure, honey.”

She bent down and plucked a single stem. We continued our stroll. A rose bush, mostly devoid of leaves, still had some buds. Sharp Eyes spotted them and a white rose bud was added to her growing handful. Her sister skipped ahead, oblivious to everything but whatever thoughts filled her head. Her leaping strides over puddles made me smile. She reminded me of a deer.

Sharp Eyes grabbed a few more sidewalk flowers then spotted a piece of blue ribbon.
“Can I use this in my bouquet? Would that be good?”

Her expression gave me pause. What was going on in her young mind?

“What are you making your bouquet for?”

She turned her face away and was silent. I put my arm around her shoulder. Blue ribbons hung from tree trunks and metal poles all along the street. With a sinking heart, I realized what she was doing. “Is the bouquet for the police officer who died?”

Shock still reverberated through our little town. A pretty young police officer had been shot and killed not far from our house. The sirens screamed past our house a few nights ago, more than we’d ever heard. We had been baffled by the commotion but the girls had gone to bed that night without finding out that there was an active shooter in our neighborhood. He had shot the policewoman then ran. No one knew where he was until after midnight. We tried to keep calm the next day but were too shocked to keep the evening’s events from the girls.

Sharp Eyes nodded. “I want to put it on her grave–”

“You mean the shrine on the street?”

The day after the shooting, we had driven by the spot where the policewoman had been killed and there were piles of flowers and signs. So of course the girls had questions. We were walking in that area now but I hadn’t intended to go by. It was too hard to see the outpouring of grief from the community. I felt uncomfortable, awkward. I didn’t know her so what right did I have to join in the public mourning? My daughter seemed to feel differently.

The three of us reached the park and Sharp Eyes sat down at a picnic table to assemble her bouquet, complete with its blue ribbon. I walked around and around, unable to keep still.

We walked through the park and there, under the oak tree where I had been married, was another monument to the town’s grief. There had been a candlelight vigil a couple of nights before and the candles were still burning. Blue ribbons festooned the stone steps and a giant portrait of a smiling young woman was propped up in the middle of candles and flowers.

“Why don’t you put your bouquet down with the others, sweetheart?”

She smiled and carefully placed it among the plastic-wrapped florist bouquets, cards, glass jarred candles, and a full bottle of coke. I winced a little. So the dead woman had loved coke. Someone who knew and loved her had placed that on this impromptu shrine. I pictured her sitting and laughing with friends, drinking coke out of bottles together.

“Okay, girls, let’s go.”

I couldn’t bear being there any longer. My child and her simple sadness shamed my conflicted feelings. They skipped away, shouting and pushing at each other.

“Look, you can see your bouquet all the way from here! It’s that bright red spot!”

They ran, a couple of deer leaping across the grass.

Bouquet of flowers

17 Common Fantasy Sub-Genres

The fantasy genre has expanded and diversified into a lot of subgenres. I’m a big fan of historical fantasy and fairy tale retellings. What’s your favorite?

Nicola | Thoughts on Fantasy's avatarThoughts on Fantasy

The fantasy genre is rich with a myriad of sub-genres, and each has its own conventions and trends. With the different terms floating around out there it can be easy to confuse or overlook key sub-genres. Finding a succinct list of the most notable ones – particularly a list with definitions and examples – is not always straightforward. So I thought I’d put my reading and researching to use and assemble one.

View original post 2,977 more words

Play like a girl: Challenging gender stereotypes in spec fiction

Some great examples of challenging gender stereotypes, especially of female-identified people.

Mikhaeyla Kopievsky's avatarMikhaeyla Kopievsky

by Mikhaeyla Kopievsky

Today, I’m launching a dystopian anthology with eleven other indie authors. On the Brinkfeatures some amazing stories and most of them feature protagonists that are female, flawed, and ferocious. It got me thinking about my own posts on the subject of gender in speculative fiction and I realised that I never posted the guest post I published on Amid the Imaginary. So here it is in all its glory for you to read:

Challenging the Collective Identity

Just a little while ago, on 14 July, I released the second book in my Divided Elements series, Rebellion. I thought it was kind of fitting that Rebellion was published on Bastille Day, since it is a dystopian tale of revolution set in a post-apocalyptic Paris. Interestingly, 14 July is also celebrated as International Non-binary Day – which similarly held a nice symmetry, since my book is centered on…

