Showing posts with label Love and Not Destroy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Love and Not Destroy. Show all posts

Monday, February 4, 2013

IF YOU'RE NOT A GENIUS


Love and Not Destroy

I’m delighted to have author Sandra Carey Cody as my guest this week. I think she captured those feelings most of us have about our writing.
Is there a writer alive who doesn't dream of being Shakespeare or Austen or Faulkner or Cather? We all long to write something that people will read after we’ve been dead 100 years. We'd like to be a genius. But genius is a gift and is bestowed on only a few. What about the rest of us? Should we stop writing? Throw up our hands and quit? Does the world really need more books by mediocre writers? I say no - to both quitting and mediocrity. There’s a lot of territory between genius and mediocrity and that vast space is the arena where most of us play out our lives, hoping that our efforts will bring us closer to the Genius end of the field.
One of my favorite contemporary authors is Jane Hamilton and my favorite book by her is The Short History of a Prince. It is the story of a boy's journey to manhood and his reluctant realization that no matter how hard he works, he'll never be as good as he would like to be. The teenaged Walter McCloud wants more than anything to be a dancer, but eventually has to acknowledge that he doesn't have the talent. He lacks that magical element that would allow him to be in reality what he is in his dreams. He sees others, who don't work nearly as hard as he does, surpass him. If you've read the book, you may be shaking your head at this oversimplification of a complex novel, a story of a loving family, holding themselves together through the illness and death of a child. In short, Walter's lack of genius isn't the most important thing in the book. Neither is it the most important thing in most of our lives. Most of us have families, friends, neighbors who have needs that deflect our energy away from our writing.
Hamilton, talented though she is, must have experienced the feeling of not being as exceptional as she would like to be in order to have written The Short History of a Prince. In it, she captured the disappointment most of us feel at times of not being enough. If you feel inadequate, use that feeling. Create a character who’s striving to achieve a goal that is beyond his ability. You’ll have a very human human being – a good place to start any story.
William Faulkner said: "The writer’s only responsibility is to his art. He will be completely ruthless if he is a good one. He has a dream. It anguishes him so much he must get rid of it. He has no peace until then. Everything goes by the board: honor, pride, decency, security, happiness, all, to get the book written. If a writer has to rob his mother, he will not hesitate…." As much as I admire Faulkner, I can't live that way and don't believe that I am supposed to. I'm grateful for his passion and the legacy that it created, but I don't believe it's the only way to be a writer.
I'd love to be a genius, but have come to the conclusion that, since I don't get to pick that card, I can't worry about it. I'll do the best I can today and hope that, by so doing, tomorrow my best will be a little better.
Ernest Hemingway, arguably Faulkner's best-known contemporary, said: "We are all apprentices in a craft where no one ever becomes a master." I would add that none of us know what our legacy will be. As for me, I'll continue my apprenticeship and not let my lack of genius rob me of the joy of writing. Reading is one of life's great pleasures and writing should be too. 

LOVE AND NOT DESTROY
A baby is found in a basket on the grounds of a small-town museum during their annual Folk Festival. Twenty-two years later, a homeless man is murdered in exactly the same spot. Connection? Or coincidence? Peace Morrow, the foundling, now an adult working at the museum, is haunted by this question and thus begins a quest that explores the nature of family, of loyalty and responsibility. As she tries to reconstruct the victim's history, his story becomes entangled with her own search for family roots, a journey that leads her through the dusty boxes in the museum's basement, to the antique markets in the northern part of the state and, ultimately, to the innermost reaches of her own heart.
Amazon Kindle: http://amzn.to/wxIV81
Barnes and Noble: http://bit.ly/PRA7Kl

ABOUT SANDRA CAREY CODY
Sandra Carey Cody is the author of the Jennie Connors mystery series and the stand-alone mystery, Love and Not Destroy, She also writes non-mystery short stories. She grew up in Missouri, surrounded by a family who loved stories, whether from a book or a Sunday afternoon on the front porch. She's lived in various cities in different parts of the country, but wherever she's gone, books have been the bridge to a new community and new friends. She and her husband now live in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. To learn more, you can visit her website: http://www.sandracareycody.com or visit her blog She blogs at: http://www.birthofanovel.wordpress.com

Friday, August 3, 2012

CODY. WYLIE. IDEN. 3 Views, 3 Authors


Photo 123rf
It’s FIRST FRIDAY! Three amazing authors give their takes on one picture in 150 words or less. Their genres, voices, and visions are wonderfully different.

