Showing posts with label chatterbox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chatterbox. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

April's Chatterbox: Walk it Off


No, I haven't forgotten.

What?

I saw you looking at me that way.

I have not forgotten that it is April and that we are midway through already and that I haven't set up this month's Chatterbox topic. I have taken artistic license with time-frames this month, and you already knew that. So. Without another delay, I am here to announce that April's Chatterbox topic is...

Travel-by-Foot

 I am allowed to be arbitrary, you know. This is my Chatterbox and my blog-space. The decision to label April's topic as "travel-by-foot" might have a little bit to do with the fact that I took a five-mile walk (at least that far) out in the countryside this morning with a friend. April is a time perfect for taking long walks, at least in Virginia. The year hasn't heated up so much that she's all sweaty and humid. Pollen will soon settle down (the pine-pollen is KILLING me today), dogwoods bloom like forgotten lace handkerchiefs along the roadsides, and if you intend to get any sort of outdoor walking into your year, you'd be wise to get out now, because Summer temperatures strangle that idea. Plus, walking along the road gives one the opportunity for many new experiences. I met an interesting old fellow Sunday afternoon, and you never can tell what'll happen by going by foot in a world overrun with autos. :)

When you've written your Chatterbox piece (see tag at bottom of post for details), link up with the linky-dink and we can enjoy each other's work. Also, it's #wordplaywednesday so if you have anything of that nature, tag it up and share on social media! Cheers!

(Travel-by-Foot)

Sunday, March 1, 2015

March's Chatterbox: Hockity, Pockity, Wockity, Wack

Chatterbox is on time this month, and a grand hurrah for it, right? A mad and merry March to you all! I'll refresh your mind as to what Chatterbox is from the get-go so those of you who are newish won't feel left out. There's nothing worse than arriving late to a party and feeling that every eye is upon your ignorance.



CHATTERBOX IS A MONTHLY EVENT CREATED AND HOSTED BY ME, DESIGNED AS A QUICK DIALOGUE EXERCISE. IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE STRICTLY DIALOGUE, AS I ENJOY GOOD DESCRIPTION TOO, BUT CENTERING YOUR PIECE AROUND A CONVERSATION IS THE GENERAL IDEA. I ASSIGN A TOPIC (USUALLY ONE THAT CAN BE TAKEN ANY OF SEVERAL WAYS) AND IT IS YOUR JOB TO WRITE A CONVERSATION BETWEEN YOUR CHARACTERS, USING THIS PROMPT. WHEN YOU'VE POSTED YOUR PIECE ON YOUR BLOG, COME BACK HERE AND LEAVE YOUR LINK ON THE LINK-UP BELOW.

 In England, there is an old tradition that if Easter should fall on Lady Day (March 25) than some disaster should soon follow:
"When my Lord falls into my Lady's lap,
England beware of some mishap."
Of course in 2015, Easter falls on April 5th, but I stole inspiration from this old superstition anyway. In addition to the tradition of havoc wreaked on Lady Day, there is more troublesome lore pertaining to this month. The name "March" itself was borrowed off of Mars, the Roman god of war, since the calender year used to begin with March, and spring was the time for wars.As Christianity spread, of course, we instituted a church calender which meant the year began in January, and out went March. Another version of the namesake comes from the old English word for "roar," which title obviously refers to the month's windy habit. Anyway. For March's Chatterbox, I thought I would foist off the idea of many traditions and wives' tales and announce the topic as:

Superstition

Now, you can declare yourselves to be purists and write of a roaring war on superstition and thus win gold stars for your Marchyness. Or you can write of two characters who are all for believing in superstitions. Or one could be for and one against it. Or you could take the more "characters having a historical-philosophical-discussion-of-superstition" view. One thing that comes to mind is the iconic scene in Roman Holiday in which Hepburn and Peck's characters are visiting the Mouth of Truth in Rome...and get a (famous) bit of a scare.



I am probably the farthest thing from superstitious you could ask for. My black cat waltzed across my path on Friday the Thirteenth of last month and I laughed at the irony of how much such an occurrence might worry the unhealthy-minded. I consider morbid superstition to be its own peculiar form of madness, and March is the month for it, traditionally, is it not? However you choose to play the topic, superstition is yours to play with. Brava, and join your posts in the link below. Looking forward to reading all the entries, so share the joy around. :)

Thursday, February 19, 2015

February's Chatterbox: Passing the Time



"February is merely as long as is needed to pass the time until March."
-Dr. J.R. Stockton
One of these days I will utilize Blogger's "schedule a post" feature and actually get Chatterbox out on time. The 19th of the month is late, even for the Queen of Tardy Posts herself. While I am already writing up one post, perhaps I will schedule March's Chatterbox. I think it is a fine idea. And then I shall feel clever when March 1st rolls around and the post shows up on your dashboards. It struck me last month that I have quite a new frequent-viewers/followers of The Inkpen Authoress blog who were unfamiliar with the general goal of Chatterbox. I realize now that including a concise description of the project in every edition might be more helpful that not. My apologies to newcomers last round: I've mended my ways.

