Showing posts with label memories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memories. Show all posts

Monday, August 15, 2022

Look What I Found? It Was in the Package… by Delsora Lowe

As writers, we write a ton of stories that are now “stored” under our beds. Each figuratively wrapped lovingly in tissue paper and placed gently in a beautiful wooden box under our beds. A present to ourselves, when we dare look back.

Okay - in reality, they are languishing in 3-ringed binders, if they were printed. If not, they are buried on long-lost flash drives, in computer files on computers that have been retired long ago, or on floppy disks (yikes, yes many are on floppies covered in dust, buried in a package of some sort – if any of us can even remember what floppies are and how they were used.)

But for me, those stories still resonate. I think about them and wonder how I can resurrect them. Unwrap them from an antiquated lace scarf buried deep in an old trunk in the recesses of my brain. Deep down, I know that since I started seriously writing romance in the early 2000s, that I have learned so much. And I will be disappointed to read what I once thought was…drum roll…brilliant.

So, the question is, will my time be well spent if I go back, dig them out of the long-forgotten package, and try to fix those stories. The basics, the elements of the story, the setting, the characters…they are all part of me. It’s the grammar, point of view fixes, and redundancy that needs to be fixed. Is it worth it? Or will it take so much energy and time to pick the manuscript apart and resurrect it, that I will grow to hate my old manuscripts and want to bury them again in an old box or trunk or abandoned file cabinet? Or will I actually want to burn them and watch the remnants of my dreams drift skyward?

But I do love the idea of a treasure hunt. And resurrecting the excitement I experienced when writing those early manuscripts. Why do you think those nuggets are still languishing “under my bed?” Who can bear to throw away what might be a treasure to someone? My gift to the world. And certainly, a gift to myself, if only for the pleasure I felt as I wrote the story that tumbled from my brain straight to my fingers and on to the page—no matter the massive writing mistakes.

Alas, there are so many more stories waiting to get out. And time is running out. So maybe I’ll leave those first stories buried in a neat package for my children, grandchildren, and friends to discover. And…I am sure I’ll hear them singing their praises about how utterly brilliant I was.

One can only dream…

 Here’s to: 

Celebrating romance!

Reading romance on vacation!

Running to your nearest Indie Book Store and scouring  
the shelves for a good romance.

THE LOVE LEFT BEHIND
Fall weddings

Amazon
Books2Read

Get a head start on holiday Reading
Release Date: October 17, 2022, PREORDER NOW

cottages to cabins ~ keep the home fires burning ~

Delsora Lowe writes small town sweet and spicy romances and contemporary westerns from the mountains of Colorado to the shores of Maine.

Author of the Starlight Grille series, Serenity Harbor Maine novellas, and the Cowboys of Mineral Springs series, Lowe has also authored short romances for Woman’s World magazine. Her newest novella is The Love Left Behind. Look for both a Christmas novel (The Inn at Gooseneck Lane) and novella (Holiday Hitchhiker) later this fall.

Social Media Links:

Photo Credits: 
Present 
Floppy Disk  
Trunk  
Clock 
Editing

Monday, April 27, 2020

An Unexpected Gift

By Courtney Pierce


My writing is an extension of me. Little did I know the positive effect being an author would have on the relationship with my family, especially with my older sister Debbie. We hadn't been particularly close since our teenage years. Life and careers got in the way and set us on parallel tracks. We saw each other at family birthday celebrations, but those visits amounted to only once or twice a year. We each lived in different states.

So was kismet, in a way, when I wrote my first book back in 2012. I had abandoned my corporate career to move back to Portland, Oregon to help my ailing parents, and so had Debbie. Back then, there was no shortage of family health dramas--heart attacks, cancer, emotional breakdowns--so immersing myself into writing a book seemed like a supremely selfish activity. The story had been percolating in me for quite some time. When I dove into the project in earnest, something quite unexpected happened.

My older sister rented an apartment only a couple of miles from my house. Debbie is a voracious reader, sometimes reading a novel every two days to fulfill her endless ivy-league smarts. I was thrilled that she wanted to be by my side through every step of the writing process: plot, character development, proofing, and publishing. It was a perfect partnership. 

As it turned out, my selfishness became more of a giving experience than I could've imagined.

I wrote every day in anticipation of my older sister’s arrival at four-thirty in the afternoon with
her box of pink wine. Debbie would sit at my kitchen island to read each chapter draft of my first book, STITCHES. This schedule soon became a predictable drill, except on Thursdays when she arrived with her laundry basket. First, she’d fill a water glass with crackling ice and lube the cubes in wine. Then she’d slap her pack of cigarettes on the granite counter top and park herself on the chair at the kitchen island. She'd reach over the counter to switch on the downdraft fan on the stovetop. Finally, her huge purse got a deep dig for a lighter and a thin red Sharpie.

