Well hi!

Hello, dear readers. It’s, uh…it’s been a minute, hasn’t it? I apologize for my silence. People have asked for updates on AoV, on other projects, and on my life in general. The idea of sitting down to type out a blog post felt quite daunting, and I have avoidance issues, so…that’s where we are at! At least, that’s where I was. I’m working on coming up with a good schedule for regular updates because I do miss keeping in touch. I’ll do my best to give you all some long-overdue info. Let’s start with the reason why most of you are here, shall we?

This May, I had the opportunity to get back to my favorite place in the world to be to meet and greet people. The New Hampshire Renaissance Faire holds a lot of dear memories for me, and many fellow vendors and people behind the scenes are like family. I chose not to be there last year because it was still too hard for me. The faire was something my mom and I enjoyed doing together, and I wasn’t ready to go back. I’m glad I went this year. It was so sweet getting to talk to returning fans, as well as meet so many new faces. Thank you for making those two weekends such a wonderful return, Those of you who reminded me how much my mom loved me and was proud of me…words could never properly express my gratitude. It was your encouragement that may have finally broken this block I’ve been in the past three years.

Book five in the Age of Valor series is finally back in the process of being written. It had been so long since I’d really worked on it, that when I sat down to write, I realized I had to reread everything I’d already written because I forgot what was going on. This book is going to be a big shift in tone from the previous books in the series. I am excited to share it all with you, though. My goal is to have it ready to be sold at the faire next year, but we shall see. I’ll certainly keep you updated!

For those that somehow missed the exciting news from earlier this year, Age of Valor is now on Spotify and wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts. Book one is brought to life by a brilliant group of talented voice actors, as well as myself. I encourage you to check it out!

Amid the craziness that is AoV, I do have two other projects in the works. The one that is closest to being finished is a New Adult Sci-Fi novel that has been super fun to write. I grew up surrounded by Sci-Fi, so it felt like a natural genre to try my hand at next. The second project I’ve slowly been working on is an Adult vampire novel. I know, Twilight and Vampire Diaries have long been played out, but this is very different. I run a Vampire: The Masquerade game each week and it has given me the inspiration to turn much of our game into a novel, making appropriate changes, of course. I really enjoy these characters, and trying out a new format for the telling of the story itself.

As far as how life is in general for me, well, it’s busy! In January, I started the journey to getting my degree in psychology with a focus on children and adolescents. Being at SNHU, I’ve found a new love for learning that I never possessed in school growing up. I was also recently accepted into the National Society for Leadership and Success, which has been both challenging to keep up with and thrilling to be a part of. As the year starts winding down, I’m looking toward next year and anticipating some more big changes. Lots of good things are in store, I know it.

Anyway, it’s good to be back. I will try my hardest to be more active here. Talk to you al again soon!

Breaking the Silence

So…it’s been a minute. My last blog entry was at the end of July. A lot has happened since then. Like, A LOT. I’ve been wanting to jump back into blogging and have tried more than once, but I know there’s something that needs to be addressed before I start “normal” posts again. It simply wouldn’t feel right if I went on in this thing as though a significant life event had not occurred. So I’ll talk about it and I’ll probably cry while I do so, but I’ll talk about it. I feel like I have to.

Besides moving twice since July - yeah, you read that right. Don’t even ask. - and really wrestling with sudden and inexplicable bouts of depression, the end of summer/beginning of fall were already a lot to handle. I was missing family, missing friends in NH. I missed going to church and seeing people in general. I wasn’t feeling like me some days, and I was having a really hard time. In September it got a whole lot worse.

Most people know by now that my mom passed away suddenly and unexpectedly late September 2. We knew she was sick, had been sick for close to two years, and wasn’t in her best condition. But she was still “okay.” So when I got the call from my brother that night telling me she was gone, I didn’t know what to do with myself. Some days I still don’t. It’s been almost two months and it still feels like I just talked to her yesterday. But it also feels like she’s been gone for so long.

Before I moved I had people, family, insinuating that my decision to leave NH was selfish. Mom was sick. Who was going to take care of her? Who was going to take care of my dad if anything happened to her? Guilt tried to change my mind but in the end, I made the decision I felt was right. Ultimately, Mom helped me come to peace with that decision. She wasn’t thrilled I was moving in with my boyfriend. Many weren’t and didn’t have a problem telling me so and why. But in the moment I wrestled most with it, a moment after I was already gone, Mom told me to stop it. She asked if I was happy, if I was as healthy as I could be, and if Conrad was treating me right. I said yes to all of the above, and her exact words were, “Then stop it.” Meaning stop feeling guilty.

The night she died, all that guilt came rushing back ten fold, and it hasn’t really left. It’s changed as the days have passed, taking on different monikers, sometimes faces. I feel guilty for not being there when it happened. I feel guilty for not being there for my dad now. I feel guilty for making my brother take Mom’s place as Dad’s caretaker, and for making him take over in general, especially when work isn’t cooperating, hours aren’t adding up, and they’re having trouble paying rent. I feel incredibly guilty. I’m trying not to, but I’ve always been the caretaker. And not being there, being unable to help, makes me feel awful.

And I miss my mom. So. Much. We didn’t always have the best relationship, and goodness knows we didn’t always see eye to eye, but she was my mom. There hasn’t been a day since she died that I haven’t thought of her. In the past few weeks I’ve started having the daily urge to call her. Like, you’d think after a few days my brain would catch on, but no. I’ll be making dinner, walking the dog, or even writing, and my brain will go, “I haven’t heard from Mom in awhile. I should call her.” It’s a split second thought that I can never catch quick enough and it always hurts.

Basically, I’m a mess. I’m still here, but I’m a mess. Every day, to some degree. I’m still writing, in fact I’ve actually started a brand new thriller project, but it’s also a mess. I’m trying to get back into a good writing schedule, trying to get back into working on the podcast, trying to allow myself good days and not feel guilty for those. But it’s hard.

In two weeks I’ll be back in NH for an early Thanksgiving with the family. I’d already made plans to go with Conrad for the actual Thanksgiving and had discussed it with Mom some time ago. Growing up, we hardly ever celebrated holidays on the actual day she she didn’t care if it was early. I wasn’t planning on going back up so soon after being there for her service, but someone incredibly generous bought me a ticket back, no questions asked and no strings attached. Hopefully because of that I’ll be able to get back for Christmas.

Anyway, this is starting to turn into a personal journal ramble and I have always wanted to try to keep this blog semi-professional. I just wanted to let everyone know where I’ve been, where I am now, and where things are hopefully going. Thank you all for understanding my silence and sticking with me. You don’t know how much I appreciate it. Hopefully normal blogs will resume sometime soon.

10 Hard Facts I Learned from Social Media Fasting (and One Beautiful Truth)

Sometime about six weeks ago I realized something was wrong. Every single day, I was waking up feeling anxious, depressed, more tired than I had any reason to be, and cloaked by a general weight of hopelessness. It didn’t make any sense. I had a man who loved me deeper and more genuinely than anyone ever has before, a sweet puppy to snuggle, a roof over my head, and food in the fridge. Yes, I was missing other human beings. Of course I was. Who hasn’t been? But the feelings I was wrestling with still weren’t making any sense. So I did what I always did: rolled out of bed, got my coffee, sat down on the couch to do my usual routine. Instagram first, because it always makes me smile. Timehop, then email. Next was Facebook. Oh, hello creeping sense of rage and frustration. Let’s switch to Twitter. Well good morning, disgust, fear, and “I don’t want to live on this planet anymore,” syndrome! Let’s go back to Facebook. Maybe I’ll feel better when I’m not reading tweets about who’s being canceled this week and I’m just comparing myself to everyone posting status updates about how they’re making the most of quarantine and solving world hunger.

Huh. Okay, I’m beginning to see the problem.

It was then that I realized these apps I use to “keep in touch” with people were making me feel worse about my life than I had any right to feel. So I deleted them from my phone. And so, for the past five weeks, I have not scrolled my Facebook feed or checked Twitter tags. And I am stunned at how much lighter I feel. I’ve also realized some things I don’t think I would have realized had I still been so entrenched in the FoMO that kept me scrolling minute after minute.

  1. No One Cares

    This sounds like a really harsh and obvious attention seeking statement, but at its very base level, it’s true. No one cares about every little thing I’m thinking in the moment, or what I made for dinner, or that it’s hotter down here than I was prepared for, or that my neighbors are terrible human beings. No. One. Cares. At least, not as much as I do. Any you know what? That’s okay. That’s actually a good thing. If people were hanging on my every typed word, I’d start to question the sanity of my friends and family.

  2. It’s a Waste of Time

    Before I took the apps off my phone, not only would I wake up and start scrolling, but I’d scroll if I found myself with a few minutes in between projects, in a moment of writer’s block or needing to let an idea marinate. I’d open the apps in the bathroom, or while making dinner, or if the boyfriend was on his phone, or really, any spare moment I could. Except those moments never just stayed moments. They’d turn into minutes, which quickly add up. It’s embarrassing to say, but I would not be in the least bit surprised if my accumulated time during the day was two or more hours. TWO HOURS. I could have done so much more with that time.

  3. It’s Addictive

    I can’t tell you how many times I wanted to stop scrolling and reading, but my brain just kept my finger moving and telling me, “just one more post.” Even when all I was seeing were stupid memes, or political posts, or articles, and none of it contained a real, actual life update from the people I was supposedly on there to keep touch with. I’d find myself opening Twitter in idle moments without even thinking about it because my brain had trained itself to do that. Why? What was I getting out of any of it that was beneficial to me? Nothing, that’s what.

  4. It Kills Self-Confidence

    I learned a long time ago that Facebook is where you lie about how great your life is and Twitter is where you just complain about anything, everything, and everyone. Where Twitter depressed me because everyone’s lives were crap, Facebook depressed me because my life wasn’t anywhere near as wonderful as everyone else. I didn’t have the partner* who randomly cleaned the house, got me iced coffee and flowers, made dinner, and had the kids all dressed in matching outfits, family-selfie ready. I didn’t make the perfect meal. I wasn’t making masks or going to protests. I wasn’t raising money for charity, and I certainly wasn’t losing weight. What the heck was I doing with my life? I’m just a fat, lazy, uncaring, gross human being who was a large waste of space. I am not measuring up to anyone on my feed. Clearly, I never would.

