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Showing posts with label Feature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Feature. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

"When I'm not writing" with Anne Leonard

This week we are lucky enough to host miss Anne Leonard, author of Moth and Spark and discover what she likes to do in her free time! Please welcome her warmly :)


"When I'm not writing" logo


B&W Anne Leonard credit Judith Love PietromartireEveryone knows what authors do when they’re writing, right? They stare at screen or paper, periodically move their fingers, curse at the phone, snack, get on Twitter, pet their cats, snack, stare at screen or paper . . . For this post, I’m giving you a glimpse at the Secret Life of Writers – what do I do when I’m not writing?

Much of what I do is kind of obvious. I spend a lot of time reading and thinking about writing. I pick my kid up at school and make dinner if it’s my night. I talk to my husband and take walks. Sometimes we go to a movie or a museum. I rarely watch TV (we have neither cable nor reception, so the only TV I see is via Netflix), I’m not athletic, I don’t make a study of obscure languages or collect rocks.

But when I’m not being a writer or a family member or leading my ordinary life, I travel with my camera. I’ve taken photographs for at least as long as I’ve been a writer, probably longer. My father, his brother, and their father all did photography, and my very first camera was a Brownie that I got when I was 7 or 8, handed down from one of them. I still have some of the pictures I took with that camera – a few of them are nicely composed, but from the vantage of a short person, so they look quite odd to adult eyes. I’ve gone through various cameras since, including a few point-and-shoots for things like parties where I didn’t care much about the actual quality of the photo, and now use a Canon EOS. (For photo geeks: I have two – an older Rebels Xsi and a somewhat newer 60D.)

Since I graduated from law school, I’ve gone off for a few days every year for a private retreat, wherein I went out and took pictures during the day and then wrote in the late afternoons and evenings. I’ve gone to Santa Fe, New Mexico; Joshua Tree National Park; Yosemite Valley and the Eastern Sierra; and Annapolis, Maryland. The year prior to that we took a family trip to northern Baja California. This is the first year I haven’t planned an expedition, because of all the business associated with the book release.

I take very few pictures of people. I like landscapes, buildings, and up-close shots of plants and insects. I pay attention to textures and to the play of shadows and light. I play around on Photoshop, but most of the pleasure I get is from the actual act of taking the picture. Photography has been criticized for causing people to worry so much about the picture that they forget about the experience the photo is recording, and I can understand how that’s true at times, but for me the act of framing the picture is an act of seeing what I would not otherwise see. I note the lines, the shapes, the colors. I watch the light.

This all plays out in my writing, of course. I use precise details in my descriptions, and this comes from having trained my eye to see the small things: the pollen on the bee’s back, the raindrops in a cobweb, the smear of rust on an old lock. My scenes often have descriptions of the light: the way it falls, the color, the sharpness and brightness, and so on. I can imagine things with photographic detail because I look at the world that way.

It also plays out in specifics at times; the final scenes in the mountains in Moth and Spark were written directly after the Yosemite trip, when I saw the granite, volcano remnants, and cliffs of the Sierra Nevada. Looking at those mountains and photographing them not only helped me describe the details of the mountains scenes but also gave my mind an imaginative jolt that it needed for the last stretch.

In some ways, writing fiction is like taking a picture – there’s all this stuff in my head jostling for attention, and I have to focus on some of it to the exclusion of other things. It has to be framed properly. Rewriting a scene can be like zooming in or out. When I’m done with a draft, there are a lot of superfluous or too-similar shots that need to be excised before being presented to an audience. Writing and taking pictures are by no means identical creative acts, but for me they engage usefully with each other. So in that sense, even when I’m not writing, I am.

anne 1

Sierra Nevada mountains with Tenaya Lake in foreground, view from Olmsted Point, California.


anne 2


 Ruined buildings at Bodie State Historic Park, California.


anne 3


Storm clouds approaching Mono Lake, California.


anne 4


Frost on a railing.


anne 5


Mt. Shasta as seen from rest area on I-5, California.


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How inspiring! Thanks so much for visiting us, Anne!


For more Anne, check out her website or follow her on Facebook or Twitter!


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Here's the scoop on Moth & Spark:




Moth and Spark


A prince with a quest. A commoner with mysterious powers. And dragons that demand to be freed—at any cost.


