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Tuesday, June 30, 2015
Monday, June 29, 2015
Saturday, June 27, 2015
Justine's Journal #45
52 Weeks 500 Words
This is how it began: Justine (not her real
name) decided to write 500 words (or as near as), anything goes, per week for 52
weeks. She would then submit it for anonymous posting, via me, her friend.
Perhaps a pattern will emerge from her words, but at this stage it’s more an
experiment I have agreed to share in. I’ll attempt to draw conclusions at the
end of this. Stay tuned if this resonates with you.
Week 45
"Do you sometimes feel as if you have failed? It could be in
a task, a responsibility you undertook, as a friend, in your work, your
personal life? Of course you have, for all of us sometimes doubt ourselves.
This was my week, unfortunately. I feel as I have failed. Just
admitting it makes me feel terrible. Yet it wasn’t in a task or responsibility,
or a relationship. I failed myself. I have this week utterly doubted myself. Every
positive feeling I have worked hard at attaining meant less than nothing. Yes, I
wanted to crawl into bed and stay there, never to emerge again, for I am a
failure.
When I sat to write this entry, I thought to record
something positive, hoping it would jog me from this state of belief. Omission though
is also lying, if only to myself. So, now the words of admission pour out
instead. While I hope you will learn from this or simply feel empathetic in
recognising yourself in here, this journal entry is so that I may reason this
all out and change my state of mind.
I stare at the screen now and wonder if a chemical
deficiency isn’t causing this negativity. Perhaps the stuff that wires me is
defective and I need to have my hormones tested or something. Maybe. I can’t
afford to visit a doctor, though, so that won’t help me. If this continues, I may
have to acknowledge there is a physical reason beyond my control and then live
with it.
Still, I am of the opinion we can rewire ourselves, shift
those chemicals around ourselves if we try hard enough, believe in ourselves
and give it our all. The process is the same for our physical selves as it is
for the intangible parts. Therefore, anything I attempt to do, whether it is physical
or emotional, will in the end lead to the same result. Right? Well, that’s what
I tell myself. I do doubt at the moment.
I’m sorry, I had hoped to reveal to you a journey, one which
slowly over the weeks of entry showed you how it is possible to grow daily
simply by being more aware of the inner self. In this I have clearly failed
also. Here I sit and dump doubts and it feels as if I have just started this
journey and the intervening weeks have not happened.
They did happen! I did learn so much! I fixed so many
issues!
Wow.
Oh, now I sound completely disjointed, but do you know what?
It just occurred to me the journey is real and I have soul-searched and
lip-chewed and I have GROWN. This current state of belief is but a few days in
a far larger picture. Why throw what went before away? That would be the real
failure. We are not perfect, not ever, and sometimes we doubt. Sometimes the
big picture is overwhelming. Sometimes we have to admit we are only human.
Okay, so these few days do not define me. Your few days do
not define you either. I acknowledge the bigger picture, but will now
concentrate on the small stuff and use them to drag myself out of this.
I will go outside and listen to the birds. I will edit
another chapter of my book. I will cook a lovely meal tonight. I will phone my
brother for a quick chat. I will veg later and watch my favourite movie without
telling myself I am wasting time better spent doing something constructive. I will
cuddle with my partner tonight after our meal.
I will fix this.
Thank you for the opportunity to unload. This has given me
the willingness to change my doubts and the path to do so. I hope you can find
your path, too."
Friday, June 26, 2015
Thursday, June 25, 2015
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
Writer's Wednesday: Chatting with Daithi Kavanagh
Today we chat with Daithi Kavanagh
Daithi Kavanagh is 56 years old and lives
with his wife and two teenage children in Trinity, Wexford. Up to 2012 when the
recession hit Ireland he was making a living as a musician. He then went back
to adult education and completed his Leaving Certificate in 2014. He is now
studying for a degree in Culture and Heritage Studies at Wexford Campus.
