Saturday, October 1, 2011

Editing Process

"Brain Freeze Ain't for Sissies" has gone through its first edit.  I must say when I first read my editor's comments and recommendations I was a little overwhelmed.  What I thought was my books strength, became the focus of the rewrite.  And so I embraced the process and I must say my editor is a genius.  The rewritten manuscript is much better than the original.  Because of the changes, I am proud to have it read...and I am really excited about seeing the book in print.  Next month the book goes to illustration.  Stay tuned for more info and for posting of characters and book cover as it moves through the process. 

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Following

I must say I am rather embarrassed.   When I look over to the right of my blog I see a single follower; a single dedicated follower.  I have met this follower...and it is me.  In fact, I've been following myself for months now.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Publishing Process Has Begun

The first book in the "Dinwiddie Dunn and his Bowlegged Sons" series "Brainfreeze Ain't for Sissies" has begun and is in copyediting phase with the publisher.  The initial draft of the book should be complete by about February of next year. I'm really excited for the process to begin; especially the illustration portion. The illustrations are key since this will determine how everyone sees Dinwiddie, dimwitted Dean-O and eight-fingered Dave from now on. Someone once said of songwriting that the music is compromised the moment it leaves your head. I'm afraid the same will prove true of the illustrations...that the characters will be compromised between leaving my head and ending up on the page. I guess I'm both excited and nervous about seeing where this journey leads.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Brain Freeze Ain't for Sissies

Dinwiddie Dunn and his bowlegged sons, preferred eating ice cream to carrying guns.
"My boys don't use guns!" Daddy Dinwiddie said, "My boys use their holsters for ice cream instead!"  Now ice cream is yummy and ice cream is fun, but ice cream in holsters will melt in the sun..."

The first book in the "Dinwiddie Dunn and his Bowlegged Sons" series begins production in August.  The initial draft of the book should be complete by about February of next year.  Excited for the process to begin; especially the illustration portion.  The illustrations are key since this will determine how everyone sees Dinwiddie, dimwitted Dean-O and eight-fingered Dave.  Someone once said of songwriting that the music is compromised the moment it leaves your head.  I'm afraid the same is true of the illustrations...that the characters will be compromised between leaving my head and ending up on the page.  I guess I'm both excited and nervous.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Black and White

I take my tall decaf to the street.  That’s where there is life and color and smells that are foreign.  I just did my ‘good deed’ inside Starbucks.  The lady with the Starbucks gift card and the gold tooth had a balance of $1.42 and an appetite of about $1.60.  And even the cheapest item on the menu was more than she had.  That one dollar and sixty-cent cookie was more than she had.  And even so, she didn’t want the cookie.  I knew it.  She was settling for the cookie; yet she wasn’t even able to “settle.”  I didn’t want her to settle and I could almost feel the discomfort and embarrassment in her awkward shuffle.  She needed $.18.  I told the barista I would make up the difference for what she wanted in the case.    I didn’t actually see what she upgraded to, but just placed 2 dollar bills on the counter.  She thanked me, I think.  The barista mentioned something about her ‘paying it forward,’ and she tried to explain that she already had…I really wasn’t listening and didn’t really care if she paid it forward or not.  I just didn’t want her to be uncomfortable or embarrassed.  I hate that, myself.
          On the street at the bistro table with the green umbrella and concrete flooring, there is comfort.  Not your typical, run-of-the-mill comfort, but soul comfort; comfort that comes from being awake.  This intersection, kitty-corner from Janus Landing where the tattooed and costumed people parade, has a personality that isn’t described; it is sensed.  It is experienced.  And tonight, even without the costumed people or the sound of underground bands tuning up, there is personality.  I first notice the barista, on a break…a smoking and writing break.  I am fascinated by his tiny handwriting quickly filling the page; the perfect crisp white pages quickly soaking up line after line of jet black ink.  As I smell the sweet smoke from his cigarette, I wonder if his thoughts are as black and white.  But I find that baristas who sit at tables on sidewalk streets, smoking Swisher Sweets, and writing incessantly in pink journals rarely have black and white thoughts.  After all, if they are so black and white, what’s the point in committing them to paper?  What’s the use in wasting all that precious crisp white paper and jet black ink with other people’s thoughts;  thoughts that have flowed from peoples’ pens hundreds of thousands of times…to be read once?