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Wednesday, September 25, 2019

New Release - The Accidental Road by Jodi Lea Stewart

1956…
Sixteen-year-old Katherine has two wishes in this world—to have enough money so she and her mother, Ellie, can escape her sadistic stepfather, Roy Cranston, and to eventually have a real home of her own. Katherine hides herself in novels and movies, and tries to be as inconspicuous as possible. But how can she fade into the background when she has a beautiful social butterfly of a mother who just happens to resemble Marilyn Monroe? It’s embarrassing, and the unwanted attention her mother garners could be the downfall of their plan to take Route 66 to the freedom of a new life—without Roy.
Once they put their plan into action and hit the road, they head to Las Vegas where a new life awaits. But real trouble begins when they become stranded in the small town of Holbrook, Arizona, and wind up rubbing shoulders with the mafia families that are moving their criminal operations closer to Las Vegas. It’s up to Katherine to keep them alive as they become targets of a mafia boss, as well as being followed by jealous Roy Cranston, who intends to have them back at all costs.
Could THE ACCIDENTAL ROAD bring them the life they’ve both longed for, or will it become a disaster they can’t escape from?

EXCERPT

     “I’m all angles and flat planes like an L-shaped ruler. My mother is all curves and bumps and bears a scary resemblance to Marilyn Monroe. It’s a curse, since no matter where we go, she’s like a specimen bug pinned ludicrously under a glass for males, no difference what age, to come stare at her. I’m an expert at narrowing my eyes and sending a toxic stare aimed right at their faces so we can have a modicum of peace, but that’s not what this story is about.
     “It’s about escaping a personal war and winding up in a dusty little Arizona town instead of the glittering lights of Las Vegas. Rather than safety, we found a place full of ghosts and tales, treachery and secrets. How long before we find out if we have taken the right road or the Accidental Road of life, and will we always have to hold our hands over our eyes and leap, never quite knowing where we’ll land until our feet hit the ground?”
 ~ Kat, 1956

      

Thursday, September 19, 2019

Fire Star Press: The Book Tour: Episode Eight Grist for the Writer...

Fire Star Press: The Book Tour: Episode Eight Grist for the Writer...:                                   Traveling by Greyhound: Grist for the Writer’s Mill           At the counter in the bus station in ...

The Book Tour: Episode Eight Grist for the Writer’s Mill



                                  Traveling by Greyhound: Grist for the Writer’s Mill

          At the counter in the bus station in Winnipeg, the ticket seller asks if have a passport. “The Americans are making things tough.” He glowers. “Won’t let you in if you don’t have one, and the crossing takes hours. All depends on how many male travelers there are between 18 and 27 years old.”
            “How so?”
            “They’re the ones who cause all the trouble.”
Outside, snow is falling, crisp, and fresh, converting a dreary industrial landscape into picture-postcard loveliness. In the coffee shop, the women behind the counter tease each other with much good nature — until one small mini-drama interrupts the chortles.
            A man, an indigenous person in his 40’s, tall, elegant, and wearing an expensive business suit, refuses his hamburger’s polystyrene box. I stare at him admiringly: he is Tonto (Jay Silverheels) to the rescue, rejecting our plastic-polluted society. I want to cheer.
            “No one needs these,” he says. “They are destructive to our environment.”
The woman at the cash register, also an indigenous person, raises her eyebrows, sneers, lets us all know she’s used to dealing with difficult cranks. But the cook and the cleaner, watching the interchange, are less denigrating.
“He’s got a point.”
“Of course, he does,” I chirp.
I am ignored by all.