  5. It Made me Feel More Homesick Than Not

    Y’all, it’s hard moving away from everything and everyone you love to start a life in a totally new place with only one familiar person in your day to day. I thought seeing friends and family, reading about everything they were doing, would make me feel closer to them. And it did for a little while. But then, it made me realize just how far away I was. All the stories I was seeing online, all the pictures, the game nights I was missing (for a few months, anyway)…these things I was seeing on Facebook were things I used to be part of. In person. Sometimes I’d even talk to someone on the phone or over Skype and a subject would come up I didn’t know about. The response would be, “Well I posted it on Facebook.” and that sucked. It hurts, honestly. We’ve stopped communicating with each other the way we were meant to, leaving it up to social media to let people into our lives. It made me feel so much father away from everyone than 1,000 miles.

  6. It Fuels Rage and Anxiety

    Have you ever noticed how right everyone is? No one is ever wrong. Myself included. We’re always right, we are incredibly entitled, and no one else’s opinion matters unless it lines up with our own. Anyone who thinks otherwise, anyone who dares to publicly challenge a stated “fact” is then shut down at best, shamed, or, at worst case, ganged up on by a swarm of other indignants to show you just how wrong you are and make you feel like the lowest of the low. The real winners are the ones who say something along the lines of, “You should just kill yourself to rid the world of your stupidity.” Yeah, that’s an actual thing I’ve had thrown at me for disagreeing with an opinion stated on a post they didn’t even write. The internet can be a beautiful place full of knowledge and revelations, but take one step out of place and you wind up in an incredibly toxic universe.

  7. It Takes Me Out of the Moment

    So many times I have been experiencing something amazing, terrible, or in between, and my first thought was, “I should post about this.” My thoughts were on my social media accounts, wondering how many likes or comments I’d get if I said whatever inane thing had come to my head that, in the moment, I thought was so brilliant. Instead of enjoying the moment and breathing it in, or sitting with the discomfort of a bad moment, or even just the rare quiet of a down or “boring” moment, I’m missing the moment. It’s passing me by as I type away on my phone. I’m ignoring the beauty that could be found, the revelation in the silence, and the understanding that could come from unrest. Honestly, this was the worst of my realizations.

  8. It Kills Personal Relationships

    How many times has someone been talking to you while you’re on your phone and you’ve found yourself going, “Huh…what?" You realize you’re not listening so you click off your phone and put it away, but even then you’re still not really listening because your mind is on the very thing that was distracting you in the first place. How many times have you been on the other end of that and found yourself frustrated over the lack of attention you were being given? Pretty sure we can all raise our hands to both. We’ve stopped “whole-face” listening. Heck, we’re not even half-faced listening most of the time anymore.

  9. FoMO - Fear of Missing Out

    I found this more prevalent when it came to Twitter than Facebook. What if I miss something big happening in the news or the entertainment world? What if someone I follow, some editor or agent, says they’re now open to submissions and I miss my chance? What if one of my friends is having a bad day and a silly gif from me could help turn it all around? What if I miss my shot at getting retweeted by someone famous?! I mean! Insert the biggest eye roll in history here. It creates this never ending, ever growing sense of anxiety that I am somehow going to miss out on something immeasurably important if I am not constantly checking my feeds. It’s the need to know everything about everything all the time, and it’s so unhealthy.

  10. It Begs for Word Vomit

    When we, as humans, believe we have a platform, we will talk about anything we feel we want to for as long as we can, and without censor. We feel justified in our feelings and opinions, entitled to our thoughts, and justified in sharing them with the world. With righteous indignation to fuel us, we spew out words that harm instead of help, and we feel no remorse. In fact, we’re silently begging for confrontation. The day I found myself getting into an argument with someone on Facebook and refreshing the page every ten seconds to see if they replied so I could leave an even smarter reply, I knew I had a problem.

Social media can bring us together when it’s used correctly. I had hoped with the world in chaos as it is that Facebook and Twitter, all the other social media outlets, would be filled with love, compassion, and support for our fellow human beings. Instead, it has become filled with vitriol and arrogance. And quite honestly, it makes me terribly sad.

Because my new book is being released soon, I’m coming back to the world of social media, but at a very limited capacity. I’m keeping Facebook off my phone and have already cut my list of friends by more than half. I’m going to block certain topics on Twitter and I’m weeding out that list as well. The second I feel myself sliding backward, they’re gone. I have too much to worry about without needlessly adding to it all.

If you’ve never done a social media fast, I encourage you to give it a try. You’ll be amazed at the beauty you find when your eyes aren’t glued to a screen, the words God will whisper in your ear when you’re not listening to another random video, and the in-person relationships that will overshadow the virtual ones.

Before I leave this post, I did promise the one beautiful truth. It actually ties in with number 4 and the little * I left in there. What I realized during this fast was that some of the best moments are the ones you don’t want to share with the world. Or anyone else, for that matter. They’re perfect just as they are and involve exactly who they should, no more and no less. And those are memories I don’t need to share on the internet to always remember.

* For the record, I have an amazing boyfriend who is always looking for ways to make me happy, smile, and feel better about myself just the way I am. I have never felt so blessed in life as I have having him to love and love me back. I would never want that picture perfect family because, man, can you imagine the upkeep?

Project Grateful

Y’all, it’s been a year. I will say it again, it has been a year! Now, I know there are still three months to go but three months ago I felt like I’d been through enough for an entire year already, maybe even two. There have been some really sweet, positive things to happen in 2019, but the sad fact of the matter is that there were far more negative moments than not. It’s been a wonderful and rare day that provided no stress, worry, or heavy burden to carry. Because of this, it’s become entirely too easy for me to focus on those negative things in my day.

Now, I’ve been in recovery groups long enough to know the actual science behind negative thinking. It is not unlike addiction itself, burrowing new pathways into your brain that soon become deeper than those that lean toward the positive. Before you know it, you see all the things that are bad and wrong far easier than all the beautiful moments peppered throughout the days. And the more you complain, the more you obsess, the more you see more dark than light.

I have fallen victim to this. If asked, I could name at least ten things each day that suck, or have gone wrong, or have irritated me. Heck, you don’t even have to ask me and I’ll gladly name them for you.

When did I become this person? This is not who I used to be. It’s not who I want to be now. No wonder I’ve been so depressed and anxious. I’m so hyper-focused on all the things that are “bad” that it’s become all I see. I used to be this optimistic, bubbly, happy person. I miss her. I’m sure those I keep close miss her, too.

In the spirit of trying to get back to that person I once was, I’m starting something I’m calling “Project Grateful.” I’m sure it’s been used before and many times over, but this is me not caring.

I started a journal last year where I’d list positive things as they happened. The habit never actually formed so my updates are few and far between. I’m going to try writing in it again. Every day. Even on the hard ones. Especially on the hard ones. I want to reform positive neuro pathways and fill in the negative ones. Not only am I going to use my journal but I’m going to take a picture a day so I have a way to look back in a more tangible way when I’m struggling to find my positivity.

If you’re interested in following along, I’ll be posting pics on my Instagram which will also go to my Twitter. I encourage you to join in and do your own project. You’ll be surprised how quickly your attitude and point of view change.

Head Above Water

How are you?

It’s a question I’ve been getting asked a lot lately, mostly through texts or messages. Nine times out of ten I have ignored the question or just chosen not to respond. Not because I don’t want to talk to anyone or I’m being rude. It sounds ridiculous to say but lately, even just returning a text is too much for me. It leads to conversation and conversation is not a thing I am up for right now. And honestly, it changes so frequently that I don’t know how to honestly answer. I may be great one minute and then bawling my eyes out the next.

This year has been kind of a nightmare and we’re still only halfway through.

Between my mom’s cancer, coming to accept her decision about her treatment, my dad’s stroke, him coming home and seeing him have to relearn things like a preschool kid, him going back in the hospital for a severe infection, my brother’s vacillation between helpfulness, severe depression, and rage, me being a taxi and running errands for two adults I don’t even live with, really struggling with the loneliness and separation of a long distance relationship, and taking care of my own health issues… I’m tired. I am so tired and overwhelmed. And I’m gonna be honest, I’m really wrestling with my faith in all of this.

I hate to even admit to that because my relationship with God, my ability to go to Him with anything and everything and know it’s going to be all right even when it seems life is at its darkest, has always been the thing that keeps me from drowning. Right now, that’s not there. I have a lot of hurt, confusion, even anger. I don’t understand why any of this is happening, let alone why it’s all happening at the same time. I just don’t understand, and I’m struggling to remind myself that God is good no matter what.

Most of the time when people ask how you are, it’s a polite societal impulse. We don’t really want to know how the other person is really doing but we ask because it’s what we’re supposed to do. You get your very surfacy answer, nothing too deep, and you move on. For most of you who have asked how I am, I know this is not the case. I know you’re asking and checking in on me out of love and concern. And I apologize for being a sucky friend and not keeping you up to date, but it’s hard to make this admission over and over.

How are you?

Honestly, I am a complete mess. But I’m doing my best to not get pulled under.

In September of last year, Avril Lavine released her first song after a long period of silence.It’s nothing like she’s ever released before, speaking of needing God to keep her from drowning and how much of a struggle it is to see through to the other side of the storm. It’s a gorgeous song with lyrics that just so perfectly encapsulate how I’m feeling.

So that’s how I am. I’m praying, sincerely praying, the rest of this year goes a little bit smoother, and that my faith will grow through all of this turbulence.

Next post will be back to the usual writing-centric stuff you’ve come to expect from me. I just needed to get this out to give myself some release. Thanks for understanding.

Where HAVE You Been?

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This is the voice I hear in my head each time I think about updating this blog, the sweet, angry, concerned, demanding voice of Miss Molly Weasley. And really, that would be fair of all of you to scream at me. I kind of disappeared for a good few months and for that, I apologize. Much has happened since my last update, some of it good, a lot of it not, and it’s kept me silent for quite some time. This is my attempt at a brief explanation and getting back into the swing of things.

Personal Crap

I say crap but not all of it has been crap. We’ll start with that anyway because it’s good to end on something that is better than crap. Near the beginning of the year, we found out my mother has Adenocarcinoma, which is stage 3 lung cancer. What seemed like pneumonia over Christmas was actually something much worse. She’s getting nontraditional treatments that seem to be working for her and will soon be tested to see where things are at. Just a week ago, my dad had a severe stroke. He’s having trouble speaking and has issues with his right side, but he’s committed to working hard in rehab and make the lifestyle changes he needs to in order to live a healthier life when he gets home. There have been other personal issues going on that have been consuming as well, but I’m not going to go into them. I’ve been struggling a lot with depression and anxiety and have often isolated myself. It’s just not been a great year so far.

