NaNoWriMo Day 3

Write what you know or do you know too much?

So much for the saying- write what you know.

It happened to me too. So far I’ve only heard about it from a few sources and author J. Q. Rose in the podcast episode about her mystery romance Deadly Undertaking set in a funeral home.

https://emmapalova123.podbean.com/e/ author-jq-rose-pens-mystery-romance-deadly-undertaking

Since the author was part of the family funeral business, she knew everything about it. When she started writing the mystery, Rose found out she knew too much and got involved personally in the story to the point where she had to stop for a while.

Well, this morning I thought Day 3 would be a breeze since I was writing about an interview for a prestigious job at a beautiful location. Not, only do I know everything about interviewing on both sides of the table, but I also know the location.

It was like pulling teeth; I had to leave and go for a ride. Even then it didn’t get any better. I barely finished my goal and logged in 2, 095 words with a major headache.

On the other hand, I put together a good recipe for fall risotto yesterday that I will share soon.

Copyright (c) 2023 Emma Blogs, LLC. All rights reserved.

NaNoWriMo Day 2

The second day of NaNoWriMo falls on All Souls Day aka the Day of the Dead.

“We believe that we have a connection, “ said Vicar David about those who passed and the living.

The Book of the Dead with signatures will stay in the narthex of the church for the month of November.

The mass was held at @St. Pat’s in Parnell.

I logged in 1,879 words between several sessions broken up by different events.

Copyright (c) 2023. Emma Blogs, LLC.

St. Pat’s in Parnell, Grattan Township
The Book of the Dead with inscription of omega on the cover.

NaNoWriMo daily log in aka quotidien to be continued.

NaNoWriMo Day 1

A freezin g 24F morning followed a snowy Halloween. But the view of my garden in the morning was beautiful . The remaining fall colors mixed with the white of the frost on the ground and shrubs.

“The hardest thing is to start,” said author Vera West in the special episode about NaNoWriMo. “Just like going to the gym or anything else.”

My stomach fluttered with anxiety from the unknown of the 50-k word challenge even though I had been preparing for my project, but not enough.

“It’s never enough,” I say about anything.

But the tips and advice from yesterday’s podcast stayed with me, “I have to keep on moving one foot in front of the other, right? I have to keep on writing.”

I logged in 1803 words as I sighed with relief.

Copyright (c) Emma Blogs, LLC. All rights reserved 2023.

NaNoWriMo special panel advises to keep on writing

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-gv9mu-14e78fe

Are you up to the 50k-word marathon challenge that starts on Nov.1 aka NaNoWriMo?

The NaNoWriMo special panelists suggest just keep on writing without any interruptions even if you hit the proverbial wall. Make November your writing month.

“This is my writing month,” author Jean Davis said.

Davis will be participating in the 18th year of the challenge.

That sentence resonated with all the panelists because as Jane Smiley said, 

Every first draft is perfect because all the first draft has to do is exist. It’s perfect in its existence. The only way it could be imperfect would be to NOT exist.” 

Don’t be too hard on yourself. Don’t punish yourself, and have fun. Enjoy the camaraderie.

The panelists are authors- Vera West, Emma Palova, Jean Davis, John Winkelman, Andrew Smith, and Ed Bentley.

Listen in for a chance to win some free E books, and mainly to win the challenge.

Sound editing and effects by Douglas Kelly of Evolve Solutions, LLC.

Sponsored by Doc Chavent, Emma Palova, Ed Bentley, John Winkelman, and Andrew Smith.

Author Ed Bentley pens What a Way to Go! Death in Oshkosh in the 1880s

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-5swv6-14e2b21

Author Ed Bentley’s hobby as a researcher in genealogy led him to research early American artists and journalism in the 1880’s. The writing enabled him to literally visualize the incredible loss of life as if it were happening in front of Ed at that moment.

“My intention in assembling these life-ending stories is to share the fascination with, and the appreciation for, journalism in the 1880s. Such a relief it is that our own future is hidden from us.”

                                                    -Ed Bentley-

 

 

 

Listen in for a chance to win a signed copy of Ed’s book What a Way to Go! Death in the 1880s. 

Sponsored by Doc Chavent and authors Ed Bentley and Hilton Everett Moore.