            At the border, the customs officials are indeed hostile. We are only a handful of travelers, but we clamber out of the bus, go sit silently in the huge, nondescript customs hall and wait for life to happen. Outside in the bitter cold, our bus driver — a man with a hacking cough — chain smokes. With a cough that bad, we might not make it to Billings.
            An hour and a half go by. No cars pass. The customs officials aren’t doing much of anything — but they’ll have to amuse themselves somehow (no trusting those Canadians). Finally, they pick a victim, a young woman of around twenty. Clearly terrified, she answers an endless barrage of aggressive questions while her bags are emptied and searched. Posters with waving American flags are everywhere, announcing that the war on terrorism will be won. Well…possibly, but that young woman seems an unlikely candidate for terrorist activities. She hasn’t the nerve for it.
When she is finally released, we are all allowed to get back on the bus. This is a flat countryside where snow drifts softly across the road, and isolated farmhouses hide behind a few bare trees. From time to time, mounds testify to habitations long vanished, to forgotten tales of courage, passion, great love, or heartbreak.

In North Dakota, more passengers board. One, a very large, kinky-haired, dyed blond has trouble climbing the steps, grunting, puffing, heaving, although she’s young enough, perhaps in her late thirties. She sits opposite me, one seat up.
“What time is it,” she asks me.
“Five.”
Outside, the snow is knee-deep, whiting out the landscape, turning the night into a snow globe.
“What time is it?” kinky-hair asks again.
      “Seven-twenty.”
      “Huh?”
“Twenty minutes after seven,” I explain.
Thirty minutes later, she turns, asks the same question.
“Eight.”
“Eight?”
At eight-thirty, she asks again. And at nine.
“So what time we get to Billings?”
I’m no timetable freak. I don’t even know where Billings is. “No idea.”
“No idea?” Obviously no mental speed demon, she lets out a sigh of frustration. We’re just not getting places fast enough for her, and she’s annoyed with me, too.
***
“We need snow. It’s good for us,” says a tall, thin man, a long-distance truck driver on his way home to Washington. We are taking a long break in a Far West style restaurant and bar decorated with stag’s heads, cheap souvenirs, wood paneling, and where country music whines. I’ve struck up a temporary friendship with him and a sullen, scratchy older woman — the sort of temporary friendship that happens in the dead of night out in the middle of nowhere in particular.
      “I was caught in the blizzard on the East Coast last week,” says the driver. “Took me two days to get into New York.” He broods silently for a minute. Looks longingly towards the bar. I can see him wondering if there’s enough time for a drink.
       “Two days? Oh my!” I say. Then search around for a peppy topic of conversation after several hundred miles of silence. “Perhaps it’s the weather, but there aren’t many of us on the bus, are there?”
        “It’s the wrong time of year for traveling,” says the scratchy woman. “And who’s got money?”
        “Yeah. Two days to get into New York,” says the driver, again. He looks at me directly — he’s about to impart some important piece of information, I can see that. “You wanna know how many trucks bring toilet paper into New York every day? Two hundred! Into New York City alone!”
        “Oh my,” I say again.
         “Two days. You think you got it bad?” says the scratchy woman. Then she bores us with a very long uninteresting tale about how she has to drive in this weather every morning. Every single morning. She drags out the tale for some five minutes. Then repeats the whole thing again.
        “What we professionals call white knuckle driving,” says the truck driver, breaking into her monologue. I give him all my attention because I can see that the scratchy woman is more than willing to repeat her story a third time.
“I go everywhere,” the truck driver says. “Wherever the company sends me. Pack up rich folk’s goods, drive them to where they’re moving. A good job if you’re not married because I’m gone all summer. That’s when people re-locate.” He looks morose, suddenly. Wends his way over to the bar, orders a beer. There’s probably a tale of a broken marriage or infidelity behind those words, but I can’t pump him for details, can I?
***
It’s still snowing with enthusiasm, but daredevils take to the road, cars and huge trucks speeding into invisibility. Our bus driver is cautious, steady. He has nothing to prove but consistency.
When we stop again some two hours later, it’s in a busy bar with slot machines. We’re in Montana now and a gorgeous, young blond waitress takes our order for coffee. Hearing my accent, she asks where I’m from. She was born in Ireland, raised in Yellowknife. She’s working here for the winter; in the summer, she’s off to Moscow to teach English. She gives me her e-mail address: fellow wanderers who will never meet again making brief contact.