CHATTERBOX IS A MONTHLY EVENT CREATED AND HOSTED BY ME, DESIGNED AS A QUICK DIALOGue EXERCISE. IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE STRICTLY DIALOGue, AS I ENJOY GOOD DESCRIPTION TOO, BUT CENTERING YOUR PIECE AROUND A CONVERSATION IS THE GENERAL IDEA. I ASSIGN A TOPIC (USUALLY ONE THAT CAN BE TAKEN ANY OF SEVERAL WAYS) AND IT IS YOUR JOB TO WRITE A CONVERSATION BETWEEN YOUR CHARACTERS, USING THIS PROMPT. WHEN YOU'VE POSTED YOUR PIECE ON YOUR BLOG, COME BACK HERE AND LEAVE YOUR LINK ON THE LINK-UP BELOW.

I have become notorious for surprising people with topics one would not generally think of in relation to a given month. For instance, I am sure you are expecting "romance" as the topic of February. I am an Expectations Disappointer. "But that is a friendly name...used only by those who don't know me well." (Name the quote and unending glory is yours) Last February I chose "criticism" for the assignment. This month, hearkening to the quote at the front of the post, I choose:

Passing the Time

Kudos in advance to those of you who manage to make a scene of creative dialogue! To be fair and not judge me too harshly for assigning this topic, isn't passing the time the thing for which chit-chat and small-talk was created? So don't roll your eyes and heave a hearty sigh. Get your pens out and get you to writing, Lizzy!

Monday, January 12, 2015

"Quiet, Sparkler." January's Chatterbox Receiving Entries!


"Lots of people go mad in January. Not as many as in May, of course. Nor June. But January is your third most common month for madness."
-Karen Joy Fowler, Sarah Canary
I realize January's Chatterbox is late and that it is my habit to be tardy with these things. I will plead the excuse of many events leading up to last weekend (we had seventeen extra people staying with us for a wedding) and leaving no time until now for scheduling blog posts. But all's well that ends with the Chatterbox link-up appearing on the blog within its prospective month, and I am pleased to introduce to you the first topic of 2015:

Pyrotechnics

I may or may not still be bitter that we had no fireworks, sparklers, matches, whirligigs, etc. for New Year's Eve. I may or may not have determined my favorite groomsman at this wedding when he gave me two extra sparklers, even though I already had one, and through his understanding was able to make up for the lack of New Year shizzam. At any rate, January is the first month of the year and I always associate it with fireworks. I also associate it with sequins, sparkling cider, cracker-and-cheese-plates, and olives. But because "olives" would be a weird topic to hand off to my public, I've stuck with "pyrotechnics" and I greatly anticipate what you make out of that. Off you go, ducks! Away from me.

Monday, December 8, 2014

December's Chatterbox: So I say God bless it!


"And therefore, Uncle, though it has never put a scrap of gold or silver in my pocket, I believe that Christmas has done me good; and will do me good; and I say 'God bless it!'"
-Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol
Good morning, Chap-os! Though it is December 8 and thus nearly a third of the way through the month of December, I am not going to make you miss Chatterbox the second time round! Last year, December's topic was mythology. I think I threw you guys for a loop that time, because it was not really Christmas-like at all, unless you count Santa Claus. Apologies to those of you who still believe. Go...watch The Polar Express or something. After decorating for Christmas the other day, I fell into a brown study over a magazine we have had since I was a year old. It's a Family Circle Christmas Treasury from 1993 and is full of stories, poetry, carols, and flash fiction. I have always loved it and poured over its never-ending pages every year during this season. So obviously, I love flash fiction about Christmas. This is the time of year in which I get nostalgic and love a good short story that makes me laugh or tear up or wish-it-wasn't-over. Don't you? In December, I don't mind you playing my emotions and making me cry over entirely fictional people who have an impossibly sweet story. Christmas is a time for miracles in every stretch of the word. I love it. I'll watch White Christmas and Christmas in Connecticut and Holiday Inn as many times as I can before Redbox reclaims them. I'll shout holiday trivia answers at the expense of everyone else's eardrums. I'll create little presents that don't cost much but means loads. And not only is this Christmastime, it is Advent: the time of year when we wait for the coming of Christ as a child and look to His second coming as a King who will put all things right. So this year, December's Chatterbox topic is:

Waiting Fulfilled

Each of us is waiting for something, or has waited. Have you ever had that fulfilled? Put that anxiety, hope, joy, peace, turmoil, what-have-you into words from you or from your characters (keeping an eye to dialog as usual) and link it up at the bottom of this page. Cheers, darlings! Can't wait to read all the holly-jolly. And does anyone else but me have "Read A Christmas Carol" on their holiday to-do list? It's a yearly tradition for my sister and me. We also watch the film, of which Jim Carey's version is our favorite, and sometimes we even make it well into The Cricket on the Hearth before the New Year. I'm off to work again, so tra-la-la!

Thursday, October 16, 2014

October's Chatterbox (Finally)

Contrary to what some of you might think, when the calender flips to a new month and we've moved from September to October (which is such a lovely thing. October is my heart-month), Chatterbox is not the first thing of which I speak. To be very honest with you, I forgot all about it till last night. Usually someone reminds me, but I think you have given up, it being the sixteenth and all that jazz. Despite this failing on my part, we will be having a Chatterbox. In fact, it begins today. Those of you who don't know what Chatterbox is, I will direct you to the tag at the bottom of this post that says, "Chatterbox." Click on it--it shall take you to the realm of the never-never, which means Old Posts. Read them, love them, participate this time. So, you'll be wanting to know the topic:

Maples

Of course I can't just let you off easy and say "fall leaves," because not only is that lame, it is also not terribly specific, and I find specifics more inspiring. I want you to write about maples. Of all the autumn trees, few can stop the show like a blood-red maple tree. I love all the fall colors, but there's something giddy about a maple rearing red against the pines (we have mostly pines, so colors show up smartly). I will be kind and let you write about maples in whatever stage. You can even bend the rules and write about maple derivatives (syrup, flavoring, etc.), but whatever you do, remember that Chatterbox is an exercise in dialog as well as description, so have fun and get the old brain cranking! You may put your links in the thingamajig below. :)

Saturday, September 6, 2014

September's Chatterbox Announced!