“Whatcha got for me?” she’d say and light her cigarette. “Hit me up. I’m ready.” A ribbon of smoke inevitably escaped the suction of the fan.

I’d hand her a clipped stack of twenty or thirty pages, my days’ offering of frantic gray cell activity. She’d remain silent while I pulled one of three options out of freezer for dinner—fish, chicken or turkey. But I’d keep a peripheral  eye on my sister’s expression with each flip of the page. She’d smile, laugh, go quiet, or utter some undefinable sound. I didn’t really know what all those signals meant until she'd meet my gaze. Sometimes, her eyes were full of tears.

“Where are you now?” I’d say.

“I need the next chapter, dammit,” she’d say, and squeeze her eyes . “You’re torturing me.”

“Do you like it?” I’d give her glass a few fresh splashes of wine. “Should I keep writing?”

“Like I said, I need the next chapter.”

“Wanna eat?”

“Not yet.” Debbie would tap her demanding finger on the granite. “God, I wish I could do this.”

“Do what?”

“Write.”

“Okay. I’ll have another chapter or two for you tomorrow.”

“Not what I meant.”

"I know, but you are writing. This is how it works, only it's my story, not yours."

"Suppose."

And so it went for three-hundred pages. At the end of each session, we'd divert our attention to each other. It became up close and personal. What came out of the process was a reconciling of our childhood pain, laughing at our teenage antics, confronting the loss of our Dad, mourning the loss of our husbands, and rejecting the idea that we'd become orphans when our mom passed. The bond we had created between one another during that time could never be broken. We had always loved each other, but it took us reaching upper middle-age before we knew how much. The two of us, so different and so alike. Her DNA and mine were forever bonded by sticky words.

Sister relationships are inexplicable. We accept each other’s flaws without challenge, but those little bugaboos from our childhood stick in our hair like old gum. No one else knows about them, and we keep the secrets from everyone. Even in our sixties, we remember those details like the heartbreak of first loves, an exquisite fragrance, and the taste of our favorite foods.

That first book holds so much of my relationship with my sister, not so much in content but in the process. Only she could read between the lines of its themes of immortality, charity, magical realism, and tough justice for the bad guy. And now I’m drafting my seventh book, BIG SKY TALK. She hasn’t yet read a word of it. Debbie has transitioned from the slow-drip review process to wanting to read the finished product.

Debbie wanted to be a reader, plain and simple. She never told me what to write or how to write it. She just loves a good story. But I learned a few things about her too. My sister is a steel-belted marshmallow. Beneath her rough veneer of strength sits a mushy heart. 

Now that Debbie and I, once again, live in different states, I appreciate even more the time we spent together while I wrote that first book.

Being in quarantine in Montana is a writer’s dream. I go on long walks in the woods. Social distancing here means avoiding a Grizzly sow with three cubs on the hiking trail. Instead of a mask, I sport a canister of bear spray on my waist and a Glock in my chest holster. 

Debbie and I are both early risers. Our favorite time is talk early in the morning. Before the sun clears the peaks of the Swan Mountains, I step outside to call my sister in Oregon. My heart soars when I hear her voice. She’s close, but so far away.

“Where’s the manuscript for BIG SKY TALK?” Debbie said on a recent call.

“It’s a work in progress, and it might be a while,” I said. “I’m on chapter ten.”

“Hurry up. I want to read it."

"The research into understanding a different culture is intense. "

Without missing a beat, Debbie said, "I’ll bet you’re writing that book on a computer made in China.”

I smile. My sister, the CoVid-19 conspiracy theorist. “Oh yeah, I’m sure China implanted hacking chips in my laptop so they'll be able to read my book before you do.”

"They'd better not. I get the first read. Just make sure everything you buy is labelled 'Made in the USA'." 

We have a good laugh. Then we dive into the ridiculousness of the pandemic situation. I end the call with a sigh, my grip tight on the memory of Debbie sitting in my kitchen. As always, the conversation gives me pause, because she's right about so many things. And I didn't want it to end.


In the morning quiet that follows our call, I turn to enjoy the ducks cruising and splashing on the lake. Honks of gossipy geese punch the sky on their flyover, and right behind them a bald eagle glides low and silent on his hunt for breakfast. I'm always amazed at how far eagles can fly without a single flap of their long wings, moving like a Stealth Bomber. 

Special moments need to be appreciated by never letting them go. The morning connection with my sister inspires me to keep going, challenging me to make what I wrote yesterday much better.