 After we take to the road again, I notice that a handsome black woman is standing beside the kinky blond and stroking her back.
       “Something wrong?” I ask.
        The black woman smiles. “She’s in labor.”
       “You’re kidding!” So that’s why she had such trouble getting up those stairs! But why, in heaven’s name, will a woman who is in labor get onto a bus for a long ride?
       “The driver knows. He says he’ll go as fast as he can. He’s already called ahead, and there will be an ambulance waiting for her in Billings. It’s only forty minutes away.”
        “How far along is she?” My fascination is mixing with raw annoyance for the woman foisting this upon us all.
       “Well, the contractions are coming every six minutes or so.”
To emphasize the point, kinky blond begins a moan, a soft sound that takes on a keening sound as she grabs the other woman’s hand.
      “You know how to deliver babies?” I ask.
“I’m a trained nurse.”
      “Well, thank goodness for that.” Then I feel bad. This nurse, poor woman, has to deal with the problem — something she surely hadn’t reckoned with. Kinky is keeling again and I wait for a minute or so. Then plunge in with unaccustomed generosity: “If you need help, you can count on me. I haven’t the faintest idea what to do but if you explain…”
The nurse smiles warmly. She’s a nice person. “Good. And thank you.” She leans over Kinky. “Has your water broken yet?”
Kinky shakes her head.
     So on we go, traveling through the night over horrendous roads. The driver is stressed. I’m stressed. All the passengers are stressed. No one is saying a word. We’re just listening to the woman moaning away every six minutes, then five, then four.
Because I’m trying to be polite, and discrete, and trying not to imagine babies, blood, and screams, I snap on the overhead light above my seat, open a book, and manage to get deeply involved in a story about Indonesia, headhunters, and parrots.
And, when I finally do look up again, I see that the nurse has vanished. In her place is a young woman with a long braid who is looking concerned, patting Kinky on the shoulder and talking softly to her, but I can’t hear the conversation.
Where is the nurse? I look around. She is seated in the back of the bus, her face blank. How can she have abandoned her patient like that? There’s no point in asking. We are approaching Billings, and city lights are cutting through the snowy blur. And, as promised, the ambulance is at the bus station, its lights flashing, beside a waiting stretcher. Five firemen leap onto the bus.
    “Everyone stay seated until we get this woman off,” shouts one.
Then they are leaning over the woman, asking her questions.
     “How many months along are you?”
      Kinky doesn’t answer. The firemen look at each other. Ask again. Still no answer.
      “What’s your name?”
Kinky whispers something no one can hear. They repeat the question, then look at each other again. Ask her when her due date is.
       “August,” whispers Kinky.
       The firemen stop leaning over her, stand there with looks of pure consternation.
       “August? But, this is February. Are you having a miscarriage?”
   Kinky doesn’t deign to answer.
       “Well, let’s get her off.”
Slowly, the men move Kinky down the aisle and load her onto the stretcher. Now we are free to move, and we pile into the crowded bus station, desperate to get away from drama. Or so we think.
A man, weedy and aggressive, is screaming at the ticket agent at the counter. “You coming outside? You coming outside? Cause you’ll get what’s waiting for you out there!” His fists are raised and his face is apoplectic ruby.
            We pull out of Billings, leaving behind the apoplectic screamer and Kinky. At two in the morning, we stop in a gas station-cum-general store. The bus driver is at the counter, laughing, talking to the owners, so I move in to hear what he’s saying.
“So the nurse, she reaches down to feel the woman’s stomach, and all she finds is a bottle of booze. She was drunk. Dead drunk. No more pregnant than you or me. The nurse comes up to the front of the bus and tells me, but it’s too late because the ambulance is already waiting.
“And then, in the station, her sister’s waiting for her, and when sees her being put onto the stretcher, she comes over and asks what’s happened. And when someone tells her that the woman is having a baby, she starts shouting: ‘What’d you mean she’s having a baby? She just had a baby a couple of months ago!’ And then the brother-in-law starts screaming because he wants her bags, and the ticket agent tells him that he can’t claim the bags without the baggage tags. So the brother-in-law threatens to beat him up.” The driver shakes his head, a good-natured man. “What a family!”
     “She’s an Indian,” says scratchy blond, stupidly. “They’re all like that in Nebraska.”
     “No, she definitely wasn’t,” I say, annoyed.
     “I hope they send her a big bill.”
     “No bill,” says the station owner. “They’re all on welfare, those people.”
     “What people?” I ask.
     “Well, I’m going to write a letter of complaint,” says the blond sourly. “About that ticket agent. He was just messing around. He wasn’t paying attention to nobody, I saw that. Greyhound is going to hear from me! You bet. A letter of complaint. I’m going to tell them all about it. I’m writing to the managers.”
      “You see it all,” mutters the bus driver.

