Showing posts with label #reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #reading. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 April 2017

Youtube Book Review by Laura 'A Carpet of Purple Flowers'

Book Review
I was sent this book from the lovely Author to read and do an honest review on.. can I just say how LOVELY Tracey-Anne is! I have been talking with her on Twitter and she's been sweet and friendly!
This book was sooooo GOOD! Mystical..magical..spiritual.. romantic ... liked the way magic and the real world mixed together. the characters were great esp. Bea the main girl. Lots of Twists and turns and emotional. This is book 1 in the series and I am soooo excited to read book 2! The ending was a real twist which I loved! This book is really great :) (Source)
Where Laura can be found ~ 
MinxLaura123's Wacky World - Youtube Channel ~ HERE
Twitter ~ HERE

I was blown away by Laura's kind review posting. Such kind words. Thank you so much, it really lifted my writing spirit. I've never received a youtube review, absolutely wonderful. 😍 
Love and light,
Trace
xoxo

Thursday, 20 October 2016

Awake in Purple Dreams - Book Two (A Carpet of Purple Flowers) - Prologue excerpts from the first draft

Storybook Inspirational Visual designed using Polyvore Digital Collage

Prologue ~ Book two introductory section
(First Draft)

Karian stood allowing the bitter wind to bite into his skin. His eyes watered from the chilling harshness wailing against his body, now turned partially numb. The vacant space in which he stood, barren and cold, had remained uninhabitable since the ancients returned from Earth. It was known as Nede then, the garden of splendour, where their world's pole joined to Earth’s Eden via a portal known as the axis mundi, the navel of both realms. Within the ice-capped mountains the stone circle that he used to hear stories about when growing up still existed, but its power long gone. The Sindria elementals had closed the portal path of Nede to earth. Once a land of beauty until destroyed by violent storms, caused by the sudden Sindria withdrawal which had a devastating ripple effect on earth. Floods removed much of the evidence of the otherworldly beings ever having lived amongst humans. It was as if they never were and that same sentiment stirred within Karian’s soul. It’s what brought him here, a feeling of something that never was. Standing at the edge of time, a place between worlds, attached only by memory. Everything white, desolate, and hundreds of feet below, a snowy blanket stretched out for miles. One step and his torment would end. He felt a strange comfort in the thought, but he didn’t come here to die. He came to cold-burn her soul from his own and would continue to stand until the frost fully penetrated the warm flesh covering his heart. He waited, begging for the pain to bleed into ice where he could crack it open and remove the pieces of her that remained - a sting he welcomed to be rid of her once and for all.
Nede
*** Below, Spoiler Alert - Book One***

Chance had bathed for hours soaking in the Heaven Stone's temple floral waters trying to remove the earth stench, as much for his own sanity as for others, but removing the grime of earth didn’t remove the pull it had over his heart. He felt tainted by more than Bea’s world. Seeing her in Karian’s arms had left a stain on his soul that he couldn’t reach. He would have to work harder to overcome the haunting image of them together and eradicate the hurt of her teary eyes meeting his before he faded into the portal flames.
As he walked through the wide corridors of the Seelie Court to the Queens Hall, heads politely turned in a desperate attempt to avoid any further intake of a place they hated. Humans wouldn’t notice the odour, but the Sidhe only knew the sweet smell of home and earth carried the pungent aroma of their shameful past. Chance did not miss the hierarchy snobbery of Court life and didn’t want to stay longer than needed. Beithir normally took care of such matters, but due to his own communications with the queen while on earth, she requested an update on his mission’s outcome, personally. Their conversations on earth had been easy, brief, with no eye contact involved. The energy links were made mentally, and with only a few spots on earth that had enough energy to tap into for such conversations, he was thankful. It had been an excuse he often used to avoid further talk of Bea and the queen’s Alithia, but today there was no such escape. He wondered whether she would see failing in his eyes. Pushing the thought from his mind, Chance nodded at the two guards outside the throne room and waited for his arrival to be announced.
“Will you inform the queen of all your endeavours?” Saras's quipped.                                   “Including your own conduct at the glade?” Chance didn't mean to snap, losing his reserved calm, but he wasn’t in the mood for snide threats and had not forgotten the Heaven Stone warriors that fell under Saras’s blade at Coldfall Woods.
“We’re at war. " Saras shrugged, manoeuvring past a guard, now closer to Chance. "Lord Karian is an enemy of our Court, of our race, and if rumours are true…” He trailed off with a smug glint in his eyes. Chance’s stomach knotted, he had heard the slander but refused to give Saras the pleasure of knowing it had crushed him. He remembered everything, especially Karian’s hands on Bea in the glade, but refused to believe it was anything more than a display of misplaced love. The Court chatter of a human, Bea, carrying Karian’s child made him feel physically sick. He was about to retaliate when the doors flew open. He had seconds to re-compose, no doubt Saras’s intention.
Seelie Court Grounds
Note: The axis mundi (also cosmic axis, world axis, world pillar, centre of the world, world tree), in certain beliefs and philosophies, is the world centre, or the connection between Heaven and Earth. More HERE. 
You are my heaven... (in Calageata)
Love and light,
Trace
xoxo

