July 24, 2010
Pink Magic for Pink Saturday!
It's another PINK SATURDAY at Beverly's blog, How Sweet the Sound, so I thought I'd share some pretty pink "magic" - pink fairies I spotted flitting about at the Renaissance Faire!
I wonder if they've left any magical fairy dust around?
** Pink Saturday visit: I stopped by Lisa's blog at Pale Pink and Roses who has some lovely peonies - and love the pink covered books! Pretty!
** Be sure to follow my blog tour (or see links on side) to enter the contest and check out my award-winning kid's mystery, Searching for a Starry Night - on Kindle and coming soon in print!
July 22, 2010
Searching for a Starry Night Blog Tour Starts!
Be sure to check the blog stops and comment to win some prizes! Leave an email or blog so I can contact the winners.
** See schedule below and visit today's stop at Acme Authors Link Blog! **
**CONTEST: Anyone commenting on any of the blog stops on the tour can win:
* One person who comments on any of the blog tour stops will win a free Kindle copy of Searching for a Starry Night. (You can download Kindle for PC free here.)
* One person will also win a miniaturized dollhouse collector's edition of the first chapter from the first print edition, made by miniaturist LeeAnn Borgia. And it's readable! (*Prize is mini book only - doll and props NOT included.)
** To celebrate the revised Searching for a Starry Night, one person will win a copy of the new print version as soon as it's available.
Blog Tour Schedule:
Today: Thurs, 7/22: Acme Authors Link - Real vs. Fictional Friends
Mon, 7/26: Morgan Mandel's Double M blog - Dogs and Such
Tues, 7/27: Killer Hobbies with Camille Minichino - Crafts and Writing, what comes first?
Weds, 7/28: Marian Allen's blog - Talking about Writing
Thurs, 7/29: Helen Ginger, Straight from Hel - Getting Kindleized
Fri, 7/30: J.E. Taylor's blog – Writer's Quiz and Other Stuff
Mon, 8/2: Killer Crafts & Crafty Killers - craft how to with Anastasia Pollack – Crafts: Make Easy Miniature Cloth Decorations (A miniature bed pillow!)
Tues, 8/3: L. Diane Wolfe, "Spunk on a Stick" – Making the Switch from Nonfiction to Fiction
July 21, 2010
A charming miniature cottage - and it's real!
The cottage reminds me of Mercedes's at Liberty Biberty's wonderful shabby cottage.
July 20, 2010
2010 Blog Tour for New Searching for a Starry Night, A Miniature Art Mystery
Be sure to check the blog stops and comment to win some prizes!
**CONTEST: Anyone commenting on any of the blog stops on the tour can win:
* One person who comments on any of the blog tour stops will win a free Kindle copy of Searching for a Starry Night. (You can download Kindle for PC free here.)
* One person will also win a miniaturized dollhouse collector's edition of the first chapter from the first print edition, made by miniaturist LeeAnn Borgia. And it's readable! (*Prize is mini book only - doll and props NOT included.)
** To celebrate the revised Searching for a Starry Night, one person will win a copy of the new print version when it is available.
** Be sure to have a blog or email in your post to contact you!
Blog Tour Schedule:
Thurs, 7/22: Acme Authors Link - Real vs. Fictional Friends
Mon, 7/26: Morgan Mandel's Double M blog - Dogs and Such
Tues, 7/27: Killer Hobbies with Camille Minichino - Crafts and Writing, what comes first?
Weds, 7/28: Marian Allen's blog - Talking about Writing
Thurs, 7/29: Helen Ginger, Straight from Hel - Getting Kindleized
Fri, 7/30: J.E. Taylor's blog – Writer's Quiz and Other Stuff
Mon, 8/2: Killer Crafts & Crafty Killers - craft how to with Anastasia Pollack – Crafts: Make Easy Miniature Cloth Decorations (A miniature bed pillow!)
Tues, 8/3: L. Diane Wolfe, "Spunk on a Stick" – Making the Switch from Nonfiction to Fiction
July 19, 2010
Miniatures Monday: Visit a new Miniature Doll Emporium
The Grand Astoria features 50 "suites" showcasing wedding, fantasy and "little black" dresses.
Several miniature doll makers, including Pathy Biero and IGMA Artisan Lucie Winsky, whom I featured previously, (see links), contributed their creative visions in miniature to the project.
If you enjoy miniature dolls and clothing, this is definitely worth a visit!
July 17, 2010
Need Inspiration? Woman Trains to be Oldest Female Weightlifter
July 15, 2010
Fun Quiz - Who do you write like?
and (hysterical laughter) It says...
Stephen King
I Write Like by Mémoires, Mac journal software. Analyze your writing!