Right away, I'd like to tell you that I have in my possession the official cover for Anon, Sir, Anon and you will get to see it here and several other blogs on Monday, September 15th. Blast it. I almost can't wait that long. Oh well. I can look at it every few hours and smile to myself in a secretive fashion.

I missed Chatterbox last month, but I was thoroughly determined not to miss it this month and so you have it here. No worries, dear people who love it so much. It is coming. In fact, it has come. Because this is the post where I tell you the topic. I'll scootch out of the way and get to the brass tacks:

This is the month of September ("with summer's best of weather and autumn's best of cheer") and as September means it is socially acceptable to bring out the salted caramel everything (Who needs Pumpkin Spice when you could have a mocha with flakes of sea salt on top of the whip? DIVINE.) and talk about autumn fashions and firesides and my obsession with ginger-molasses cookies, I decided that the theme would also be a bit cozy and autumnal. And because I take the path of least resistance when it comes to blogging schedules and because I always feel bad for not participating in my own Chatterboxes, I'm challenging you in retrospect. Because the theme for September, as brought to you by Sandwiches For Two, is...

Pears

Now don't look at me like that. You know I have absolutely no intention of ever fulfilling your assumptions. I did pears with my descriptions, the makers of Saving Mr. Banks did pears with a heart-rending death-bed scene. You'll be able to come up with something, I know.

Oh. And for those of you who are probably new and confused as to what the blazes Chatterbox is, here's the descrip-o:
ChaTTERBOX IS A MONTHLY EVENT CREATED AND HOSTED BY ME, DESIGNED AS A QUICK DIALOG EXERCISE. IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE STRICTLY DIALOG, AS I ENJOY GOOD DESCRIPTION TOO, BUT CENTERING YOUR PIECE AROUND A CONVERSATION IS THE GENERAL IDEA. I ASSIGN A TOPIC (USUALLY ONE THAT CAN BE TAKEN ANY OF SEVERAL WAYS) AND IT IS YOUR JOB TO WRITE A CONVERSATION BETWEEN YOUR CHARACTERS, USING THIS PROMPT. WHEN YOU'VE POSTED YOUR PIECE ON YOUR BLOG, COME BACK HERE AND LEAVE YOUR LINK ON THE LINK-UP BELOW.
Cheeeeeeeeeers! Can't wait to read all your entries, and this month I will actually be home to look at them, believe it or not! Also, my St. Rachel is, according to rumors, having a bit of luck with stuffing the Map of Whistlecreig into the print copy of Anon, Sir, Anon. :3 We shall see.

Also, I made up a word: Woebegonity. I like that word.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

July's Chatterbox: Something Foreign

I am taking a quick moment while my newspapers are printing to announce the Chatterbox topic for July because SOMEONE was so good as to remind me I hadn't done it yet. Ahem. Jolly good. So, the topic for July is going to be:

Foreign Relations

Haha. Hard topic on the surface but really: how do your characters interact with those of another culture or nationality? I want to know because it will probably be quite varied and certainly interesting. :) I don't have time to figure out how to sign in to the InLinkz page so for now, just leave a link to your post in a comment! :D Life of a journalist. So sorry. See you in a week or so!

Monday, June 2, 2014

June's Chatterbox

The beginning part of any month means, of course, Chatterbox! If any of you are still confused as to what Chatterbox is, may I direct your attention to the label on the bottom of this post? By clicking that, you will select every post related to Chatterbox that has ever found space on The Inkpen Authoress and you may browse submissions and instructions at will. Self-help; that's what we're all about these days, correct? Now, for June's topic:


"Believe me, my young friend, there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats."
- Kenneth Grahame The Wind in The Willows
It is summertime, this June-thing. Summer in all her innocent glory before she's been fondled and smirched by roving August. June is still a blossom-eyed, lovely green thing and the weather in June makes me feel like doing lazy things like going to the beach or lying in the grass in my front yard with my face buried into the earth just sniffing the greenness. Star-gazing, ice cream, and wading in creeks and rivers go right up there on the list. June is a watery month - not watery as in rainy, but watery as in Having To Do With Wetness of All Sorts. And when I think of water - be it a river, creek, puddle, gutter, lake - I think of boats and boating.

That's your assignment.

Boats & Boating

What any of you will actually do with this topic is a thing that makes me eager to see. I can't wait for your entries and I'll probably try to write something myself on this topic. Remember, the main thrust of Chatterbox is a dialog exercise so don't get stuck on thinking, "My story does not deal in Boats. Whatever did she pick Boats for?"

Think hard, think splish-splash. Think Boats. I'll be waiting with my link-up and an anchor o'er my shoulder.

Saturday, May 3, 2014

Drink isn't Drink

Because I'm a goose and panicked that I wouldn't fulfill my word, I wrote up my own Chatterbox piece between bouts of wheel-barrowing mulch thither and yon today. My shoulders don't thank me for the work, but I had plenty of time for thinking so it all worked out. This piece belongs with Mob Ink. Enjoy!