Photo: Micah Brooks
Courtney Pierce is a fiction writer living in Kalispell, Montana with her husband, stepdaughter, and their brainiac cat, Princeton. Courtney writes for the baby boomer audience. She spent 28 years as an executive in the entertainment industry and used her time in a theater seat to create stories that are filled with heart, humor, and mystery. She studied craft and storytelling at the Attic Institute and has completed the Hawthorne Fellows Program for writing and publishing. Active in the writing community, Courtney is a board member of the Northwest Independent Writers Association and on the Advisory Council of the Independent Publishing Resource Center. She is a member of Willamette Writers, Pacific Northwest Writers Association, and She Writes. The Executrix received the Library Journal Self-E recommendation seal.

Print and E-books are available through most major online retailers, including Amazon.com.
Check out all of Courtney's books: 

courtney-pierce.com and windtreepress.com 

New York Times best-selling author Karen Karbo says, "Courtney Pierce spins a madcap tale of family grudges, sisterly love, unexpected romance, mysterious mobsters and dog love. Reading Indigo Lake is like drinking champagne with a chaser of Mountain Dew. Pure Delight."


Coming in 2020!

When Aubrey Cenderon moves to Montana after the death of her father, the peace and quiet of Big Sky Country becomes complicated with a knock on the door from the sheriff. An injured grizzly bear is on the loose and must be eliminated before it kills again. The sheriff's insistence that she buy a gun for protection will present Aubrey with some serious soul-searching, because the grizzly-on-the-run is hunting for her too . . . for a different reason.


Tuesday, July 16, 2019

If I Could Change One Thing in My Past... by Delsora Lowe


Truthfully, I can’t imagine changing anything in my life, even the dreadful experiences of losing a job, or my sister, favorite aunt, and dad, and friends. Strange as it seems, and despite my longing to have all those people back in my life, the things, good or bad, have shaped who I am.
Plant given to me by the Maine Romance Writers in honor of my sister.
They bloom every year right around her birthday
Would I take back the temper tantrum, when I was fourteen, (mind you, old enough to know better,) when I refused to go to the school my parents wanted me too? No. Sure, I regret being a PIA to my parents. And, thankfully, I did not win that battle. I just celebrated my 50th high school reunion.
Looking back, the best years of my life.

My best friends (male and female) to this day are from that school, including those who I lost along the way. They were sorely missed, but their influence in my life was ever present. We had an incredible reunion, not only in recalling old memories, but many discussions on how growing up in the 60s and attending a Quaker school influenced every one of our lives. And all the more meaningful, for me, was how much more I appreciated the experience and lessons taught from the long-ago temper tantrum.

YAY for long-time, great friends
Yes, I still talk to my deceased family and friends, and wish they could answer me back, offer me their wisdom, delight me with their humor, and accompany me on new adventures. In truth, they are still there, in my heart and my mind.

But the fact is, if I changed any one thing, my life would be different and I would have missed out on something. The old adage, when one door closes, another opens. Each life experience led me to the next.

The one thing I do wish I could change are all the wasted moments.


The moments I was too tired to write while working full-time, and keep up on all the constant changes in social media and marketing. The missed communication with friends who are no longer here. Those are my regrets. The moments where it was easier to veg on the couch in front of a Hallmark movie. Even though the movies have inspired my writing.
Anyone remember high school Christmas dances?
This love story is about the chaperones.
And right now, on Hallmark, it is Christmas in July, 24 hours a day. Which is perfect timing for revising my holiday romance, which has all things Thanksgiving and Christmas at a Vermont inn, including a refurbished sleigh.
My hero refurbishes an old sleigh as a surprise for the heroine.
Okay, total disclosure, I do watch those movies over and over and over. But I also take notes, study how they construct the plot, the character arcs, details on setting, and what tropes they use. I AM working and learning. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.

Having said all that, the wasted time of not keeping up on constant change, is now resulting in my taking more and more time out of my writing to catch up. And, hate to admit, but the “old” brain takes a lot longer to process the constant barrage of new information and updated techniques.

Still, I am who I am, because of the progression of my life experiences.

So moving forward, I’ll try to waste less time, take more opportunities to learn and experience, and live the rest of my life to the fullest (okay, I’ll still watch Hallmark and devour romances, because in my profession neither are a waste of time 😊 and they make me SUPER HAPPY.)



  ~ cottages to cabins ~ keep the home fires burning ~

Delsora Lowe writes small town sweet romances and contemporary westerns from the mountains of Colorado to the shores of Maine. Author of the Starlight Grille series, Serenity Harbor Maine novellas, and the Cowboys of Mineral Springs series, Lowe has also authored short romances for Woman’s World magazine.