** So.... I'm waiting for that $million check. haaa! Try it out for yourself; see link above!
July 14, 2010
New Links for Motherly Love Ebook
It is available on Ipad (if you've seen it let me know,) and is supposed to be up on Kobo (I can't find it.)
** For easier downloading you can find Motherly Love at Sony and B&N.com (B&N has a free reader for PC too.)
A story for less than a cup of coffee!
If you read it, please post a review on the site you purchased it from. Thanks!
About the story:
It's not what you think - it's more of a light horror story with heart.
Maria's family has an age-old tradition that she viewed as mere superstition, until her little girl fell ill. Now she'll do anything to save her daughter's life - even the one thing she fears most.
July 13, 2010
Meet Jess and read an excerpt from The Killer Valentine Ball
Jess finds out just how memorable a party can be, in today's post at the Muse It Up Publishing blog.
July 09, 2010
Killer Valentine Ball and other Scary Ebook Covers
Lin, LJ Holmes, author of the upcoming Dec. release eboook, SANTA IS A LADY (cute cover!), posted a rather creepy entry for her Cover a Day post.
The posts feature THE KILLER VALENTINE BALL and some of the other ghoulish (well not all) ebooks coming out this October from MuseItUp Publishing.
Gotta say I just love the heart pic she found...
July 02, 2010
Author Snapshot column in Mysterical-e: What about the cover?
Click cover at site, then click Author Snapshot under columns.
* Direct link: Summer 2010, Author Snapshot column - First Impressions, Designing the Book Cover
July 01, 2010
Motherly Love Featured at Examiner.com
NOTE: You may have to sign in to Smashwords to purchase.
June 30, 2010
Featured Miniaturist: Pathy Biero and her Beautiful Dolls
After she is done working at the post office for the day, miniaturist Pathy Biero goes to her home outside Paris, takes care of her family, and if she is lucky, spends a little time with her art.
Pathy's art is sometimes smaller than an inch, but it is big in charm. (Pictured: grandfather and his dog, top. Left, half-scale baby)
"I always liked to look at miniatures and my dream was to be able to make my own dolls," she says.
"I could not have a kiln (lack of place, lack of money), so I was very happy to find Flumo, which doesn't need to be fired."
Using Flumo, an air-dry casting slip, allowed Pathy to buy some porcelain dollhouse doll molds and begin making the dolls of her dreams. She makes the dollhouse scale dolls herself from start to finish: pouring the slip, cleaning, then painting, wigging, and dressing the dolls.
For Pathy, it's not quite an overnight process, but the results make it worth the wait.
(Pictured: Her latest, Sleeping Beauty, also in 1/24th, half scale.)
"It's quite long to make a doll, about two or three weeks," she says. "I try to put expression in the attitude and the look of my dolls. It's not easy, but with training, I have some good results. I like to make everything and I like to see the doll come to life under my eyes (and my hands!)"
So do we! A member of the Mini Doll List, Pathy loves finding inspiration from other doll makers - and inspiring some of her own fans.
What always caught my eye was the charm of her dolls, like this cutie, probably my favorite. (Pictured: Sarah)
Besides making dolls, Pathy has finished three roomboxes, and has plans for another roombox and finishing a large dollhouse. She also is thinking of selling her dolls.
"Making dolls is easier for me," she says. "I need less space making a doll than making a house, but I dream one day that I could have other dollhouses and a lot of free time for furnishing and decorating them!"
(Sounds like a good idea, right?)
Thanks, Pathy for sharing your fantastic dolls!
* Visit Pathy Biero's doll blog
* How to: Flumo tutorial. (The tutorial uses Liquache, which is the same as Flumo.)
* Flumo tips
June 29, 2010
New Banner for Upcoming October Release: The Killer Valentine Ball
Wanted to share the cool new banner for my story, The Killer Valentine Ball by C.A. Verstraete, and other releases coming out in October at Muse It Up Publishing.
About the ebook: A party at a day camp; a blind date on Valentine's Day. Can you say loser?, Jess thinks. But this is no ordinary party. The Killer Valentine Ball has more thrills than Jess ever expected--or will ever forget.
* Also check out the front page of the Muse It Up blog!
June 28, 2010
Miniatures Monday: Miniature Flowers
They're easy and fun to make. I'm picturing several lined up in one of my dollhouses or rooms. Maybe I need to get some real ones. I have to replace the one I had that was doing so well, then I killed it!
The third photo shows the half scale versions. These silver and gold beads made perfect sized vases.
Next, I want to work on some primroses.
* And how is your miniature garden growing? What are you planting?
June 26, 2010
The 100th Follower!
I had a contest a while back so Marlene wins a mini plant and book set! Jonesy wins some books, a journal and pencil.
