From Mark Coker and the folks at Smashwords.
Smashwords: Smashwords Year in Review 2014 and Plans for 2015: Each year I provide Smashwords authors and publishers a review of our progress in the year as well as hints of our plans for the coming ye...
Smashwords is the publisher for the ebook version of The Year of the Rabbit (2011). We're working on a new print edition, due out by 2023. Meh... I just enjoy keeping a young artist and editor hostage, feeding her and supporting her creative work.
Happy New Year!
Theresa (Flo)
Thursday, January 1, 2015
Sunday, December 28, 2014
Growing up Catholic
It's not a secret.
The average reader will have concluded that most of the Catholic themed portions of the novel are influenced by the author's upbringing.
While Sera Fletcher was often excused from Sunday mass, my siblings and I were obligated to attend church. Some of my brothers were altar servers so they had no excuse.
I have fuzzy memories of my First Communion and dropping my little white Bible into the Seguin River on the way home.
As we became teenagers, some of us played hooky, smoking cigarettes and killing time beside the railway tracks. Shame, shame!
Sera would spend her Sunday mornings with the Johnsons, the kind neighbours who encouraged her to read Bible stories from Baptist and Coptic sources. After church, the Fletcher family and close friends gathered for brunch at the Red Hare restaurant.
Those were good, wholesome times.
What memories do you have of growing up Catholic? Any anecdotes filled with wonder, mischief or the fear of punishment by fire and brimstone? Do submit a comment below.
If you have read the novel, please add your comments to those of the other readers. Thanks!
If you haven't read the novel yet, take a detour through Smashwords to download a sampling of the ebook format of The Year of the Rabbit. If the notion grabs you, purchase a copy of the entire novel. You get to set the price. How do you like them apples?
Thanks for dropping by!
T
The average reader will have concluded that most of the Catholic themed portions of the novel are influenced by the author's upbringing.
While Sera Fletcher was often excused from Sunday mass, my siblings and I were obligated to attend church. Some of my brothers were altar servers so they had no excuse.
I have fuzzy memories of my First Communion and dropping my little white Bible into the Seguin River on the way home.
As we became teenagers, some of us played hooky, smoking cigarettes and killing time beside the railway tracks. Shame, shame!
Sera would spend her Sunday mornings with the Johnsons, the kind neighbours who encouraged her to read Bible stories from Baptist and Coptic sources. After church, the Fletcher family and close friends gathered for brunch at the Red Hare restaurant.
Those were good, wholesome times.
What memories do you have of growing up Catholic? Any anecdotes filled with wonder, mischief or the fear of punishment by fire and brimstone? Do submit a comment below.
If you have read the novel, please add your comments to those of the other readers. Thanks!
If you haven't read the novel yet, take a detour through Smashwords to download a sampling of the ebook format of The Year of the Rabbit. If the notion grabs you, purchase a copy of the entire novel. You get to set the price. How do you like them apples?
Thanks for dropping by!
T
Saturday, November 15, 2014
November is Picture Book Month at the Huntsville Public Library
While my writing friends are hunkering down to tap out an 80,000 word draft novel, I'm taking it easy with reading and fondly gazing at the remaining picture books in our home.
The kids are grown up but I still have a soft spot for some of our favourite titles.
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Edgar the Bear with a reading recommendation |
As mentioned many times in this blog, I also have a soft spot and great respect for public libraries. I even scored a work term in a library many years ago.
The library in my old stomping ground is celebrating November as Picture Book Month and posting recommendations from staff and patrons. I think it's a great way to engage patrons, parents and families in sharing the love of reading.
The role of libraries has evolved over the past few decades. To me, they are still gathering places in a community where people can search for information, acquire knowledge and exchange ideas.
In the novel, the library is a place where Sera Fletcher could escape and seek comfort during difficult times. You won't find a printed version of The Year of the Rabbit in a library yet. You can find the eBook version at Smashwords.
Please submit a review there, at Goodreads or drop me a line. See what others have written.
Thanks for reading!
T
Friday, October 31, 2014
Have a safe and happy Halloween
Here's wishing all the kids big and small a happy Halloween.
Most of us have fun memories of the "night of dressing up for free candy". Most parents I know support their kids in making it a night of spooky thrills.
There are fiction writers who offer creepy, scary stories to make your hair stand up. I just want to make you cry. That's right. Here is an excerpt from the novel about the night Sera Fletcher's friend was spirited away.
Read more excerpts from The Year of the Rabbit. Download a free ebook sampling from Smashwords.
Thanks for stopping by. Stay safe, warm and dry.
T
Most of us have fun memories of the "night of dressing up for free candy". Most parents I know support their kids in making it a night of spooky thrills.
There are fiction writers who offer creepy, scary stories to make your hair stand up. I just want to make you cry. That's right. Here is an excerpt from the novel about the night Sera Fletcher's friend was spirited away.
Read more excerpts from The Year of the Rabbit. Download a free ebook sampling from Smashwords.
Thanks for stopping by. Stay safe, warm and dry.
T
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