Showing posts with label Visionary Fiction Alliance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Visionary Fiction Alliance. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

In the Eye of the Beholder


If beauty is in the eye of the beholder, what about ugliness?


How do we define ugly? What repulses us? And why?
I posed these questions at Visionary Fiction Alliance in a review of Dean Koontz's latest release, Innocence, in which little by little, step by step, Koontz immerses us in ugly, until we are in ugly's head.


Ugly on my mind.

During my 3-mile walk today, ugly was on my mind.
I saw many sights that could easily be overlooked as too ordinary to deserve attention or dismissed as eyesores that should be destroyed, if not for lack of time and money.
But then I leaned in for a closer look.
I noticed the interplay of light and shadow, the tenacity of the weeds, and the way nature intertwined with the man-made.
 












Ugly or beautiful?


And then it hit me, as it did in my review of Innocence.

Ugliness depends upon the eye of the beholder. Sometimes we don't go deep enough to find the beauty in something ugly or the ugly in something beautiful.

Sometimes we are wrong.

Take a look at the objects around you, especially when you're in the midst of nature. Then lean in as if using the zoom feature of your camera.

You may be surprised at how something that at first glance appears ugly becomes beautiful upon closer examination.

As always, thanks for stopping by.



 

Sunday, March 10, 2013

A Next Big Thing Blog: Ten Questions About My Book

Blog Hop: easier agreed to than done


A Next Best Thing blog hop is a giant game of tag to help readers discover
authors who are new to them.

Jackie Treehorns (The House on the Rock)
kern.justin / Wedding Photos / CC BY-NC-ND
Naomi Williams, one of my former creative writing instructors at U.C. Davis Extension, tagged me several weeks ago to talk about my current writing project as part of the hop.

I said yes, of course, but it has taken me until now to actually answer the 10 questions involved. Believe me, this project is easier agreed to than done.

Another part of the "blog hop" is to tag several other writers to repeat the process, something even more difficult for me than answering the ten questions.

Would my blogger buddies thank me for being invited, or put me on their now-you-owe-me-big-time lists?

Links to the sites of the bloggers who answered to the affirmative (thank you, dear friends) are listed at the end of this post.

So here it goes! A Next Big Thing: 10 Questions About My Book

10 Questions About My Book
Chapters/Scenes for Between Now and Forever
What is the working title of your book or story? Between Now and Forever is the title of my current project, the fourth (and hopefully final) novel in a series called The Between.

What is a one-sentence synopsis of your book? When Marjorie Veil takes on a class of thirteen-year-olds with psychic abilities that surpass her own, she realizes playing solitaire isn’t the only game in town; she can get a lot more creative with the cards she’s dealt by putting a little heart into the game.

I know, that's two sentences. Using a semicolon is cheating.

Where did the idea for the book come from? A combination of things, actually. My original idea, thirteen years ago, was to write one novel about a woman’s search for spiritual and emotional freedom.

Then I came across two books by Kenneth Meadows, Earth Medicine and The Medicine Way, about the hidden teachings of the Native American Medicine Wheel and the shamanic path to self mastery.

A Next Big Thing: 10 Questions About My Book
I was blown away and ended up using four of the directional paths in the Native American Wheel to map out my protagonist’s journey. The lessons she learned on each path became a separate novel.
  • Between Will and Surrender: East, the path of illumination and clarity
  • Between Darkness and Dawn: South, the path of love and trust
  • Between Yesterday and Tomorrow: West, the path of introspection and transformation
  • Between Now and Forever: North, the path of wisdom and knowledge.
The last of the four directions turned into my fourth and current novel, which I will publish first as a frame for The Between series.

What genre does your book fall under?

Oh dear, here’s where the story gets interesting, or depressing, depending on how you look at it.

When I delved into the exciting and fascinating worlds of shamanic paths and, later, psychic children, I had no idea I was digging myself into a deep hole, when it comes to the way books are classified by agents, publishers, and book sellers.