One of the bright spots in my life has been a new relationship. But it’s also been time consuming (though in the best possible way). I’m also working on a project for AoV that takes up a lot of my time and brain power, and I cannot wait to share it with you. Which is a perfect lead-in to…

Writing Crap

I know a lot of you are still anxiously awaiting the release of book four. I’m itching to get it to you! Unfortunately I lost my editor over the fall which has been a major setback. Though I’ve been looking for someone new, my funds are rather limited and not everyone wants to work for free - nor should they. So I’m doing my best to self-edit and am currently on draft one-hundred-billion-point-2, trying to make it as close to perfect as possible. Thankfully my editor taught me a lot in the way she went through my previous books, showing me things to watch out for and helping me pick up on things that need to be considered. Once I’m done with this draft I will be sending it out to two or three beta readers, likely do yet another draft or two, maybe do another beta read and one more draft, and then I intend to publish it myself.

But Diana, you said you weren’t self-publishing anymore!!!!!!

I did say that, yes. My plan was to pursue traditional publishing, thus the reason for taking my books offline. My thoughts on that have changed over the course of my two weekends at the New Hampshire Renaissance Faire. I spoke to quite a few fellow authors and aspiring authors who shared their journeys of publishing with me. Two of them worked at bigger publishing houses before branching off to start their own. At their advisement (and that of my unfairly smart boyfriend), I’m going to keep on this road with AoV. Anything else I write that is outside of this series, that is what I need to seek traditional publishing for. No one will look at my books because they’ve been self published, and I understand why. But if I can make a name for myself with something else, attention will then fall to my series and a publishing deal is more likely to happen. So the books are back on Amazon for purchase, and this time next year, this is my promise, I will have Age of Valor: Blood Purge ready for all of you to get your hands on.

At this time I would like to point your attention to my Patreon! It’s a bit outdated as far as goals and subscription tiers go, but that will be fixed this week. Subscribers will be able to see cover art sketches and the actual covers before they are released to the public. You’ll get news about the super secret project. You’ll get to vote in polls that could have an impact on plot lines and possibly even help me shape a character or two. You’ll even get snippets of works in progress, and much more.

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So, with all of that having been said, thank you for your continued support. I’m going to make a real effort to keep up with all of you a lot more from now on.

Ten Movies I Could Watch Over and Over (and one extra)

Everyone has a top ten list of favorites, whether it's songs, foods, books, lines from that show you watch over and over. And of course, we all have our top ten movies that we just love. Some of them make us look completely vapid, some of them make us seem much more thoughtful and introspective, while others make people look at us and go, "...really?" In the spirit of fun and honestly just needing to update this blog and get myself back into the swing of things, I bring you my top ten list of movies I can watch over and over, and one honorable mention that I think absolutely everyone should watch at least once.

  • The Last Unicorn - This movie was one of four that I watched constantly as a kid, the others being The Secret of N.I.M.H, The Dark Crystal, and A Flight Dragons. Is it a wonder that my main genre for writing is Fantasy? All four of these movies served as a foundation to what would be a long love of all things magical and fantastical. As much as I loved them all, none of them stuck with me the way The Last Unicorn did. Maybe it had something to do with the music that, even as a kid, stirred emotions within me that I didn't fully understand. As an adult, I love the story of this female who is frightened and unsure, but willing to do whatever it takes to save her kindred. Of course nothing goes as planned and the friends she makes along the way, something she's never had before, add humanity to a creature who has lived such an emotionless life. The story is just beautiful and will always remain my ultimate favorite movie. Meeting Peter S. Beagle, the author of the book from which the movie was inspired, and being able to give him a copy of my first book was an amazing moment for me.
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  • The Hobbit - Return of the King - Yeah, I'm lumping them all together into one. What are you gonna do about it? I love all of them and they're part of the same universe and...and...I don't have to explain myself to you! I can just watch these movies over and over and just be happy. They're comfort movies because they have a lot of good memories attached to them. I used to be able to pretty much quote LotR line for line but I have been slacking in my rewatching of this series over the past few years.
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  • Phoebe in Wonderland - If you've heard of this movie, I'd be shocked. If you've watched this movie, I'd be even more blown away. Back in 2008, a young Elle Fanning starred in this beautiful movie about a little girl dealing with some pretty significant mental illnesses. This was done back before we took mental illness in children as seriously as we do now, and the story is both enlightening and heartbreaking. You see this sweet child going through her every day, not always feeling like something is wrong even when others do, but when things are bad for her, they're really bad. And then there are her parents who are trying to understand what's going on with their daughter and how to help her. Elle's character actually inspired one of my own who has yet to make an appearance in the AoV series, but she's been waiting to be introduced ever since I saw this movie years ago.
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  • Frozen - Ooooh, I hear so many of you silently judging me. And one of you vocally judging me. How dare. You leave me and my animated/CG movies alone. It's not the first on the list and it won't be the last. I love Frozen, okay? I love it because right off the bat, I saw so much of myself in Elsa. Like many others, I likened her locking herself away, her "conceal, don't feel, don't let them know," mentality to how I dealt with my anxiety and depression. Her anguish was something I felt in a very real way, as well as her isolation. On the surface it looked rather self-imposed, but she grew up being told she couldn't show who she really was by her parents. Of course she chose isolation over risking exposure. And then there's Anna, who I am also very much like. The eternal optimist when it comes to people I love, willing to risk anything and everything to help them when they are in need, and just wanting to know what true love feels like. And also saying things before my brain has a chance to stop my mouth from moving. Y'all, let me love this movie, okay?!
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  • The Proposal - Okay, I just laugh thinking of this movie. I hate RomComs, but this movie... This is one of the rare few movies that I can watch and laugh like it's the first time I've seen it every single time I watch it. I mean, with the combination of Sandra Bullock and Ryan Reynolds, you can't go wrong to begin with, but throw in Betty White, the gorgeous Alaskan scenery, and a little puffball of a dog named Kevin that causes way more trouble than should be possible, and it's just so freaking funny.
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  • Spirited Away - A top ten list would not be complete without at least one Studio Ghibli move on it, amirite? It was realllllllly hard to choose, especially with Totoro and Howl's Moving Castle in the running, but I have to go back to Spirited Away for nostalgia sake. I've seen this movie so many times and I still love it just as much when I watch it now. Chihiro is just the sweetest reluctant protagonist, and I love her relationship with Haku. My favorite character is actually No Face. Which I know he shouldn't be, but he is. I don't really know why I love this movie as much as I do because there's no great life lesson in it or anything, and there's a terrifying giant baby thing. It's a ridiculously weird movie overall, as many of Ghibli's movies are, but I just love this one so much.
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  • Mean Girls - Yep. I'll own it. This is one of my favorite movies and I would want to be stranded on a desert island with a copy of it. And a way to watch it. Easily the most quotable movie on my list, I have seen Mean Girls so many times by now, it's ridiculous. I don't know many people who haven't seen this movie and most love it as well. In case you're wondering, I am wearing pink today.
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  • I Am Legend - This was an instant love movie for me. I'm a huge fan of Will Smith to begin with. I'm not one of those "he can do no wrong" fans because there are a few movies of his I've just been like O_o. But I loved this one. He didn't have his usual quirky comments or physical comedy bits to play off of. This was real drama and isolation, and moments of sheer sadness and even a little madness. I thought it was brilliantly acted and had the perfect amount of thrill and fear thrown in.
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  • The Village - M. Night tends to be a polarizing person and people either love or hate his movies. While I don't love all of his movies, I'm actually a fan of most of his work and am so stinking excited to see Glass! Ahem. Anyway. This movie...this movie. My brother made me watch this movie and I was terrified the first time I saw it. Then I was mad at the ending and thought it was the stupidest thing ever and vowed to never watch it again. And then I watched it again to see all the clues to the ending and kind of enojyed it more for the intricacy of the storytelling and the writing. And somewhere along the way, I just fell in love. Also, Bryce Dallas Howard, ladies and gentlemen. She gave me one of my favorite lines ever from this movie. And I love her.
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  • The Fast and the Furious - Okay, you can judge me for this one. I give you permission. I will watch this movie over and over and over until my dying day. I love Vin Diesel. Is he the best actor? No. Not by a long shot. But I love him. And I love movies with fast cars and lots of action and explosions. What can I say? Destruction makes me happy when there are hot guys involved. Does that make me shallow? Okay. I can accept that.
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  • Cyberbully - AKA the one movie on the list I could not watch forever but I am so glad I did watch it and think everyone should see it at least once. This movie will gut you. There is no way around it. But if you have kids in or near the age of middle or high school, if you work with kids these ages, interact with them in any way, you need to watch this movie. Emily Osment, Haley Joel Osment's little sister, plays the role of a girl who is bullied and attacked online to the point where she sees no other way out of her torment but to take her life. I can't tell you how many buckets I sobbed, but this movie is so important. It's on Netflix right now. I'm so serious. Go watch it.
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So were any of these a surprise to you? Do you agree with any of my choices? What are your top ten? I'd love to hear what they would be!

Casting Ashlynn

Over the years I've had more than a few people ask me if I've had any specific faces in mind for characters I've written. It isn't an uncommon thing for authors to have actors, musicians, even people they know personally in mind when creating a character with which to work. Sometimes it helps us get vocal quirks right, facial features, silly little traits we pick up on when we watch them but wouldn't necessarily think to write in on our own. Because I get asked this question often enough, I'm going to do a semi-regular series in which I answer by doing a "casting session" of major characters starting from book one and going through all the books, adding new characters as they join the series. This is meant to be interactive. I'd love to hear your thoughts on who I see as my characters and who you see when you picture them! So let's get started with the main character, Ashlynn Stuart!

I've never had a real solid face for Ashlynn until literally a few months ago. It's been ever changing since I started writing this series over ten years ago. She started out looking like Haley Westenra, then Ayla Kell, then just kept having a face that changed with every actress that even slightly resembled what I thought she could possibly look, act, or sound like in my head. Then it finally hit me when I was watching Girl Meets World one day. The girl who plays Maya, the Shawn equivalent to this next-gen show to one of my childhood favorites, Sabrina Carpenter, was pretty much exactly how I pictured a younger Ashlynn. She was a rule-breaker but she was loyal to a fault. She was also quite short but didn't let that determine how much personality she had. This was a girl who, if she wanted something accomplished or didn't understand something, went after it all on her own until whatever ends she arrived upon were met, even if they weren't always good. She was Ashlynn.

