This is my link to the latest book I’ve put on Kindle Scout, and the campaign opens tomorrow:
Voyageurs
by
- The process is driven by votes (aka popularity)
- One source of votes is friends. I’m not one of those people who have a lot of friends on media. For example, I don’t have more than 400 Facebook friends. If one-tenth of them voted, I would have 320 votes. If they all nominated me on the same day, I might earn the coveted “hot” stamp for that day. Might.
- The second source is the readers/nominators on the Kindle Scout site. They are more likely to mark the ones labeled “hot”, so some items sink and some remain “hot”, and it all has less to do with how good a book is than how popular it is.
So here I am, sitting at my desk with the dregs of the flu, looking at snow showers in the forecast on Sunday, and hope still springs eternal — I’ve decided to submit another book to Kindle Scout for voting on/potential publishing.
The name of this book is Voyageurs, and it is still under review, with the hope that this time it will get picked up. If this doesn’t work, I will put one of those books (probably Gaia’s Hands) on self-publishing, so I can say I accomplished my goal and get on with my life.
Voyageurs is the one about time travel, ecological catastrophe, and the outer edges of megalomania. It also has an edgy relationship and a lot of coffee.
I’ll let you know the address tomorrow. Please consider looking at it and voting!
Happy National Bipolar Awareness Day!
Happy National Bipolar Awareness Day!
Being someone with bipolar issues seems like something not to use the word “happy” about. People with bipolar can plunge into deep depression, while for some people, mania becomes psychosis at times. There’s always the self doubt — “Is this feeling real, or is my bipolar talking?” And any medication that works on brain chemistry is likely to have strange side effects, so the medication search for “what are the least annoying side effects” becomes an odyssey of pharmacopeia.
But here are reasons to be happy (and educational opportunities for the rest of you:
- Bipolar people are not crazy. “Crazy” is a word made up by people who fear difference. It has been used to marginalize people (with or without a mental health condition) for ages.
- Bipolar people are neurodivergent. Isn’t that a cool word? That means our brains work differently than other brains. The Neurodiversity Movement is one that seeks to normalize people with mental health conditions, autism, epilepsy and other mental conditions as being “just the way some people are born.” The Neurodiversity Movement does not prohibit treatment of symptoms of a condition, such as antipsychotics for someone with bipolar.
- Bipolar traits may relate to enhanced creativity. Some doctors still dispute this, but most doctors see a link between bipolar and creativity — even when the bipolar is being treated. So that stereotype of the artist on the edge is true, but the artist is still an artist when pulled back from the edge with medication.
- Compliant people with bipolar are following the health advice that everyone should. We get enough sleep at night, establish regular routines, give up alcohol and (of course) illegal drugs, meditate, manage our moods through affirmations and cognitive exercises …
- Being around a manic episode can be scary. So can being around someone who has a fierce temper and a disdain for cops (there’s a story here). Neurotypical people can be scary too.
- Your bipolar friend sometimes gets spacy with their medication. Someone with diabetes gets spacy when their blood sugar is too low. Your friend who stays up late gets spacy when she hasn’t gotten enough coffee. It sounds like a universal condition to me.
- Bipolar people get depressed. So do people with diagnosed depression. And those with triggered situational depression. One is not scarier than another.
My first bout with the flu
I should never have said “I never get the flu” aloud. I should never have assumed that my yearly employee benefit shot in the arm would fail to work. I should never have said never —
I’m dealing with my first case of bonafide flu in probably thirty years.
While I’m marking my list of “nevers” off with red pen, I also haven’t run a fever above 100 degrees since I was three (during an oldie but not goodie flu vaccine of the mid 1960s). Now I’m all bundled up in a 70 degree room with shivers and a 100.9 fever. That’s flu, right?’
I stayed home yesterday, hoping that a day of rest would fix that cold of mine. This morning, I woke up with a voice that sounded and felt like I’d chain-smoked and swilled bad whiskey (neither of which I do, to the relief of my students.) I went to work anyhow thinking that my morning temp of 98.9 would hold for the day because I couldn’t possibly have the flu. I had (and still have) the chills and my temp (as I mentioned) is 100.9 degrees, My nose sounds like it’s harboring a rain frog that makes little grumbling noises every time I exhale. My chest hurts from all the coughing (but I never get chest symptoms), And did I mention that I kept 3 1/2 hours of office hours and taught two classes in this state?