Prince Corin has been chosen to free the dragons from their bondage to the Empire, but dragons aren’t big on directions. They have given him some of their power, but none of their knowledge. No one, not the dragons nor their riders, is even sure what keeps the dragons in the Empire’s control.

Tam, sensible daughter of a well-respected doctor, had no idea before she arrived in the capital that she is a Seer, gifted with visions. When the two run into each other (quite literally) in the library, sparks fly and Corin impulsively asks Tam to dinner. But it’s not all happily ever after. Never mind that the prince isn’t allowed to marry a commoner: war is coming to Caithen.

Torn between Corin’s quest to free the dragons and his duty to his country, the lovers must both figure out how to master their powers in order to save Caithen. With a little help from a village of secret wizards and a rogue dragonrider, they just might pull it off.

Purchase: Amazon | Book Depository



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giveaway banner


Penguin is giving away a copy of Moth and Spark!


 Follow the Rafflecopter instructions to enter!


a Rafflecopter giveaway


US only, no P.O. boxes.


Ends March 11th, 2014.


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Do you guys have suggestions for who you’d like to see featured on the blog? If so, you can make your suggestions on this page. No guarantees that your favourite authors will be able to participate but we’ll try!


Authors, would you like to visit  us? Please email us at jenn (at) tyngasreviews (dot) com and we’ll set it up!


tynga

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Daring You to Read... Jaran by Kate Elliott (author edition!)

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MariaIt's been a while since we've done a Daring You To Read post and we've decided to bring it back with a bang! We will now host guest authors who will dar you to read THEIR favorite book! How awesome is that? I am super happy to welcome Maria V Snyder, author of the Study, Glass & Healer series. She's one of my favorite author and I hope you will welcome her warmly!

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Published in 2002, this novel is one part science fiction, one part epic fantasy, and one part romance. It’s one of my all time favorite books.


Tess Soerensen is accidently stranded on a planet that is off limits to her race and other alien races since the indigenous people are unaware of their existence. In this book humans are not in charge and have been conquered by the Chapalli. While on the planet, Tess discovers that Chapalli are on the surface illegally. The aliens paid a band of nomads to uncover ancient ruins which may contain vital information. In order to get home, Tess has to reach the city of Jeds where there is a way to get off world, but she also wants to find out what’s so important about the ruins.

Tess meets Ilya, the leader of the nomadic tribe the Chapalli have hired. She joins up with the excursion and discovers the tribe is a rich mixture of characters and traditions. I loved how the relationship developed between Tess and Ilya. He doesn’t know she’s from another planet and she is unfamiliar with his customs.

This book has political intrigue, deceptions, and a few swoon worthy moments. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did!

 
jaran coverIn the future, Earth is just one of the planets ruled by the vast Chapalii empire. The volatility of these alien overlords is something with which Tess Soerensen is all too familiar. Her brother, Charles, rebelled against them at one time and was rewarded by being elevated into their interstellar system—yet there is reason to believe they murdered his and Tess’s parents.
Struggling to find her place in the world and still mending a broken heart, Tess sneaks aboard a shuttle bound for Rhui, one of her brother’s planets. On the ground, she joins up with the native jaran people, becoming immersed in their nomadic society and customs while also attempting to get to the bottom of a smuggling scheme she encountered on her journey there. As she grows ever closer to the charismatic jaran ruler, Ilya—who is inflamed by an urgent mission of his own—Tess must choose between her feelings for him and her loyalty to her brother.


Jaran
is the first volume of the Novels of the Jaran, which continues with An Earthly Crown, His Conquering Sword,and The Law of Becoming.

Purchase: Amazon | Book Depository

 

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Thanks so much for visiting us, Maria!


For more Maria, check out her Website/Blog/Facebook/Goodreads!


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Here's the scoop on Taste of Darkness, Maria's latest release:



Taste of DarknessShe’s fought death and won. But how can she fight her fears?

Avry knows hardship and trouble. She fought the plague and survived. She took on King Tohon and defeated him. But now her heart-mate, Kerrick, is missing, and Avry fears he’s gone forever.

