Saturday 1 November 2014

Nano

It's November and it can mean only one thing - no not Christmas decorations, not putting away the summer gear and getting out the winter (winter comes late here in Cyprus and then mostly it's just a ghost) - no November means Nanowrimo.
Thirty days to write and write and write. Permission to write rubbish, freedom to wander down any old path, no detention if you mix tenses or throw in a few cliches. It's like skinny dipping on a warm summer night in the sea of words. Bliss.
I've decided to forget everything I've written so far about my novel of a thousand names and write as if it is a whole new story.
Any suggestions or tips on how to gag, sedate, make disappear a husband and his I-need-you-along social life would be greatly appreciated.

Sunday 29 June 2014

Sunday in the Heat

What to do when the heat is high and the ants invade - spray, swim and cruise old favourites? Finished a Poke Rafferty book - The Fear Artist http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13330314-the-fear-artist Revisited music from my youth the good, the bad and the cheesy from Jefferson Airplane, Juicy Lucy, the Troggs, Spencer Davis, Tremeloes, Allman Brothers band and so, so many more. Read poems by Charles Simic - my favourite The Great Horned Owl - watched YouTube with the Charlie Daniels Band, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DNSljt0i3TI Janis Joplin, Santana. Watched Christopher Hitchens dismantle the myth of Mother Theresa https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65JxnUW7Wk4
The ants have been beaten back for a few hours, sat around in my wet swimsuit and had an eclectic afternoon of fun between walking the dogs, cooking dinner for husband arriving home tonight after 10 days away and offering the corpses of said ants and one spider to the gods for Greece to triumph tonight. 

Friday 20 June 2014

Because I can

My beautiful grandchildren whom I won't see this time  - the only downside to not travelling with the man to UK, Brussels and Paris.


 Alex wowed by the lobster for lunch on Spetses in May 2014
 Allan (Panos for the Greeks) and Daniel (holding Allan's new baby Constantine).
Ellie Belly just being beautiful.

CHECK NO MATE

Husband deposited at airport - CHECK
Drive home with Janis Joplin at full blast - CHECK
Supplies ready:
                                       

                                                         
                             
     Vices: Cigarettes -  CHECK  Chocolate - Uh oh - forgot to buy - no  CHECK
               E-cigarette for when the lungs get weary -  CHECK
                   


  Tomatoes and salad -  CHECK
                                  Fruit -  CHECK 
Food:   Peanut butter -  CHECK Marmite -  CHECK  Cheeses -  CHECK
             Bacon -  CHECK  Sausages -CHECK  Ice-cream -  CHECK  Eggs -  CHECK
             Bread -  CHECK
             Souvlaki and Gyros takeaway numbers -  CHECK


         Entertainment:
         DVDS: Seasons 1 & 2 of The Bridge (Swedish version) -  CHECK
                      Season 2 of The Killing (Danish version) -  CHECK

         Books:  The Illuminaries (that's a maybe) -  CHECK
                      Kindle with new books by Tim Hallinan -  CHECK
                      Cockroaches by Jo Nesbo -  CHECK

        Music: Janis -  CHECK Gin Wigmore -  CHECK  Dylan -  CHECK
                    Neil Young -  CHECK  Doors -  CHECK  J.J. Cale -  CHECK

    Drink:  Coffee CHECK   Wine - CHECK  Assorted softies - CHECK   Water - CHECK                  


   Pool ready for cooling off in the 30C plus days -  CHECK
       Ready to work like crazy to finish current draft -  CHECK  CHECK  CHECK

        Reading corner -  CHECK

Monday 16 June 2014

A room of my own

16 June 2014
How can you mourn the potential loss of a room? I didn’t realise I was doing just that until my room – my ‘room of my own’ – received a reprieve. It’s not even really a room of my own. It is the main thoroughfare between the kitchen and garden – but over the last couple of years it has evolved into my (and the dogs of course) space.
I’ve squeezed in the old dining room table and covered it with stars. I have a comfy chair- a birthday present two years ago. I have an arm chair and foot stool for reading, a sofa, three book cases and walls filled with family photos, pin-board nonsense, gifts from friends, artwork by my sister and paintings by unlauded artists. 






A coffee table holds my printer, magazines (mostly about food), the too many notebooks, a zipped pouch with Mexican Train (still waiting for people drunk enough or idle enough to play it with me). I have files and boxes full of ideas for stories and projects, my mother’s letters to her mother sent from New Caledonia when she was a young girl serving in the military hospital there during World war Two. I have the letters sent by me to my mother from England, Greece, Saudi Arabia and Cyprus – full of events, people, opinions and thoughts I’ve long since forgotten. I never kept a diary so these are precious reminders of my life when I was too busy raising my children to think about who I was. I have pots and pots of pens, sticky notes, as yet unblemished exercise books all ready for the future. I have too many paper clips, staples, index cards, highlighters, and everything else I can justify buying from the stationer’s, but just as some women can’t have too many shoes or hand bags, I can’t have too many blank notebooks or coloured pens. I have a sweet two-tiered cheapo Ikea bench (with wheels courtesy of the husband) which holds my thesaurus and precious battered two volumes of Webster’s Comprehensive Dictionary (Encyclopaedic Edition – replete with the blanking of certain words by Saudi censors). The double glass doors to the dining room double as my notice board to chart the progress of chapters and scenes.