More about my books and passionate life can be found at http://www.j-arleneculiner.com and http://www:jill-culiner.com and on my podcast at https://soundcloud.com/j-arlene-culiner

Sunday, September 8, 2019

Book review: Einar of Vindemiatrix by Michael E. Gonzales


Blurb:

When King Thurban the Great is murdered at the hand of his younger brother, very few of his loyal knights survive. Sir Einar, one of the fiercest knights of King Thurban’s realm, has lost his entire family in the carnage. Giving up on a life of his own, he chooses to travel and teach others the principles of chivalry. For those who believe in a knightly code, he will also show them the deadly way to wield a sword in battle—including Ascella, a young woman who convinces him she is an apt student.

Though many years have passed since Einar’s painful losses and King Thurban the Great’s murder, the knight finds a way to avenge his honorable liege—but he cannot do it alone. To return Vindemiatrix to the rightful heir and restore the holdings to their former glory, he needs magic—the most powerful magic he can find.

With the help of a powerful witch, a dragon, an army of centaurs, and beautiful Ascella, Einar is determined to find a way to make things right once more in the land he loved. But he’s never fought an enemy so prepared to hold Vindemiatrix in its powerful grip—and this is a battle to the death. Can he risk losing everything he holds dear a second time?

My Review:

Oh! Did I enjoy my time in Vtramix and soaking up the magic and adventure of days gone by.  And Mike Gonzales has given me my absolute favorite story of his (so far!)!  I absolutely adored it and look forward to when I can reread this story and fall into the magic again!

Einar of Vindemiatrix delivered on so many levels -- you feel the rush of adventure, the despair of struggle, the thrill of victory, the tears of sorrow, the tension of danger, the sweetness of love.

Einar was a true knight, who even despite his world crumbling around him, carried on and kept true to the knight’s code.  He proved himself to be a man of honor, strength, and one who I’d feel safe having by my side.  While this story is so much more than Einar’s journey, without Einar, this odyssey couldn’t have happened.

Travel back in time to where knights battle forces of evil; and magic, dragons, centaurs and witches are a part of everyday life.  A time that was difficult in its simplicity, but held a charm all its own.  This is a story not to be missed!


Purchase Links:

     

Friday, September 6, 2019

Office Space



I'm so excited! Why? I finally have my own office!

When we moved to this house a couple of years ago, I planned to turn the loft outside of the master bedroom into my writing nook but that didn't pan out. I quickly realized that wasn't going to work because the loft is exposed to all of the noise in the house and sound is my nemesis - I need quiet to write.

So, as an alternative, I decided the basement would become my writing space. The basement was better than nothing but still left a lot to be desired. During the winter months the basement is cold and being surrounded by the stacks of boxes I still needed to go through was less than relaxing but I made it work.