*Contact me privately so I can mail your items. I'll email you also.
Thanks for responding and following! I'll do another giveaway later.
June 25, 2010
More Vampire Book News: New summer serial tied to Facebook and Twitter
I just discovered that Slate is running a YA vampire serial that began June 4. My Darklyng runs each Friday through August. (It was on chapters 7-9 as of this posting).
YA writers Laura Moser and Lauren Mechling, culture editor at the Wall Street Journal, also are running an interesting experiment: having the characters post to their own Facebook pages and Twitter as part of the story.
Natalie's Facebook page has daily updates, including photos of '70s album covers, sheet music, and old Hollywood starlets that also serve as clues. Natalie, her friends, and fictional best-selling vampire writer Fiona St. Claire also have their own Twitter accounts.
About the Book:
Natalie Pollock is a normal-enough 10th-grade girl who happens to be obsessed with a certain vampire series. From the moment she tries out to be the next cover model for one of the Dark Shadows books, her fantasy turns into a nightmare replete with solicitous NYC models, dead squirrels, a psych ward, and little orange pills.
Interesting concept as it makes online posting and promo a regular, ongoing event.
** What do you think?
Writers: Is this something you'd do for your next book?
Readers: Does this make you more interested in a book? Or is it just more online stuff to do?
June 24, 2010
New Review for Horror Ebook, Motherly Love
Carl Brookins called it "crisply written, this gem of a story would make a great Mother's Day gift..." Read the rest at Smashwords.
MOTHERLY LOVE is a (light) horror story with heart, so check it out!
* A story for less the price of a cup of coffee!
June 22, 2010
Book Review: Forget Twilight - Fevre Dream is a real Vampire Tale with Bite
I love vampire tales. I do periodically reread my two classic favorites, Bram Stoker's Dracula and Stephen King's Salem's Lot. I find those two hard to beat.
Then friends in my writer's group recommended George R.R. Martin's Fevre Dream.
Wow.
Description:
When struggling riverboat captain Abner Marsh receives an offer of partnership from a wealthy aristocrat, he suspects something’s amiss. But when he meets the hauntingly pale, steely-eyed Joshua York, he is certain. For York doesn’t care that the icy winter of 1857 has wiped out all but one of Marsh’s dilapidated fleet. Nor does he care that he won’t earn back his investment in a decade. York has his own reasons for wanting to traverse the powerful Mississippi. And they are to be none of Marsh’s concern—no matter how bizarre, arbitrary, or capricious his actions may prove.
Marsh meant to turn down York’s offer. It was too full of secrets that spelled danger. But the promise of both gold and a grand new boat that could make history crushed his resolve—coupled with the terrible force of York’s mesmerizing gaze. Not until the maiden voyage of his new sidewheeler Fevre Dream would Marsh realize he had joined a mission both more sinister, and perhaps more noble, than his most fantastic nightmare...and mankind’s most impossible dream.
Here is the spellbinding tale of a vampire’s quest to unite his race with humanity, of a garrulous riverman’s dream of immortality, and of the undying legends of the steamboat era and a majestic, ancient river.
"The night air was cool and moist. Their boots sent up echoes as they walked the dark, deserted streets York with a limber grace and Marsh with heavy authority."
My thoughts:
At the beginning, some parts seemed familiar, and I thought maybe I'd read this years earlier when it was first published (copyright 1982), which I might have, but I didn't remember the rest of the book so I doubt it. Even if I did, it would still be worth rereading.
Full of beautiful, descriptive writing, it is a true vampire tale of obsession, dedication, overcoming weaknesses, immortality, and more. It is a skillfully written tale showing the vampire as more than a monster, but someone you actually grow to like and root for.
"York looked up, and their eyes met.
"Till the rest of his days were done, Abner Marsh remembered that moment, that first look into the eyes of Joshua York. Whatever thoughts he had had, whatever plans he had made, were sucked up in the maelstrom of York's eyes."
It has its share of blood and gore as you'd expect, and some incredibly sick characters, along with several other people that stay with you. Some of the steamboat background can be slow, but the story sucks you in. It is one of those can't-put-it-down books that you actually enjoy reading. The ending was sad yet poignant and charming, and you almost hate to see the story end. I look forward to reading other books by this amazing author.
June 21, 2010
Miniatures Monday: Newspaper Printie
Here's a smaller one also; (click for full size; right click to save)
June 18, 2010
Summer Flowers
So, I thought I'd share a few of my favorites.
I really like the look of these pink and white dahlias. So striking. (These might be fun and relatively easy to try creating in miniature, too.)
I love double begonias! (see above) I have red, yellow, pink and a yellow with an orange trim. They grow with little care and are so pretty!