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Going from there was almost easy. I'd had someone on my radar for an older Ashlynn, one for nearer to the middle-end of the series. What I really needed was a face for in between that. It was about that time that I started watching Runaways and found exactly what - or who - I was looking for in Virginia Gardner.

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I know what you're thinking. She looks entirely too sweet to be Ashlynn. But remember, there are quite a few times when she's got to pull out that sweet side of her and do a little charming to get what she wants or needs done. And then there are times she gives that disarming smile before she hits with a killing blow. Older Ashlynn is walking an unsteady line between the girl who simply acts on impulse to get things done and the woman learning to be queen of an entire nation, and a person who has to stop to think before she actually does things. Besides, Virginia is really just a bridge between Sabrina and the one who has become the ultimate face of Ashlynn, Eliza Taylor.

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As Clarke on The 100, Eliza is everything Ashlynn has been and everything she has begun to grow into. Now I admit that I'm only halfway through season two - I know, I am woefully behind - but many of her qualities are what I see in older Ashlynn. She still has that fierce loyalty and impulsivity that often make her reckless, but every decision she makes is based on what she thinks is best for everyone she cares about until she has to make the tough decisions that put the greater good above even the people she holds closest. She is not afraid of her leadership position, neither is she afraid of letting someone else taking charge if their ideas are better than hers. She has strong opinions and concrete convictions that are rarely shaken. When it comes to fighting, she runs into the fray instead of away from it as well. Really, could I find anyone better to represent who Ashlynn is?

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Closing out all the generations I plan to show throughout the series, I feel like Diane Kruger just has a perfect older face to follow Eliza's. That's really my only reasoning. Eliza could look older than she is with the right makeup and Diane could look younger/older as well, making a seamless age transition between the two.

So what do you think of my casting? Have someone else you think would fit the role? I'd love your thoughts!

No Such Thing as Writer's Block

When I was a freshman in college, someone once said that there was no such thing as writer's block. I was so annoyed by his words and the surety with which he spoke that I can clearly remember narrowing my eyes up at him and trying to figure out if he was just attempting to get a rise out of everyone or simply being pretentious. The school I went to was full of people pretending to be much better at their creative craft than they really were, and the writer's group I attended only once was certainly no exception. There was no mirth in his expression, however, no slight upturn to his lips, no hidden amusement in his eyes. He was dead serious. Someone asked him to explain.

“A true writer is never blocked,” he continued, satisfied by the attention he'd drawn. “Perhaps he may be momentarily stunted on a particular piece, but all he has to do is take a step outside, sit down with a cup of coffee outside a cafe, watch people as they pass, and the muses will come. Will they be for the same piece in which he struggles? Not necessarily. But the muses will come, and write he will find he must. He is not blocked, only redirected.”

I may be adding a little eloquence to the words that were spoken that night, but the message is still the same and it's something I've never forgotten. As much as I thought he really was pretentious at the time, he wasn't wrong. I may not have recognized it then but I certainly do now, years later.

People watching has always been something I have loved to do, especially at a public venue or event like the Highland Games, a concert, or waiting to be seated at a restaurant. You see little things that you can employ in character development that makes them more real to the reader: the way someone plays with their nails while trying to make a decision; the stride of someone whose left leg is just a little shorter than the right; the small, secret smile of someone who's just remembered something that instantly makes them happy and then immediately makes them sad for some reason. People are fascinating creatures and they spark all sorts of creative inspiration in all of us artsy-fartsy types. There have been times when I have been deep into more than one project at once and cement blocked on all of them, but I step away to just observe and the proverbial muses swirl around me as I see and hear and smell and experience creativity all around me. And before I know it, another story idea is being born.

It's the little things. Sometimes, it's the unexpected things. Driving down the road and seeing a man raking the leaves, falling to his knees before the pile he's created. Is he weeping? Did he just drop something that he now has to find? Is he having a health crisis? So much possibility that passes by in the space of time it takes to zip through a green light. The sound of a congregation all turning the pages of their Bibles at once can take you out of the sanctuary as it mimics the soft patter of rain falling on a tin roof in the middle of a cold night. Even the hum of silence can stir up the most ominous of feelings within us, painting before our closed eyes scenes of terror that simply must be put into words, or brushed across a canvas, or put to a rhythm for our bodies to follow. We are, as they say, slaves to inspiration. It comes when it will with no thoughts or care as to where we are, who we are with, or how inconvenient it may or may not be.

One of the areas by which I have always been most inspired is music. My favorite type of musicians are the storytellers who happen to be singing their stories rather than telling them in book format. Artists like Carrie Underwood, Sara Bareilles, and Sia who don't just sing love songs but take us through an introduction to a character, a conflict, a climax, and sometimes — but not always — a resolution. Those are my favorite songs. I think that's part of the reason why I always loved Josh Groban as well. Aside from his amazing voice, each of his songs — the ones that were in English so that I actually understood what was being sung — was a story.

In 2006, Josh came out with his third album, Awake, and on it was one of my all time favorite songs of his. It is still one of my top three even twelve years later and has inspired many romantic fantasies and scenes that were never used in various projects. The song is called “So She Dances,” and I am determined to still use the inspiration that song arouses someday, somewhere, because it is so precious to me. From the first time I heard it, I could see the entire moment as clear as day. The faces within the scene always change but my setting never has, and it has never lost its thrill. There are other songs of his that evoke emotion like that within me as well like “Broken Vow” and “Remember When It Rained.” More recently “Happy in My Heartache” is just... I can't explain why that song effects me the way it does. But still, nothing has quite reached the level of “So She Dances.”

 

There is no such thing as writer's block. Only redirection. It's something I have to tell myself the next time I get frustrated by the lack of forward motion on any given project. Just because I'm stuck in one place doesn't mean I'm stuck everywhere. Maybe I need to be moving forward somewhere else until it's time for me to be moving forward again in the other place. Kind of like life.

I want to apologize for my long hiatus, dear readers. It was unexpected and I'm going to work my hardest to get back into the weekly Wednesday updates. Thank you for your patience and understanding. It's good to be back with you.

So, for those of you creative types out there, what do you do to battle creativity block?

Book Review: Beyond the After: Princess Lillian

* Please note, my editor is on a road trip and has not been able to look this post over. Errors probably abound!

 

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It seems I have finally come to the last book in my long list of fellow Independently Published Authors, and to be quite honest, this one has left me a little flummoxed. Beyond the After: Princess Lillian by C. M. Healy has remarkably high reviews on both Amazon and Goodreads. I, myself, was initially relieved to see good writing in the few seconds I had to glance through the book when I had the opportunity to meet Healy at a faire we were both signing books at and we exchanged books, as authors sometimes do. It took me awhile to get to the book because I had a few in line ahead of him, but now it is finished! So let's dive into why I'm confused by these high ratings.

The Premise

This is the first book in a planned series of four that follows the children of familiar and beloved princesses Snow White, Cinderella, and Sleeping Beauty. The first book centers around Lillian, Snow White's eldest child. She has just turned eighteen and everyone is trying to learn that new balance of what it looks like to have a young woman in the house who is no longer a child but is still not quite an adult. When Lillian wanders away from her birthday party, setting off a string of odd events that leads to her meeting a mysterious stranger in the woods, she quickly discovers that an old adversary to her family's kingdom long thought destroyed has returned and is on the rise. Can she trust this new presence in her life or will she have to rely on herself to save the day?

The Plot

I really wanted this to be good, but it was so flat. There were brief moments where things started to happen or could have happened and then just fell through or were resolved so quickly that it was completely vanilla to me. There was not a single moment when I found myself eagerly turning the page, needing to find out what was going to happen next. There was very little that was surprising, nearly every plot point hit was predictable, and there was a heck of a lot of winking happening. People winked all the dang time in this book.

The Characters

This is another area where I felt things were severely lacking. Lillian herself was fairly accurately portrayed as a young woman coming into her own, trying to figure out her limits as a new adult and testing just how far her parents would let her go while still very much needing them at times. As the main character, that was good to see. She didn't have much of a personality, though. She wasn't quirky or silly, she wasn't snarky or sarcastic, polite or impolite. She was just...there. Her love interest, Alexander, was the very definition of a Gary Stu, the male version of a Mary Sue. He was handsome and mysterious. He saved her life in the beginning of the book. He baked perfect bread. He was a master archer and swordsman. He fished like no one's business. He never got angry with her even when he should have, and he always had the perfect answers. It was annoying and, quite frankly, almost made me want to stop reading at times. The villain was kind of abstract most of the time. Yes, actual threats to Lillian show up, but again, they were neutralized ridiculously easily and quickly. The real bad guy never actually shows up, and his “biggest, baddest henchman” only shows up at the very end and we barely get to spend any time with him. And the whole time, he's locked in a cell.

Saving Graces

Healy is a good writer, I will give him that. His flow and sentence structure is smooth and there was never a moment that I had to stop and reread anything because it was confusing or unclear. His descriptions of places and events was actually something I quite admired. There are certain scenes I could and still can picture quite clearly, and I really enjoyed those moments when I was truly transported into his world. Given that there are three more books in this series, one of which is published and two which are not yet written, I hope what was begun is expanded upon, but in a book that is a little over 300 pages long, much more could have already been opened up than was.

Final Thoughts

The book ends on what should be a cliffhanger. SPOILERS BEGIN HERE The love interest has been kidnapped, his true identity still a ginormous mystery. Lillian is riding away from the castle alone on a mission to save him and, ultimately, her kingdom, having learned one of her childhood friends has betrayed her and was working for the enemy. SPOILERS END HERE By all rights, I should be left ready and wanting to jump into the next book...but I don't really care what happens. I feel horrible saying it, but that's the truth. I'm not going to read the next book because I was not entertained by the first one. This is why I am left confused at all the high ratings. This is a bland story with bland, forgettable characters.

 

As a reminder, reviews are so important. If you have read any of my books, I would so love and appreciate you taking the time to leave a review on Amazon and/or Goodreads. Whether you loved the book, hated it, or somewhere in between, ratings and reviews help! I'm certainly going to be leaving a review for Mr. Healy, though one much more condensed, because I think it's only fair.