While he was studying he began writing ‘The
Gun’ which is the first book in The Tadhg Sullivan Series. His second book in the series called The
Brotherhood was released in May 2015. He is currently working on the third book
in the series.
He plays guitar and sings in many of the
pubs in his hometown of Wexford where he is often joined by his two children
Ella and Rory who play fiddle and flute.
In his spare time he likes to walk his two
dogs with his wife Caroline.
Welcome, Daithi!
1.
What sparked your interest in writing? Your proverbial light-bulb
moment?
In 2012 I found
myself unemployed due to the recession. I had worked as a musician prior to
that. I took up adult education after that and am currently studying for a
degree in Irish Culture and Heritage Studies. While studying English for my
Leaving Certificate my teacher encouraged me to write. I started writing my
first book The Gun and my teacher would check it for me. It took off from there
and with the help of my wife Caroline I finished The Gun. I signed a contract
with Tirgearr Publishing in 2013.
2.
Which genre are you most comfortable writing in?
Definitely crime
fiction. I’ve been inspired by Stiegg Larrson, Jo Nesbo and Ian Rankin.
3.
Would you say you draw most often from your own knowledge base when
writing or do you research for fresh material?
I always draw from
my own knowledge base. I feel it gives the stories authenticity. It is at times
necessary to research as there are often things within the story where your
knowledge could be limited. But in general I tend to write my stories quite
often around my own life experiences. Also I often base the characters on
people I am acquainted with either living or dead.
4.
Tell us a bit about your work. How, for instance, do you choose your
titles?
So far the titles
of my books have always been related to the main theme of the story e.g. in my
first book The Gun the whole story grew around one of the main characters in
the book accidentally acquiring an assault rifle. In book 2 – The Brotherhood
the story revolves around a vicious cult known as The Brotherhood. I think it’s important (in most cases anyway)
that the title gives some indication towards the direction the story is going
to take.
5.
We love to read excerpts. Share with us your favourite bit of
writing from you latest book.
My latest book is called
The Brotherhood and is the second book in The Tadhg Sullivan Series.
She knew nothing of the white van that pulled up
behind her, until the two men
grabbed her and bundled her into the back. She’d
been jogging along the road, with
her headphones on listening to Mumford and Sons.
At first she’d thought it was a
prank by some of her friends. But as the van
tore along the narrow road at top speed
and she found herself being tossed from side to
side, she knew something much
more sinister was unfolding. She screamed.
Suddenly the van took a sharp left, and
she smashed her face against the side paneling.
They seemed to be on a long,
pebbled lane. She stared at her headphones, the
music still blaring, lying on the
floor, and cursed herself for not listening to
her parents, who had begged her to bring
her mobile phone.
6. Who do you identify with most in your work? And why?
Without doubt
Detective Sullivan my main character is the person I identify with the
strongest. But most of my characters have a little bit of me in them. To give
the characters more depth I tend to
often lend them the darker side of myself as for some reason bright and
cheerful people often come across as bland. Where I can I try to use wit to
counteract this darkness that exists
in the characters.
7.
If you could choose who would play Detective Sullivan in the movie or series made from your work, who would it be?
I think the Irish
Actor Cillian Murphy would play the part of Sullivan very well as he can portray
both strong and vulnerable personas very well (in my opinion) and he has a
depth to his character that I think would portray Sullivan very well.
8.
Which four words would you use to describe yourself?
Passionate, controversial,
opinionated and left wing conservative!!
9.
Which four words would you use to describe your work?
Honest,
controversial, fast-paced and very Irish.
10.
I have to throw this in! That list of favourites we’re all
interested in!
Favourite book: Anything by Arnaldur Indriðason
Favourite movie: On the Waterfront
Favourite TV series: Wallander
Favourite colour: Blue
Favourite food: Steak and Chips
Favourite drink: Tea!!
Favourite pet: Our two dogs Sam and Rosie
Favourite season: Winter. I love the cosiness of the short evenings and
lighting the fire.
