This issue's theme is "Playing Second Fiddle," which features couples who play "second-fiddle" in a story or a movie or a TV show. I chose Levin and Kitty from "Anna Karenina." Leo Tolstoy's magnum opus is one of the greatest novels ever written, but I feel that the secondary couple in the story, Levin and Kitty, are often overlooked.
So check it out and let me know what you think.
Click here to read it!
Sunday, January 22, 2017
Thursday, January 19, 2017
The Artist Unleased
An update: I have guest post on the blog "The Artist Unleashed" and invite you all to read it. It covers a period in 2012 when I thought I had secured a literary agent and was sadly mistaken. Though it was a painful experience, it taught me to persevere.
To read the blog post, click here! Thank you and I hope you enjoy it!
To read the blog post, click here! Thank you and I hope you enjoy it!
Friday, January 6, 2017
WIP #2
One
of the many, many lessons I have learned in my years of writing is never to put
all your hopes into one story. As great and wonderful as a novel can be, to not
have a second story waiting is naïve. Trust me, know from personal experience.
For years I placed all of my hopes into one Epic Novel that was to be my “be
all and end all” in my literary career. Needless to say that story was never
picked up. So as much faith as I have in my Great Depression novel, it would be
foolish of me not to have another WIP. After all, something had to keep me
occupied in 2016 while I fretted away on my various submissions.
Some
of you may know that I was very blessed a year and a half ago to go to Poland
with the CANDLES Museum and tour Krakow and Auschwitz- Birkenau. It really was
a life changing experience that I will never forget for as long as I live.
Though I have been interested in the Holocaust since I was twelve, dreamt of
visiting Auschwitz, and wanted to learn from Eva Mozes Kor – I must admit that
I had ulterior motives in going. I was there partly to do research for a
prospective story.
The
novel is based in Krakow and Auschwitz-Birkenau; it spans most of the war and
some of 1946. And it is told from two perspectives: a Catholic woman and a
Jewish man. Unbeknownst to them they are connected and must come to terms with
their prejudices to find a way to co-exist. It is almost finished and I hope to
speak more about it in the coming months, especially now that the movie “The
Zookeeper’s Wife” is to be released, which is based in Nazi Occupied Poland.
Until
next time.