But there’s a more immediate threat. The Skeleton King plots to claim the Fifteen Realms for his own. With armies in disarray and the dead not staying down, Avry’s healing powers are needed now more than ever.Torn between love and loyalty, Avry must choose her path carefully. For the future of her world depends on her decision.

Find it: GoodreadsAmazonBarnes & Noble

My review

And here's where it all began:


Touch of Power (Healer, #1)Scent of Magic (Healer, #2)


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Daring You To Read is a feature here on Tynga’s Reviews where our favorite authors dare you to read some of THEIR favorite older releases (at least 6 months old). All the books/series  featured are adored titles and we think you should give them a shot! We think it’s a super awesome way to discover that special book who might have slipped off your radar!

You’ve already read the book? Let’s us know what you thought!
You are accepting the dare? We’d love to know!
Have a dare of your own? Leave a comment ^^
tynga

Tuesday, February 04, 2014

"When I'm not writing" with Steve Vernon + Giveaway

 

"When I'm not writing" logo


Steve Vernon, author shot“So what do you do when you’re NOT writing?” Tynga asked.

“Well, I like to eat a lot,” I replied.

“Oh my gosh,” Tynga replied. “You’re an old fart, aren’t you?”

Well okay – so I am putting words in Tynga’s mouth – but that’s pretty well what we storytellers/writers do – isn’t it? We put words in people’s mouths. We sit down and imagine people wild and crazy and brave and lonely and bugged out of their freaking minds. We make up imaginary people and we make up words for them to say.

Well, let me tell you that my name is Steve Vernon and I am a writer and a storyteller. I’ve written enough words to give Noah Webster a permanent case of tongue-tie. I have hitchhiked from one end of the country to the other. I’ve made a living as a factory hand, house painter, field worker, tree planter, roustabout, woodworker, artist's model, fiddlehead picker, blueberry raker, woodchopper, warehouse worker, snow-shoveler, garden digger, waterfront palm reader, backroom Tarot card reader and a few professions I’ve forgotten along the way. Mostly, I have lived here in Nova Scotia long enough to grow barnacles on my butt.

And yes – I like to eat a lot.

And belt shopping. A whole lot of belt shopping – on account of my belt keeps shrinking, leather or not – on account of my liking to eat a lot.

In fact it was most likely my love of eating that fostered my love of cooking.

So let me share with you my recipe for something I call REFRIGERATOR SOUP.

First step is to open up the refrigerator.

I find two onions. EVERYTHING worth cooking starts with a couple of big fat onions. Peel them, chop them and throw them into the pan with a little olive oil.

Next I grab some chicken that happened to be on sale last weekend. Cut up the chicken and sizzled it with a little olive oil, garlic and butter in the bottom of my largest pot. Then I chopped a couple of good red potatoes, a yellow zucchini, and a turnip, and threw them in on top of the browning chicken. Then I dumped in a bag of baby carrots – which ACTUALLY are just regular carrots whittled down – and then I drain a can of chick peas and chucked them. I dump two cartons of broth on top. Sometimes I like to make my own broth but I was in a hurry today.

refrigerator soupCover the pan. Turn the heat down as low as it will go. Let the whole mess simmer. Go and watch a movie or read a book or write something or just stand by the window and practice looking serene.

Your family comes home and the entire house is going to smell so heavenly I bet you they set the table without being asked. If you don’t have a table they’ll build you one out of two-by-fours and chewing gum.

That’s what I call refrigerator soup.

I wrote the recipe while looking in my refrigerator.

I cook this again it will most likely be different.

But it still tastes good.

Serve it with wine or a good chewy beer and grin knowingly when they asked you how long it took to get ready. If you REALLY want to impress the heck out of anyone I’d recommend a batch of bannock to go with the soup.

Here's my bannock recipe - One cup flour, pinch of salt, pinch of baking powder, enough beer to make a nice squeezy batter, shmoosh it up and load fistsized nuggets of batter onto a baking sheet, 350 degrees, maybe ten fifteen minutes later smear the butter and pray that a couple of pieces get left over for jam.

You get done all this – you might want to go shopping for a brand new belt.


Yours in storytelling,


Steve Vernon


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Mixing genre is a little like refrigerator soup. You open the refrigerator, empty it into a pot, let it boil all day and you've got supper. It usually comes out good. It usually comes out the kind of good that people will say "Dang, I have got to get that recipe from you."

