Holiday Wishes
Simple post. I wish all of you a very Merry Christmas (a happy holiday season if Christmas is not your thing). I hope you find yourselves, and your families, happy and healthy throughout the new year (anything else is gravy).
This blog has changed its location and can now be found at www.tinachaulk.com where you can learn more about my novels and read my blog.
Simple post. I wish all of you a very Merry Christmas (a happy holiday season if Christmas is not your thing). I hope you find yourselves, and your families, happy and healthy throughout the new year (anything else is gravy).
The problems with the straps on the Wii controllers (they break and since the controllers use motion-sensing technology and are moved like a tennis racket or a bowling ball during play, when they break, they fly off and often break something in the room or injure someone) is causing headaches for Nintendo but I am getting a great kick out of the headlines:
Phew. My last Christmas function is done. There were four to attend just this weekend. Well, Saturday night wasn't a Christmas function but a stagette. You know, the kind that leaves your head fuzzy the next morning and leaves pounding messages in your head. Still, I managed, with much coffee, to defuzz enough to attend the last Christmas function of the weekend. It was an open house my friends had so that was relaxed. Sam was fairly content there and I got to meet a few new people, mostly writers and talk a bit of shop.
A gingerbread house created by Barry Parsons from St. John's is up for the grand prize of a trip for four to Disneyland in the 2006 Wilton Gingerbread House Contest. It is a replica of a heritage home on Cicrular Road and is a gorgeous looking house (and very scrumptous looking as well). You can see it and vote for it here. It is called Circular Road Christmas. Just click Choose Me underneath the picture and then click on the left to make your vote count.
"I believe terrorism cannot be won over by military action. ... We must address the root causes of terrorism to end it for all time. I believe putting resources into improving the lives of poor people is a better strategy than spending it on guns."
Went to a Christmas party last night where Leanne Kean was singing. I thought she did an awesome job and really enjoyed her voice. I stopped to tell her so afterward and asked her if she has a CD out. She said she has one coming out on December 20th. Keep an eye and an ear out for this young talent (you may remember her from Canadian Idol--she sang the Take My Breath Away duet with Craig Sharpe).
Sometimes when writing, conundrums arise. Duelling dictionaries compete about the correct spelling of a certain word. Is email hypenated or not? Is a certain word used with a hypen or as one word or as two (dictionaries can be surprisingly inconsistent with this). Or maybe you're wondering are more people talking about the Sony Playstation 3 or the Nintendo Wii? Do more people care about Paris Hilton or Britney Spears? Or, as one long-running debate over drinks has raged on for some of my friends and I, is it "hell in a handbasket" or "hell in a handbag" (handbag, pheshaw, Rod, you silly man)?
I can barely keep up with these.
Oh, how I hate editing. As I always say, you have to get the clay on the table before you can make it into something recognizable but then there's that part of it--the moulding of the clay, the finishing of the product. I like getting the clay on the table. I like not having to worry how to spell something or if that cursed comma should stay or go (I have lots of books on grammar and punctuation and have studied them all but the comma still escapes me). I like not having to know what year they stopped making the original VW Rabbit or in what year the first minivan rolled off the line. I like being able to write without dealing with the details, with the knowing this part can wait until later. But then later comes.
Labels: writing
As Trudy* posted in her blog, yesterday I had the great pleasure to be part of her post Nanowrimo celebration at Starbucks. Six female writers of different backgrounds and with different lives, yet you could not shut us up. Not a momentary lapse in the conversation, not a dull moment, just lots to talk about and great conversation. We found out that there is a strange connection between writers and engineers and also that if there is a story about a divorce and a questionable "friend" in said divorce case, six writers sitting around drinking caffeinated products can come up with some pretty cool plotlines about it. I felt so comfortable talking with all of them. Everyone seemed to feel the same. so, we have decided to make it a regular thing which is something I am looking forward to. I think we are going call ourselves the Society of Strident Women (although hubby laughs at the idea of me being considered strident) and I look forward to our next meeting.
So, if you were a person who went to Costco to get my book signed by me yesterday, I apologize that I was not there, even though it had nothing to do with me. It is true that I considered cancelling so I would not have to drive from CBS to the east end of St. John's in the freezing rain. But hey, I said I'd be there and I keep my promises. Then, after a morning of conversations with Michelle from Jesperson Publishing (my publisher) trying to decide whether or not I should cancel, I get one more call from her just as I am heading out the door for the signing. Turns out Costco St. John's cancelled the signing (and all signings until after Christmas, I believe) because they are just too busy for book signings. Costco had not informed us of this and, in fact, I would not have known at all if Michelle had not called Costco to ensure everything was set up for the signing. Someone from Costco then called Michelle back and said "didn't anyone tell you?" She called me and was happy she reached me before I got on the highway.
After a few days of blogging about other things, I now turn back to me and my novel, this much is true. Tomorrow, the second of December, I will be signing books at Costco between 1 and 3. It's the first Satuday of December and Costco has been extremely busy as of late so I think there is nothing to stop it from being a very success...what? What weather? Really? 5 to 10 cm of snow? Oh, just in the morning. The snow will probably have stopped by then and it won't bother us anyway. This is not Vancouver where they're not used to it. 5 to 10 cm is nothing.