A Next Big Thing -10 Questions About My Book
A fraction of my research books
You see, while marketing my books to agents, I discovered there was no genre - and supposedly no market - for stories about shamanic paths and psychic abilities. Not in fiction anyway.

My novels are spiritual, but not religious. They have paranormal elements, but aren’t science fiction or magical realism. They highlight a woman’s journey, but don’t fit the genre of women’s fiction because of their spiritual/paranormal elements. I could go on, but I think you get the picture.

I later discovered a book category called visionary fiction, an exact fit for what I write.

Unfortunately, this genre is not recognized by the gatekeepers. Back to square one.

I tried marketing my novels as upmarket fiction, women’s fiction with paranormal elements, and fantasy, but grew frustrated because none of these categories were a good fit.

I finally resorted to calling my work what it is, visionary fiction, regardless of the consequences.

Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition? My protagonist is a triplet. So the actor playing the lead role would have to play three parts—a tough job. If Cher Bono were twenty-eight, she’d do a fantastic job.

That’s as far as I’ve gotten in the movie rendition fantasy.

Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency? Ha. For the reasons stated above, my first novel will be self-published. Agents currently will not take on visionary fiction. If Between Now and Forever or visionary fiction catches on, I may be able to find representation for future novels.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript? The rough drafts of my novels came fast and furious. I’m talking about three months each. But then, oh my...the revisions and rewrites. Did I mention I started writing my first novel thirteen years ago?

10 Questions About My Book
What other books would you compare this story to, within your genre? As far as I know, there is no other published stories like mine. Another nail in my coffin, right?

However, I am a founding member of Visionary Fiction Alliance, a website dedicated to promoting visionary fiction. I’ve noticed increased interest in this genre by readers and writers alike. Maybe visionary fiction will become the next big thing!!!!

Who or what inspired you to write this book? Well, book one inspired book two and book two inspired book three and book four…

Seriously, the article on my website, A Word from My Protagonist, explains what inspired me to write book one. The rest followed, as I pointed out above.

What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest? Seven of the characters in Between Now and Forever are Indigo Children.

People in the metaphysical world believe that a large percentage of the children born today—labeled as Indigo Children, Transitional Children, and Children of Now—have special gifts, including psychic abilities.

Any more questions? Really? If so, click: FAQ.

Links to three other authors answering:10 Questions About My Book

Rosi Hollinbeck
Jo Chandler (Her blog debuts March 11, 2013 at 4:00 PM)
Lee Lopez

These bloggers may not have their 10 question posts up yet, but their sites are definitely worth a visit.

As always, thanks for stopping by.

Lessons in Proper Behavior

Monday, November 19, 2012

Storycatcher/ Making Sense of Our lives through the Power and Practice of Story




When writing a post recently for Visionary Fiction Alliance about the relevance of visionary fiction in today's world, I realized how important "story" is to our lives. 


Life stories
+Freedomby ~myonlyexceptionisyou
I'm not just talking about the stories written by our favorite authors for our reading pleasure.  I'm talking about our life stories, the stories that begin on page one of a blank text on the day we are born and continue until the day - and sometimes even after - we die.

All the things we tell about ourselves, all the experiences we remember, the sights, the sounds, the feelings, are part of our story.  As Christina Baldwin says in her book, Story Catcher, "You are a book of bone and flesh."

What event, besides your birth, set your story's plot in motion?  What are its turning points?  What are you proud of?  What are you ashamed of?  What will you preserve.  What will you purposely omit?  What will you forget?  Who wrote your story?  From what point of view?  Yours?  Your parents'?  Your teachers'?  Society's?  What values shaped your life story?  How much of your story is real?  How much is fiction, created by distortions of the lens you're viewing it through.  The lens of judge, victim.

How did you come up with the lead characters and settings for your story's scenes? Who are the heroes, the villians, the bit-part players?  Who do you love? Who loves you? Who do you blame? Who do you judge?  Which characters do you bother to flesh out enough to know them enough to care for, understand, give a voice?

