This month’s Challenge Participant is the amazing author, Roland Yeomans! His theme was Words of Wisdom for Writers, something he offers on a regular basis at his blog.
Please welcome Roland in an interview like none other!
Meilori's was empty for once: everyone was out Christmas shopping. What do ghosts give one another? Don't ask. You'll sleep easier.
Alex sat opposite me, toying with his Romulan Ale.
Alex:
You know, Roland. After our "Hangover" adventure with Mark Twain, I don't touch this stuff.
Roland:
Mark wanted to show you Asgard next ... with Jamie Alexander ... as his date.
Alex (rolling his eyes):
Of course as HIS date. Your blog always offers words of wisdom. Was it hard matching letters to your topics?
Roland:
With as varied a place as Meilori's and as populated as my linked novels are, it was fun. Sort of like bobbing for ideas.
In fact, some of my literary friends fought for some topics. Some letters were challenges, of course -- like Q or X or Z. That's what makes the A to Z Challenge fun.
Alex (sipping at his Romulan Ale):
Hey! This is Ginger Ale!
Roland:
I didn't want to risk you with Loki.
Alex:
Thanks for having my back.
Roland:
This way I get to accompany Jamie Alexander to Asgard.
Alex:
Oh, it was Jamie's back you were interested in. I should have figured. Your F post was on Frost. Do you really think poetry is dead? And just how important is poetry anyway to a prose writer?
Roland:
If poetry is dead, we prose writers are in the next ward over, wheezing noisily, with our family gathered around looking concerned and asking about our DVD's.
There are about six people who buy new poetry, but they are not feeling very well. I joke, of course. But poetry is becoming a lost taste in reading. A shame really.
Ernest Hemingway said that the best writing was poetry in prose. Read some of the early Stephen King and you will see what Hemingway meant.
Alex (stiffening in his chair):
Was that Carl Jung who just strolled by?
Roland:
Yes, and we writers can learn alot from him.
Carl Jung was a “spiritual thinker” who offered Western culture a way back to religion that places no shame on being human.
He said: "As far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a light in the darkness of mere being." And isn't that what fiction is meant to do as well?
Alex:
What are some of the keys to writing success, do you think?
Roland:
Well, Mark Twain had some keys:
#1 - Write without pay until someone pays you to do it.
#2 - Don't say the old lady screamed. Drag her out on the stage and have her caterwaul herself.
#3 - Do not hoard.
Give each paragraph all the dynamite you possess. Do not save "a good bit" for later. Your reader may become bored and wander off before your novel explodes.
Alex:
Which post was your favorite and which one was the readers' favorite?
Roland:
The post I am working on is always my favorite, for everything seems possible and the only limits are my imagination and my skill -- so I constantly push myself.
The readers' favorite is WHY FRIENDSHIP? (A RETURN VISIT) See it HERE.
In this digital age, we have never been so connected, yet so alone. Yvette Vickers, star of ATTACK OF THE 50 FOOT WOMAN, was found mummified sitting in front of her computer, having lived the last tragic days of her life, touching people only digitally.
Alex:
So tragic. But enough gloom. My favorite post was our Galactic Hangover adventure. How much fun was that for you?
Roland:
Immense fun. You got the hangover. I got the laughs. Flying through space in Ming the Merciless's space ship was a hoot. And I hope it got people to read about Gordon R Dickson's HOKA. :-)
Alex:
If you do tackle the A to Z Challenge again, what do you think might be your focus?
Roland:
The world is changing so, especially the publishing one. I might write on CHANGE.
You can't stop the future. You can't rewind the past.
The only way to learn the secret of life is to press "Play."
Thank you, Roland!
Co-host Ninja Captain Alex is the author of Amazon Best Sellers CassaStar, CassaFire and CassaStorm, and his blog can be found HERE
Monday, December 2, 2013
Monday, November 11, 2013
A thru Z? The Possibilities Are Limitless!
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Infinity Room (Photo credit: pixeljones) |
How will you be using A to Z to your best advantage?
From that first year in 2010 I realized the potential of an event like the April Challenge. It was a great way to meet new bloggers and add to followers to ones own blog. Now after four Challenges we've seen the endless possibilities that A to Z has to offer. Each year brings talented bloggers with innovative ideas to try as well as tried and true methods of improving content generation, reaching out to community, and bettering oneself as a blogger.
