Monday, November 7, 2016

Guest Post: Maria Grazia Swan Author of Gemini Moon



Fiction versus reality.
I’m often asked where I get my ideas for the stories I write. What can I say? From everyday life. And not just ideas, objects and locations also.
Take my Lella York Mysteries series, let’s compare some of her everyday items with my own, past and present. 
Her car; she drives a Mustang. For years I drove a silver Mustang with custom paint job on the hood. The young men at the car wash would argue for the fun of taking the car through the wash. It was that cool. Later on I traded it in for a 2 door black Infiniti, but that's another story...
Her townhouse. Yes, I'm describing the gated complex I lived at while in Dana Point. Common garage and even the views. Eventually I moved south.

Mission San Juan Capistrano. I was a volunteer there for a couple of years, and did everything Lella describes...including answering the phones on Swallows day.

Flash the cat? The name of my black cat was...Cat. RIP.

All the restaurants and places named in the book are real. Some are now gone, like the bar where Lella first met Ruby. Quiet cannon is now called Cannons, and my beloved Sarducci moved from across the Mission to the train depot.
But don’t take my word for it…read the books and then you’ll have a good reason to visit Orange County, the old Mission and the wonderful beaches from San Clemente to the South to Seal Beach to the North. Believe me, you’ll be happy you did.


Author Bio
Award winning author Maria Grazia Swan was born in Italy, but has also lived in Belgium, France, Germany, in beautiful Orange County, California where she raised her family. She is currently at home in Phoenix, Arizona.

As a young girl, her vivid imagination predestined her to be a bestselling author. She won her first literary award at the age of fourteen while living in Belgium. As a young woman Maria returned to Italy designing haute couture. Once in the U.S. and after years of concentrating on family, she tackled real estate. These days her time is devoted to her deepest passions: writing and helping people and pets find the perfect home.

Maria loves travel, opera, good books, hiking, and intelligent movies (if she can find one, that is). When asked about her idea of a perfect evening, she favors stimulating conversation, Northern Italian food and perfectly chilled Prosecco.


Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Guest Post by Gino B. Bardi Author of "The Cow in the Doorway"




            Quick! What’s more important? The story or how well it’s written? 
No, the correct answer isn’t ‘both.’ our goal as writers and storytellers is, indeed, ‘a good story well told.’ Bear with me now, I'm not dissin' anybody's writing ability, but I'll argue till closing time (and the car is about to be towed away) that a terrific story line gets the nod over great writing ability.
 A compelling and unique plot, with terrific conflict and a strong resolution, will have your reader weeping in despair when they arrive at the dreaded words “The End.” That story will be remembered far longer than a weak or predictable one, no matter how well the wordsmithing is done. Yes, there are examples of brilliantly executed but humdrum plots that achieve an audience. But there are far more with blockbuster plot lines, yet barely credible characters and believable dialogue. The authors of those novels and screenplays are sipping boat drinks on a tropical island while the rest of us criticize them and complain “I coulda done it better.”
And maybe we coulda. But a little advance planning on the story structure woulda been a great idea.

