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Sunday, November 12, 2017
Interview with Regency writer Regan - Events during that era
Here's a link to where I discussed events during the Regency era and the heroine of DANGEROUS HOMECOMING tells it like it is:
Thursday, September 21, 2017
WRITING LYRICS AND DEVELOPING CREATIVITY
WRITING
LYRICS
♪♯
Recently I embarked on a new journey with a
like-minded partner. David writes the music; I write the lyrics. Now David is
different from most composers. He likes to have a bunch of words in front of
him before commencing to write music. So, my lyrics come first.
And let me tell you, as a poet from way back, writing
lyrics is very different from writing poetry. You need to have an appreciation
of music so that some sort of song sings through your head as you write the
words. Will the words sound out of place when set to music? Is the rhythm of
the words conducive to the synapse transmission to music rather than just
sound?
♯♫
We write all sorts of songs, some with a view to
providing them to our local singing group. As we singers are all over 50 (and
that’s a polite euphemism), we are tolerant of not-quite-right rhythms and
phrases. But David and I also produce songs
best tackled by a soloist and accompanist such as Dark & Light, our present
offering. David has roamed all over the keyboard with this one so I’ve
suggested a little less minor angst and more…well, light.
And sometimes my words puzzle David and he suggests
not that I change them, but that I switch them around for clarity. I’m still
learning, you see, that poetry and novel writing is not at all the same as soaring
lyrics that can’t wait to be sung.
And then there’s words like Constantinople that need a
stress on the first two syllables and demisemiquavers for the …ti-no-ple. But I
leave the hard yards to David. After all, he chose to fit his music around my
words and boy, is he paying for that little brainstorm. One day he’ll compose a
stupendous song that I have to fit the lyrics to in the more normal fashion. Challenges,
challenges… Creativity is never-ending.
♪♯
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
DANGEROUS HOMECOMING
Sloane has done me proud on her blogpost. She has posted an interview with the heroine of DANGEROUS HOMECOMING and also posted an excerpt from the book. Lookee here:
https://sloanetaylor.blogspot.com/2017/07/sass-and-brass-but-always-lady.html
https://sloanetaylor.blogspot.com/2017/07/sass-and-brass-but-always-lady.html
Sunday, June 18, 2017
Eight Months
Yep. Against all the laws of blogging, it's been eight months since I posted something on my own site. I've been busy blogging on other people's sites, thanks to their generosity. The best thing an author or marketer can do is to find a group of like minded people and work with them in this regard. Authors Moving Forward is my group of choice.
You know why I haven't posted anything? Got nothing to say. Which, when you think of it, is not a fault. There are thousands of people out there blogging about whether they prefer whole milk or skim milk, or whether dogs are better for people in high rises than cats and...You get the drift. And when I'm notified of these blogs I DELETE THEM. Yep. The same way many of you will do when you see this.
And that, friends, is why my blog is silent.
You know why I haven't posted anything? Got nothing to say. Which, when you think of it, is not a fault. There are thousands of people out there blogging about whether they prefer whole milk or skim milk, or whether dogs are better for people in high rises than cats and...You get the drift. And when I'm notified of these blogs I DELETE THEM. Yep. The same way many of you will do when you see this.
And that, friends, is why my blog is silent.
Tuesday, October 4, 2016
A Time of Change - the Regency era
The internet is over-burdened with writers marketing
their wares. And I’m adding to the general plethora out there. But hear me out.
I’ve been writing Regencies for eighteen years now
and getting them published. Now my three main publishers have closed their
doors, I have joined the endless queue of self-published authors. So many of us
out here jostling for position like mid-field marathoners. The chances are
you’ll never hear my plea. But I’m chucking this out there in the anorexic hope
that you just might read this. Perhaps you have nothing better to do.
I hope you’re one of the many readers who like
historicals, and in particular, the Regency era. It was such a short period in
Britain’s history, but has given rise to many things such as the development of
canals (as trade with its trading partners hotted up with the imprisonment of
Napoleon, freeing up trade routes and resulting in large numbers of goods that needed
to be transported all over England), the Royal Astronomical Society was
founded, the early prototype of the bicycle, the development of the railway
system, the Act of Union with Ireland in 1801 etc. All this is from the British
point of view. Elsewhere, in the USA, Whitney came up with the principle of
manufacturing interchangeable parts as pertaining to firearms. The statue of
the Venus de Milo was discovered in Greece (1820) and so it goes on.