Also, as part of a huge oversight on my part last week, I forgot to leave a link to the blog where you can find Alex, the author of the guest blog post, “Novel Soup." Check him out here and tell him Diana sent you!

Novel Soup: Writing as a Culinary Art

Written by guest blogger Alex Genetti

 

I do hope Diana doesn’t mind if I begin by bragging on her a bit. When her first novel, Heritage, came out in 2014, it lit a fire under me. At the time I was pursuing a graduate degree in professional writing, and story ideas were buzzing around my brain. Too long, I realized, had I allowed them to wheel about freely; now it was time to put them to good use. Reading Heritage, I admired that Diana seemed to know from the beginning where her story was headed and how her characters wasted no time in getting there. I admired the color and music and energy that enlivened every page. I don’t know what her real creative process was like. Maybe it was like mine. In any case, a great recklessness seized me. I wanted to follow her example. I resolved to write a novel.

Now, here’s the thing: I like stories for their characters, sometimes, or for their plots, or for their interesting premises or exciting action sequences. But mostly I enjoy them for their atmospheres. When I read a science fiction story, it’s usually not the events of the plot that excite my interest; it’s the bustling streets full of alien creatures, the dusty, red-stained Martian sunsets, the vast impressions of cosmic loneliness. When I watch a hardboiled film noir, it’s the trench coats and rain-slick streets and private-eye monologues that I revel in more than the mystery itself. For me, atmosphere is often the starting point. Everything else – plot, characters, dialogue – is there to give the atmosphere a framework where it can do its magic.

That’s why, when I decided to have a go at penning my own long-form narrative, I considered first what ingredients should go in it. What manner of strange locale did I want to whisk my reader’s imagination off to? What sort of mood, what sort of tone, what sort of ambiance would I convey? What themes and emotional textures were important to me? Well, I reasoned, maybe I should start by telling the kind of story I would like to read. So I let the ideas come of their own accord:

Misty Appalachian forests. Highways littered with abandoned vehicles. A pale, raven-haired woman with a sword. A villain who thinks he’s Nietzsche’s übermensch. Nebulous Christian symbolism. Guilt and fear and faith and hope. Something about fairies. Dismemberments.

These thoughts appeared in starts and stops over several months. At length I pulled a musty, dusty, post-apocalyptic story idea from out of a trunk I kept in the attic of my subconscious – a very lean idea, really, less than a plot, less than the skeleton of a plot – and I tossed it into a big vat in my brain. Then I started tossing the new ingredients in, too. I let it simmer and boil. I started writing down notes and scenes and dialogues. The rising aroma made my mouth water. This story had everything.

But something rather large and obvious was missing – several somethings, in fact. I didn’t have a beginning yet. Or a middle, precisely. I sort of had an ending, though I wasn’t quite sure how I would get there. I was just following my muse: character interactions, fight scenes, mythological symbolism, detailed backstories, pages of philosophical musings about death. I had so much material to work with; surely the minor business of the plot would sort itself out.

So it was that my first attempt at novel-writing fell flat on its face. Even though I had all the ingredients, I had no recipe. Or, put more plainly, I had all the ideas, but no story.

What I ended up with was novel soup: lots of ideas, scenes, objects, events, themes, and characters floating together in a weak broth of atmosphere and mood, sometimes bumping into each other and sometimes drifting off to float around on their own, never really coming together into anything solid, cohesive, or structured. I wasn’t even sure I understood my main character completely. I had ideas, yes. I had pages and pages of notes on her psychology. I wanted to be Dostoevsky and illuminate the complicated, contradictory inner mechanisms of the human soul, but I didn’t have any notion of how I’d accomplish this from sentence to sentence, page to page. I knew her story would deal with lost faith, the challenge of showing compassion in a cosmos that runs on violence, the corrosive influence of secret guilt, and a subconscious longing for an Arcadian otherworld. But how would these themes play out in the plot itself? How would her convictions show in her speech and actions? What choices would she make, and what consequences would follow? Where, in fact, would the story go? To those questions, I had no answers.

Thus, when I really sat down and started writing the blasted thing, I realized quickly that the story wasn’t going anywhere. I had several pages of text describing a forest. I had my main character waking up, going through her odd, post-apocalyptic morning routine, and ruminating about weighty matters. I had a single inciting incident that I had hoped would get the gears of the story turning. Beyond that, nothing. No direction, no substance, no sequence of events that would point toward a conclusion. When I tried to pick up the whole thing and hold it up to the light, it fell apart in my hands: pieces ran away here and there, and nothing held together. It was very discouraging.

I gave up.

Time passed.

More time passed after that, and I realized what had happened.

I had been drunk on my own ideas. The uncanny atmosphere I had wanted to create, the weighty questions I had wanted to wrestle with, the intricate characters whose souls I had wanted to explore – not only had I let them run away with my imagination, I had fallen in love with them all, even the ones that didn’t fit together or make sense. Each idea held me hostage. It was as if I had taken three or four separate jigsaw puzzles, poured out all the pieces into a single pile, and tried to make a picture using every single piece. It was never going to work.

But now I could see more clearly which pieces belonged to which puzzle. It had been a long time since the muse had stopped singing, and in the meantime I had fallen out of love with quite a few details. I still liked my main character, or at least some parts of her psychology. I liked the post-apocalyptic setting, though I knew it needed work. But the bulk of the ideas I’d written down no longer seemed indispensible. That doesn’t mean I disliked them, only that I could finally see I didn’t need them. I was willing to let them go and stick with the simple stuff that I could mold into a real story.

The lesson here is not that you shouldn’t get carried away. By all means, get carried away. Scribble out volumes of worldbuilding notes. Come up with dialogue between characters who probably won’t even appear in the final version. Write a fight scene. Use your passion while it’s still burning. Think long and hard about what your story is going to say and mean and make people feel, and write it all down. Write down every word.

Maybe it will all congeal into something edible. Maybe it will be a disaster. Either way, you have something instead of nothing. New stories and new people and new places that weren’t there before are in the world, even if they’re only in your mind. Then let it rest.

Put some distance between yourself and what you’ve written. Go for a walk. Have a glass of water. Sleep on it for a day or a month or a year or two. Clear your head. Then go back and rediscover the ideas you love.

You’ll find that you need to slim things down, hack through the foliage, locate the best seeds and let them flower to their fullest. The old writer’s adage about “killing your babies” has some truth to it; a lot of the scenes and characters and moments of soaring emotion that you had once loved so dearly just plain won’t fit anymore. But now you’re no longer a slave to them. Passion is perfect for an improvisational jazz trombonist (I should know), but a good composer needs a cool disposition, a patient approach, to write good music. Or, to return to the culinary metaphor, you can’t satisfy every taste in a single dish. I’m no chef, but I know that good cooking calls for restraint, and restraint, more often than not, requires some emotional distance from the stuff you’re working with. You might want to write a story that makes readers weep bitter tears for the harshness of the world one moment and leap out of their chairs to cheer on their hero the next. You might want to write a story that concerns post-partum depression, Slavic folklore, and pirates. You might want, as I did, to write a comprehensive encyclopedia of everything you think is cool or interesting or moving or worth considering. But probably it won’t all hold together. Then it’s best to step back, put some space between you and what you’ve written, let your passion cool, and come back later. You’ll be able to distinguish the good from the bad, the stuff that works from the stuff that won’t. Some ideas will be keepers. Others, inevitably, will go into cold storage.

But, then again, what’s the refrigerator for, in the end? Leftover night is always just around the corner. Maybe soon you’ll root through the cluttered fridge and find an old character or a snippet of dialogue that would fit perfectly in whatever new dish you’re cooking up. The best ideas will always keep calling you back to them, begging to be used.

Patience, whether in cooking, in writing, or in life, continues to be a virtue.

 

Character Analysis: The Sympathetic Villain

I've decided to do something of a series here on my blog. Well, a couple of different series that will run simultaneously in the coming months, one of them being a brief analysis on different archetypes you can find in books, movies - any good story at all, really. I've had several very sweet people suggest that I start a writing workshop, and while I am deeply flattered by the suggestions, I'm really not that qualified. I'm just a writer who soaks up what I can, when I can, and I try to let it come out in whatever it is that I create. I am more than happy, however, to pass on what I think I know and my own personal views on certain aspects of writing.

Everyone is familiar with the villain of the story. He or she is the one who ruins the day for the heroes, throwing everything possible in the way to prevent that final goal from being reached. They are loathsome, deceitful, crooked, and downright irredeemable. But what about the sympathetic villain? Is it possible to even feel sympathy for a villain? Should we feel anything but hatred for the one standing against the very characters we've been cheering for all along? It all depends on the type of layers you're going for as an author and what you want your readers to walk away feeling at the end of your book.

In the past few months I have been going back through the first book in my own Age of Valor series, not only seeing the difference in my writing style from then to now, but coming into a more acute awareness of the difference between Laidley and Merrik, my two antagonists in Heritage. You know right from the beginning that Merrik is evil by the way he carries himself, the things he says, and the subtle actions he takes that appear to go unnoticed by anyone but the reader. He is out for blood and war, and nothing will stop him. Laidley wants blood and war, too, and he's right there beside Merrik in planning the deaths of hundreds of people. Nations will fall because he so desires it. The difference between them is motivation. Merrik wants death for death's sake. Laidley wants death because he somehow believes it will make the pain of losing his father less and the betrayal of his sister make more sense. Somehow it will make his people love him, when love is all he has desperately wanted since he was a child. Those are things we can understand as human beings. We know what it is like to live with hurt and loss and to act in our rage because of it. Are we not the villain as well in those moments?

A sympathetic villain is motivated, at her very core, by something pure. Usually it is love, or lack there of, and loss. He doesn't start out wanting to be the “bad guy,” but evolves into what he becomes out of perceived necessity. She has this idea that once she reaches her end, when she has her hilltop moment, everything will go back to the way it was and everything will be magically right with the world again. There is a certain level of innocent disillusionment in him, one that could never be present in a true villain.

For example: Hela and Loki. Yes, Hela gave us this sad story about Odin sending her to Hell and all this blabbity blah that was like, “Okay lady, whatever, you're still a wack job who just wants everyone to bend to her will and death to those who do not take a knee before her.” Loki, on the other hand, always felt like he was second best to his brother, found out he was adopted, and always felt like he had something to prove and so he set out to make sure everyone understood he was second best to no one. He, like Laidley, just wanted to be loved. He wanted to prove he had worth. And then in the end...well...love. And loss.