Hybrids, if written well, can be fun - and isn't that what we all are REALLY reading for? To have fun?

Let me tell you about this nifty little hybrid novella that I wrote.

I call it SUDDEN DEATH OVERTIME and it is a story of vampires and hockey.

Pick up a copy today. I guarantee if you read it you are going to say that this is the BEST vampire-hockey novella that you have ever read!

It also comes with a bonus time travel hockey tale and a bonus hockey ghost story.

Best thing is – you don’t even have to be a hockey fan to enjoy the story.

 

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Thanks so much for visiting us, Steve!


For more, check out his website or follow him on Facebook or Twitter!


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Here's the scoop on SUDDEN DEATH OVERTIME:



Sudden Death Overtime - final artMeet Sprague Deacon - one of the toughest old-time hockey players who ever skated upon a rink of hand-poured ice. Sprague was born and raised and he expects to die here on the Northern Labrador coast. What he did not expect was a tour bus full of vampires - none of whom glitter in the least bit - to pull into his town and begin lowering the population level - one corpse at a time.

Sprague and his three best friends - an over-the-hill never-say quit bush league hockey team from Northern Labrador go toe-to-tooth with a tour bus full of vampires in an immortal-stakes showdown of street hockey? For the answer - throw Paul Newman's Slapshot into a blender with

Steven Niles 30 Days of Night and hit frappe!

Read an excerpt


Pre-order: Amazon | Amazon Canada



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giveaway banner


Steve and Stark Raven Publishing will be giving away an entire (hamster-sized) coffin full of cool stuff including one signed paperback copy and three e-book copies of his vampire/hockey novella SUDDEN DEATH OVERTIME, a signed paperback copy of his middle grade novel – SINKING DEEPER – OR – MY QUESTIONABLE (POSSIBLY HEROIC) DECISION TO INVENT A SEA MONSTER!

Follow the Rafflecopter instructions to enter!


a Rafflecopter giveaway

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Do you guys have suggestions for who you’d like to see featured on the blog? If so, you can make your suggestions on this page. No guarantees that your favourite authors will be able to participate but we’ll try!


Authors, would you like to visit  us? Please email Jenn at jenn (at) tyngasreviews (dot) com and we’ll set it up!


tynga

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

"When I'm not writing" with J.A. Souders

J.A. Souders, author of The Elysium Chronicles, has made a little room in her busy schedule to join us today and discuss her non-writing life.


 

"When I'm not writing" logo


When I’m not writing, I’m a: taxi driver, nurse, housekeeper, cook, alarm clock,  calendar, psychologist, and personal shopper otherwise known as a mom. J I’m sure I don’t have to tell people how difficult of a job being a mom is.

On top of all that, I’m a big giant nerd so I spend a lot of time watching documentaries and doing research on “all the things”: mostly not useful, so I’m a  font of information about things no one else knows or probably even wants to know.  LOL. Of course, I spend a lot of time reading for fun and while I prefer YA fiction, I’ll  read anything that catches my interest.

As far as other hobbies, I have a ton because I get bored easily. LOL. I love riding  horses and prefer the English style of riding, but just being around horses is  awesome so I’ll take what I can get. But I’m not just a lover of horses. I love animals  of all kinds—I especially love marine animals (which is why I wanted to be a  marine biologist.)--but I’m horribly allergic to anything with fur, so I compensate by  supporting and volunteering for charities for the protection of animal rights. (I’m a  philanthropist by nature, so I spend a lot of my time supporting the causes I believe  in.)

I love knitting and as a bonus I can listen to audiobooks while I do it. Two for one,  baby! :D I’m a gamer by proxy. I absolutely love video games, but I get motion sick  if I play, so I beg my son and husband to play them for me so I can watch them. My  favorite video game of all time is Zelda: The Twilight Princess followed closely by  BioShock Infinity.

And last, but not definitely not least, much to my husband’s dismay, I have an  addiction to antiques with a flavor for the Victorian/Edwardian Eras in the US and  Japan so I spend a lot of time at antique stores or finding new ones. And to Tiffany  jewelry (which he has no one to blame but himself, since he bought me my first  piece. :P)

I could go on and on (I may be an introvert, but I’m a talker. LOL.), so I’ll stop here,  but thank you so much for having me!