So in spite of many Regencies persuading you that it
was all about Almacks and dukes, the Regency era was actually a time on the
cusp of great changes, not just in Britain but all over the world. Minds were
opening up, no longer relying on the dogma of ages past.
In 1814 The Times
adopted steam printing. By this method it could now print 1,100 sheets every
hour, not 200 as before—a fivefold increase in production capability and
demand. This development brought about the rise of the wildly
popular fashionable novels.
The Regency is also noted for its
achievements in the fine arts and architecture (Nash springs to mind, and
remember that striped wallpaper known as ‘Regency’?) This era encompassed a
time of great social, political, and economic change that shaped and altered
the societal structure of Britain as a whole. Remember that in London alone,
the population increased from just under a million in 1801 to one and a quarter
million by 1820.
One of the reasons that the arts
flourished during this era was because of the patronage of ‘Prinny’, the fat
and at times ridiculous Prince of Wales. We might laugh at him, but it’s thanks
to him that the development of British architecture flourished, even if his
schemes often left the common people paying for his over-the-top designs.
The Regency era opened up the
market for many authors including Sir Walter Scott, Maria Edgeworth, Mary
Shelley (who incorporated the general mistrust of science during the earlier
part of the Regency era), John Keats and William Blake. Then there were the
playwrights and artists…the list goes on and on to confirm how minds began open
to new possibilities during that time.
Oh yes, there was a lot more to the Regency period
than those autocratic dukes and the patronesses at Almacks!
My latest Regency historical is a re-release called
Mr. Monfort’s Marriage wherein a chivalrous businessman who is not overly fond
of the aristocracy finds himself married to an earl’s daughter. She teaches him
about noblesse oblige, courage and joie de vivre, and he teaches her…all
sorts of things!
Mr. Monfort’s Marriage:
My Amazon bookpage is here:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=Vonnie+Hughes&x=18&y=20
Friday, June 24, 2016
NZ ROMANCE WRITERS' CONFERENCE
Not just for romance writers - no. So don't ignore this post, you who read and write fantasy and mystery etc. It has always been one of the most useful conferences on the planet when it comes to both writers and readers. For readers it's like being in a magic world of books, books, books, both e-books and paper ones.
And the speakers! NZ grabs knowledgeable people from all over the world for their conferences. For a small country it knows what's important.
Sunday, April 24, 2016
What is an
Anzac?
Why is April
25 so important to Australians and New Zealanders?
Most likely anyone outside Australia or New Zealand would
not have heard the term “Anzac.” It stands for Australia New Zealand Army Corps
and was first used during WWI. Both Australia and New Zealand were relatively
new colonies when WWI broke out, (between Germany and Britain), so their ties
with Mother England were still very strong. Most of the young men who died in
the mud at Belgium and on the beaches and trenches of Gallipoli were only
second generation Aussies and New Zealanders. From a country with a population
of almost one million, New Zealand lost 18,000 men and nurses. This was the
highest loss pro rata of any nation during both WWI and WWII .
And do you know, all
those men and nurses who went to Gallipoli (Turkey, Germany’s ally) in 1915
were volunteers? On that very first day on 25 April 1915, 2,000 Australians
died. Another 6,500 were killed or wounded by the end of the week. Australia
was second only to Britain for the numbers of soldiers who fought in WWI.
They call it “the Anzac spirit” which took those boys –
because most of them were mere boys –
through battles along the Western Front at Ypres, Fromelle, the Somme and into
the Middle East and Beersheba. The Anzac spirit determines that during wartime,
Kiwis (New Zealanders) and Aussies can rely on each other.
The Anzac symbol is the red poppy that represents the wild
poppies growing in the fields and roadsides throughout Belgium where some of
the toughest battles were fought and where the flower of a generation perished.
I’ve seen those poppies for myself, and it is astounding to someone from the
Southern Hemisphere that those young men came so far to bleed out on soil so
far from home. There is a poem that begins:
In Flanders Fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
Between the crosses row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
In the days leading up to April 25 Australians and New
Zealanders all wear the symbolic poppy. And the Anzac spirit rang true
throughout WWII, in Korea and in Vietnam too.
Winston Churchill, as First Lord of the Admiralty, commanded
the navy and everything it did. He was removed from that post after the
Gallipoli disaster. During WWII he was responsible for leaving Australians and
New Zealanders stranded in Greece and on Crete. Methinks Winston thought of
colonials as of no account.
Many Kiwis and Aussies fought on the Western Front (remember
the book All Quiet on the Western Front)? The Western Front
was the name the Germans gave to a series of trenches that ran 700 kilometres
from the Belgian coast to the Swiss border.