***


“May I have a glass of water?” It came out more Oliver Twistian than Fizz had hoped. He’d try again: “I can’t possibly continue with the story till I’ve had a drink.”
Camel gave Spinks a nod. Spinks slank (slinked? Fizz had never been certain of the past tense) to a rusty latch in the wall and turned it. A piece of sheet-rock fell back, revealing a cache as deep and wide as the proverbial fountain flowing. Inside the cache were rows upon rows of flat, amber-shot bottles.
“Brandy.” Spinks took a bottle and brought it to Fizz with a very graceless have at the bow of maitre d'.
“From the waist, not the knees,” Fizz directed. He took the proffered bottle and turned it in the dim light of the warehouse. The muted warmth it gave off was admirable in a world that seemed to be nothing but sheet metal and concrete blocks. “Brandy? Under the ban?”
Spinks rolled his shoulders and eyed the flask. “We’re a mob, loony. Less a’ the stuff the country gets, more of it we gets.”
Camel moved one long leg over the other.
“You got any business sense?” Spinks snapped.
Fizz thought of a recent conversation involving Marvin and something about premiums and interest. “Afraid not. Numbers were never my game.”
Camel grunted. “Yeah, but stories is and till you’s started talking, we ain’t gonna let you off our guns.”
Oh, the guns. He’d almost grown used to having conversations with a Colt .45. So much so, he’d failed to notice Camel and Spinks both wore trench coats--and you could count on one thing for sure: if a man wears a trench coat, it’s never for rain.
Conscious of a tickle in his throat, Fizz tossed the brandy to Spinks with a shrug. He hadn’t seen anything stiffer than apple juice, let alone tasted it, in a solid year, but now was not the time to get bubbly and lose his bearings. Perfectly nonchalant. Fizz took pride in the accomplishment of that toss and shrug, for nonchalance often seemed to go with numbers and The Charleston on his list of Things I Am Less Than Good At.
“I can’t tell a story till I’ve had a drink.”
“Then have some and stop yippin’.”
“Water,” Fizz said in an equally impatient tone.
“Water?” Spinks laughed a choppy, disbelieving laugh and elbowed Camel who, till then, had not seemed to find anything interesting.
“Oh yeah,” Camel said, “Water? Ha heh ha.”
Up this awkward moment, Fizz had assumed the humorless-sidekick gag to be a product of  the below-average imagination of filmmakers in Hollywood. Evidently, it was not.
When Spinks was done making fun of his prisoner’s demand, he settled into a naily glare. “You come up to Eddie Harold Howard--to us--and splash our work all over the newsstands with your book and trow yourself on Big Eddie’s good graces and refuse a glass a’ his gold?”
“Don’t you have any water?”
Spinks pocketed one hand and the flask together then ambled to the cache and latched the door with his free hand. He brought out his other hand but the flask remained hidden. Somehow, Fizz got the idea Spinks saw a lot less of the gold he was so hot over than he’d like his storyteller to know.
“You don’t have water, do you?”
Camel looked up to check with Spinks then bit off his thumbnail in a contemplative fashion more suited to a student of Plato than a gangster with a .45.
“Well, no,” he said. “We can’t have it lookin’ like this is an unabandoned abandoned warehouse, can we? We can’t just go grinnin’ up to d’Lord High Mayor and ask him to send us a water-bill, now can we? gotta keep it abandoned so no one knows anyone lives here, see?”
Put in that way, Fizz had to agree that life as a mobster was on par with exploring the Sahara Desert, as far as the peril of dying of thirst went. It could have been delirium brought on by excessive dehydration, but Fizz seemed to have a vision of himself stopping gang-violence and repealing Prohibition all at once by marching to the Mayor of Chicago himself. It would be a simple conversation: he would explain that the reason gangs smuggled liquor at all was because they were too humble to ask for water.
“Give them water, Mr. Mayor, and the demand for liquor supply would go right down. Then you’d need no Prohibition laws because people would drink responsibly--or not at all! Because, dear Mr. Mayor, when you’ve had a nice glass of water, do you yearn for a glass of sherry? Oh, you do? Well, the American Citizen would likely not, and if he did ... well. Yes, Mr. Mayor, no need to shove. I was just on the point of seeing myself out.”
Oh, the gangs had it very rough indeed. But he guessed it was not written in his script to sort it all out.
“Hurry up with da story!” Spinks shouted. One wing of his trench coat flapped eagerly.
Fizz settled his back against the cinder-blocks and thought about licking moisture off the bricks. "As a point of interest, Mr. Spinks, I'm still thirsty."

Friday, May 2, 2014

May's Chatterbox Announced


Every month, I seem to forget that I host a thing called Chatterbox and that it begins at the start of every month, and that I'm obliged to make up a topic and dispense it to you like aspirin, to chew on at your will and come out with something fabulous. Those of you who don't know what Chatterbox is, may I introduce you?
Chatterbox is a monthly event created and hosted by me, designed as a quick dialog exercise. It doesn't have to be strictly dialog, as I enjoy good description too, but centering your piece around a conversation is the general idea. I assign a topic (usually one that can be taken any of several ways) and it is your job to write a conversation between your characters, using this prompt. When you've posted your piece on your blog, come back here and leave your link on the link-up below.
Quite easy, quite helpful. I always love reading the many entries that come in! I ought to participate myself, someday. I always say that and I always mean it, but it isn't overly often that I do prompts outside of my general course of writing. That's the point of writing prompt, right? To crack you out of the realm of normal? Hmmmm. This month, I might do it. I will do it. Hold me to it, please, won't you? (Such a jolly idea of mine, ten days before I leave the country. Har HAR.)

