Tiki Tom
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Back to working on the new novel. ...Hopefully, a great adventure.
Sounds intriguing. Right up my alley. Who is the protagonist? And what is he or she in pursuit of?
Back to working on the new novel. ...Hopefully, a great adventure.
Oooh, this sounds exciting!!!Back to working on the new novel. Covid's been a HUGE distraction. But I'm finally back in the world of 1961. Barcelona, Alexandria, Tel Aviv, Caracas, Buenos Aires, and then down the coast of Chile. Hopefully, a great adventure.
Back to working on the new novel. Covid's been a HUGE distraction. But I'm finally back in the world of 1961. Barcelona, Alexandria, Tel Aviv, Caracas, Buenos Aires, and then down the coast of Chile. Hopefully, a great adventure.
Sounds intriguing. Right up my alley. Who is the protagonist? And what is he or she in pursuit of?
the new novel
A new implies the existence of previous novels. Anything we can buy in print someplace? I'm an aspiring adventure novelist myself and I like to read in the genre and support authors!
^^^I recall reading an interview your father gave to a magazine I cannot now recall,
circa 1980; perhaps earlier. I do remember that he expressed concern over a lack of youthful
reading.... Is there a published collection of his interviews available?
Publishing seems to be dead. Readership is nano-layer thin.
[/QUOTE]Stephen King's On Writing; A Memoir of the Craft is the book to read.
A high school English teacher in Maine decides he has some game and writes.
And you know the rest of the story.
As a published author and voracious reader, I am ravenous but selective. Certain genre played out vein,
little interest except historical well researched topic, veteran factual basis but contemporary supposition
based on imaginative plot, no thanks. Too much **** is writ, far too much s..t published.
[/QUOTE]Stephen King's On Writing; A Memoir of the Craft is the book to read.
A high school English teacher in Maine decides he has some game and writes.
And you know the rest of the story.
As a published author and voracious reader, I am ravenous but selective. Certain genre played out vein,
little interest except historical well researched topic, veteran factual basis but contemporary supposition
based on imaginative plot, no thanks. Too much **** is writ, far too much s..t published.
I think there's still a voracious reading public out there, especially after last year with the advent of the pandemic. I won't ever quit writing as that's just who I am and what I do.
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Schott 568 Vandals Jacket - $1,250 The classic Perfecto motorcycle jacket, in a very special limited-edition Schott double rider style. How I do so agree with you Lizzie, you only have to trawl through a few postings on forums that cater for baby boomers to see what occupies them. Soap operas, they seem to believe the scripts even though the script writers, dramatise well beyond realism, no matter. All's well in soap addiction land.It's people my age I often wonder about -- they seem to be just as addicted to mind-sapping pocket devices as any millennial, but I never -- but NEVER -- see them browsing at the local bookstore. Plenty of kids in there, but when I'm there, I'm usually the only one over 50.
That sounds interesting. I have been writing to a pen friend for the last year. A former neighbour, she was married for just short of seventy years. Her husband had a stroke and died about six months before the pandemic broke out. Her only daughter died from M/S years ago, the only relative that I know of is her adult grand daughter. She looks in on her Granny and buys her the provisions that she needs, other than that, my pen friend is coming up to 93 and trapped all alone at home.Meanwhile, what am I writing? Started in yesterday on the April script for our radio show, the "Light At The End Of The Tunnel Edition." Among other bits, I'll be singing a vocal trio number doing all three voices, so it's going to take some finesse.
The kids at the theatre, all of them "digital natives," are all also voracious readers. Some of them go in for pop fiction, some of them like weightier stuff, and one of them graduated from college with a degree in poetry.
Maybe this is the result of self-selection on my part, but reading, and the love of books is still alive and well among young people. It's people my age I often wonder about -- they seem to be just as addicted to mind-sapping pocket devices as any millennial, but I never -- but NEVER -- see them browsing at the local bookstore. Plenty of kids in there, but when I'm there, I'm usually the only one over 50..