Favourite
place: My
hometown of Wexford.
11.
Often personal fame and prominence for your work go together, but
frequently authors prefer remaining in the background while hoping their work
will assume the limelight. Is this true for you, or don’t you mind a bit of
fame?
I’d accept the
fame if it also brought money with it! But I would prefer to remain in the
background as I love the simple home life and be able to go into one of the
local pubs in Wexford with my family and play music without all my fans mobbing
me!!!!! (LOL)
12.
Tell us about your next book (we love to know what to look forward
to!).
My next book is
Book 3 in The Tadhg Sullivan Series called The Crucifixion. The Crucifixion is
once again a story steeped in Irish history and Irish life. It begins with the
murder of a Christian Brother
13.
What comes next, besides a new book project? A holiday, an event?
This summer myself
and the family will be going to Doolin to take in the brilliant traditional
music and see again the beautiful Inishere and Inis Mor.
14.
And finally, if you could choose one person, living or dead, you
would like to meet, who would it be and what would you ask of that person?
GOD – I would ask
him how my books are going to do in the future!!!
Lol, yes, I wish we could all receive insight regarding our work!
Thank you, Daithi, it was a pleasure having you :)
Detective Tadhg
Sullivan’s life seems to be falling apart, since being shifted to Clare
from Dublin after
falling out with the Minister for Justice and the Garda
Commissioner. His
partner, Journalist Helen Carty, has moved out, unable to live
with his bouts of
depression and periodic alcoholism. He finds himself once again
alone in a world that
doesn’t understand him.
Suddenly Sullivan is
knocked out of his lethargy when a teenage girl goes missing
not far from Ennis
where he has been stationed. Sullivan is asked to lead the hunt by
the local
Superintendent and is catapulted into a world of unimaginable horror. He is
confronted by Lord
Charles Cromwell the leader of a sadistic cult—The
Brotherhood—that
derives its pleasures from the torture and murder of young
women.
Sullivan’s
investigation is once again hampered by political interference. As he fights
his way through one
bureaucratic obstacle after another he discovers that The
Brotherhoods
tentacles have not only reached into corridors of power in Ireland but,
they are being
protected by powerful politicians worldwide.
To cut through this
protective ring of steel Sullivan finds himself having to engage
with some strange bed
fellows. Which included an ex CIA agent, Simon Horowitz,
who had saved his partners
life during his last investigation and an IRA leader, Rory
O’Connor, who has
recently been released from prison.
Will this strange
combination be able to destroy The Brotherhood before their
murderous reign takes
another young life or will Lord Cromwell destroy Sullivan and
everything he loves?
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Monday, June 22, 2015
Saturday, June 20, 2015
Justine's Journal #44
52 Weeks 500 Words
This is how it began: Justine (not her real
name) decided to write 500 words (or as near as), anything goes, per week for 52
weeks. She would then submit it for anonymous posting, via me, her friend.
Perhaps a pattern will emerge from her words, but at this stage it’s more an
experiment I have agreed to share in. I’ll attempt to draw conclusions at the
end of this. Stay tuned if this resonates with you.
Week 44
"I have a serious issue with the banking system here in the
south. It’s a minefield of frustration, that’s what it is.
I have more than one account and recently ignored one
account (where I try and save) and when I tried to put in some funds via internet
banking, it was to discover my account is inactive. Huh? It seems the fees put
me in arrears and now it is inactive. I have to make a special trip to the
branch and spend literally hours in line (I mean it, HOURS – it took me four hours in line just to open this
account a few months ago) in order to fix it. I have to do this, for I receive
money from another party into this account on occasion.
FEES! The bane of our lives. There are fees for every
transaction, fees for just having an account, fees for using internet banking,
fees for sms notifications, and FEES for being in arrears! For doing nothing,
the banks here make money off us.