UP author Hilton Everett Moore pens North of Nelson Vol. II

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-b2a2x-14d7d1e

In his second book of short stories North of Nelson Vol. II, UP author Hilton Everett Moore explores themes that most authors will not touch; Moore exposes stories of incest, lust, love, and hate all set in the rugged terrain of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

The five stories include “The Cell Tower,” “The Ditch Dog,” “Ode to a Lone Wolf,” “A Beast Called Fate,” and “Lust and Lightning.”

Author Sue Harrison has written the following review: North of Nelson should be read slowly, savoring the quirky characters, the poetry of the words, and the odd fierce stories. Hilton Everett Moore is far more than a regional writer. His words and stories place him in high literary circles indeed.

Listen in for a chance to win a signed copy of North of Nelson Vol. II.

Sponsored by Doc Chavent and authors Hilton Everett Moore and Ed Bentley.

Author Janice Afman pens memoir SariSari

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-t6q54-14cb2ec

Jan Afman spent 10 years in Taiwan and six years in the Philippines during a difficult time in her life. She managed to write about it in her memoir SariSari many years later after processing her experience.

“It was hard to pry myself out of my comfort zone,” she said. “I had to get over a culture shock.”

However, she encourages people not to avoid difficult experiences since they are opportunities to grow.

“I learned to look for good things each day,” she said. “I learned about growing from not being a happy camper to contentment.”

Listen in for a chance to win a signed copy of SariSari.

Sponsored by Doc Chavent, authors Hilton Everett Moore and Ed Bentley.

Author Janice Afman pens memoir SariSari

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-t6q54-14cb2ec

Jan Afman spent 10 years in Taiwan and six years in the Philippines during a difficult time in her life. She managed to write about it in her memoir SariSari many years later after processing her experience.

“It was hard to pry myself out of my comfort zone,” she said. “I had to get over a culture shock.”

However, she encourages people not to avoid difficult experiences since they are opportunities to grow.

“I learned to look for good things each day,” she said. “I learned about growing from not being a happy camper to contentment.”

Listen in for a chance to win a signed copy of SariSari.

Sponsored by Doc Chavent, authors Hilton Everett Moore and Ed Bentley.

Grim Paradise: The Cold Case Search for the Mackinac Island Killer

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-33ua4-14c2c4d

In his fourth true crime book Grim Paradise: The Cold Case Search for the Mackinac Island Killer author Rod Sadler offers an in-depth account of the brutal murder of Frances Lacey on Michigan’s Mackinac Island in 1960.

So, why would anyone commit a murder in this paradise on earth?

“Well, it depends on who you ask,” Sadler said during the podcast interview.

The city officials think it was somebody who lived on the island; the island folks think it was an insurance job and others think it could have been a young serial killer who moved on in his “criminal career.”

Sadler went through a 2,000-page police report and interviewed the islanders who remembered the atmosphere; however, nobody mentioned what happened with the evidence items taken off the victim’s body.

Will new DNA technology help identify the Person of Interest in the Mackinac Island cold case?

Embark on a journey with Sadler for a detailed look into the murder of Frances Lacey.

Listen in for a chance to win a signed copy of Grim Paradise: The Cold Case Search for the Mackinac Island Killer.

Sponsored by Doc Chavent, authors Hilton Everett Moore and Ed Delaney.

Author Rich Nelson pens This Tender Man – My Father’s Story

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-a7vyq-14b131a

In his memoir, This Tender Man-My Father’s Story Nelson explores the journey of an ordinary man caught up in the extraordinary circumstances of war. “My father nearly died of malaria in the jungles of WWII New Guinea” is the opening line of the book.

 

Woodrow F. Nelson served in the U.S. Army’s 1462nd Engineer Maintenance Company in the tropical Pacific during WWII, coming home damaged by war but committed to leaving the war behind and going back to work, starting a family, and serving his community. 

However, like many veterans, he never shared any of the war stories with his son. Author Rich Nelson embarked on a journey to find out about his father’s experience.

The book also delves into Muskegon’s colorful historical and cultural tapestry.

 

Listen in for a chance to win a signed copy of This Tender Man-My Father’s Story.

 

Sponsored by Doc Chavent, The Lowell Ledger, and UP author Hilton Everett Moore

 

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