Magneto (Erik Lensherr) is another great example. Here is a man who feels like he is doing right by all mutant-kind, fighting for them, protecting them, and by doing so he is only making mutants more of a target in the eyes of humanity. Long before his story ends, he even ends up making enemies of those he is trying to protect, yet he still clings to his belief that what he is doing is the right thing. In X-Men: Apocalypse we get to see Erik living a normal life with a wife and young daughter, holding down a job. Then, when it's discovered he's a mutant and his daughter is captured in the woods in an effort to get him to surrender because he used his powers to save a co-worker, things go horribly wrong. We see this man who has built this life, content in leaving his mutant life behind, tormented over having to use his powers again and using them to kill, doing it all, once again, for people he loves and ultimately losing them.

The Phantom in The Phantom of the Opera is perhaps one of the most recognizable examples of a sympathetic villain. Driven by loneliness and infatuation, he stops at nothing to lure Christine to his lair where he plans to keep her, only to let her go when she removes his mask and sees his face. He's mortified by his own ugliness, but it's only a momentary stun. He still so longs to be loved that he again pursues her and captures her, only to realize in the end that she could never truly be his, and so, with his heart breaking, he lets her go.

Love and loss. Doing the wrong things for the right reasons, at least in the eyes on those doing them. That is the difference between a real villain and a sympathetic one. There's no, “Screw you, I get what I want!” mentality in an SV. It's more of a silent, “Can't you see my anguish?” scream from deep within that stays behind a facade of ambivalence and devilry.

Not every story has a sympathetic villain, neither does every story have a straight up villain. It is rare – at least as far as I have found – for a story to have both. There's something to be said for the former, in my opinion. It adds a certain amount of humanity to a story. Instead of the hero claiming victory at the end and everyone walking away happy, the SV stays with you, making you wonder if things could have turned out any differently for them. Those are the ones that stick in your thoughts long after the last page has been turned.

 

What is your take on the villain versus the sympathetic villain? Do you prefer one over the other? Know of any good female SVs? I had a super hard time thinking of any, and I'd love to read up on some or even watch a good movie featuring a few. Share your thoughts!

Ten Things You (Probably) Didn't Know About Me

  1. When I was a freshman in college, I won a karaoke contest by singing "...Baby One More Time," by Britney Spears. I grew up convincing myself that I wasn't a good singer unless I sounded exactly like the person whose song I was singing, a talent which later helped me greatly when I started dabbling in voice acting, so I had a four octave range that allowed me to reach the super low notes Britney was known for and the high ones singers like Mariah Carey likes to belt. I started singing, making my voice sound just like Britney, and my RA jumped up from his front row seat and screamed, "THAT'S MY RESIDENT!" After I won, he and a bunch of others from my dorm made me sing a few more of her songs down in the commons for fun. One of my favorite college memories.
  2. Drinking too much plain water gives me acid reflux. Crazy, right? Same thing happens to my mother, too.
  3. I have read "Watership Down" by Richard Adams more times than I can even count. There was a time when I was reading it once every summer but I've been so busy reading books for other people these past few years, it's fallen to the wayside. I was forced to read it in eight grade and I hated it. Some years later, for whatever reason, I picked it up again and decided to give it another chance. This time, I loved it. So much so, in fact, that it became a yearly tradition to read it. Each time through, I picked up new nuances and themes. A sweet friend of mine and fellow writer once compared my writing style to that of Mr. Adams, and it was truly one of the best compliments I could have ever been given.
  4. Nerd alert! I prefer Marvel over DC any day, but my favorite caped crusader is Batman. Even as a child, I was more drawn to Bats' story than any other superhero out there, and I can't quite put my finger on the reason why, even to this day. Yes, it's tragic, but others have had just as heartbreaking beginnings as he has, some even worse. Many have had lives that were wrought with tragedy and chaos, reasons to love them and cheer them on, but Batman has always been my guy, followed closely by Wolverine. I have a thing for tortured souls, apparently. coughLokicough
  5. My biggest fear is drowning. Like, it's to the point where I have a hard time watching the end of Titanic without hyperventilating, and I sure as heck can't watch movies like Poseidon. I go into a full blown panic attack. It's ridiculous.
  6. Don't ask me who got me into this habit, but one of my favorite indulgences is a big glass of ice cold milk (which I can't drink anymore. Getting older is so much fun.) and molasses. So. Much. Yum. Don't judge me. You know you have weird food things, too.
  7. When I was a kid, and we're talking like five or six, I was often told that I used words that were too big for me even though I was using them correctly. It made me very self-conscious about the way I spoke and to whom I was speaking. There were times growing up that I would "dumb down" my sentences so I didn't sound like a pompous know-it-all. Sounds arrogant, but it's true. Along the same vein, my third grade teacher told me that my stories were "too wordy." When I saw her again a couple of years ago and told her I was now an author, she simply grinned and said, "I believe it."
  8. Apparently I'm related to Mandy Moore. You know, the woman who makes you cry every week on This Is Us? Yeah, she's like my third cousin twice removed or something. I don't even know. It's distant, but we're related.
  9. I can't get through Frozen without crying. Even after five years, if I am watching this movie alone, I will cry like a baby. I relate to Elsa on such an emotional level. As a person who has struggled with anxiety and depression for the majority of my life, her whole, "Conceal, don't feel, don't let them know," motto hit me hard. Her whole freaking life hit me hard. Take away the ice powers and the isolation she deals with growing up and as an adult...it just kills me every single time. I feel it to my bones, guys. I need to see the Broadway show. Like, if there is one thing on my bucket list that I can check off before the ticking time bag behind my heart goes off, THAT has to be it!
  10. Call me weird, but I don't really have a favorite color. I love anything jewel-toned - those rich, deep colors, teal especially, but no real favorite. What can I say? I have rich taste.

What about you? What is one thing most people don't know about you?

Invisible Assassins

You can't see them, but you know they're there. They make sure of that. Sometimes they begin their work in small, subtle ways. Sometimes they come roaring in like a hungry bear just waking from a long hibernation. They take pleasure in the kill no matter their tactic as they destroy your motivation, your focus, your ability to comprehend and maintain some semblance of normalcy. As the minutes tick by and your energy drains, they take pleasure in knowing each time you fake a smile or a laugh, all you really want to do is curl up in bed and cry or sleep for a hundred years. They attack men and women alike, older and younger as the days go by, and because they are invisible, they are often dismissed by those that do not fight them off themselves. The medical professionals lump them all into one category called  "chronic pain," but for those of us who battle them every single day, they are invisible assassins.

Mine began plaguing me several years ago in the form of an inflammatory disease called Costochondritis. This is when the cartilage between the ribs becomes irritated and so inflamed that even the smallest amount of pressure can feel like a jolt of electricity is being sent through my body. Even wearing a bra can be intolerable on days when it's bad. One time, my dad poked me in the ribs because he didn't know I was having a day and whatever happened on my face and to my body must have scared the living daylights out of him because he just froze as his eyes bugged out. I turned white as a sheet and my eyes filled with tears, and my mother hastily explained why what he had just done was the wrong thing to do. It comes and goes. I'm happy to say it is an infrequent occurrence these days, but when it does come around, it definitely camps out for a few days and likes to be as strong a presence as possible.

Lately, I've been dealing with some unexplained nerve pain. A neurologist I went to a while back said it was Fibromyalgia. I knew it wasn't. My new Neuro knew it wasn't. It's idiopathic, meaning no one can figure out the source or cause, which 40% of chronic nerve pain is. I don't know if she told me that in the hope of making me feel better about it, but it didn't. Didn't make me feel worse, but it definitely didn't make me feel better. All I know is that I have certain spots on both arms, hands, my back, and my left leg that are sensitive to the touch. When I say sensitive, I mean to the point that even washing my hands brought me to tears because the simple feeling of a gentle stream of water on them made my bones feel like they were shattering. Still does at times. So I stand in the bathroom and cry until it's out of my system, collect myself, and go back out to rejoin life. I don't do it to be deceitful, I do it because, frankly, I don't want to dwell on it, I don't want to complain, and no one can fix it for me anyway, so why bring it up?

As of this morning, I'm on day four of waking up with deep nerve pain in my left tricep. It literally feels like fingers are reaching into my arm and trying to pull the muscle from the bone. I'm exhausted. I'm sad. I'm...so sad. There are things I want to do with my life, and for some reason, God is letting me go through this right now, leading me down this path that seems so contrary to the path I want to be going down. I don't quite get it. But that's not the reason why I wanted to write this post.

We talk to dozens of people throughout our days, our weeks. Be aware of people. Be kind to people. I promise you that those in your life who make you smile the most, who go out of their way to be helpful or kind are often the ones who are hurting the most, and they're the ones who are the best at hiding it. That's just how it seems to work out. Just...love one another and have patience. We're all so busy rushing around and it's only going to get worse as the holidays approach.

Don't judge people based on what you think you know.

Breathe.
Relax.
Love.

As we like to say at CenterPoint, go be a blessing. You don't know who needs it today.

Gridiron Conspiracy by Christopher Paniccia

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Dear Readers,

This is a blog entry I never wanted to write. This is a review I never wanted to write. The time has come, however, to get the dreaded "Did Not Finish" review out of the way. So let's buckle in and do this. Today I am reviewing Gridiron Conspiracy by Christopher Paniccia, and I am about to test my own ability to stick to my "100% honesty" in my book reviews.

I had high hopes for this book. I met Christopher at the New England Author Expo this summer in Massachusetts and had the pleasure of hearing him speak on a panel for first-time publishers. Most of the points that were brought up were things I already knew, but Christopher and his fellow panelists were fantastic speakers and did have a few suggestions and tips I hadn't thought of myself. Afterward, when I was wandering around, I had the opportunity to speak with him. I purchased some of his amazing artwork, and we agreed to a swap of the first books in our series.

The first book in Christopher's series follows a protagonist by the same name, a young man entering into the world of professional football. Not too far into the book, we learn that Chirs is unknowingly part of a secret government program that is cloning players and it goes much deeper than just professional football. Really, it's a fascinating premise, but the whole thing is poorly executed. When my male best friend asked me what the book was about, as soon as the word "football" passed my lips, he said, "Well, of course you don't like it if it's a sports book!" For the record, I love football. Also for the record, whether I love football or not, a well-written story should engage the reader regardless. The book opens up with two chapters of exposition and history of the character and the game, with the narration having little more than a monotone voice. At times it felt like I was reading a report or an essay rather than a work of fiction. We writers tend to fall into this trap of wanting to show off all this knowledge we have on particular subjects that we cross the line of being informative into being preachy encyclopedias telling the reader way more than they ever want or even need to know. This book crossed that line way too many times.

