I am not a summer person. My favorite season has always been winter, and even though I'm getting older and the cold bothers me to a degree, I still prefer the discomfort of being too cold over the irritation of being too hot. Summer 2010 is less than a week old, and already our temperatures have soared over the 100 degree mark here on Patti's Porch.
Still, I do not like to be a person who complains. So, I've been spending the past few days getting myself psyched up for the season and thinking of innovative ways to grin and bear the heat without making my life and that of everyone around me miserable.
It took me a long time before I would wear shorts and tank tops in public. I did not have a problem wearing them at home where no one was bound to see me, but I really don't need them at home since the house is centrally air conditioned. It's when I go to town to run errands and am in and out of my air conditioned vehicle that I need to be comfortably dressed. I have learned that if I attire myself in the same summer wear as everyone else, no one seems to notice. If I wear jeans and a T-shirt, I draw some funny looks. No one cares that I am overweight. I'm not competing in a fashion contest here.
One of the advantages of summer is the opportunity to swim. Not only is this activity a great way to stay cool, it provides great exercise as well. I don't live near the ocean or real close to a lake, but our town pool offers lap swimming from 11-1 PM most weekdays. It's a great time for someone like me since very few people, usually less than half a dozen, use the pool during this time period. I'm not exactly a lap swimmer. One or two lengths of the pool is about all I can manage before I get tired. Still, it's a great time to do some water aerobics or water-resistance exercise.
This summer, our granddaughter is a member of the local swim team. We haven't been involved with the swim team since our kids were members almost ten years ago. Our first "B" meet was held here in town last Tuesday. She did great for a new swimmer, swam three of the four strokes unassisted. This week-end, our town is hosting the big "A" meet and she is swimming in it as well. I had forgotten how exciting it is to have a competitor in a swim meet. The kids are so full of energy and it doesn't take them long to become infected with the competitive spirit. It gives us the opportunity to see old friends who are also cheering on their grandkids and meet some new folks as well.
Did you ever notice how good a bottle of cold water tastes in the summer? Iced tea and lemonade are great thirst-quenching drinks in the heat as well. Fresh fruit seems to taste a lot better in summer. It's the time of year for watermelon and juicy peaches and red seedless grapes. I tend to eat less in the summer. A basic salad will satisfy my appetite very well during this time of year. Cooking is much simpler because neither my husband nor I have any desire to heat up the house any more than necessary.
People seem to be more accessible in the summer somehow. Vehicle windows are more likely to be open than in the winter, so if you see someone you know, you can even maybe holler a hello as you pass by. You seldom meet someone on the post office steps or the grocery store parking lot in summer that would say, "I need to go. I'm sweating to death!" In winter, folks are rushing back to their vehicles because they are "freezing to death".
Summer brings with it some fascinating cloud formations. Granted, the danger of violent and destructive storms is high, but the skies those impending storms produce are truly a work of an awesome Creator. Even lightning, with all its power and ability to harm, holds a beauty that can't be described.
These are just a few of the positives about summer. So, for the next three months, I will dwell on those facets of the season. If you want me to be honest about it, though, I'll be secretly counting the days until December 21st, the first day of winter. Just in case anyone out there is counting with me, there are 179 days to go! Now aren't you glad you read this post. You learned something you may not have known!
Thanks for reading my blog!
Friday, June 25, 2010
Summer Spirit
Posted by Patti Shene at 10:26 PM 1 comments
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Alison Strobel Blog Tour
Hi Allison and welcome. I am so pleased to host you on Patti's Porch today. I finished reading your wonderful book, the Weight of Shadows, in three days. What a riveting story! You really evoked deep emotion in me as you related the story of the women in your story and their struggles with secrets that led them to live with such feelings of guilt. My heart raced as I turned the pages, waiting for your heroine to get out of the desperate situation she was in. You crafted a very strong story that held my attention from page one to the very end. With that little introduction to your story, let me ask you a few questions.
Tell us about your writing journey.