Elaina told me how the account she had in Ireland was bliss
itself. NO FEES! On the other hand, no interest to speak of (which we do have
here, although it’s not massive for saving – massive for lending, oh yes), but I
would rather earn little interest and not have my money vanish into the ether
the way it does here.
While frustration is an issue, as is the impracticality of
sorting this out, my main problem with this affair is how it makes us feel unworthy.
We try to save. We try to keep our heads above water. And what
happens? Without doing anything wrong, we are in debt to the banks. Instantly we
feel debt-ridden and anxious and unworthy as a member of our society. Fix it,
you say, and all will be well. I agree, but why is it necessary to put us
through this gauntlet with regularity?
I am not going to start on the politics of money our leaders
manipulate, for then I will be raving like a lunatic and it will destroy my
calm … and it will help me not at all. But I do wish our leaders could wake up and
affect changes that will aid in making every citizen begin to breathe easier …
to feel worthy. This doesn’t mean freebies, merely less taking from us. A foolish
hope, no doubt.
So next week I am off to stand in line cursing under my
breath for a few hours. Wish me luck and wish me patience. Wish also for
lightning bolt enlightenment to strike someone with the power to change things
for ordinary people. Ha."
Friday, June 19, 2015
Thursday, June 18, 2015
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Writer's Wednesday: Chatting with David O'Brien
Today we chat with David O'Brien
David is a writer, ecologist and teacher
from Dublin, Ireland, now living in Pamplona Spain. He has a degree in
environmental biology and doctorate in zoology, specialising in deer biology and
is still involved in deer management in his spare time.
As an avid wildlife enthusiast and ecologist, much of David's non-academic writing, especially poetry, is inspired by wildlife and science. While some of his stories and novels are contemporary, others seek to describe the science behind the supernatural or the paranormal.
A long-time member of The World Wildlife Fund, David has pledged to donate 10% of his royalties on all his hitherto published books to that charity to aid with protecting endangered species and habitats.
As an avid wildlife enthusiast and ecologist, much of David's non-academic writing, especially poetry, is inspired by wildlife and science. While some of his stories and novels are contemporary, others seek to describe the science behind the supernatural or the paranormal.
A long-time member of The World Wildlife Fund, David has pledged to donate 10% of his royalties on all his hitherto published books to that charity to aid with protecting endangered species and habitats.
Welcome, David!
- What
sparked your interest in writing? Your proverbial light-bulb moment?
I started writing poetry as a teen. I
haven't stopped, but I added a few short stories in my late teens and then
turned one into a novel. I prefer novels to short stories - it's just the way I
write, slow and conversationally. I wrote a few more over the next twenty years
as I studied and wrote biology papers.
- Which
genre are you most comfortable writing in?
Tough question still, after 8 books.
Perhaps young adult, though I don't have a lot of ideas for that genre. I don't
like writing erotica much, and don't put many sex scenes in my novels - I leave
that to my mate JD Martins. Contemporary with some romance and some link to the
natural world is what I like best, I'd say.
- Would you
say you draw most often from your own knowledge base when writing or do
you research for fresh material?
The former, definitely! I go with what I
know, fill in with some short research and questions to friends who know stuff.
I collect factoids as I go through life and some of these come into my head
when I am writing. I have a long term WIP called Palu and the Pyramid Builders that requires a lot of knowledge of
Neotropical ecology. I have read some books about it, but I am mostly basing it
on what I learned on my few trips to the Caribbean and later in the second
draft I will add in some stuff and fact check what I've included from memory.
- Tell us a
bit about your work. How, for instance, do you choose your titles?