Among the ongoing A to Z community and the A to Z alumni, proudly displaying A to Z badges and other identifiers is a mark of achievement. A to Z has become a blogging institution of integrity.
How has A to Z helped you? How can you make the Challenge serve your needs?
These are some questions we'll be exploring in the next coming months. If you've given up on the April Challenge or have considered not doing it again in 2014, think again. You may be overlooking some important potentials offered by the A to Z Challenge.
Want to Start a Blogging Wildfire?
Please check out my Monday November 11 post at Tossing It Out. You don't have to read the entire thing, but scroll down to the last section. I'm planting some seeds of thought that I hope to start sowing more extensively in the next couple of weeks.
Or if you'd rather just skip the Tossing It Out post and visit the post that started my thinking, then go to the post by Yolanda Renée at A Faraway View. This post might make you think. But this post is only a starting point for something else. Something that will come later. Be sure to leave Yolanda a comment about her post so we know that you were there.
How has the A to Z Challenge helped you? Are you looking for more readers on your blog? Do you think there is any tried and true formula for increasing blog followers or subscribers who actually come back to read your posts?
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Thursday, November 7, 2013
Science and the Supernatural: A Match Made in Heaven and Earth
As a writer of modern day
Sci-fi, action, suspense, and horror I love marrying two polar opposites, while
at the same time creating great conflict. I can think of no better subject than
combining science with the supernatural.
Most civilizations,
including advanced ones throughout history, believed there was more to this
world than what the five senses could perceive and interpret. They thought
there are more realms than the spatial dimensions we are confined in and
limited to by our five senses. Most believed the supernatural was more real
than the world they lived in.
Looking back on Greek and
Roman mythology, these cultures were merely trying to understand and explain
their universe they best they could. Theologians do the same today, the best
they can. So do astronomers and biologists. And physicists. Which brings us to
one of the simplest, beautiful, elegant, and powerful equations known to man.
E=MC2. Einstein’s famous, even
cult-like, equation. The key to this expression is the equal sign. Both sides
must be the same. E equals energy. MC2 is mass times the speed of light
squared. To get an idea of the potential power of energy in mass, the bombs
dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki only released one to two percent of their inherent
energy.
But what I love about this
equation is energy can be converted to mass and mass right back into energy.
This could very well explain angels and demons. An angel is generally
understood to be a spirit being, made of pure energy, and living for the most
part in a dimension above and beyond the space-time continuum we reside.
These beings can, at will if
they have the authority, convert themselves into mass and manifest in our
world. Then, when their work is done, convert back to energy, disappear, and
move with ease back into their dimensions.
Add in a wormhole or two,
and let the fun begin. Who knows what evil lurks for a human traversing a
portal through space for the first time? They could punch a hole through
another world and bring back an evil hitchhiker. But why stop there? Wormholes
are the Pandora’s Box that gets knocked over, its unknown contents spilled
across the floor and unleashed upon an unsuspecting world. Let the fun begin!
As a writer, I now have free
reign to do pretty much anything I want when combining science and the
supernatural. I am not confined by the scientific method or need to call my
work speculative fiction. I have a license to write all kinds of crazy stuff
and not care if I anger someone in the scientific world or the religious field.
Believe me, I have had both camps
hound me and write terrible comments on some of my blog posts over the past
five years. Why, because these conflicting viewpoints, both trying to explain
our universe and our place in it the best they can, do not understand E=MC2.
What about ESP? These are
senses that go beyond sight, smell, hearing, taste, and touch. Pentecostals
will call these Gifts of the Spirit, such as discerning of spirits. Mediums
claim they can talk to the dead. Others will say they can read your mind, help
police find a buried body, or bend spoons. Children seeing monsters in their
bedrooms at night? This may not be their imagination after all. Regardless,
E=MC2 goes a long way in helping to explain our universe and our place in it.
It is certainly not limited to Bunsen burners and telescopes.
So to all my writer friends,
you may freely move about the cabin. Take a deep breath and know you can confidently
move in any direction your story demands. You may not be writing speculative
fiction. You might just be onto something far more concrete than you think.
Stephen Tremp is the author
of the Breakthrough trilogy. His third book Escalation is the final installment
in the series and is set for release November 2013. You can visit him at
www.stephentremp.com
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