CODY
"It's the color of a ruby." The child's awe-filled voice broke the eerie silence following the storm. "Just like the Book of Legends says."
Murmurs rose and blended into a single, querulous hum: "That's all it is. Legend. Only part ruby. Rest … black as night. Not exactly a slipper."
An old woman stepped forward. "Might be. Fashions change."
The child reminded them, "The Book says she came on the wind."
The hum countered, "Aye … seven generations ago."
The woman said, "I've heard rumors of ominous weather down there."
The leg twitched, accentuating its unseemly length. The crowd, except for the woman and the child, stepped back. The child cried out, "She needs help."
The hum accelerated to an angry buzz: "She's not our kind. What can we do?"
"Whatever we can."
"There could be consequences."
"There's always risk."
"Not if we don't get involved."
"Unthinkable!"

At Amazon
WYLIE
In the dark shadows of the forest Mira stood out like a psychotic rainbow amongst the bland browns and greens. She had always been different; a bit wild, forever disregarding the rules, particularly when it came to fashion. Her choice of colors had never caused her harm; in fact it would often bring smiles and laughter to those around her.  She loved to smile. She loved to laugh. In the forest, she did both as she skipped and danced along the path in her favorite red and black shoes. The bright pinks, yellows and blues of her outfit swirled around her. It was not, in the end, the colors that killed her, though they did attract the fairies. The creatures didn’t harm her either, though their sudden presence startled her.  Later investigators firmly attributed her demise to the 40 foot fall down the ravine. Cause of death: six inch heels.

IDEN
I had two reactions to this picture the instant I saw it. In both, I sense the wearer of this get-up is a young girl dressed up in atrocious cast-off clothing from the seventies or eighties.
Those ridiculous heels, they’re good for a laugh. All kinds of scenes—right out of any sitcom—spring to mind.
At Amazon
Unfortunately, writing crime fiction gives you a crooked bent of mind. The other reaction? A murder scene. The girl discovers, then dons all of the blinding fuchsia clothes her mother picked up in 1978. By the time she senses the killer, it’s too late: the scene turns from humor to horror in an instant. She runs, but the heels trip her just as she attempts to escape. The picture captures the horrific irony that it was the very costume that led to her demise.

ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Sandra Carey Cody
Sandra Carey Cody's latest book, Love and Not Destroy, examines the ways in which destiny is shaped by family secrets. An infant is abandoned in a carriage shed on the grounds of a small town museum. Twenty-two years later, the body of a homeless man is discovered in exactly the same spot. The foundling, now an adult working at the museum, is haunted by the coincidence and thus begins a search for identity that explores the nature of family, of loyalty and responsibility. Sandy also writes the Jennie Connors mystery series, published by Avalon Books. Her website is: http://sandracareycody.com/

Jen Wylie
At Amazon
Jen Wylie resides in rural Ontario, Canada with her two boys, Australian shepherd and a disagreeable amount of wildlife. In a cosmic twist of fate she dislikes the snow and cold.
Before settling down to raise a family, she attained a BA from Queens University and worked in retail and sales.
Thanks to her mother she acquired a love of books at an early age and began writing in public school. She constantly has stories floating around in her head, and finds it amazing most people don’t. Jennifer writes various forms of fantasy, both novels and short stories.

Matthew Iden
I write fantasy, science fiction, horror, thrillers, crime fiction, and contemporary literary fiction with a psychological twist. A Reason to Live is the first in my debut detective series featuring Marty Singer, a retired DC homicide cop who helps the victims of past crimes while waging his own war with cancer. Marty’s story continues in Blueblood (August, 2012) and Signs (October 2012).
Book link: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0081MW9LM

Feel free to join in. Add your vision (150 words maximum) in the comments!