I’m going in tomorrow unless we’re looking at 100 degrees or higher just before I go to work. I figure that I’m probably going to be fine, because I never, never, NEVER get the flu.
Why Novels?
Even though I still ponder whether the world needs my novel, I am still prepping for NaNo, which starts this Saturday. My goal is to finish Prodigies at a clip of 1000 words per day, or 30,000 words for the month-long session. That’s a lot of words, yet I’ve written 50,000 words or more during regular NaNo season.
I used to write at a much more relaxed pace, a short story here, a poem there, and occasionally a chunk of song lyrics. I mostly used to write about my feelings without much artistry (although in my defense, without too much cliché.) On rare occasions, I would show someone and they’d say “That’s really nice.”
I wanted to know how good I was and how good I could be. I read others’ poetry, and felt I didn’t quite have what contemporarily published poets had in terms of their raw emotion and immediate imagery. At the same time, I had to write my truth, which was that of a woman who lives her life in a clear glass bubble, sequestering her emotions. I felt an affinity with Emily Dickinson, another woman who lived in her own clear glass bubble, and I remembered that she died with most of her poems unread. My own truth has a very limited audience — 385 hits a week. or about 45 hits a day (Thanks, readers!)
Once I found out from my first NaNo that I can write over 50,000 words with a coherent plot, I realized I could write novels. However, I didn’t know that I could write good novels. I wrote those novels about other people, other situations, other plots — yet we write what we know, so the brittle beauty and the emotional turmoil still show up.
I hoped to prove my talent by getting an agent and, eventually, getting published. That has not happened. I have gotten over 200 rejections, and almost all of these read “This isn’t grabbing me” or some variation. I may still write novels. I may burn out and develop a project obsession (although we don’t have enough room room in the yard for a 4-season greenhouse with a hot tub. Believe me, I measured).
I’m rethinking a lot of things right now. But I will still finish those 30,000 words.
Writing from the Soul
Writing comes from a personal place.
I would argue that all writing — poetry and novels, song lyrics and even textbooks come from a need within one’s soul. The need may be as mundane as “I really wish someone had written a textbook about case management for the disabled (Me about 10 years ago)” and as lofty as “I want to share this prophetic dream I had last night” (me thirty years ago), or for that matter, “I want to imagine I’m the captain of this starship who gets away with anything short of murder and gets branded a hero” (Whoever write the Star Trek movie reboot).
One also can write for the market, which can be a whole ‘nother thing, as they say around here. This is the thing I struggle with, because I have this crazy notion that people need to read emotionally packed narratives about people who don’t match the status quo. For example, there’s Amarel:
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So weary.
So, so weary, friends. Too weary to write, too tired to feel. Send hugs.
Hidden stories in a Poem
Sometimes when we write, we reveal our subconscious evaluation of a situation through the imagery we use, and only later do we realize that.
For example, here’s a poem I wrote thirteen years ago:
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This was about three men who were casually in my life at the time. I was not dating any one of them, but spending time (face to face or online) with all three. When I wrote, it was based on the imagery I had when I wrote about them, which is one of the reasons I think this poem became a turning point in my poetry skills.
According to the “end of an endless road”, you’d think guy #3 was someone I might end up with, right? Not if you were my friend and mentor Les. I read him this poem and he said, “I’m putting my money on the cat.”
He was right — #1 was written about my now-husband. We’ve been married for 11 years.
What did my friend see in the symbolism? #2 was never in the running, as he was all about darkness and heartbreak. #2 was great for poetry (I wrote a poem abut him which should be set to music.
#3 — wouldn’t he be the one, the one all about settling down and coming home? Not if you’re me, although I didn’t understand it at the time. The dog here is subservient and tame. I’m a high-spirited person, which my friend knew well.
So that leaves us with #1. What might my friend have found in that verse? The description is more affectionate and playful, with a tiger (orange) cat nipping at me. The polished obelisk represents a sense of mystery. Roses represent romance. I didn’t get this at the time, so it surprised me.
I owe my friend Les a fifth of premium Scotch whiskey.
Grey
Icy rain seeps into my bones