I threw around quite a few horrible suggestions for May before settling on one that I think will please those of you who are metaphorical, those of you who are literal, those who are humorous, curious, or whimsical. This topic is, of course,
Water.
Can't live without it, too much will kill you, it can be a salvation or a terror depending on whether it comes as the last drop of moisture in a desert, or an unforeseen tsunami. I remember reading Little Town on The Prairie and marveling over the intellectual debate held in the town hall over which was the more powerful: fire or water. Water won, for water can put out fire in the end. Water has many biblical parallels, geographical, historical, and environmental effects, and much much symbolism. You can be a scientist and study water, or an Olympic swimmer and use water. Put strychnine in the well and the whole family will DIE in fearful AGONIES. Crush a leaf of mint in a mountain stream and the drink will be the sweetest you've ever tasted. Find the Fountain of Youth and you'll live forever. Go down Niagara Falls in a barrel and you'll live a second.

Water is a marvelous thing. Write about it and leave your link below.

Friday, April 4, 2014

April's Chatterbox

new specs!
It's April, my dear fools! Quite April. April fourth, or something, isn't it? I missed a good "here we go round the mulberry bush and gathering nuts in May' sort of opening to the month, but I'm here now. Truth to tell, ever since my older brother moved away to Leesburg, I haven't felt much like playing April Fool's tricks. I'd never noticed that I actually helped him with his machinations instead of making up my own. Huh. Anyway, the start of a new month also means the start of a new Chatterbox topic! I'm so pleased to see more and more writers participating each month. It makes such a better splash when you have writers in all genres from all corners of the blogging sphere. Perhaps one of these days I'll actually do something with it myself instead of leaving all the work to you. Haha. Oh, before I announce the topic, I wonder, how many of you are doing Camp NaNoWriMo? I am not--Heavens, I'm not!--but I would like to publicly raise my non-existent cap to you and say that you are jolly good fellows and I hope you meet your goals. Huzzah huzzah. I, for one, am finding the editing of Anon, Sir, Anon going slow as a snail jogging through wet concrete, so that is a very big cap-tipping.

April's Chatterbox topic is going to be:

Resurrection

Oh jolly. What do I mean by that? Do I mean the Crucifixion and Resurrection? Perhaps. Do I mean someone you thought was dead that reappears at an extraordinarily inconvenient moment? Do I mean the resurrection of old fears, or perhaps long-dead hopes? Spring is a beautiful time of re-birth, new life, and things-that-were-dead coming alive. I want to see you play this in a dozen different directions. It could be the up-sweeping of a long-dead custom, the revival of an old feud, the thawing of a long-icy relationship, the discovery of a hidden secret. So many possibilities. I cannot wait to see what you come up with. In addition to the topic being interesting (and appropriate for the month), it is a topic that ought to fit somewhere in every work in progress; though life is ever-changing, there is a rhythm to it just like there is a dance to the seasons and a pattern to the winds. Find that pattern in whatever way is most vivid, and bring your "resurrection" for the rest of us to read! Per usual, the link-up is below! 
Little stones are smooth
only when the water passes through
So I am a stone,
rough and grainy still
trying to reconcile this river's chill.
-Mindy Gledhill "River God"

Saturday, March 1, 2014

March's Chatterbox: "...then we shall see face to face."

Happiest of all happy Marches to each of you! It's a new month which means a new page on my calender, a new writing space, newly painted walls in the hall (the soles of my feet are speckled with paint), and I'm sure many adventures to come. This month I hope to be able to purchase a ticket to Romania for our missions trip in May. I am so excited about this opportunity and cannot wait to go back to all the places and people from last year. It was such a privilege to share in their lives for two weeks. Want to see some photos? Here's an album. Anyway, I digress. It's time for Chatterbox again! It's funny how uncalculated all my choices of topic are. A friend asked me what the next Chatterbox topic was going to be and I hadn't even thought of it. I threw around a few ideas and finally settled on one with which I expect you to have fun:

http://media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/4b/97/18/4b971834630b5b34f2d8c4ef8476af81.jpg

Mirrors

Such an ambiguous topic, isn't it? Do I mean literal mirrors? Do I mean two people imitating one another? Do I mean reflections, or a reflective spirit? Do I mean an absence of mirrors, or perhaps a superfluity of them? Do I mean a robber baron signalling to his band with flashes on a mirror, or perhaps I mean something more like The Picture of Dorian Gray.  There is ample room for speculation as to what I mean by assigning you mirrors. That speculation is your job and I am certain you will come up with brilliant ways to apply the topic to your own stories. Mirrors are always a bit mysterious, always changing what one thinks one sees into something just a little different. I recall walking through a house of mirrors are our county fair and losing my breath to laughter over how deuced hard it really is to find your way...until I looked at the cracks at the floor and was able to see where they led. Because of the properties of mirroring, you aren't really seeing exact reality...and that opens up a slew of ideas for me. Can't wait to read the entries. You can add your links to the link-up below as usual. Have a lark!


Monday, February 10, 2014

Now Receiving: February's Chatterbox!


Charmings sirs and madams, it is my pleasure to announce February's topic for Chatterbox! I am going to be a pill and not let you write about love in this month of romantic frippery. I am much too independent & etc. to let you off that easy. No, February's topic for the Chatterbox event will be...