Tuesday, 14 June 2016

Fantastic News...

WOOHOO! 
'A Carpet of Purple Flowers - Book One' reached the 
Top 100 Amazon Bestseller Paid Kindle Ranking in 3 Sub-Genres.
Thank you so much. Chuffed to bits.
#12 in Books - Fiction - Religious and Inspirational - Romance
#48 in Kindle Store - Books - Science Fiction and Fantasy - Fantasy - Fairy Tales
#51 in Kindle Store - Books - Literature and Fiction - Mythology and Folk Tales

Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #14,247 Paid in Kindle Store U.K

Love and light,
Trace
xoxo

Tuesday, 10 May 2016

Writing Style...

A kind reviewer, via Goodreads, mentioned that she liked my 'writing style' and this prompted me to blog a post concerning 'The Voice' of an author. Further down, I've provided links to websites with more information. Enjoy. :o) 
A writer's style is what sets his or her writing apart and makes it unique. Style is the way writing is dressed up (or down) to fit the specific context, purpose, or audience. Word choice, sentence fluency, and the writer's voice — all contribute to the style of a piece of writing.
In fiction writing, the style must represent the author's personal expression of these events that comprise the plot; setting the mood, and leading the reader to a subjective, non-literal, emotional understanding of the subject.

How a writer chooses words and structures sentences to achieve a certain effect is also an element of style. When Thomas Paine wrote “These are the times that try men’s souls,” he arranged his words to convey a sense of urgency and desperation. Had he written “These are bad times,” it’s likely he wouldn’t have made such an impact!
Style is usually considered to be the province of literary writers. Novelists such as Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner and poets such as Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman are well known for their distinctive literary styles.
Elements of style
Many elements of writing contribute to an author’s style, but three of the most important are word choice, sentence fluency, and voice.
WORD CHOICE
Good writers are concise and precise, weeding out unnecessary words and choosing the exact word to convey meaning. Precise words — active verbs, concrete nouns, specific adjectives — help the reader visualize the sentence. Good writers use adjectives sparingly and adverbs rarely, letting their nouns and verbs do the work.
Good writers also choose words that contribute to the flow of a sentence. Polysyllabic words, alliteration, and consonance can be used to create sentences that roll off the tongue. Onomatopoeia and short, staccato words can be used to break up the rhythm of a sentence.
SENTENCE FLUENCY
Sentence fluency is the flow and rhythm of phrases and sentences. Good writers use a variety of sentences with different lengths and rhythms to achieve different effects. They use parallel structures within sentences and paragraphs to reflect parallel ideas, but also know how to avoid monotony by varying their sentence structures.
Good writers also arrange their ideas within a sentence for greatest effect. They avoid loose sentences, deleting extraneous words and rearranging their ideas for effect. Many students initially write with a looser oral style, adding words on to the end of a sentence in the order they come to mind. This rambling style is often described as a “word dump” where everything in a student’s mind is dumped onto the paper in no particular order. There is nothing wrong with a word dump as a starting point: the advantage of writing over speaking is that writers can return to their words, rethink them, and revise them for effect. Tighter, more readable style results when writers choose their words carefully, delete redundancies, make vague words more specific, and use subordinate clauses and phrases to rearrange their ideas for the greatest effect.
VOICE
Because voice is difficult to measure reliably, it is often left out of scoring formulas for writing tests. Yet voice is an essential element of style that reveals the writer’s personality. A writer’s voice can be impersonal or chatty, authoritative or reflective, objective or passionate, serious or funny.