The titles usually suggest themselves,
though it might take a few years to do so. Often the names are obvious. When
they are not, it's a nightmare. I have a book set in Madrid that I can't come
up with a decent name for. I'm sure it's part of the reason nobody has jumped
on it yet (it's also very long, so perhaps another edit would help!) Leaving the Pack took a long time to
come, but when I had a proper novel-lenght draft, it summed up the book. Five Days on Ballyboy Beach was just the
best way to describe what happened in that story - way too much happened to be
explained in a title at all! It was best left to the imagination as to what
might have happened over those five days... The
Ecology of Lonesomeness was first called The Shadow of Loch Ness while I was writing the first draft. Half
way along, I realised what the name had to be. Readers have agreed so far...
Of my other books, a YA paranormal called The
Soul of Adam Short is about a teen whose soul is separated from his body
and the struggled to reunite them. That title captures the story. I had to make
sure the character's name sounded good though; The soul of Jimmy O'Callaghan doesn't have the same ring! Peter and the Little People is a
children's book out next year, with Muse ItUp Publishing (as is Adam Short, this summer) and the title
came right before I started writing down the idea.
- You are certainly prolific! We love
to read excerpts. Share with us your favourite bit of writing from you
latest book.
I can't share my favourite, because that
would give the plot away. But here's a bit from the first few chapters... The
two main characters, Kaleb the American scientist and Jessie the local girl
just back home to the Great Glen are in Fort Augustus on the shore of Loch
Ness:
He
watched her cross the canal, swallowing the last of the cod fillet and
finishing off the small crispy fries from the bottom of the bag. Once over the
swing bridge she turned and headed straight towards him.
He
stared. She smiled at him, still approaching. His heart lurched. She was coming
to sit here, with him, he realised. Holy shit! Did he have any ketchup on his
face? Unobtrusively, he tried to wipe his mouth on the greasy paper the fries
had come in.
He
went back to staring at the lake, as if he didn't see her walking up the path,
so he could act surprised when she arrived. His heart was thumping, now, and a
leaden feeling weighed down his liver, making his abdominal muscles
instinctively tighten.
"Hello."
He
looked up, feigning a surprise that must have been as transparent as the water
flowing over the lock beside him. "Oh, hey. Fancy meeting you here."
She
smirked. "Do you mind if I sit here?"
"For
sure, go ahead, no problem." He indicated the bench on the other side of
the table, wishing there were chairs so he could get up and pull one out for
her. "Not eating inside today?"
She
chuckled. "No. I need to relax and get a breath of fresh air."
He
laughed too. "Oh, you're short of that out here?"
"Ah,
I'm getting my fill. Might be goin' back to London at some stage. Got to get it
while you can."
He
nodded. His heart had begun to slow down again, the heaviness lifting a little.
She was only a normal young girl, he told himself. She
came over to you, so relax.
"What
did you do at college?"
"English
and Drama: like everybody else in the world."
"Cool.
If it's popular it must be good. So, what do you want to do now?"
"That's
the big question. That's what I'm tryin' to figure out."
"No."
He shook his head, drinking some Coke to wash the last of his food down.
"You're trying to figure out if you can do it, or
if you think you'll have to do something else because you don't think you're
good enough to make a living doing it. But what would you like to do, if you
could just do it? If your fictional boss would say, 'Yes, that's a great idea,
Jessie. Do that. We'll pay you handsomely for that.' What would that be?"
She
smiled at him, her dimples tinged with a little blush that made his abdomen
heavy again. "I'd like to be a playwright, or a screenwriter."
"Then
do that."
"Aye,"
she replied dismissively. "There's not much call for screenwriters round
here..."
"Then
you should go to California."
"Aye,"
she repeated in the same tone. "That's what they all say."
"They're
right."
"And
the Californians are coming here—look at you."
He
grinned. "I'm from Washington."
She
smiled back and shrugged. "Same difference."
"Yeah,
like here and Norway."
"The
Shetlanders are practically Norwegian. Well, what did you do
in uni?" She leaned forward.
He
was suddenly nervous again. Thank God for the cardigan.
"Well,
for my first degree I studied a mixture of computer science and biology, called
Computational Biology. I went to Gonzaga University in Spokane. That's a city
in the middle of the state." He watched her to make sure she was following
him.