We actually got a few more roses this year. We don't get many, but then we don't do anything except trim the rose bush. ha!
How's your garden growing this summer? What's your green thumb pick?
June 16, 2010
Featured Miniaturist: Steampunk and Miniature Creations by Deb's Minis
A former textile artist, Deb has been working in miniature for nearly five years, making everything from dressed beds and furniture, to a variety of one-of-a-kind items.
"I’ve always loved anything in miniature so it wasn’t surprising that I found myself wanting a dollhouse," she says. "I actually thought that I only wanted one!" (We all know how that goes, right?)
"After researching dollhouses, I discovered that the ones I liked the best were the Greenleaf designs and decided that I could build my own dollhouse. By the time I finished the first one, I had already ordered three more kits and knew that I was hooked. I became a member of the Greenleaf building team and started my own miniature business within a year. I’m also the editor-in-chief of the Greenleaf Gazette and was recently inducted into the Dollhouse Hall of Fame."
Dollhouses as Art
Deb's artistic side continues to come through in her dollhouses, which she admits just might be her favorite art form.
"It would be hard to pick a favorite from my dollhouses.," she says. "I have a passionate love affair with each one when I’m building them and they all have a special place in my heart. While I love all the little things that go inside a dollhouse, I can be just as happy with building a dollhouse and leaving it unfurnished in order to better admire its architectural lines and features."
Take her "White Orchid," what she calls "a monochromatic exercise in light play using crystals and mirrors in a white-on-white environment."
In fact, she loves building dollhouses so much that she admits, "I’ve lost count of how many I’ve built." (Confession: she now has 17 dollhouses in her personal collection.)
"I find inspiration almost everywhere," she says. "My miniatures are extremely diverse and eclectic. I can go from making a decrepit ghost townhouse. to an ultra feminine French café and then to a sleek modern bachelor style without even thinking about the change.
(Pictured: French cafe')
"I’ve done everything from a fairy house encrusted with gemstones, to a Japanese Edo period house with sliding Shoji doors and even a party boat for the Grim Reaper titled “Death Takes a Holiday." (Pictured: Emerald Fairy Tale Cottage)
A Favorite
It's hard to pick one favorite, of course, but she does lean towards her "Wise Ways Emporium." The detailed shop, a witch’s supply store, is dedicated to her great-grandmother and built in the Brimble's Mercantile dollhouse kit.
Amazing Steampunk!
She also loves Victoriana, technology, and fantasy, and combining them has begun a whole new passion: "I’m also a geek, so Steampunk miniatures are a natural for me. I love everything about Steampunk. The combination of the past and future is intriguing, but the most fascinating aspect of Steampunk is creating the impossible.
"I always try to add a level of probability to my Steampunk minis so they make the viewer think, 'that might actually work!' With Steampunk, the only limit to what you can do is your imagination.
"In fact, I’ve given a name to the part of my personality that creates Steampunk. His name is Dr. Thaddeus Robertson and he’s a mad scientist.
"I don’t actually believe that my imaginary friend is real, but it’s fun to be involved in creating something so unique that it requires its own name and personality." (Pictured: Dr. Thaddeus Robertson’s Amazing Steam Powered Self-rocking Rocking Chair.)
With her interest in the new and unique, don't be surprised what's next on Deb's planning board!
"I look for a challenge in each creative venture and am always looking toward the next challenge," she says. "I don’t like to repeat the same thing twice—I’d much prefer to do something new and exciting. My inspiration comes from my Muse and I never know what she’ll want to do next!"
** For fun, read the whole story of Dr. Robertson's creations on Deb's website, and follow his exploits as he has some incredible plans for the future on his design table!" (I, for one, can't wait to see what's next!)
Thanks, Deb, for sharing your work with us!
June 14, 2010
Miniatures Monday: New Fleamarket find
June 11, 2010
Fun New Mystery Book Titles
Here're a couple new releases that sound good and have titles that should make you smile.
TOAST MORTEM (HEMLOCK FALLS)
The Inn at Hemlock Fall reopens for readers!
Bernard LeVasque has opened a multi-million dollar cooking school in Hemlock Falls-and has even stolen customers from Sarah and Meg Quilliam's Inn. But someone finds the infamous chef too bitter-and takes him off the menu for good.
Night of the Living Deed (A Haunted Guesthouse Mystery)
Welcome to the first Haunted Guest House Mystery, the getaway every reader can afford.
Newly divorced Alison Kerby wants a second chance for herself and her nine-year-old daughter. She's returned to her hometown on the Jersey Shore to transform a Victorian fixer-upper into a charming, and profitable, guest house.
One small problem: the house is haunted, and the two ghosts insist Alison must find out who killed them.