However, about the time we left for our road trip (see my post from last month HERE) inspiration struck. I realized if we rearranged a few things, I could use one of the spare bedrooms as my office. Why had I not thought of this before? *facepalm* Once we got back we enlisted the help of our youngest son, rearranged some furniture, and voila - an office was born. It's still a work in progress but I've had a blast decorating with items that are special to me.

Let me give you a tour:

This is one of the best gifts I have ever received - a customized sign made from old license plates! (If you are interested in getting one of your own, they are available from CMR Designs on Etsy.)


During the last few months of her life, my mama discovered adult coloring books. After mama's death, my oldest sister gifted us with "memory pillows" made from some of mama's shirts and some of the pages she colored. I chose this page to frame and hang in my office:






I love opossums and follow Gilbert Opossom on Facebook. My hubby surprised me with original artwork by Gilbert (complete with tail swooshes) last Christmas so it now adorns my office wall, right next to the picture above.



I love all things cow so this picture that I found at a thrift shop and a tile given to me by a friend now share wall space:


Daisies are my favorite flower and I found this gem in a cute little store in Kalispell, Montana.






Our house was built in 1979 and I'm pretty sure the wallpaper on the "accent wall" in my office is original. However, instead of the dated wallpaper being a nuisance, I actually kind of love it - especially since I'm currently working on a historical western romance. This wallpaper sets the mood perfectly, LOL. (I also didn't realize just how well the daisy would go with the wallpaper.)


So, until next month, if you need me, I'll be over here doing twirls worthy of Julie Andrews in the Sound of Music and enjoying my new office space.



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Monday, September 2, 2019

Research by Michael E. Gonzales


My most recent story, Einar of Vindemiatrix, required a lot of research. I set my story in a mythical “dark ages”. I saw the characters, for the most part, as English like. So, I read up on a great many subjects, among them; period dress, period customs, weapons, castle design and layout, mythology, manner of speech, and much more. All very enlightening.
Obviously my fantasy would necessarily have to abridge the historical record.
And much that is ‘canon’ in ancient lore I would also need to bend a little.
The biggest challenge, for me, was the language. First off, what people spoke in “the dark ages” would barely be recognizable today as English. I noted several categories of Ole English, for my purposes I selected three: Old English, Middle English, and Early Modern English. There are few alive today, scholars only perhaps, that would understand any of that speech. To wit:


So…I settled on what I call Ren-fair speech or, “fake English accent people us at a Renaissance fair.” This is the sort of thing `ya hear in the old Errol Flynn Robin Hood movie.

I also learned you have to be sparing with it. I had friends, family and total strangers read some test lines and they quickly became lost.
So…I altered the meter of speech, used a very few archaic words and at last reached a happy medium. Or one might say, “Ci leáslícettung bæd.

The mythology surrounding weapons in the Ancient world I found fascinating! Stories of magical weapons with amazing powers and abilities, carried by famous Vikings, Romans, Goidelic, and Pictish warriors. Weapons fashioned by the gods, and by demons. These demonic weapons held the promise of victory but at the price of your immortal soul. Damned weapons that would incur the wrath of evil on their bearers, or result in instant death from merely touching them.
It was, however, the true story behind the Ulfberht sword that grabbed my attention for Einar.
There was a type of sword prized by Vikings that far exceeded any European weapon of its day. The rare and precious Ulfberht swords were a thousand years ahead of their time, and wielded only by the most elite and powerful of Viking warriors.
Most Viking blades were found to have been composed of slag-ridden, low-carbon steel. But the Ulfberht blades’ metal was comparable to the strength of modern steel. They were inscribed with the signature “+Ulfberht+,” and their like would not be seen again in Europe until the industrial revolution.
It was a personal journey through history, legend, myth, and lore. One I shan’t soon forget. Doubtless, dear reader, you shall see me put my lesson to use again, in future efforts.



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