She
smiled and nodded as if she was, taking a bite out of her tuna sandwich at the
same time.
"For
my doctorate," he went on, "I used what I learned to study the big
redwood forests in the Pacific Northwest. I made computer models of the effects
of bears eating salmon in British Columbia, in Canada." Would she know there was a Vancouver Island?
"Oh,
that's where Bigfoot lives, isn't it?"
"You
know about Bigfoot?"
"Of
course. Us 'monster locations' are all connected. I have a pen friend in the
Himalayas: she sends me photos of Yeti."
Kaleb
laughed.
"Maybe
that's why they brought someone all the way from America," Jessie said. "Because
you’re an expert in the Bigfoot.”
Kaleb
chuckled again. It was true Loch Ness wasn't his first brush with a
cryptobiological phenomenon. Many of the hunters and backwoodsmen he'd met on
his fieldwork on Vancouver Island had asked if he'd come across signs of the
Bigfoot. There had been a few mentions of it on hiking trips in the Cascades,
too, and even a word of warning to watch out for more than bears during
undergraduate field trips to Glacier National Park. He'd nodded solemnly and
walked on, smirking to himself and shaking his head at the credulity of the lay
community. If ever there was a case for federal control of schoolbooks and
course content, it was the terrible state of scientific reasoning among the
general public.
“It’s
not Bigfoot, it’s Big Data
they pay me for. Mostly it's because the US government pays me."
"So
you don't believe in the Sasquatch, then?"
He
loved the way she said Sasquatch. "For sure I don't believe in it. I've
spent a few years in the deep woods, bumped into bears and wolves and marmots
and cougars—bumped into grizzlies in Glacier, too. They're all very secretive
animals, but if you're out there enough, you'll see them. Never saw a single
sign of a Sasquatch—not a footprint, nor hair I didn't identify for sure as bear
or wolf or cougar. It's like the monster that's supposed to be out there,"
he said with a nod towards the lake. "It's impossible, man."
"So
you don't believe in Nessie, either?" she asked, taking another bite of
her sandwich.
Kaleb
laughed again and shook his head. “No way. I told you that. I’m an ecologist.
I’m open to any evidence of the ecological possibility—either for or against
it. My study is a complete statistical breakdown of the lake and its
tributaries. It’ll show where every gram of nutrients can be found—whether it's
in the water, the fish, the bugs, the forest, or the otters. Energy in, energy
out. If there is something left over for a pod of
orcas, or a shoal of sturgeon, or a family of ichthyosaurs miraculously left
over from the Jurassic—or whatever else the monster’s supposed to be—I’ll find
it.
"But
even with an open mind, how can there be a population of large animals out
there, with no dead bodies ever showing up, no sign of them for years on
end?"
"A
population?" Jessie asked, holding her hand over her full mouth.
He
noted the curiosity in her tone.
She
swallowed the piece of sandwich. "Why a population?"
He
smiled. It was always amazing how little biology seeped into the majority of
the general populace's minds and stayed there after they'd left high school.
"There's always a population. It's
biology."
"Oh,
is it, Mr Smarty-Pants?" She laughed back: obviously, he noted with
relief, taking the lighter side of his dismissal. "I thought he could have
spontaneously generated from the wishful thinking of a drowning man in the
1680s."
Kaleb
guffawed. She was a quick wit, this girl.
"So,
then, you're here to prove it can't exist. Like Bigfoot. You can't actually survey the whole lake: not at once. But you can say there's not enough food there to feed the
animal—sorry, animals. Just like you can't sweep the entire coastal
redwoods—though they're getting pretty thin on the ground, I hear—with an
infrared camera to prove there are no Bigfoots... Is it Bigfoots or
Bigfeet?"