I never in a million years thought I'd get to write as a career. I always loved doing it, but knew how hard it is to actually get published, and I didn't think I was good enough to garner anyone's attention. So I just wrote stories for fun and prepared for a career in education. (My degree is in elementary education.) In 2000 I moved from the suburbs of Chicago, where I'd been raised, to Orange County, California. The first time I drove through Hollywood, with Plumb's "Worlds Collide" playing in the background, I caught myself staring at the other cars on the freeway looking for celebrities. When it dawned on me that I could have gotten into a wreck from not paying attention to the road, my imagination took off. What if I ran into a celebrity? Would *I* become famous? Would *their* life change at all from encountering mine?
I couldn't get the ideas out of my head. I hadn't written creatively in a long time--this was just a year after I'd graduated college, and all the papers I'd written during those 5 years had sucked away any desire to write if I didn't have to. But as I started outlining the story--a practice I'd never attempted before--I found myself excited about writing again. I plotted out the story and started writing, and 18 months later I typed "The End." But I still had no plans to publish. I printed it out, stuck it in a binder, let my mom read it, then stuffed it into my closet, never thinking I'd touch it again.
About two months later my dad happened to be talking to an editor from Waterbrook Press. He mentioned to the editor that I'd just finished a book, and the editor asked if he could see it. I sent it in, we talked on the phone a couple times, and a few months later I was offered a two-book contract. I was a little wary at first, to be honest--I was concerned that it was more of an attempt to get my dad on board with publishing there than a real vote of confidence in my abilities, or their attempt to cash in on the Strobel name. But when I raised my concerns with folks there, they assured me they'd publish the book even if I used a pen name. Knowing that made me feel a lot better.
I was still teaching at the time. But a year and a half later God orchestrated things so that it was possible for me to quit teaching and start writing full time. It was such an amazing blessing. I still can't wrap my head around it sometimes, the fact that I get to write and that people actually want to read what I have to say. I love my life!
What is the most enjoyable aspect of writing for you?
From start to finish, my most favorite point in the creation of a book is the day I open a fresh new Word doc and start chapter 1. I get giddy, no joke. I use Randy Ingermanson's Snowflake Method to outline, and it's a very long and involved process--though also an invaluable tool that I will never again write a book without using--so by the time I'm done with it I am *dying* to start writing. I've been mulling over and working on various aspects of the story for a good 4-8 weeks at that point, and I'm mentally done with the whole planning stage. I want to start crafting sentences.
What do you dislike, if anything, about writing?
Research. I HATE research. I hate the time it takes, I hate worrying that there's something I've missed that readers will pick up on and that I'll look like I didn't do my homework at all. I hate chasing down details, or hitting walls because I can't find an actual person to talk to who is knowledgeable in a particular area when I'm not confident in the stuff I'm finding online. Going to the library to research just isn't possible for me, so the Internet is my main tool for research. Facebook has actually come through for me a few times--I've been able to connect with experts through my friends. For example, when I was working on The Weight of Shadows, I wanted to find someone who worked with abused women to make sure I was accurately portraying abusive relationships and also what women's shelters are like. A friend back in Chicago saw my note on Facebook about needing that type of information, and he told me he knew a woman who worked as a director for a women's shelter in the city. He got me in touch with her and she helped me with the details and even read the rough draft to make sure I'd written the abuse dynamic and the shelter scenes realistically. And, funny story: for my April 2011 release, Memory of the Heart, I needed to find a medical expert. I asked a childhood friend if her older sister, who had once been my babysitter, was still an ER doctor and if she might be willing to chat with me. In the end she helped me with a scene in Reinventing Rachel, as well as some other bits of Trouble Child. It was really weird to write back and forth about street drugs and ER procedure and mental illness with the woman who had once played "Taste Test" with my brother and I when my parents went to the mid-week service at church.
Are you a plotter or seat of the pantser?
Every story I ever wrote before Worlds Collide was as a panter. And that explains why all the novels I started before Worlds Collide never got past the first chapter. That book was the first one I'd ever outlined, and it was like unlocking my creativity to have a plan to follow. Even though the final story ended up straying from the outline, just having that list of "big points" gave me the direction I needed to keep working. And now, as I previously mentioned, I use the ultimate outlining tool--The Snowflake. I honestly think that anyone who is interested in writing novels needs to get Randy's lecture (only ten bucks, how could you not?!) and at least give it a good shot. I've heard people say it doesn't work for them, and even though I can't imagine that, I'm willing to concede that it's not for everybody. But I still think everyone needs to at least try it. :)
How much research have you had to do for your novels?