When we finally get to meet some characters and see some interactions, they leave much to be desired. Interactions feel forced, dialogue is wooden and awkward, (no one uses contractions. Like...what? O_o) head hopping occurs so frequently that you don't know whose perspective you're reading from at any given moment, especially since this book is written in block format where the cardinal rule of starting a new paragraph each time a new character speaks is broken on the regular. And don't even get me started on the switching tenses and the grammar!

 

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This book got me shook, y'all.

I really wanted to like this one. The cover is awesome. It's minimalistic and different and really catches your eye. I really liked Chirs, and I really wanted to like his book. Unfortunately, this one is definitely not for me. I had to walk away after a hundred pages, and that was really forcing myself to get that far. In the interest of my sanity, it's time for me to move on.

Up next: The Rare Pearl by Jennifer W. Smith. Spoiler Alert! I've already started reading this one and this author has restored my faith in independently published authors.

A Tale of Mist and Shadow by M. R. Laver

Hello, fellow readers! Here I am with my second book review. Today, it is M. R. Laver's A Tale of Mist and Shadow, the first book in his series by the same name. It is classified under Science Fiction and Fantasy, but I would definitely call it pure Fantasy. The book itself is 450 pages long and can be purchased both in e-book format and as a paperback through Amazon.

I started reading this book shortly after I "met" Laver online through a mutual friend of ours. When I found out he was a fellow author, I knew I wanted to read his first book and throw some support his way. We independently published authors need to stick together, after all. Knowing he was a Fantasy author and a fellow Christian, I figured that chances were pretty high that his work would be right up my alley. So I downloaded the book and got to reading. In truth, it took me far longer to get through this book than it should have, and that was my own fault. I had to stop reading for awhile to get a different book in, and that may have made some details revealed earlier in the book a little fuzzy.

The story starts off by throwing the reader into a bit of a battle and some conflict between those in charge (and those who think they're in charge) of a small town, and it really doesn't slow down much from there. Laver's strength is definitely writing battle scenes. Actions are precise and easily pictured, explaining what is happening and with what kinds of instruments and types of people involved without talking down to the reader. These scenes were easily my favorite. I will say that there were one or two battle scenes that felt drawn out for longer than they should have been, but even then, these were the scenes where the storytelling really shone.

As a whole, the book is not without its flaws. There are multiple grammatical issues, inconsistencies, and some characters that you just don't like. Even the worst villains have some sort of quality that makes you want to read more about them. Unfortunately, that is not the case with the demi-villain in this book. She has no redeeming qualities about her and I honestly sighed every time she was involved in a scene because I knew there would be some sort of subtle (often far from subtle) allusion to sex.

The plot doesn't feel fleshed out enough, which says something for a book that is 450 pages long. There is so much thrown into the novel that not enough time is spent on a single element to get the reader truly invested in it. I was always taught that a good novel in a series takes two or three big ideas and focuses on them while weaving the smaller elements around them, saving other big ideas for later books in the series. It felt like Laver took all his big ideas and stuffed them into this first novel, which left me feel a bit chaotic. There were so many things to learn, characters to keep track of, myths to separate, that sometimes I felt overwhelmed, which made me not want not read as much. Not a good thing.

Dialogue between characters was 50/50. Sometimes it felt extremely organic and believable, others had them pausing in the middle of very serious situations to have a slapstick comedy moment full of laughter. Sometimes reactions were so out of the ordinary that it took me out of the story to wonder about it. There were also moments of swearing which took me completely off guard and just didn't sit well with me. It felt thrown in there to try to make the scene more intense or important, but it just made it awkward.

I did love some of the characters. Grace was definitely my favorite bar far. She felt the most real to me, and her story had a distinguishable arc to it that I thought was beautifully handled. There was even a side character or two that I wished we could have seen more of or learned more about, but again, this was an area where there was just so much that there was not enough time spend on any one character.

My overall rating for this title three out of five stars.

If you would like to check out this title for yourself, check out the Amazon page. 
If reading isn't you thing, you can also find it on Audible
M. R. Laver can also be found on Facebook and Twitter.

If you are an author and have a book you would like me to review, leave a comment down below and I'll get back to you as soon as I can. The wait list is rather long at the moment, but I am still taking new titles.

Practicing the Pause

My father has never been a very patient man. If you asked him, he'd be the first to admit it. He hates sitting in traffic, complains loudly over the commercials that come before theatrical trailers, and mumbles, mutters, and curses under his breath when something isn't finished when he believes it should be. Out of all the traits I have inherited from my dad, I am thankful this was not one of them. The thing is, he's not alone in his impatience. While I may be more of a “go with the flow” type of person, there are many people who are the complete opposite.

This morning, I decided to walk down to my local craft store. Unless it's a holiday or there is a major sale going on, it's unusual for more than a couple of people to be in line, especially on a Monday morning. For some reason, today the store was packed. Even with multiple registers open, the line was quite long. When I was ready to check out, there were five people in front of me with more people quickly falling into line behind me. One of them was an elderly gentleman. He heaved a great big sigh behind me when he saw how much of a wait there was. It was the first of many. His impatience was not hard to understand. I certainly hadn't expected the store to be so busy. As more and more sighs sounded behind me, I was torn between amusement and annoyance. We all needed to buy things. We were all stuck in the line if we were intent on purchasing the things we wanted. How was expressing irritation over and over helping? It did nothing but make me feel rushed and cause his wife to question whether or not she really needed the things she had in her cart.

A trip to Market Basket is always a lesson in patience, no matter the time of day. There are people everywhere. All the time. No matter what. I have learned to go in with the expectation that it's going to be chaotic, and rushing will only raise my already high anxiety level. (Little known fact about me: grocery shopping stresses me out, and by stresses me out, I mean I would rather sit naked on broken glass than grocery shop because it raises my anxiety level so much.) I had a list with me, as I always do, and was strolling through each aisle, grabbing what I needed, waiting when people were in my way to move before taking what I needed. As it seems to happen when I grocery shop, I kept going down the same aisle with the same people, one particular woman standing out. She was quite a bit larger than me, and tended to walk (and park) her cart right down the middle of the lane, making people either have to wait for her or shimmy around her if they could. We happened to be down the frozen veggies aisle together at the same time, both of us heading for the other end. An elderly couple entered the way we were looking to exit and stopped to discuss whether or not they wanted frozen tilapia. The woman with the cart stopped, waiting for the couple to move. They blocked the aisle as they talked for all of fifteen seconds at most, a much shorter time than her own record for blocking the way. Instead of politely asking if either of them would step aside, she let out a loud, obnoxious growl, whipped her cart around, nearly taking me out in the process, and stomped back down the aisle saying rather rude things about impolite people who don't take anyone else into consideration in a loud voice.

 

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How many times do we do this? How often are we oblivious to the ways we hold other people up, yet feel impatient, angered, even outraged and abused when we feel like someone else is hindering our ability to accomplish or complete something? Why do we feel like we deserve to have every want and need met the second we realize it is there, but if we see a want and need in someone else, we react to fill them with much less speed and conviction than our own? I don't have any real answers for this, but it's something I intend to be more aware of. This “righteous indignation” that tends to take root when we are faced with obstacles that remove situations and outcomes from our control gets us nowhere. What of, instead of huffing away or sighing loud enough so that everyone knows you're unhappy, we took a breath? What if we paused?

Life moves so quickly and we've become so accustomed to getting what we want exactly when we want it. It's killed our ability to wait and made patience practically an antiquated ideal. We rush through everything, looking for the quickest way and in doing so, we sacrifice so much: experiences, memories, interactions. Sometimes our inability to take a second before reacting makes us say or do things we wouldn't normally, simply because we're giving knee-jerk reactions.

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Practice the pause before you give that tell-tale sigh. Practice the pause before you speak. Practice the pause. Let it be the action that comes before your reaction. It isn't easy. I'm working on doing this myself, and I'll be the first to tell you that it doesn't feel natural. I can also tell you that it's incredibly freeing to not be bound by impatience and frustration.

I'm in the middle of a rather long pause myself, and it's certainly testing my patience. Unfortunately, this has not been a good year for book sales and I'm definitely feeling the pinch of it. In the breath before the exhale, I wait to see what's going to happen instead of jumping ahead, opening my mouth before I take a second to think and make things worse. I'm going to try to do that more often. Hopefully others will do the same.

Doorways and Debts by J. P. Michaels

As an independent author, I know how hard it is to get your name out there and to get recognition and reviews for your books. Because of this, I want to support as many other independent authors as I can. My goal is to read and review at least four books a year, starting in 2018, written by self-published and little-known authors. It may be a lofty goal, especially looking at my busy schedule, but it's something I feel is important enough to make time for. That being said, if you know of an independent author or are one yourself, send titles (or books!) my way. I'm starting a list to go through.

Before I begin I will say these thoughts and opinions are my own. They are not a representation of how anyone else I know who has read the book feels about it. My reviews may sound harsh at times, especially given that I know for 100% certainty that my own books are far from perfect. However, I feel it is important to be honest and to help each other along this rather arduous and isolating road of being an IA. None of my comments are meant to be malicious, neither are they meant to blow sunshine. They are meant to help grow, refine, and encourage. I can only hope others would do the same for me.
 

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This first review is of a book called Doorways and Debts by J.P. Michaels. I was actually in the middle of another IA's book when I received this one, but chose to make this title a priority since I would be seeing the author again in a month. When I sold my book at the Mutton and Mead Medieval Festival in Turners Falls, Mass last month, I had the pleasure of meeting J.P. in person. We were able to have a great, albeit short, conversation in which we agreed to a book exchange. Because I was slow and stupid busy, it took me about six weeks to get through. Having finished it just last night, I wanted to get the review done while thoughts and feelings were still fresh on my mind.