Life coach, Gary Van Warmerdam, talks about the different versions of stories we tell about ourselves in the fourth of his Pathway to Happiness Audio Sessions in Self Mastery called "Attention."


In Storycatcher, Christina Baldwin explores story as the core of life experience. Through stories, education, writing and oral prompts, the book illustrates how we use narrative to make sense out of what is happening to us and around us.

And here comes the big question.

How can your story still change?

The group, Rascal Flatts, sings about how "Life's like a novel with the end ripped out."

What can you change?

What will you change?

How will your life story end?

As always, thanks for stopping by. 

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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

A Letter from Dean Koontz

I've been blogging for over two years, and lately I've been doing some serious soul-searching about the value of working so hard.

Then today, I received an email from Dean Koontz about a post I wrote about him at Visionary Fiction Alliance, and it has energized me in a way I haven't been energized in a long time.

Dear Margaret,

My editor at Bantam, Tracy Devine, sent to me your lovely post at Visionary Fiction Alliance, and I'm asking her to forward this to you. I was quite touched by your words. After a long career as a novelist, I've learned that what anyone writes about my work, good or bad, will only occasionally, very occasionally, be written with true insight regarding my intentions. For so many years, I have
denied being a horror novelist, never thought I was, and struggled to prevent earlier publishers from putting that word on my books. You got to the heart of what I try to give readers when you mentioned hope and healing, and spoke of seeking to "help readers see the world in a new light and recognize dimensions of reality they commonly ignore."

If you will provide my editor with a mailing address, I would like to send you
two inscribed books that are close to my heart.

Best wishes,

Dean Koontz

Oh my, talk about synchronicity!

Thank you, Dean Koontz, for taking the time to inspire a fellow writer to not give up. Ever.

I'm back.



Friday, October 5, 2012

Dean Koontz/ Author of Horror or Visionary Fiction?




I'd like to introduce you to Visionary Fiction Alliance, a website created to promote visionary fiction.

I've written a post there, titled Is Dean Koontz a Visionary Fiction Writer?

It starts like this:

Dean Koontz is generally categorized as a writer of horror, and I’m not a fan of horror, so I’m not sure what possessed me to read one of his novels. Maybe someone gave it to me. Maybe I picked it up in a bargain bin somewhere.

What I do remember is that the book’s title was Watchers and, while reading it, I fell in love with a dog named Einstein and an author named Dean Koontz. 

For more, please visit Visionary Fiction Alliance.   
 
If you like fiction that heals, empowers, and bridges differences, you'll be glad you did.



Friday, August 17, 2012

Visionary Fiction Alliance Blog Blessings


Visionary Fiction Alliance goes live today.

The Founding Members of the Visionary Fiction Alliance invite you to join us in our blessings, our intentions, and our prayers for this site.

Blog Blessings


Monday, August 13, 2012

Visionary Fiction Alliance


I'm proud to announce that I've joined a group of talented writers in starting a website aimed at raising awareness of and interest in the genre of visionary fiction.

Though visionary fiction has been around for a long time - think shaman stories of ancient times - most agents, publishers and big book buyers don't recognize it as a genre.   "No interest," they say.  "It won't sell." 

Well, we at Visionary Fiction Alliance hope to prove them wrong. 

In a world riddled with fear, misunderstanding, and lost hope, we believe there are people prepared to transcend the boundaries of their five senses and open to new thoughts and ideas.  In other words, we believe the audience is ready for fiction that heals, empowers, and bridges differences.

In previous posts, I've written about how important it is for writers to find their own niche and identify with a specific audience.  I also wrote about how difficult it can be for writers to categorize their work.  Well, thanks to my friends at VFA, I have found all three.

Why not visit us at Visionary Fiction Alliance and see if visionary fiction is for you. 

As always, thanks for stopping by.