Criticism

Criticism is one of those things that you can't live without. Want to move ahead in your life? Want to develop your character and fulfill your goals and live a life actually worth living? Criticism is going to be a big part of that along the way. It's not always fun or easy to hear. As writers, we often have it even tougher than many people because we succumb ourselves to criticism every time we submit a manuscript, send out our novels to beta-readers, or win a contest. I was handed a file full of criticism (gentle and helpful criticism but still criticism) for The Windy Side of Care and asked to perform surgery on my brain-child. I know it's going to make TWC that much better; I am excited to begin polishing this story for publication. It's all good, but it's all criticism. And that's only one area in my life.

Your characters are going to encounter criticism in your novel. At least, they better. Maybe it's unsought criticism; maybe they asked for it and didn't expect their listener to actually let loose with a broken dam of thoughts on the topic. Critics can be your best friend or your worst enemy...a delicate balance of vital help that can drag you into failure or into success depending on how much you trust, apply, let go, or deny. What a witch's brew. As always, link up with your posts below. I am looking forward to reading this topic! :)



Monday, January 13, 2014

In a spirit of judgement and lemon juice

When one has initiated a certain thing like Chatterbox, it does help if one participates along with the populace. Here, then, is my offering from Vivi & Farnham. This is Vivi's first night at Whistlecreig Manor and Farnham has just inquired of his butler whether it was time for supper or not. Thanks to everyone who has entered Chatterbox so far! Your entries have been varied and amusing and it's quite a pleasure to read how you each used the subject of "food".



“It is time, sir,” Allen replied. He tucked the silver tray under his arm, bowed, pivoted on his heel, and departed.
“Well, follow him. Dining room’s just across the great hall. When I passed by earlier it was making a very ancient and fishlike smell.”
Genevieve’s stomach balked. “Oh...my.”
“No need to look so ill, Miss Langley. Quoting Shakespeare. Allen’s made branzino. Off we go. I won’t enjoy it but you might.” He stood, tugged the edges of his cardigan, and jutted his elbow at her.
She paused a second, wondering what he meant for her to do with it. Some odd gesture of gallantry, I suppose. Genevieve slipped her arm through his and suppressed a smile.
He cut his eyes at her. “You think me odd, Miss Langley? What a pass the world has come to when gentlemen no longer escort their ladies to table. Have you never been elbowed round?”
“Never.”
“‘Youth, whatsoever thou art, thou art but a scurvy fellow.’ If ever I get my hands on a man of your acquaintance, I’ll teach him.”
Her uncle’s arm was a warm thing to clasp as they made their way through the tangle of passages and Genevieve thought what a sad fact it was that gentlemen no longer “elbow” their ladies as Farnham had so bluntly put it; there was a certain peaceable respect in the gesture that made her feel like royalty as they hurried through the echoing hall and into another cell of firelight. The smell of baked seabass filled the room and through a curl of steam and candle-glow, Genevieve saw Allen pouring water into crystal glasses like a tee-totalling Bacchus in a three-piece suit. Farnham released her arm and pulled a chair out, waiting for her to sit before he pushed it in again. He took the place across from her, leaving the chair at the head of the table empty.
Genevieve had spread her napkin and thus exhausted any action that required no conversation. “Are we expecting company?”
Farnham laid his napkin across his legs with meticulous care and drummed his fingers on the tabletop. “None. The welcoming committee had gone to London to visit the Queen else they would have been here to pay you homage.”
She felt the sting of his sarcasm and wished he wouldn’t take everything she said as a personal insult. “I only wondered, as you weren’t sitting at the head of the table.”
“I’ve saved a place for Macbeth’s ghost.”
“I thought theatre-people refused to say the name of The Scottish Play.”
Farnham speared a potato with his fork and passed the bowl to her. “I am not superstitious. Why should I not use his name any less than I’d use yours? You’re not going to give me bad luck, are you?”
Genevieve served herself and set the bowl before the empty plate at the head of the table and bowed toward it. “Then Macbeth, dear sir, would you take some supper?”
Farnham scoffed. “Silly girl. I was in jest. I leave a place at the head of the table because I hate to have my back to the gaping hall.”
“You’re afraid?”
Curious. I like to know if anyone is looking at me.”
“Oh, uncle, narcissism never did any man a good turn.” Geneveive laughed at Farnham’s befuddled expression and laughed harder when he flapped his elbows with an annoyed look.
“Perhaps we’d better bless the food and have done with ghosts,” he said.
Oui, monsieur, c’est une bonne idée.”
Farnham bowed his head and Genevieve did the same. She wondered where Allen had gone to and if he thought his employer’s behavior in regards to the empty seat a bit odd.
“For what Thou hast given us, liege Lord, we thank Thee and ask that our lives might be of service to Thee,” Farnham prayed in an elegant, soothing voice that seemed to treasure the holy words. “In Thy Son’s magnificent name do we pray. Amen.”
“Amen.”
“One thing you will need to know, Miss Langley.” Farnham turned his fork with the potato still speared on the tines and smiled at it. “We are often interrupted during our supper.”
“By whom?”
“Or what? Or whither? Never you mind, for it changes every time. I thought you would like to be advised, though.”
Puzzled, she shrugged. “Of course. Thank you.”
Allen brought the branzinos on two plates and set one before each of them. The whole fish in its crispy, salted jacket stared at her with a glassy eye and Genevieve thought it seemed to look at Whistlecreig and its inhabitants in a spirit of judgement and lemon-juice. “I incline to concur,” she whispered.
“To whom are you speaking?” Farnham asked.
Genevieve snapped straight, blushing to realize she’d been overheard. “To my fish, if you must know.”
“I could have gone a long time without knowing that.” There was a bit of a silence--horrifyingly awkward--and Farnham smashed the potato he’d been turning on the fork since first stabbing it. “Tell me, Miss Langley, are you one of those nature-spiritualist people who eat nothing but dried fruit and hot water and apologize to the Earth for taking even that much from Her bosom? No? Good, because I was going to tell you that I’ll have none of that here. We eat fish. We eat poultry and lamb and pork and whatever we take a fancy for. Allen raises cabbages and he doesn’t weep a little weep over each plant as he decapitates it and takes its head to steam in a pot.”
“Really, sir!” Allen’s voice intruded.
Farnham stopped Allen with an imperious gesture of his hand. “I imagine we’d eat a horse if we decided it would taste any good. What I mean to say is that you’ll find your feelings constantly trod upon if you insist on animals and plants having spirits and crying tears and marrying and owning property and all of that ridiculous brouhaha one hears so much about in this modern age. Animals have lives and I like them to live their lives in comfort and decency. But I’ve got a life too and what’s more, I’ve got a soul, and when the time is right I have no compunction about eating a bunny or two to keep body and soul entwined.”
“Sir. Your potato,” Allen murmured.
Genevieve passed a hand over her lips, praying she wouldn’t dissolve into laughter as she watched Farnham stare at the shapeless mash that had once been a potato sitting cheek-to-jowl with the fin-tail of his branzino.
“Hmmm...well dear me,” Farnham muttered.
Allen cleared his throat. “‘I am a great eater of beef, and I believe that does harm to my wit’, sir? Was that, perhaps, the quotation for which you were searching?”
Farnham drew himself up. “Oh fie on you, Allen.”
Genevieve tried to keep her amusement inside but the aggrieved expression on Allen’s face and the surprise on Farnham’s as if he’d been an unlucky Jove discovering his Titantic strength was too much to be borne in silence. She laughed aloud--peals of it--and the idea of anyone laughing in a place like Whistlecreig only made her situation funnier. Farnham sat back, affronted, and Allen whisked himself off someplace--Genevieve could only imagine where--and still she laughed. It was just too bang ridiculous, this house and these people and her uncle’s passionate description of his butler merrily guillotining the cabbages in the garden.
“I suppose you think I’m joking,” he said after she’d finally stopped laughing long enough to begin to feel embarrassed.
“No. That’s what makes it so...so...” the hilarity almost burst out again but by a valiant sip of water, Genevieve saved herself from further disgrace.
“Now that your fish is quite cold,” her uncle said, “shall we proceed with our supper?”
“By all means.” Genevieve fanned her cheeks. “Branzino has given me permission to consume him as soon as he is cooled.”
Farnham was furious, she supposed. For the next fifteen minutes he flicked at the skin of his fish, making small cuts in the flesh but eating very little. He seemed to have lost all his appetite and when Allen finally came around with steaming cups of wassail, he beamed upon Farnham with a fatherly eye.
“I think a bit of company is good for you, sir.”
“How so?”
“Look at how you’ve eaten. That’s appetite there.”
Geneveive fingered her napkin, curious to see Allen employing sarcasm which seemed to be his master’s forte. But Farnham was not laughing--he even seemed a bit astonished and looked at the plate with a certain fondness.
“You know, Allen,” he said, “I think I did make a good attempt.”
“Enjoy your cider, sir.” Allen rested his fingers on Farnham’s shoulder for a moment then cleared away the dishes, leaving Genevieve and her uncle alone again.