A first meet, royalty and the nanny romance between a self-exiled prince with a royal chip on his shoulders and the local rancher's daughter who rails against any man who tries to tell her what to do. When she tries to tell the prince how to raise his son, tempers flare and sparks fly.
Amazon E-book link: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07PZD3FNC/ref=sr_1_2? rid=32PO3EI3KDLQI&keywords=delsora+lowe&qid=1553611414&s=digital-text&sprefix=dels%2Cdigital-text%2C196&sr=1-2-catcorr   
Amazon Print Book Link: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1091276862?ref_=pe_3052080_397514860 
Books2Read link, includes Barnes and Noble and iBooks: books2read.com/u/b6xzr6

Social Media Links:


Clip Art Links

Classmates – crayons - https://www.dreamstime.com/stock-photos-group-photo-image740763

Christmas Sleigh - http://clipart-library.com/christmas-sleigh-pictures.html

Snarky happy face - http://cliparting.com/free-smiley-face-clip-art-1465/
Flying time – man and clock - https://www.iclipart.com/search.php?keys=cliches&tl=clipart

Monday, February 27, 2017

Recycle Day

RECYCLE DAY
By Courtney Pierce

In the summer of 2011, my ex-husband and I committed an act of treason. We decided to deal with our stuff in the attic. Not a feat for the faint-hearted in the steamy heat of Houston.
For twenty-five years we moved around the country to grab the swinging ring of a promotionmostly minebut without children, uprooting was an easy decision. Always moving forward. In each case, we had only a weekend to buy a house in an unfamiliar state. The corporate movers would swoop in to pack up everything in too much paper and send us on our way: San Francisco to Portland to Minneapolis to Houston. The boxes in the attic went with us—all of them—even my vocal scores from my college days in the seventies, tangible dreams of becoming an opera singer. We moved the beta hifi machine that didn’t work, along with the six boxes of eighties music videos and recordings of Dallas and Falcon Crest. All unplayable.
But the last move, back to Portland, would whisk us away from the corporate grind. With no deadline, we took the time to sort through the aging relics of two aging relics. Our modern-style home in Portland had no basement or attic. Treasures morphed to junk when there was no place to put them.
The banter sessions during the shedding process were hilarious and pricelessand uncomfortable. Tough love was tough. These markers of time had shaped who we were as individuals, and as a couple. When I opened the boxes in the corner of the atticthe music of another lifemy heart sank. The brittle pages had been chewed beyond recognition. A tiny dead mouse, full of melody, had already made this gargantuan decision for me without my permission. A portend of things to come, but I didn't know it.
I lugged the boxes outside to the curb for the scavengers. Hourly, I padded to the front window to check on their welfare. The music sat untouched, their thirsty pages drinking in the humidity that gave no life. The dead scores were alive only to me.  
On recycle day, the rumble of the truck sounded like an approaching storm. I dashed outside to witness the aspirations of a younger woman grind away in the hungry teeth of the metal cruncher. In slow motion, the recycle man launched the boxes, one after another. When the last one missed the mark and hit the rim, a cacophony of musical notes floated to the pavement in an ugly symphonyMozart mixed with Stravinsky; Bach melted into Brahms under a final aria of Bizet. Carmen had shattered her knees as she crumpled in a heap.
Unthinkable!
I didn’t know what to grab first. I scooped up as much as I could hold in my arms. My wild eyes met the recycle man’s in search of empathy, an apology, anything to acknowledge the disrespect shown to my failed dreams. Instead, he said, “Thanks, ma’am. I shoulda aimed higher.”
As I turned back to the house, alone and dejected, I spotted one soiled page in the gutter. The truck had moved on, its whirling blades out of reach. I stared at the opening of “Laudate Dominum” from Mozart’s Solemn Vespers; my debut solo back in 1979. The penciled notations for sounding like an angel had faded but were still visible. How nervous I’d been in front of those hundreds of people. But when the downbeat had started, I'd gone to another place. That same year I had married as a twenty-year-old bride. We grew up together, grew young together, grew apart together. A wipe of the smudged mud from the paper straightened my shoulders. I took a deep breath. The melody kept time with my steps back inside the house.
A magnetic pull floated me upstairs to the special drawer in my grandfather's bureau. I tucked the page beneath my lingerie. A romantic memory was added to its significance that day; the day I almost let go of the music. It would become a small reminder that I had, indeed, aimed higher. Now, at the age of fifty-seven, a new man in my life appreciates that music, my dreams, and me. For the rest of my life. We’re getting married in June, and I can't wait for life to start anew.