Source  HERE
Tone vs. Voice
Anything you write should still have your voice: something that makes your writing sound uniquely like you. A personal conversation with a friend differs from a speech given to a large group of strangers. Just as you speak to different people in different ways yet remain yourself, so the tone of your writing can vary with the situation while the voice -- the essential, individual thoughts and expression -- is still your own.
Links:
1. A Simple Exercise to Find Your Writing Style ~ HERE
2. What’s Your Creative Writing Style? Tips for Developing Your Voice ~ HERE
It can take years for a writer to develop a stylistic voice. Some writers have a natural voice. Others work at crafting a unique voice with a particular tone or attitude. And plenty of writers don’t think about voice at all. But voice is a key element of writing since it represents you as a writer and can help readers connect with your work. For example, some readers will be turned off by a sarcastic tone whereas others may be drawn to it.

Creative Writing ~ HERE

I don't think about 'voice' when writing, but I am aware of tone. In general, I feel reality, day-to-day tasks require a different form (tone) of self and I usually need to get into that 'writing-mode' before I put any words down. If I didn't do this the 'tone' would be different. Does that make sense?
I block out the world and create a mental sphere (bubble) where I draw in and keep a flow of inspiration/creativity around me. Initially, I do this with images and music (headphones on). Depending on the day, it can take minutes or hours to find that balance, but once found the word count moves up. Yay! :o)
What works for you?
Are you aware of 'Voice' or 'Tone'?
 In My Bubble by Love-and-Blades

Love and light,
Trace
xoxo

Friday, 29 April 2016

Ian Irvine on writing

Had to share a wonderful couple of websites on writing with you all.
 
“A writer’s job is to give his readers pleasure …
through stress, strain and tension.” ~ Sol Stein
The essentials of successful storytelling – for popular fiction, are external conflict, inner conflict, compelling characters and sustained suspense. 

According to Maass, every hero should have “a torturous need, a consuming fear, an aching regret, a visible dream, a passionate longing, an inescapable ambition, an exquisite lust, an inner lack, a fatal weakness, an unavoidable obligation, an irresistible plan, a noble ideal, an undying hope, or whatever it is that drives him beyond the boundaries that confine us, and brings about fulfilling change.”

Relating to the characters is what makes a story real, but how does this work? Relating means making an emotional connection, and the emotions we’re feeling when we read a story are the emotions of the characters (enhanced by our own lives and experiences). What they feel, we feel. The better the story, the more we lose ourselves in the lives of the characters and the more we become them, through identification.
The Basics of Story Craft
In its purest form, a story consists of just three elements: conflict, action, and resolution (Cleaver). Someone is faced with a problem (conflict) that he must struggle to overcome (action), and he either wins or loses (resolution).

Conflict brings stories to life, though it isn’t important for what it is, but for what it does. What does it do? The answer to this question lies at the very heart of storytelling. Conflict forces characters to act in ways that reveal who they are – and nothing tells us more about characters than how they deal with their troubles.

When conflict exposes who a character really is, the reader is drawn in through identification. The more difficult the character’s choice, the more his true nature will be revealed. In great stories – Romeo and Juliet; Hamlet; Scarlett O’Hara; Frodo; Harry Potter – the heroes are forced to go all the way. The more pressure you put on your character, the more you make him reveal his true, inner self and the more powerfully your readers will identify with him.

To be forced to change, to act and reveal their innermost selves, characters need to be frustrated, desperate and at the end of their rope. The worse you make it for your characters the better it is for the reader. When the characters give all they’ve got, readers experience it deeply and powerfully.
Conflict is often misunderstood in fiction. A great story can’t be made from everyday conflict (bickering, abuse, arguments, fights etc). A great story requires dramatic conflict, that is, conflict related to the hero’s story goal – either furthering it or blocking it. A dramatic want and a dramatic obstacle are needed to create dramatic conflict.
A dramatic want arises when the character is desperate to make things change. She can’t stand this aspect of her life any longer, and has to act. If she can live with things the way they are, if she can turn away from what she wants and be no worse off, it’s a false want and will only create a false conflict.
A dramatic obstacle is one that is as determined to block or deny the want as the want is driven to deny the obstacle (Frodo is determined to take the ring to Mount Doom, Sauron is determined to stop him). If the character can ignore the obstacle and suffer no harm, it’s a false obstacle and there is no conflict, no drama, and no story.
General Ways to Create Conflict (adapted and expanded from Lukeman, The Plot Thickens).
Create inherently conflicting characters. Your characters should be sufficiently different so that, even if they’re friends or lovers, they will constantly strike sparks off each other (for instance, a deeply religious person and a gleefully atheistic sinner, a communist and a capitalist, a refined lady, and a boorish slob). When you put such characters together it creates reader anticipation about the coming conflict and its consequences. But make sure the conflict is dramatic conflict.
You can create conflicting characters in an infinite number of ways, via:
  1. Opposing character traits – eg, aggressive, argumentative, a meditator, a conflict avoider;
  2. Race or nationality (for instance, characters from countries or regions which traditionally hate one another);
  3. Political or religious or moral or ethical views;
  4. Money, social status, upbringing, education, etc
Work out the conflict potential for each of your characters (you could rate it on a scale 1-10), then tailor it to create the maximum potential for conflict with the other key characters.