Format and Grammar
J.P. writes in a block format that is sometimes hard to follow. Instead of starting new paragraphs each time a new character speaks, there could sometimes be up to three different characters speaking in the same paragraph. Many times, I had to go back and read things over to be sure of who was speaking and when. Another thing that made me pause at times were the paragraphs that were little else but definitive statements. He did this. He did that. She came from here. She went there. Sometimes it was just a laundry list of what the character was doing, and that made reading certain sections a little tedious. He also tended to get caught up in describing characters to minute details, even sometimes, characters who were only used very briefly. It may be a personal preference, but I like basic descriptions of characters that leave room for personalization through imagination as I read. It matters little to me the exact height or weight of a character. Short, tall, average is really all I need to know. Several times I was taken off guard by incorrect words, such as "wonder" instead of "wander," and little things like that. However, I've had a few similar instances in my own books, so I can't really be too picky about that.

 

Setting

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I want to know more about this world than I was given. To be fair, this is a side story to J.P.'s main series entitled The Legacy of Jiraiya, but it left me feeling like I was jipped on this fantasy world he created. There are clear indications that this place is not like our world. There are lions that walk on their hind legs, orcs, dwarves, elves, even creatures that look like talking rocks. There are allusions and brief mentions of a war, but other than that, this great big fantasy world is very limited. I was disappointed that we didn't get to explore things a little more. For most of the book, we are inside an inn and its different levels that have a bar, a restaurant, and a spa. Different, certainly, but not expansive.


Plot


This is where my review may come across as harsh, but as I said, I'm going for 100% honesty in hopes of helping people grow in their craft. The plot of this book was very thin and not very engaging. The first few chapters where we are getting to know the main characters and find out about this magical doorway that leads to another world got me so excited about what was to come...only to find out that the rest of the book follows only two of the five characters we're initially introduced to as they do odd jobs to pay off this mysterious debt that is keeping them all from returning home. That's it. There is very little conflict, and when there is, it is addressed and solved rather quickly and tidily. There was no villain, no antagonist at all, really, and that was disappointing.
 

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Characters
I love these characters. J.P.'s strongest feature in this book is definitely his ability to create endearing characters. Though the book mainly focuses on two young teenage boys, Andy and Roger, we also get to meet Ed, Tom, and Jack. They are all distinctly different from one another in personality, though not always in voice. For as young as they are, they have a bit of a Dawson's Creek syndrome to them in that they speak a lot older than they are. That doesn't do much to tarnish who they are, however. I got a clear Goonies vibe from the group right from the beginning. I loved the relationship between Andy and Jack especially. There is always one kid in every group of friends who ends up the butt of the joke, even if it's not meant to be mean, and I loved seeing the "leader" of this pack come to the rescue and stand up for his friend even against his other friends.

Mister Gravoa was a fun character to meet. His pattern of speech instantly made me think of Gru from Despicable Me which, whether intended or not, made me love him all the more. As a mentor, he watches over all five boys from afar while still managing to be involved. No easy task when it comes to teenagers.

The three girls we are introduced to-Laurel, Nicole, and Marie-are all very different from one another and just as endearing as the boys in their own individual ways. I could see bits of myself in each of them, just as I'm sure boys/men would see bits of themselves in each of the boys. There was a brief scene at the end of the book between Laurel and Mister Gravoa that actually made me quite sad. It was beautifully addressed and I'm sure it was the reaction J.P. was going for.

Final Thoughts
This is a good book for pre-teen/young teens if they need a casual read. There are a few swears within, so if that is something you're worried about, be aware. I always encourage parents to read the books their children want to read first, simply because you just never know what can be hidden within the pages nestled between a pretty cover and a back-of-the-book summary.

Links
The Legacy of Jiraiya Website
Amazon Page
Facebook Page

The Cute Girl at the Gym

How many of us feel, on a normal day, that we look good? How many of us feel like we'll pass but get no high marks? How many of us think we look like we rolled out of bed at 2 a.m. with one eye sealed shut by sleepy goo and the other one wide open with the pupil dilated for no good reason all day? If you're like most women, you fall in the middle. You feel okay in what you're wearing. Your hair is fine. Your make up, if you chose to wear make up at all, doesn't look like it was done by a three-year-old so, yay! Overall win for you! What about when you go to the gym? Yeah...totally different story.

Every time I go, I look at myself in those huge stupid mirrors on the other side of the room and hear this little voice in my head that says I don't belong there. Because, you know, the gym is for skinny beautiful people who really just go because they're narcissistic and like to watch their muscles flex in those evil mirrors and make kissy faces at their own reflections. Before you tell me I'm wrong, I'll beat you to it by saying I know that is not the case. Always.

I went to the gym tonight for the first time since getting my heart monitor on three weeks ago, and boy did my body feel it. I was sweating, my round, bean shaped face was red, I was panting like Tom Hiddleston had just come in the room, I had a bandana on my head to cover my sweat-drenched hair that makes me look even more balding than I really am. I mean...messy, gross, and not feeling all too great about myself. But I was there. I kept telling myself that. I was there, and that mattered.

And then I saw her.

Here I am, this four-foot-eleven-inch tomato doubled over on a glutes machine as I try to push and extend, the wheezing coming out of my mouth reminiscent of a chain smoker on her death bed, and this petite little blonde girl walks over near my station. She's got the classic all black ensemble of skin tight yoga pants and black sports tank. Her hair (which was totally dyed, I'm sure) was curled in that way some women can do, making it look effortless and natural even though it would take me at least five hours to get it done right and then it would fall pin straight five minutes later. Her make up was done beautifully and she had ruby red lips that glittered when the unnaturally bright lights above her caught the top coat of gloss she'd applied at one point.

I hate you, was the first thought that ran through my mind, subsequently and immediately followed by, I hate myself. For once, I was able to get my thoughts out of that dark place fairly quickly and direct them to a more healthy place: back on the girl. What? It was healthier for me at the moment. I scowled at her with my inner Gremlin, thinking, Really? You have to come here looking like that when the rest of us feel like gross piles of slime? I actually stewed in my irritation for the rest of the thirty minute circuit I was on, watching every male head turn in her direction when she passed them, blissfully unaware. It wasn't until I was driving home that grace tried to edge its way into my heart.

Once upon a time, I had a friend who could not do anything menial without looking cute. I mean, cute outfit, cute hair, full on makeup. She literally could not leave her apartment if these things were not in place, and it was because she had so little confidence in herself. I was one of the lucky few to see her without all her trappings (pun fully intended) and got to see how vulnerable, uncertain, and uncomfortable she was in her own skin. When she was all done up, even to go do laundry, she was a totally different person. She was sure of herself, funny, easy-going. Remembering this friend made me wonder if this cute Barbie-esque girl at the gym was like that. My friend was, and still is, gorgeous. This girl was gorgeous. But I don't know her struggles. Maybe she does have issues with confidence, maybe she doesn't. Either way, I had no right to assume the things I did about her, and I should not have compared myself to her. I shouldn't compare myself to anyone, because no one else is me, and no one else is walking my path.

As annoyed as I was by her presence, I'm actually really glad I saw her today. Not only will she be something of an inspiration for me to keep going to the gym and working hard, but she served as a much needed reminder that what we see on the outside is not always what is going on in the inside. I think that's a reminder we could all use from time to time.

Hello, Lovely

Several weeks ago, I walked into church and saw a friend I hadn't seen in weeks. I'll call her Gabby for privacy's sake. Though there were several groups of people between us, I made like a fish swimming upstream and slowly worked my way through the sanctuary until I could get to her. As soon as I was close enough and we made eye contact, I broke into a huge smile, threw my arms around her, and said, "Hello, gorgeous!" In my embrace she gave a light, almost bitter laugh and replied, "I certainly don't feel gorgeous." As we parted, I realized she didn't have any make up on, her hair was carelessly put up, and her clothes were not as "up to standard" as what everyone has come to expect from her, simply because she is always so put together. And yet, she was beautiful.

It's rare these days that I don't greet my female friends with some variation of the way I greeted Gabby that day. "Hey, beautiful." "Hello, lovely." I don't say these words carelessly, but honestly. We live in a world that is so focused on outer beauty that we often forget that age old adage of beauty being more than skin deep. In this wonderful age where we are beginning to accept the fact that a woman doesn't have to be a size two or even a size twelve to be beautiful, we're still not quite yet there when it comes to looking beyond the flesh. Let's face it, men are visual creatures but women are just as visual. We pass someone on the street who is better dressed, taller, has better hair, and we think, "Ugh. Her life must be so perfect. I bet she's so stuck up." Who knows what men think? I don't know that I want to be privy to that information. The point is, we don't see someone like that and think, "I bet she has a generous spirit." We still, whether we mean to or not, on some level, let our eyes determine how we view others.
 

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Don't think for a second that I think I am any different. I know I make snap judgements of others based on what I saw, especially strangers. How fair is that? Without getting to know someone, I think I have them all figured out just by seeing them across the room. That outfit must have cost a fortune; clearly she has money. Look at that piercing; such an attention seeker. Look at how short that skirt is; no standards and no shame.

But what if people did that to me? Now, I'm not a huge fan of this term, but I'll be the first to admit that I have resting bitch face, meaning if I am not smiling or making an active effort to show some kind of emotion on my face, I look ticked. I'm not. Generally, it takes a great deal to get me irritated enough to the point where I actually am angry. I've also been told I look like a lost or abandoned child. So, you know, my go-to faces aren't the best representative of who I am, yet people who don't know me see me and assume I am one way or another. They hear I am on disability and look at me only to see nothing wrong on the surface, which leads to other judgements.

Guys, we have got to stop doing this to each other. And by guys, I mean all of us. We have to stop assuming we know someone just by what we see. You can never know a person's heart by looking at the name brand shoes they're wearing or how well kept they are. I have found in my own life that there are people I have made snap judgements about, thinking, "I will never have anything in common with this person," who have gone on to be some of my closest, dearest friends.

That is what beauty really is. When you see a person and you light up because you know you can trust them, that you can be honest and vulnerable with them...I don't know anything more beautiful than the glow of someone who has someone invested in them and loving them for exactly who they are.
 

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Ladies, if I see you and greet you with this compliment, people know that I mean it from the bottom of my heart. I don't care about your make up, your hair, your clothes...I care about you, and I do think you're beautiful. Love makes everyone beautiful, and there is no greater example of that than the unconditional love we receive from God. If He can look at a walking, talking mess like me and think, "That's my beautiful, precious daughter," the least I can do is try to look at others through His eyes. Who knows? My next life-long friend could be among those I have harshly misjudged because I was too distracted by what was on the outside to see what was on the inside.

That being said, I'm going to style my pink hair, put on my sparkly gray zebra print sweater, and go do some errands.