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How Many Is Too Many?

Ah, an interesting question this one, and the answer can depend of so many different things. How many houses is too many? I have just the one, and and satisfied with that, other people might have many houses, and there are various answers in between. I know a chap who has several rental properties, as well as his own home. And I wouldn’t be surprised if he said he has a holiday home as well.

This man has retired, and obviously earned good money at his job, and saved, or invested, or something. I didn’t have as hightly paid a job as he did, when I was ‘a worker’, and so I certainly have never had enough money to buy a rental property. My my husband and I , both more or less retired, both live good lives. We have enough of what we need, and sometimes too much of other things, but not often.

This is a way to live a good life, I feel, having enough, and not too much, of what we need, and some of what we want. We have enough money to pay our bills, almost all of the time. When we want things we usually have enough money to but them, and sometimes there’s money left over to buy extra things.

If I had lots of vegetables, more than we need, that would be a problem, trying to deal with the excess produce. If I had rental properties as well as the house I live in, I’d worry about the upkeep, getting the rent, looking after the people living in these houses …

Things like flowers, I don’t think you can have too many of them growing in a garden. If there are plenty, you can pick them and have them on display inside, while leaving others in the garden still, to look at, and enjoy. Trees, I’m sure you can have too many of them in some instances, but most of the time, having lots of trees is a wonderful thing!

Those lovely trees can attract birds and other creatures into yard, and most of the time that is a wonderful thing. But if you are growing fruit and vegetables, sometimes lots of birds can be a problem, unless you have ways to keep your produce safe. At our place we have a few strawberry plants growing in hanging baskets, and we decided that this year, we wanted to actually eat our strawberries again, instead of the birds getting them.

So we were fortunate enough to have some extra money, and bought some bird netting, so now we are able to eat some of those lovely strawberries, which always taste better than any you get from anywhere else! There aren’t lots and lots of strawberries, but just enough for us to have some every now and then.

So I think the best way to go is to have an ample sufficiency of what you like, and not much at all, of what you don’e like!

Uncategorized

On Hoping For Words …

Wife, mother, dog owner. Important things in my life, all of them. But I was a lover of words before I was any of those three things, and when my time is coming to an end, I hope I will still be a writer, and lover of words.

I’ll always be a mother, I certainly hope, and if the wife label changes to widow, well it will not be an unexpected thing, sad, but that’s how life often (but not always) goes. And while I plan for having a dog in my life for a long time to come, who knows if that will last until my end? I like trees too, and unicorns, and I hope for many more trees and unicorns in my life!

But the love of words, reading, writing, thinking about reading and writing. Sharing my love of words in as many ways as I can. That will stay with me, I hope. I am a reader, poet, writer of fiction and of non fiction, and an editor. I have eight published books, with an anthology with a publisher and waiting to hear whether they wish to publish it.

I am ‘working on’ a novel, the first in a series of novels, that, if they work, might well be with me until my end too … And if that novel series dies unborn, well at least I had a bit of a go at it. Poetry sings to my soul though. Poetry, those few words, stripped back to just the best words, and nothing more, that I hope will always be there with me too.

Some of my books

Words, writing them, reading them, sharing them, these are the good things I share the most with my friends. I hope my enthusiasm for words, lights a fuse in the lives of others and they shine brighter in their lives, with the glow of their words.

If I didn’t have this focus, these options and ideas, what would my life be then? A sad and dreary thing, I’m sure. Words bring understanding, insight, ideas. I love words, I think words are pretty fond of me too!

inspiration, Uncategorized

It All Starts Tomorrow

Today is the penultimate day of January, and I can almost say that tomorrow will be the first day of February, and that means it’s also the first day of February, and the first day of the month of creative writing prompts! I’ve been talking with members of my writing group about this, and the blog posts I’ve written about it, are on my Facebook page, and being read by some people.

I’ve put some links on my twitter accounts, and who knows how many people may have seen the information there. I’d like hundreds of people to be reading this blog post, obviously, but life isn’t like that – you have to work hard to get stuff like that happening in your life.

And my life is full of lots of different things, and I don’t have the time or the knowledge, understanding, or inclination to get all of those kinds of things done. In my ideal life, I’ll have a p/a, who will attend to the details, and I’ll be able to concentrate on the big picture stuff only. I’m not living that ideal life though.

Puss in Boots and I hape we all have a great creative month together, for February, with lots and lots of words written!

So I do what I can, what I want to do, what interests me the most, and what ‘floats my boat’. I get a huge kick out of inspiring other people to write, when they never realised creative writing was a skill they had. Giving feedback and encouragement taught me these things, and I’m grateful to the people who helled me in these ways. This February writing prompt idea is a way of giving to others.