I look out onto the window boxes of pink and red geraniums, if I look right I see the pool and the oasis of my garden which has flowers all year round and is enclosed with a high dense hedge and trees, to my left is the kitchen, convenient for cooking while I work, handy for the endless cups of coffee and the jars of peanut butter which I eat by the spoonful.
A month ago, my husband decided unilaterally that he wanted to do stuff to the upstairs verandahs which included building me a ‘writing room’. At first I was excited, but then a doubting Thomas worm did what worms do – it wormed its way into my heart. A room upstairs would be nice but inconvenient. When husband came home, I would still feel obliged to shut up shop and come down stairs and say howdy. If I wanted to cook, either I’d be running up and down the stairs or have to decamp for the duration. The proposed room would look out on the growing body of new houses springing like mushrooms and by day the room would be in the full glare of the brutal Cypriot sun. The dogs, who follow and stay with me everywhere, would need letting out and no longer be free to wander at will.



So what if my husband doesn't understand the sanctity of being left alone? So what if he doesn't understand that when he comes in to just sit, drink his coffee, put on opera or talk it breaks the spell and I have to stop writing, turn and face him and sit, sometimes in silence, until he decides to move? So what? I’d miss my place downstairs in the heart of the house.



Yesterday, my husband decided that maybe the renovations he planned were not such a good idea. Had he sensed my reluctance or lack of enthusiasm? I don’t know, but I do know my heart sang a little off-key tune. My room is safe. I’m staying put.

Sunday 15 June 2014

World Cup Night - Greek opening match.

June 14th 2014
I’ve just eaten the cerebellum are not the words you particularly want to hear as you pick up your knife and fork to start your own meal. But they were the words I heard last night. Next to me, an otherwise kind and caring doctor looked gleefully down at the half a lamb’s head (kefalaki to Cypriots), split on the sagittal plane and continued to eat the rest of the brain and bits with relish. More disconcerting was the pile of denuded jawbones replete with teeth littering the plates.  Two lambs’ heads together with rosemary, rigani and thyme, a slather of golden green olive oil and lemon, had been lovingly wrapped greaseproof paper and string and slow cooked in my oven – not by me, by my husband. 
Food and friends last night started with a miserable defeat by the Greek team at the hands of Colombia (3-0) and ended with a Mastika fuelled after-dinner couple of hours of singing along to all the old Cypriot songs pulled up with glee by my husband on his IPad.
The menu – As mentioned kefalakia, souvla (chunks of lamb on the spit), tumeric roasted potatoes, oyster and portobello mushrooms with Marsala and cream, asparagus with lemon and parmesan, salmon and shrimps in herb butter with spinach, tagliatelle, tomato, green pepper, cucumber and fresh coriander salad, caper leaves and olives. Lashings of wine and beer. The dessert of fresh apricots cooked with cinnamon, honey, saffron and star anise served with ‘Arabian’ pancakes (pikelets to you and me with a dash of ground cardamom) dripping with orange-water syrup and pistachios and a scoop of vanilla ice cream, and a platter of sweet melon and water melon was served with a bottle of Malvasia http://www.spectus.com.cy/index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=flypage.tpl&product_id=486&category_id=43&vmcchk=1&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=836 – one of the most ancient grape varieties and reputed to be the sexiest wine in the world, although I didn’t see any such effect last night.
All rounded off by coffee and Mastika (mastiha) and song. Neither of the dogs was over impressed by anything.

Hey ho and we have a month of the World Cup to get through.





Wednesday 11 June 2014

WD Webinar

Last night I had my second Webinar - 90 minutes presentation with Qs & As direct from the US. Last Thursday was my first webinar. Soooo exciting as I was a Webinar virgin - turned out it wasn't rocket science. It was fun - the thought of Carly doing her thing and about 100 other people sitting and listening and sharing. I liked it. So much so I've signed up for last night's session on writing women's fiction. And that was the great bonus last night - I discovered my genre - for this never ending book anyway - Women's Fiction Suspense. Simples!
Some of Carly's points about what agents are looking for in a book, helped galvanise my thinking. I am in such a muddle with the latest re-write but I think that maybe I'm getting some clarity about what I have to do. Essentially, stop cutting and pasting and trying to make thinks fit - like trying to jam a jig saw piece where it really doesn't belong - and just write. Write new, write fresh and write the way I want to write - not fit any formula.
A few weeks ago I came across an American author - Timothy Hallinan http://www.timothyhallinan.com/blog/ Reading his posts and his books started the climb out of the hole.http://www.amazon.co.uk/Timothy-Hallinan/e/B000APW06C/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_pop_1 
I had a bit of a eureka moment last week too. Reading a critique by Larry Brooks http://storyfix.com/getting-published-self-vs-traditional-great-debate  he talked about when you write in the first person POV the writer is having a conversation with the reader. I found this advice liberating. It is so easy to get 'writerly' and clever and even beautiful, but it clangs and is stilted.
So, this morning, troubled as I am with my current draft, I am also optimistic and excited - I can do this.
My thanks to Carly and Larry and as always to Rhay who always comes up with the right/wrong question - i.e. the one you don't want to hear but the one you should anyway.
http://carlywatters.com/blog/

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