View original post 741 more words

3 Things to Know About Marketing Historical Fiction Novels — A Writer’s Path

by J. U. Scribe What’s your favorite genre? For some it’s romance, others it’s fantasy, sci-fi, or maybe a mystery/thriller. For those that know me well I enjoy reading a variety of genres, so it’s hard to pick one genre over another when I enjoy different books spanning across the many genres of fiction. However if you were […]

via 3 Things to Know About Marketing Historical Fiction Novels — A Writer’s Path

I love reading historical fiction and it’s true that if the author hasn’t researched properly, it can be jarring. I’m one of those readers who tuts at too-modern dialogue or morality. So I knew going into the writing of <i>Escaping Andronicus</i> that I’d better do my research. It did help that early 20th century Bahamas is not well-known because I knew not too many people would catch my mistakes. Then again, finding references was really hard.

Got Books to Sell? Try These 22 Book Marketing Tips – by Frances Caballo…

You wrote that book…now get it into the hands of readers. Do you know your target reader?

Chris The Story Reading Ape's avatarChris The Story Reading Ape's Blog

on Social Media Just For Writers:

How many book marketing tips have you tried?

Probably every single one that you’ve read about, right?

What makes book marketing so tough isn’t that you run out of ideas to market your books. It’s that you have so many different plans.

Well, if you want to make it as a writer, get ready for the marathon of writing and marketing. You’ll always be doing both from now on.

To make life easier for you (or harder?), I’ve assembled a checklist of my top book marketing tips for you.

Continue reading HERE

View original post

The Best Writing Prompts To Help Spark Your Imagination – by Derek Haines… — Chris The Story Reading Ape’s Blog

on Just Publishing Advice: Are you looking for writing ideas? Take a tour of our list of the best writing prompts. Whether you are writing fiction, non-fiction, articles or blog posts, you sometimes need a little help to give you a spark of an idea. There are many places you can find creative writing prompts. Our […]

via The Best Writing Prompts To Help Spark Your Imagination – by Derek Haines… — Chris The Story Reading Ape’s Blog

I love writing prompts. I can’t say that any of my books were created from a writing prompt but I do use them to get my writing going. I’ll choose a writing prompt, fire up Write or Die, set it for 20 minutes, and go. I get some…interesting…pieces. Most will never be shown to anyone. Some make me laugh.

Re-titling Sand and Bones

Book titles are funny things. The title should encapsulate an entire novel, be unique, and be concise. It’s not easy to come up with a title. I struggle with every book I wrote to name it with the Most Marvelous Title Ever. Or at least one that doesn’t suck.

Book # 2 was called Sand and Bones for the last couple of years. I thought it was the perfect blend of spooky and evocative. Tropical island was the Sand and the murder and peril was the Bones.

And then came the Beta Readers. I asked them what the title made them think of. Almost everyone said something about archaeologists and dinosaurs. <facepalm>

Right, back to the drawing board. I enlisted my lovely beta readers and writerly friends to help me brainstorm and distill the essence of the book.

What is it really about? It’s about Clara’s journey into and out of a cult, the Order of Andronicus. A title including something about Andronicus would be appropriate and it even hints at the name of the island she’s visiting, Andros Island. Plus it includes the root word for man and since this IS somewhat about a woman finding her own power and getting out from under a man’s control, Escaping Andronicus seemed to fit nicely.

Oh and a note about Andronicus: it comes from the Shakespeare play Titus Andronicus in which the titular character serves parents a pie made from their sons. While there isn’t exactly cannibalism in my book, there is a certain similarity. No spoilers. The Titus Andronicus suggestion came from my dear friend and fellow author Dover Whitecliff.

There we have it, Sand and Bones is now Escaping Andronicus. Until someone else tells me how that title completely doesn’t work!

Update: yeah so that title also failed. And I am THIS close to releasing the book, with the shiny new title The Cultist‘s Wife. I swear that’s the last title change: it’s even on the cover! Which will be revealed soon…

How do you come up with titles for your work? Any tips and tricks? Please comment below!