Giving to others, helping them to write better, inspiring them to write, as a writer, of course I want others to write too, they’re my peers, and writers, are also readers, and of course writers and readers have a symbiotic relationship, giving to each other …

So the month of February will be a month of exploring ideas, writing on the new prompts I’ll be handing out, a new one every single day … And I’ve just today discovered that Writers’ Week starts in Adelaide, on the last day of this project, and that seems so appropriate to me, a month of new writing, ending with a great writing and listening and learning, as well as chat and schmoozing event, that brings together writers and readers from around the world, all getting together in the that little grassed space …

I’ll be there, for some of the event, not sure how many days, but at least two days, hopefully more. Writers Week always feels like I’m ‘one of the gang’ the gang of writers, sharing with others, and learning more and more about this writing world …

So this month of writing prompts starts tomorrow, the fun starts tomorrow (I hope!), and with luck, by the end of February, I may have enough poems for my next poetry collection! Or I may have a breakthrough and really truly get to work on my series of Cosy Murder Mysteries, or I may even turn the first draft of the novel I’ve written into the second draft, and have begun giving it to readers to make it into a publishable book, perhaps! You never know what might happen, when inspiration is in the room!

So I hope you’re feeling inspired for February to bring good writing, as I am, buckle in and be preapared to write and write and write!

Writing

The Writing Of My Novel

Today was Anzac Day, and my writing group held a Writers Lock In at the venue we meet at every week, the Prince Albert Hotel in Gawler, South Australia. Four of us got together when we could in the morning, and stayed until our usual group meeting time. We wrote, and wrote, working on whatever of our writing projects were that we wished to put a big effort into.

I had previously decided I would spend my time putting as many of my small bits of my novel-in-progress, a story with the working title of “Talloola Travails”, into the main file of that work. Last night I wrote down the current word count I had so far for the novel. it was nowhere near as high a number as I need, but there were all of my bits and pieces I have been writing at our group meetings, when we are given a writing prompt, and I have been thinking about my novel, and what my main character will do with that prompt …

I have many such hand written words, of around 150 to 300 words each, in various notebooks I have. If I put all of those words into the actual file of the novel I have on my laptop, and then add the bits I have on my phone, (in Notes), that will add many more words to my total. I did 1661 words today and there are probably at least twenty times that many words left to type up, and transfer …

So that’s 33220 plus the words already there – and that makes 47645 words in my novel, without writing anything new. Then there will be the words needed to join all of the pieces together, plus words to draw out the various plot pieces and sub plots, many of which exist only in my head …

If I add all of that together, I expect I will have around 60,000 words in total, and in this day and age that is enough words to make a novel, except for the genre this story is, I probably need to have more words than that. I’ll look that up now, while I’m thinking about it.

OK, so my book is a political thriller, of sorts, and the given word length for that genre is 70,000 to 90,000 words. Another word count, on another web page has given 75,000 words as the minimum count, with an upper limit of 130,000 words. I certainly can’t see this work getting to that high number of words, although who knows what might happen? The lower numbers are quite achievable I think.

I have been working on this piece since 2016, writing these small responses to prompts, using some of them to place written pieces inside of a plot outline, using the “Heroes Journey” format. This link gives a great description on what that format is, and if you want to write fiction with some kind of high level action to it, this classic style is a golden oldie, much used for exciting stories, both novels and movies.

I have a lot more work to do on feeding in and ‘fattening’ various subplots, and possibly will benefit from doing more work on each of my characters, so I know more about each of them. I think I can wait on that task until I’ve got the already written pieces slotted into the novel as it is now, first though, so it will be easier to see what I’m dealing with, in terms of things that need to be written still.

I hope you have found this look into how I am writing this novel interesting, I had a good time looking at some of the bits and pieces of what I’m doing. I realise it would be far more sensible to write directly onto my laptop. I’m not sure why I’d been hesitating about taking my laptop with me to our writers group in the past. There have been problems with internet connection at that venue in the past, but today, there was a good internet connection and none of us had any problems there at all.

I didn’t have my laptop until quite recently though, and I’m still learning about it, so felt pen on paper would be my best way to go, or writing notes on my phone … There are many ways to write a novel, and I am certainly exploring a few different ones! Being open to change, and using what is available are good ways to go in all of life, for sure.

I have no deadline for the completion on this novel, but I want to have a first draft done, and given to others to read for feedback. I’ve been reading my pieces at the writing group each week at meetings, and the other group members always seem to think it’s good, even though they haven’t read it in a connected narrative form just bits and pieces, from disparate sections of the story.

This story has been with me for three years now, and I am beginning to see an end to it all, where until our writer lock in today, I hadn’t really thought much about when this may end, and sometimes I almost decided to just forget about the whole thing. But then at the next writing group meeting, Meredith (my main character), would tell me what was going to happen, based on the writing prompt given by Alex. And I know members of the group would probably to actually like to read the full story to make sense of the scraps they heard from me over the past few years.