Before
he had time to reply, she continued, "Bigfoots. So, since you can't say
definitively that it doesnae exist, because ye can't prove a negative, you say:
'It's kind of like saying that it's irrelevant whether Schrödinger's cat is in
the box or not, or was once in the box or not, because if he's in there now,
he's most certainly bloody dead. A cat can't live without food, water and
oxygen: it's biology.'"
"Uh...
yeah," Kaleb replied, quickly reviewing what she'd said to ensure he
wasn't tripping himself up—or she was trying to trip him. Man, she knew her
stuff, this girl from the chip shop who'd studied English and Drama.
"It's
a bit of a cheat, isn't it?" Jessie asked. "Go on, you can say it.
I'm not a scientist. I won't rat you out to your learned colleagues."
- Lovely, loads of unexplained! Who do
you identify with most in your work? And why?
I suppose I have to say Derek, from Five Days on Ballyboy Beach. I gave him
some of my basic characteristics - university, home town, course of study - and
a few personality traits, just so I could put him in a very different situation
and see what would happen.
- If you
could choose who would play Derek in the movie
or series made from your work, who would it be?
Oh, that's another tough question. He's
pretty young (early twenties) so I don't know many decent actors of that age
simply because I'm not keeping up with those kinds of movies. Twenty years ago
Colin Farrel would have been great. He also could have played Paul, from Leaving the Pack.
- Which
four words would you use to describe yourself?
Good words, right?
Easy-going, loyal, day-dreamy,
environmentally-conscious.
- Which
four words would you use to describe your work?
Interesting, true-to-life, romantic,
enviornmentally-conscious.
- You are definitely environmentally-conscious - awesome! I have to
throw this in! That list of favourites we’re all interested in!
Favourite book: varies, but today it's The Girl in the Swing, by Richard Adams
Favourite movie: The Highlander
Favourite TV series: The Wire
Favourite colour: Green
Favourite food: Venison fillets fried in
olive oil
Favourite drink: Harpoon IPA beer
Favourite pet: My dad's old german pointer,
Tess, long since dead of course.
Favourite season: Spring. Just because it's
always too short
Favourite place: the top of any mountain in
Co. Wicklow,
- Often
personal fame and prominence for your work go together, but frequently
authors prefer remaining in the background while hoping their work will
assume the limelight. Is this true for you, or don’t you mind a bit of
fame?
I'd have to admit not minding a bit of
fame, if only to push forward a bit of the old environmental awareness that
some famous people have been able to do. My wife thinks I love to be in the
limelight just for the sake of it, though. She knows me better than most!
- Tell us
about your next book (we love to know what to look forward to!)
I am working on the two sequels to Leaving the Pack - parts 2 and 3 of the
Silver Nights Trilogy. The second title is not sure yet, Leading the Pack is a little too similar to the first book, but the
last one will probably be Unleashing the
Pack. I have part 2 written, but it needs lots of edits. I am doing them in
tandem so that I can keep everyone's name in my head and not have to go looking
up character's names later. In Part 2, a new pack is being formed and the young
werewolves have to learn how to control their urges as well as decide who is
going to be leader, or leash as they call it. In Part 3 they discover that
their city is now home to a tribe of old enemies who know their secret. Their
survival will require either reaching an agreement that had never been possible
in the old country, or a war that will eliminate either one or the other group.
- Sounds intriguing! What
comes next, besides a new book project? A holiday, an event?
Right now, I'm looking forward to the big
festivals of San Fermines in Pamplona, and then a trip home to Ireland in July.
I have a friend visiting from Boston, so I'm excited to show her around the
town and experience the mayhem and madness. It coincides with the release of JD
Martins' One Night in Pamplona, part
of the City Nights Series published
by Tirgearr, so it's doubly exciting this year.
- You have much to look forward to! And
finally, if you could choose one person, living or dead, you would like to
meet, who would it be and what would you ask of that person?
I'd love to have met Hemingway and I'd ask
him if he'd prefer Pamplona not to have become famous because of him. A thing
I'd ask of him, would be not to allow
his wife to be in charge of his manuscripts that day they were stolen from a
train and lost to posterity.