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Thanks so much for visiting us, Jessica!


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Here's the scoop on Revelations:




Revelations by J.A. SoudersSix weeks after her arrival on the Surface, Evelyn Winters is no closer to unlocking the memories lost in her subconscious than she was when she first came. Isolated in a strange new society, Evie has only Gavin Hunter to remind her of who she once was.


But even with a clean slate, it’s easy to see that Evie doesn’t fit in on the Surface. And as her differences make her feel more and more alone, she can’t help but yearn for that place she doesn’t remember: the isolated city hidden in the depths of the ocean. Elysium. Home.

But she can’t exactly tell Gavin what she’s feeling. Not when he’s the one who helped her escape Elysium in the first place, and has the scars to prove it. Though the doctors say otherwise, Gavin believes that Evie just needs time. And if her memories don’t come back, well, maybe she’s better off not remembering her past.

But the decision may be out of their hands when Evie’s ever-elusive memories begin to collide with reality. People and images from her past appear in the most unlikely places, haunting her, provoking her…and making her seem not only strange but dangerous.

Evie and Gavin can’t wait around for her memories to return. They’ll have to journey across the Outlands of the Surface to find help, and in the end, their search may just lead them back to the place it all started…

Pre-order: Amazon | Book Depository




And here's where it all began:


A Dark Grave (The Elysium C...Renegade (The Elysium Chron...


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Do you guys have suggestions for who you’d like to see featured on the blog? If so, you can make your suggestions on this page. No guarantees that your favourite authors will be able to participate but we’ll try!


Authors, would you like to visit  us? Please email Jenn at jenn (at) tyngasreviews (dot) com and we’ll set it up!


tynga

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Soapboxing: Novellas, yay or nay?

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With Novella November going strong I thought it would be the perfect moment to discuss these short stories!


Novellas are more and more popular, especially amongst young adult series and I have to confess I have split feeling about them.


On the plus side, when you love a series, you usually can't get enough of its characters and novella is just the perfect way to fill a craving! Not only you can get an extra treat you wouldn't get in a novel, but they are usually released between books. The torture of waiting for the next installment then feels much more bearable!


Novellas are also the perfect short read when you have only a little time on your hands. Waiting for an appointment? Don't feel like starting a book now because you won't have much time to read? Why not read that novella you've had on your ereader for a while?


Also, I must confess, novellas are lifesavers for those weeks life gets in the way and I don't have time to read a full length novel in time for my Friday reviews! But shhh, don't tell anyone!


On the other hand, I find that even though novellas are a fun read, I don't read them as much as I would like to because they are often too expensive for what you get. I categorically refuse to pay more than a dollar for a story that is under 50 pages. For example, The Transfer, a Divergent novella, is 1,99$ on amazon (though I see it at 4,35$ for some reason) and it's only 30 pages long. I would NEVER pay that price even though I like this series. Also, Hana, a Delirium novella, is 3,26$ for 60 pages. Again, it feels like a total rip off.


Thankfully, there are a lot of free (Maria V Snyder has many on her website) or really cheap novellas out there for our enjoyment!


Now I'm asking you, do you read novellas? Do you like them? What's the maximum price you'll pay to read one?


Soapboxing is our platform for talking about books and book-related topics that matter to us. Soapboxing posts may be rants, they may highlight awesome or terrifying trends, or they might tackle bookish issues on our minds…
The content will vary but the posts will (hopefully) never be boring!


tynga

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Daring You to Read. . . on Hiatus

0daringyou_thumb-25255B2-25255D_thumb-25255B2-25255DHello Guys!


Daring You To Read has been running since October 2011 and even though it's been a pleasure to present you our favorite series, we are quite honestly running out of dare ideas. For this reason, Daring You to Read is going into hiatus status for the moment and will most likely make a come back a in while :) This'll give us some time to discover new favorites to share with you!


In the mean time, we are thinking of new possible features to replace this one and we are open to suggestions! I want to keep it book related, but don't want to join any memes, we strive to stay original :) If you have any ideas of what you'd like to see on the blog, please leave a comment, it might inspire us!


Thank you!


- Team Tynga's Reviews

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