My need to research has increased lately--with Worlds Collide I barely did any and pretty much just relied on my imagination and what I'd picked up through Us Weekly Magazine and movies. :) I did a little more with Violette Between--researching comas--and then quite a lot more with The Weight of Shadows. Reinventing Rachel didn't need much, but Memory of the Heart needed a ton. I have dozens of emails from my ER doc babysitter, as well as a few books that I read. That was definitely the most research I've done for a book, and I really hope I don't have to do that much more for a long time. :) And of course, for all the books I do a lot of random fact-finding--Google Maps is one of my always-open browser tabs, so I can look up the towns in which I set the stories (or the real-life towns that the fictional ones I make up are modeled after) and figure out things like hospital names or distance between two landmarks or whatever.
Do you have any research tips?
Um, do it? Honestly, I don't think I'm good enough at it yet to be giving out advice! Though I will say this: check your sources, especially if you're researching on the internet. Make sure the sites are reputable. I know that sounds obvious, but sometimes sites *look* reputable but are really more about advertising than accuracy.
I understand you moved to Colorado within recent years. Is there a particular attraction in our beautiful state that you would like to see?
We haven't been to Garden of the Gods yet. I really want to go there. The sand dunes, too! It's hard right now because the girls still nap and also aren't fans of long car rides. But we're planning some little overnight trips that will allow us to set up a "base camp" and take day trips from there. I think we'll be hitting Garden of the Gods on our first one. I can't wait!
Alison, thank you for a wonderful interview. I would like to wish you continued success with your writing career. Hope you get to take some time off from writing to enjoy those camping trips and see the Sand Dunes and Garden of the Gods!
go here for information about other blog tour participants.
For info on a free ebook, go here.
To order Alison's book from Amazon, go here.
To order from Christianbooks.com, go here.
Posted by Patti Shene at 11:28 PM 1 comments
Labels: Alison Strobel, Christian fiction, The Weight of Shadows
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Memories of New York
I took a trip to New York with my daughter and granddaughter last week. We spent a few days at my sister's house, where we also got to visit with my mom and my niece from Tennessee. We had intended to take the gondola up Whiteface Mountain, but it wasn't open yet. So, we went to Lake Placid and toured the ski jump. Got to the top and found out the chairlift had malfunctioned, so we had no way down! An employee took us down in his van. We also got to see a skier in action. Yes, they have some kind of special surface so skiers can practice in the summer.
The next day, our son and daughter-in-law came up from NYC and joined all of us for a boat tracross Lake George on the paddle wheeler Minnie HaHa. It was a gorgeous day for the trip and we enjoyed browsing the souvenir shops prior to the cruise.
Our son and daughter-in-law drove us the city Sunday night, and we had a wonderful tour over the next three days of all the sights. We saw......
Times Square
Union Square
the financial district (where our son works!)
walked the Brooklyn Bridge
Observed the city from the Empire State Building at night
Toured Central Park
Took the Staten Island ferry
Observed a moment of silence at Ground Zero
And saw lots of other sights.
We took the subway to Chinatown and Yankee Stadium. We walked for what seemed like miles, but we could not have seen as much as we did if we did not have our personal tour guides!
Our last day, we took the subway to Coney Island. My daughter has been wanting to see the Atlantic Ocean for years. Unfortunately, it was raining that day and there was no one on the beach. It looked bleak and desolate. Still, she rolled up her pant legs and ran into the water, thrilled actually see the ocean.
The subway was fun, especially for my granddaughter. She took a great deal of pride in the fact that she kept track of her own Metro card. In fact, I finally turned mine over to her for safekeeping as well.We resorted to a taxi a couple of times, and Madi thought that was pretty neat as well.
Even though I grew up in New York, I never spent much time in the city. I went there with some preconceived notions that were proved false. People in the city are not rude, indifferent, and unfriendly. They are generally considerate, polite, and always willing to help with directions. They live at a much faster pace than I do here in Colorado, for sure. I enjoyed watching the hustle and bustle, the different dress, the diverse people who travel the subways and walk the streets.
This was a trip we will all remember for a long time. I even have to admit that someday, I would not mind going back!
Thanks for reading my blog.
Posted by Patti Shene at 5:19 PM 1 comments
Labels: Lake Placid ski jump, New York, New York City