Where two characters have a generally harmonious relationship, find ways to wedge them apart – for instance by giving them different goals, agendas or attitudes. You can heighten conflict in any scene by giving the people in the scene opposing goals. Raise the stakes, make the need for the goal more desperate, and the scene will come alive.
Find more HERE
A character is in inner conflict (i.e. torn in two directions at once) when he has two goals, needs, wants or desires that are mutually exclusive. He must choose between equally desirable (or undesirable) courses of action, each supported by its own inner voice (Frey, How to Write Damn Good Fiction, and Iglesias, Writing for Emotional Impact). If he chooses one, he can’t have the other (Maass, Writing the Breakout Novel Workbook). The conflicting forces don’t have to be world-shattering in themselves, but they do have to really matter to your hero.
Bring your readers to a state of total absorption by showing the storm raging inside the hero: the doubts, misgivings, second thoughts, apprehension, fear, guilt pangs, remorse, indecision, etc. Powerful conflict comes when the opposing emotions or courses of action are equally strong.

The reader now suffers the hero’s inner storm and takes sides in the painful decisions he is forced to make. It is this participation in the decision-making process, when the reader identifies with the hero’s conflicts and wants him to make one decision over another, that transports the reader – and makes the story memorable. The inner conflict creates powerful suspense because the stakes are high yet readers don’t know:
  1. What the hero will do in the crisis;
  2. Whether it will be a good choice or a disastrous one;
  3. Either way, what the consequences will be, for him and for others.
To make the story even stronger and more compelling, give your hero multiple inner conflicts, then weave them together with the inner and external conflicts of the other key characters.
Common Behaviours Exhibited by People Suffering Inner Conflict

People suffering strong inner conflicts may (calmdownmind.com):
  1. Feel physical discomfort, stress or agitation, but suppress or deny it;
  2. Do what they ought to do rather than what they really want or need;
  3. Struggle to make decisions, and doubt the decisions they have made;
  4. Be uncertain about what they want from life;
  5. Be easily influenced by others;
  6. Feel guilt or shame about past behaviour or natural drives or urges;
  7. Attract or be attracted to dysfunctional relationships that are rife with conflict;
  8. Be unstable or volatile, especially facing some challenge;
  9. Constantly seek support from others due to a lack of self-conviction;
  10. Suffer sudden mood or personality changes;
  11. Seek distraction via entertainment, alcohol, drugs, sex or gambling, etc.
More HERE
How to Write Love Scenes by Carolyn Campbell
A love scene can provide a satisfying ending or an enduring, effective hook that you can thread throughout the plot of a mainstream novel. Such a scene can serve as an action scene, a sequel following a scene, or it can build tension and suspense leading up to another scene. The relationship between the two characters in a love scene can add interest to the story, move the plot forward, or complicate and add tension to the story.
1. Create tension by rendering the lovers as opposing forces
2. Get involved in your love scenes
3. Keep the lovers in character
4. Raise sexual tension through conflict
5. Reveal sexual attraction through contrast
5. Build suspense, anticipation, and intensity
6. Heighten the characters' five senses
7. Reveal relationship status and character changes
8. Tantalize with temporary togetherness
9. Turn up the heat (and the speed) with touch
10. Make love a difficult choice to heighten the emotions
11. Captivate with close calls
12. Kiss your story good-bye
Another great section HERE
Polishing Your Prose: Tips on Grammar, Article & Story Structure, and Self-Editing
Writing Speculative Fiction: Fantasy, Science Fiction & Horror HERE
Fiction Writing Tips: Characters, Viewpoint, & Names HERE
Romanticism (also the Romantic era or the Romantic period) 
was an artistic, literary, and intellectual movement.
William Blake (28 November 1757 – 12 August 1827) was an English poet, painter, and printmaker. Largely unrecognised during his lifetime, Blake is now considered a seminal figure in the history of the poetry and visual arts of the Romantic Age. His prophetic poetry has been said to form "what is in proportion to its merits the least read body of poetry in the English language". His visual artistry led one contemporary art critic to proclaim him "far and away the greatest artist Britain has ever produced."