            I wrote a few novels before I tackled one I thought was worth a damn. I had a general idea of the plot...up to a point. Some of it had actually happened. As soon as I left the realm of what happened and had to actually make stuff up, I got unmoored, like a hot air balloon floating with the wind. The story had gotten away from me. I tried to make up for the lost story line by continually rewriting and improving the way I told the story.  The characters realized that no one was steering the ship and mutinied. They fought over who was the protagonist. They lied to each other. They started drinking and fighting.
             The 80,000-word story I had planned grew by half. All this extra writing was good stuff- it just didn't advance the PLOT. What plot? It took the story down one-way streets and forced me to edit and delete. I had to rip out stuff I loved--some of my favorite descriptions and dialogue. It was heartbreaking. But that stuff should never have been written in the first place.
 There must be a better way.  I found it at the library's "fill a bag for a quarter" sale. One bag was filled with Reader's Digest Condensed books. I had never read one. I'd heard about them, of course, but the whole concept was silly. Maybe not.
             Someone had managed to take a full-length novel and squeeze it into a few thousand words. At that size, the plot moved with lightning speed and was brilliantly clear and understandable. Would the concept work in reverse? Could I take my novel idea, and instead of just charging ahead, could I tell the whole story, first, in a short form...with all the major plot points, the central conflict, most important dialogue, and the resolution? Could I write my own private version of a Reader’s Digest Condensed Book, without meandering into all the subplots and self-indulgent scenes that I like writing way more than the meat-and-potatoes plot? Could I stay focused and just write THE STORY?
What an exercise! I had no plans to show it to anyone, not even my writers' group. No one swooned at my writing ability because no one heard it but me. In its  concentrated version I quickly discovered what was right with the story and what wasn't. When I threw out pages,  they were, in fact, 'pages.' They weren't stacks of sheets that I had poured my heart into. I learned to write quickly. I spent less than a page on each chapter. I ignored spelling and grammar mistakes. I skipped the research...what difference does it make on what date or what street something happened? I could find that stuff later. I kept going until I had told the story.
My condensed book was about 2500 words, way longer than any synopsis, nothing at all like an outline, shorter than any novella. It was my novel, in miniature. By compressing the story, the faults in the plot line became obvious. The essential characteristics, good or bad, of the theme, conflict, and resolution stood in high relief. I had plenty of stuff to fix, but that was okay; I hadn't spent months tearing these pages out of my soul only to throw them away.
It was easy to do. I made the fixes and then started at the beginning, writing carefully, concerned now with the flow and the language. I knew the hard work was done. In the end, I got the best plot I could make along with the best writing I was capable of.  The 'writing part' was easy. We can all do the writing part. That's because we're writers, right?


Author Bio
Gino B. Bardi was born in New York City in 1950, and lived on the South Shore of Long Island until he attended Cornell University in 1968, during the tumultuous era of Vietnam War protests. Armed with a degree in English/Creative Writing, he diligently sought work in his field and soon wound up doing everything but. For the next forty-four years he cranked out advertising copy, magazine articles, loan pitches and short stories while running a commercial printing company in Upstate New York. Along the way, he married his college girlfriend, became father to three lovely daughters and decided that winter was an unnecessary evil. In 2008 he sold the printing business, retired, and now writes humorous fiction in his home on the Gulf Coast of Florida. Two signs hang above his desk: "Bad decisions make good stories," and Mel Brooks' advice that "You only need to exaggerate a LITTLE BIT."

The Cow in the Doorway is his first full-length novel and won the statewide Royal Palm Literary Award for best unpublished New Adult novel for 2015.
LinkedIn:  Gino Bardi
Skype:  gino.bardi
Buy link:

The Short Seller by Elissa Brent Weissman





Genre: Middle Grade, Realistic Fiction
Source: Purchased

My love of this author’s work started with the book “Standing for Socks”. I read this when I was a Middle Grades judge for Cybils in 2009.  I have read her Nerd Camp Books and loved them as well. I had no thoughts of not liking this book.  As I thought, I loved it.  Lindy Sachs, the main character of the book is a very lovable character. Lindy is like so many people, including myself, who struggled with math in school. When she comes down with mononucleosis and must stay home from school she is bored. Her parents hire a tutor for her so she doesn’t get further behind in her least favorite subject. She does a favor for her dad by helping him purchase some stock, since he can’t access the site from work. As he explains it to her she becomes interested enough that he fronts her one hundred dollars to buy and sell stock on her own.  She becomes even more interested when she learns her new tutor used to be a trader. They have that in common. She begins to understand math better the more she works the market. Like others who have found that a little bit of money isn’t enough, Lindy falls into that trap. One wrong move in the stock market, one bad and illegal decision has both her and her father in hot water.


I really can’t wait for my students to get their hands on this book. It is fun, funny, and full of enough adventure to keep you on the edge of your seat reading until the end.  Once again I highly recommend this book to young and old alike.