That would change something, wouldn't it?
Thank you so much for chatting with us, David. Here's to very success!
David's new book, just released :)
Blurb
Kaleb
Schwartz isn't interested in the Loch Ness Monster. He'd enough
cryptobiological speculation about Bigfoot while studying the Pacific Northwest
forests. He's in Scotland's Great Glen to investigate aquatic food webs and
nutrients cycles; if he proves there's no food for any creature bigger than a
pike, then so much the better.
Jessie
McPherson has returned to Loch Ness after finishing university in London,
hoping to avoid the obsession with its dark waters she had when younger and
first discovered lonesomeness. She knows any relationship with a scientist
studying the lake is a bad idea, but something about Kaleb makes her throw
caution to the depths.
When
Kaleb discovers Jessie's lonesomeness refers not just to the solitude of the
loch, he's faced with an ecological problem of monstrous proportions. Can he
find a way to satisfy both the man and the scientist inside himself, and do the
right thing?
Find out more about David and his other books here
Tuesday, June 16, 2015
Monday, June 15, 2015
Saturday, June 13, 2015
Justine's Journal #43
52 Weeks 500 Words
This is how it began: Justine (not her real
name) decided to write 500 words (or as near as), anything goes, per week for 52
weeks. She would then submit it for anonymous posting, via me, her friend.
Perhaps a pattern will emerge from her words, but at this stage it’s more an
experiment I have agreed to share in. I’ll attempt to draw conclusions at the
end of this. Stay tuned if this resonates with you.
Week 43
"Well, it’s countdown to my final journal entry. Ten to go,
including this one, I admit I’m starting to feel as if I am about to end
something I would prefer to continue! This session of entries began to force me
into recognition of self and I was initially frightened of doing so. Had Elaina
refused me the space on her blog, I admit it would not have insisted too hard.
Yet, over the weeks, this has come to mean quite a bit to
me. I soon realised how therapeutic it is to talk to the ether. It was as if I spoke
to everyone and no one simultaneously, and that is pretty liberating. It’s
faceless, as I remain faceless. I have learned so much about myself merely by
being honest about my feelings.
I will continue with the journal under my pillow, without a
doubt!
In a sense, you know me now.
You know I love and respect nature and find much of my
inspiration from listening to and watching what happens in the natural world,
from birds, rain, sunsets and the little spaces in the grass.
You also know I have acknowledged the sense of premonition
we all have and, while I certainly don’t claim knowing how it works, the
feeling is welcome now. Follow your instincts, for that, in my opinion, is
premonition.
You have followed my issues with family and I want you to
realise, this entry thing? It helped to fix the relationship with my brother,
and for that I am eternally grateful.
And, of course, you know about the stalker who nearly caused
me to surrender my sense of self, as you know of my new partner (and my insecurities
about us!). The stalker is now a lesson learned, while my partner has my heart.
I do believe we will be together for a long time, but, if not, I have learned
it is just fine to love again. Perhaps we will tie the knot, perhaps not, but
these entries will be over before I can share it with you. Pity.
Maybe, in a year or so, Elaina can post an update!
I post this ‘overview’ now because the final entries, I feel,
should concentrate on those final niggling issues we all seem to carry around
with us. Not that I have anything planned, for I think my life should determine
which thing becomes important at a given time, but I will be looking out for it
and then tell you what I think.
Maybe it will be about my frustration with my cooking
skills! Yes, an issue for me. I have always thought I do okay in the kitchen,
but now that I am cooking for a man again, I doubt myself. How crazy is that?
It is, of course, not about cooking, but about my own insecurity, therefore an
issue needing honest examination. And there, in those few words, a niggle is
laid to rest without having to try too hard. Just acknowledging my insecurity
sets me on a path to healing! A journal REALLY helps!
Catch you next week. Stay safe and well until then."