Friday, January 10, 2014

January's Chatterbox: Food


It is already the 10th of January and I've been so busy with things an' stuff that I forgot to post this month's Chatterbox! Never fear, though. I'm only ten days late. You've still go 20 days to play the game and that's a good long chunk of time. Chatterbox, for all you people new to the game:
 Chatterbox is an event to help authors get to know their characters and stories better. I love to talk and I love to write dialog. Chatterbox is, essentially, an exercise in showing your character via the way he or she speaks. It's fun, it is sassy, it is simple. Each month I will assign a conversation topic and it will be your duty to write a conversation between several of your characters regarding whatever I topic I designated. Who knows? You might even end up with something you'll want to work into your real novel. When you are finished writing your post you will be able to link up with me here at The Inkpen Authoress and we'll have jolly larks reading the wide variety that springs out of the assigned topic.
See? It's quite simple and easy and fun. Lots of people enter the links to their posts on their blog in the linky-up tool below (aren't you proud of me, darlings. I remembered it this month.) and we read each others' pieces on the same topic and they're all so smashingly different. This month's topic is:


Food
"Some hae meat and cannae eat and some can eat but want it, but I hae meat and I can eat and tae the Laird be thankit."
I know I've done "coffee" as a Chatterbox subject already, but food is a thing that comes up in any book at any given point. Unless you're writing an anorexic character...but then you're still talking about food...about not eating food. So it's all the same when you're through. Food is a thing that can make people feel comfortable and at home or uncomfortable and most definitely not at home (tripe, anyone?) and it's a thing that can almost become a case of national identity as many Italian families will attest. Think about the role food has played in literature over the years...I mean, guys, the way 85% of fairytale princesses die is by eating a poisoned apple. Real kings die of surfeits of food and drink. Or poisoned food or drink. Mr. Woodhouse from Emma is forever remembered as the one who wouldn't let anyone eat cake, Marie Antoinette is forever remembered as the one who wanted everyone to eat cake.