Courtney Pierce is a fiction writer living in Milwaukie, Oregon, with her bossy cat. She writes for baby boomers. By day, Courtney is an executive in the entertainment industry and uses her time in a theater seat to create stories that are filled with heart, humor and mystery. She has studied craft and storytelling at the Attic Institute and has completed the Hawthorne Fellows Program for writing and publishing. Active in the writing community, she is a board member of the Northwest Independent Writers Association and on the Advisory Council of the Independent Publishing Resource Center. She is a member of Willamette Writers, Pacific Northwest Writers Association, She Writes, and Sisters in Crime. The Executrix received the Library Journal Self-E recommendation seal. 

Check out all of Courtney's books at:
courtney-pierce.com and windtreepress.com. Both print and E-books are available through most major online retailers, including Amazon.com
 
The Dushane Sisters are back in Indigo LakeMore laughs, more tears...and more
trouble. Protecting Mom's reputation might get the sisters killed―or give one of them the story she's been dying to live.

New York Times best-selling author Karen Karbo says, "Courtney Pierce spins a madcap tale of family grudges, sisterly love, unexpected romance, mysterious mobsters and dog love. Reading Indigo Lake is like drinking champagne with a chaser of Mountain Dew. Pure Delight."

Colorful characters come alive in Courtney's trilogy about the Dushane sisters. Beginning with The Executrixthree middle-age sisters find a manuscript for a murder mystery in their mother's safe after her death. Mom’s book gives them a whole new view of their mother and their future. Is it fiction . . . or truth? 

Get out the popcorn as the Dushane Sisters Trilogy comes to a scrumptious conclusion with Indigo Legacy. Due out in early 2017.

Monday, December 19, 2016

The Epic Water Slide That's 2016

by Michelle Monkou

I'm calling 2016 the epic water slide because it was a winding, tumultuous at times, funny, sad, hopeful ride and we still have a few days left for more unexpected gifts from this year.

I started it in January with a wonderful author retreat in Destin. We rented beach houses, ate wonderful food, had a workshop, brainstormed about current and future projects, shopped at nearby stores, and chatted about life and the business of writing.



I did visit Korea where my daughter attended Yonsei University for a year. She had a ball and so did I. Definitely a place I would visit again. Food is fantastic.



Despite a busy year, I did have two book releases. Under the Harlequin Kimani banner  - One To Win  - is part of my Meadows family series. I really enjoyed this story set in the Hamptons. Very emotional and romantic (Available at Amazon and other retail sites)

To Charm A Billionaire is the beginning of my Men in Monaco series. I do love writing tortured heroes who are putting things right in their life to move onward and upward, stronger and better for the journey with a strong woman at their side. (Available at Amazon and other retail sites)


And when I was feeling quite overwhelmed with finishing another project and dealing with the passing of my mother, I received an invitation from a dear friend to attend a charity event with the Washington Capitals hockey team. I had a blast and met most of the team. It was the perfect pick me up for the long haul to finish my project.  























So here's to you, 2016, you've certainly made it memorable. What wonderful memories do you have to share about 2016?

All the best,


Michelle
http://michellemonkou.com

Monday, December 12, 2011

SANTA CLAUS IS REAL

This is one of my favorite Christmas Memories, any names have been changed to protect me if one of my brothers should read this. :)

It is actually a bittersweet memory but one I treasure just the same.

It was the Christmas after my mom died, Dad and all of us older kids had done our best to make it a real special Christmas.

Some of my brothers were still little and all I had heard for weeks was Santa, Santa, Santa.
Christmas Eve came and I was getting ready to go to a party at my best friend's house. Suddenly the doorbell rang and I heard "Ho-ho-ho is Charlie here?" I hurried downstairs to see my brothers' reaction.

Santa stood in the doorway and one brother was talking to him. But it was the littlest one the rest of us watched. He came running down the hall, stop dead in his tracks, his eyes grew wide and he whisper SANTA. He ran over and hugged Santa, who sounded suspiciously like one of my older brother's friends. Charlie whispered to Santa all he wanted for Christmas and when he was done, Santa whispered something to him, wished us all a Merry Christmas and was gone.

I went to my Christmas party and my brother went to bed that night without an argument.
We are all much older now, and while I have no children, all my brothers do. When I see the look of wonderment on a child's face when they see Santa, I always think of that Christmas. When a young man gave a child a true gift and reminded the rest of us that Santa really is alive and well.

I want to wish you all a Happy Holiday, no matter which one it may be. I hope you all enjoy time with those who are so important to you as you make your own holiday memories.