I’ve written the ending of the story, so I know what I’m heading toward, I just have to fill in the gaps to bring it all to that place …

If you have any ideas about good ways to write a novel, I’d love to read about it, feel free to leave a comment here.

poetry

Gawler Poets at the Pub – Poetry Reading

Where I was today

The poetry workshop and reading had only few people present, some poets, and only one audience member, who wandered into and out of the room. One of the poets said she wasn’t a poet, but a children’s book writer, but she was there, and she wrote new poetry at the workshop. She is a poet, now, if she wasn’t one before!IMAG0530

Poetry gets written, and read, hugs and love, no ego, just the love of words, and friendship, this is how poetry can extend us all, writing and appreciating poetry, understanding the importance of words, and of friends and friendships. Egos left behind, and so it all went well, no-one grandstanding, just words written, read, heard, responded to, and loved.

Good food, and drinks, a cosy room in a lovely venue (Prince Albert Hotel), and so good things came for all in attendance, with hopes the good times continue for all afterwards. Knowing all may not be there the following month, but hoping to catch up again another time, if not at the next Gawler Poets at the Pub meeting, on the last Sunday of the month, every month.

 

What we did

This monthly poetry reading has been going for over twenty years in Gawler, a small town in South Australia, close to the premier wine growing region – the Barossa Valley. The poetry events have changed over the years, changed venue, changed added extras, and the people running the event have changed.

I’ve been a constant there for around seven years or so, and I am thrilled with the way this great event is getting better and better. The numbers of attendees isn’t high, but the quality of the poetry always is. We have developed a range of parts that are remaining the same, and as they are going so well, they probably will remain the same.

We have writing related workshop in the morning, usually writing related, but that could change, if something else seems that it may be interesting, to the sort of people who attend the afternoon event. That event is a poetry reading.

We usually have  guest writer, usually but not always a poet, who often is the person who did the morning workshop. That guest writer is asked to provide 5 words from their latest book, if that is relevant. Then those five words are told to attendees, and who are given ten to fifteen minutes to write something, often a poem, and then to read their own new piece of writing. The guest writer is asked to pick the best piece of writing read, and that person will receive a bottle of wine as their prize. This wine is donated by the hotel, which is the venue for this poetry event.

Once that fun event is over, the guest writer then read from their own work for ten to fifteen minutes. Then, depending on numbers of people present, poets are able to put a gold coin donation in a tin, and they can then read their own poetry out to everyone else for two or three minutes. If there is a good sized number of attendees, we will have a break after a number of poets have read, then have a short break to top up drinks, and chat, buy books, and so on.

 

Value in sticking with the team

The hotel is also where our writing group holds its weekly meeting, where some of us dine at, or drop in for coffee and cake occasionally. We have a good relationship going with the management of this hotel, one we have managed to maintain through several changes in managers over the years.

Because we have been supporting those in charge of this particular venue, they can see it is worthwhile helping us with the various things we do. The writing group I run, as President, Adelaide Plains Poets, is involved in this event. The writing group that holds meetings at the hotel every week, is a part of that larger group, and it all goes together well.

Another group member, the treasurer, is also a regular member of the monthly workshop/poetry reading. He carries the heaviest things we bring along every time, while I bring along some lighter pieces …

The main part of these ‘things’ is books. We both new or near new books that we offer as first prize for the raffle we always hold at this event, and we also have ‘classic’ books, certainly not new, but usually previously loved books, that may be of interest to the writers there. Attendees are encouraged to look through these books, and take away (for free) any they are interested in.

These books are kindly donated to us by a sponsor, one who has helped our group for many years. It is a lovely woman, Ally, who has a bookshop, just a little way away, and we are tremendously thankful to Gawler Books for that help they give us.

 

The love of words

All of us there at these events love words. We are readers, writers, poets, and our love of words brings us all together beautifully well. Some groups suffer from clashes between people with big egos, but so far, we have avoided any of that kind of thing. I certainly consider these people to be my friends, not competitors, and I love being involved in something that brings together others who hold the same views.

I first began attending the Gawler Pets at the Pub event when it was run by an icon of the town of Gawler, a man named Martin Johnson. He and his life partner did a fine job in getting interest in this event, but he eventually decided he was ready for a change. I’m glad I was able, with two friends, to take over the event.

Those friends moved on to  other things, or moved too far away, and I’m thrilled Alex Robertson, from the writing group, wanted to get involved in the poetry reading fun! Another relatively regular attendee is a wonderful poet and photographer, who takes beautiful photographs of people at the poetry reading.

Martin Christmas is his name, and I am thrilled to count this clever person as one of my dear friends. Martin is helping many people involved in such poetry related events in Adelaide and beyond, keeping a poetic record on who and what goes on.

 

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If you do anything similar to this event, or would like to know more, please leave a comment or message here!