Food's a pretty major deal.

I can't wait to read your posts! This topic could be twisted in so many ways...it is going to be amazing. Just add your posts to the link-up below whenever they are ready. I shall be waiting. :)

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

December's Chatterbox and I Survived The Silence-Month

I am almost done with this blogging break. I shall be back round here for good starting Friday. In some ways a month seems too short--I had not realized how stressed I was until I actually took a load of things out of my life (Twitter, Blogger, Facebook, Google+, Instagram, Pinterest). My goal this month was to get back in touch with real life enough that my first impulse upon experiencing a thing wasn't: "This will make a great blog post!" or "Let me Instagram this!" Ridiculous as it sounds, I had been living life with an unconsciously materialistic viewpoint so that each little bit of life only served to be ground into flour with which to make my writing pancakes. I started the month with an eye to get a lot of writing done in the interim. What happened instead is that I lived a creative month, but from the writing standpoint, it was unproductive. And you know what? I am okay with that. I had sapped so much creativity for so long without putting anything back into the fund that my well was running dry.

I took a rest month and I'm sure my brain is the better for it.

What did that month look like? Well, in pictures, it went something like this:

Filling a quote-book with favorites


Experiments in cookery: pomegranate-orange cheesecake with a gingersnap crust, anyone?

Making jewelry. You can buy this neat poetry-ring in The Warren!


breaking my brain over geometry to enlarge by hand a 5x5 photo of Audrey onto four different 12x12 canvases

Having fun with celery as a stamp. :)

A sweet friend gifted me with an UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER. Guys. This is the brand Callie uses. I may or may not have legitimately freaked out and bounced up and down and made excited noises and yelled when the "ding" went off.

started over with my 1000 Gifts list

Made a batch of cuties. <3
So yeah. My life has been touched by a bit of drama. I have led a quiet, peaceable, gentle life this month and I feel refreshed, relaxed, and loved. God is good, whether or not I am on a brilliant roll with my writing. That being said, I have been hard at work this month applying the final edits I made a couple months back for Fly Away Home and I will have some exciting news forthcoming about that novel. Secondly, I feel like I know Vivi and Farnham pretty well at this point which comes from just thinking about these characters for a month, reading up on Northamptonshire, and a goodly dose of James Herriot. I look forward to digging into the story with a concentrated effort soon. And speaking of The Warren, if you are looking for Christmas gifts for any of your writing/reading/word-smashing friends, check out the 20% off sale! Everything in The Warren is 20% off until Christmas and I will be continuing to add new products all month so stay tuned. :)


The main purpose of this post, though, was to announce December's Chatterbox! You know the ropes, and if you somehow missed what this Chatterbox thing is about, just click on the label below and read all about it. It's a barrel of fun. This month's topic?
Mythology
I can't wait to read all your posts on this topic! Mythology in any society is an interesting thing. I want to see your characters talking about it! Maybe some of them swear by the myths of their world, maybe others are skeptical, maybe others are creators or participators in those myths. Whatever the case may be, I want to hear about it! Sorry this challenge is late this month! I have (obviously) been away. I have missed all of you and look forward to catching up about the things I have missed this month. 

Friday, November 8, 2013

November's Chatterbox

I am baaaaaaack people! We unfortunately lost the election by a two-percent vote and a Democrat-funded straw-man of a third-party candidate, but God's got it under control and somehow I'll suffer through Terry McAuliffe being governor. (Please excuse me while I throw up and then breathe into a paper bag, then hand it to Hillary Clinton) THAT being said, finally November can start for me! I know oodles of you have been doing NaNoWriMo and I have not, so you are very well-aware that it is November. Probably most of you don't even have time to read this post, but because Una asked if we were doing Chatterbox this month and because of course we are, I thought I'd post the next challenge!


The explanation of Chatterbox from the introductory post:
 Chatterbox is an event to help authors get to know their characters and stories better. I love to talk and I love to write dialog. Chatterbox is, essentially, an exercise in showing your character via the way he or she speaks. It's fun, it is sassy, it is simple. Each month I will assign a conversation topic and it will be your duty to write a conversation between several of your characters regarding whatever I topic I designated. Who knows? You might even end up with something you'll want to work into your real novel. When you are finished writing your post you will be able to link up with me here at The Inkpen Authoress and we'll have jolly larks reading the wide variety that springs out of the assigned topic.
To make sure that the widest variety of people can participate in Chatterbox this month (especially those of you doing NaNo) I am choosing a topic that generally comes up in pretty nearly every novel in some form or fashion. This month, your characters are going to talk about death.
 Death is a topic that is inherent to humanity and so it comes and clocks us in the face pretty regularly. Whether your MC is faced with death, or someone they are close to dies, whether they are the ones inflicting the death or whether they are discussing it, death is a prevalent. A good measure of how well you know your character is how well your know their philosophy and worldview. How would she react to the end of a gun-barrel? How would he react if his brother was killed in cold blood? How would they react if both of them were kidnapped and in danger every second their captor was around? How would she react if she was told she had a terminal illness, or what would he think of his father--his hero--slowing losing his mind from the senility of old age and becoming unable to advise him?

So....have at it, Chatterboxers. I hope you will be able to participate even through the hectic schedule you're keeping with NaNo! Best wishes for all you who are brave enough to sign up for that madness. ;) My November looks to be busy enough with editing TWSOC and starting Anon, Sir, Anon. Toodles!