 
William Sharp (12 September 1855 – 12 December 1905) was a Scottish writer, of poetry and literary biography in particular, who from 1893 wrote also as Fiona Macleod, a pseudonym kept almost secret during his lifetime. He was also an editor of the poetry of Ossian, Walter Scott, Matthew Arnold, Algernon Charles Swinburne and Eugene Lee-Hamilton.
Foam of the Past is the ‘selected writings’ of Sharp’s channelled pseudonym, who became a darling of Victorian readers and one earnestly courted by the fin-de-siècle ‘Celtic Twilight’ movement. This collection, includes provocative dark tales, early church musings, mystical ecritures, reveries of nature, political polemics, and various delightful vignettes. A gleaming new jewel for Scottish literature and Gaelic culture.

love and light,
Trace
xoxo

Monday, 22 February 2016

Setting a writing goal for book two ~ 2016

Awake in Purple Dreams

(Image created via Polyvore)

When we two parted
In silence and tears,
Half broken-hearted,
To sever for years,
Pale grew thy cheek and cold,
Colder thy kiss;
Truly that hour foretold
Sorrow to this!

The dew of the morning
Sunk chill on my brow;
It felt like the warning
of what I feel now.
Thy vows are all broken,
And light is thy fame:
I hear thy name spoken
And share in its shame.

They name thee before me,
A knell to thine ear;
A shudder comes o’er me-
Why wert thou so dear?
They know not I knew thee
Who knew thee too well:
Long, long shall I rue thee
Too deeply to tell.

In secret we met:
In silence, I grieve
That thy heart could forget,
Thy spirit deceive.
If I should meet thee
After long years,
How should I greet thee?
With silence and tears.

(Lord Byron)

Sitting here writing this blog post as I print off the first draft (not fully complete, yet) of my second book. I've struggled with getting this one typed up as life has been mentally and physically demanding in many ways since last September, but I must set my goal for completion. Get tough on myself. :o) 

The goal is to have the manuscript proofed, etc, ready for publishing in October 2016, that's exactly a year from when ' A Carpet of Purple Flowers' was published. I'm really excited about this one as the main character's story concludes. There is quite a bit of anguish and fast-paced action, but hopefully, the end will prove most satisfying for the readers that loved the first book. 

The characters in this story have changed so much, their growth measured by experiences, twists and turns. Each must face parts of themselves and accept the truth laid before them. Easier said than done. One character, in particular, has to go through a major transformation, which desperately changes aspects of other characters lives that are close to them. 

I also include some new characters that are important for the next book 'Claíomh Solais' (Shining Sword), and, of course, there are faces put to names mentioned in the first book. Lips are sealed.
It's incredible how much certain characters push to make their story heard. The new tale 'Claíomh Solais' started to unfold as I wrote 'Awake in Purple Dreams' and so I quickly outlined it as I continued with the second installation. It's been difficult not to side-track as I have fallen in love with that story, too. It intertwines nicely the new and old characters, continuing the epic tale. I never intended for the initial story to expand into these new directions, it just happened, and now I try my best to keep up. Lol. Outlining and keeping a book bible has proved invaluable. Investing in a filing cabinet really helped. I place the brain-stormed scribbles into separate drawers ready to refer back to at a later date. 

So now, I have the task of placing my hand-written notes into the partial manuscript that I've just printed and then type up those extra pieces. Fun, fun, fun. :o) I admire writers that can just type away without feeling the need to write on paper first. It just doesn't work for me. Most of the time I write back to front. If I'm feeling stuck on a chapter, I write another. A 'feel' thing. 
Editing is the toughie, I've actually swapped around chapters/paragraphs, removed/added scenes, but hopefully, all for the better. I've got that part to look forward to again. Tee hee. :o) 

(Symbolism ~ The Crow and Deer)

love and light
Trace
xoxo

Wednesday, 3 February 2016

Guest Post Shirley Golden ~ Writing

Hi, everyone :o) 
Shirley Golden, also an Urbane author, has kindly invited me to answer a few questions concerning 'A Carpet of Purple Flowers', my debut novel. The guest post is now up on her blog, and I thought that you might like to pop on over. :o)


Link to Guest Post:


A Carpet of Purple Flowers can be purchased directly from Urbane Publications HERE

Portal?

love and light
Trace
xoxo