World War I, 1914-1918, was the 'Great War', the 'war to end
all wars'. Great battles were fought in towns with names such as Fromelles,
the Somme, Bullecourt, Messines, Passchendaele, Dernancourt and
Villers-Bretonneux. Of more than 290,000 Australians who served in this theatre
of war in the Australian Imperial Force, 46,000 were either killed in action or
died of their wounds. And remember that many returned wounded in spirit. We now
call that post traumatic stress disorder.
I have a personal link to the Great War. My great-uncle William
Tielle (nicknamed Teddy) was one of the many volunteers from his district. He was
the only boy amongst a large family of girls and at 21 he died of wounds
received at Passchendaele. He is listed on the honour roll at the Auckland Museum
in New Zealand.
Sunday, February 7, 2016
Books and Writers I've enjoyed lately
Every now and again I sit back and think about the books I like to read, and the writers who appeal to me. There are some excellent writers around, and I've discovered a few through BookBub. But the following are my favourites:
Most books by Tami Hoag such as Down the Darkest Road and Live to Tell. I think my favourite is Still Waters. Why? Because her novels are so detailed and the solution of the mysteries is never obvious. In fact, the character of the antagonists and protagonists holds the key to the solutions each time. For example, in A Thin Dark Line, it is the generations-old warped solution of ways to protect a family that bubbles to the surface and the bloody mindedness of an ambitious female cop who stands up for her rights amongst male chauvinism that would chop most women off at the knees, that points the way to reasons for the crime and the discovery of the perpetrator(s).
Friday, October 9, 2015
SOME LIKE IT HOT
My friend Sloane, whom I 'met' when we were both Musa authors, writes hot stuff. Much warmer than what I write, and she does it with gusto and finesse (the two are not mutually exclusive). Read a little something about Sloane below. You see, she's not just an author - she's a magnificent cook. Take a gander.
By Sloane Taylor
Don is the hero of my erotic short story French Twist. Don Hobbs knows
exactly what he likes in the bedroom as well as the kitchen. This Chicago born
and bred man is a true lover of fried chicken. The lady in his life, Claudette D’Laquois,
has no clue how to turn on a stove, let alone fry this scrumptious dish. But
what can you expect from an Interpol agent? To make Claudette's life easier, I
gave her the recipe so she can keep her man happy while he oversees an orchard
in Nice, France.
Sloane’s Down-home Fried Chicken
1 tbsp. salt
Tap water
6 chicken legs, or thighs or 4 breasts, skinless and boneless
1 cup flour
1tsp. thyme
½ tsp. marjoram
Freshly ground pepper to taste
1 large egg
1½ tbsp. milk
½ cup solid shortening or lard, plus more as needed
Dissolve salt in a small amount of water. Add chicken pieces then cover
with more water. Set this in the refrigerator for 4-6 hours.
Remove chicken from fridge 2 hours before you plan to cook. Drain and
pat dry.
Combine flour and seasonings in a paper or plastic bag. Shake gently to
combine ingredients. Mix egg and milk in a bowl. Set a clean plate or platter
on the counter to hold the breaded chicken.
Place one chicken piece at a time in the bag, shake gently to
thoroughly coat, then dip in egg mixture, then return the piece to the bag and
gently shake again. Set chicken on the plate. Repeat the process until all
pieces are coated. Set the uncovered plate in the fridge for at least 30
minutes.
Heat the shortening in a large frying pan over medium-high heat. Test
to be sure shortening is hot enough by adding a small piece of bread. It should
sizzle and toast quickly.
Carefully add the chicken pieces. Maintain the temperature, but adjust
it so chicken doesn’t burn and grease doesn’t splatter everywhere.
Turning frequently, brown the chicken on all sides. Cover and cook
20-25 minutes or until juices run clear when pierced with a sharp knife.
Lay pieces on a plate lined with paper towels to absorb any oil.
Transfer them to a clean platter and serve.
Here's a brief intro to Book Three of the Naughty Ladies of Nice series
with Don and Claudette.
Spies and lies bring a deadly twist to the City of Lights:
Interpol agent Claudette D’Laquois is trapped in the hellhole of life
and unable to trust anyone. Desperate to regain control, she flees to the
safety of her uncle’s rundown chateau on the French Riviera. But Claudette soon
learns the countryside has its own dangers when she finds herself alone with a
sexy foreigner.
Uptight accountant Donald Hobbs ditches numbers for dirt to oversee his
friend’s orchard for three weeks. His well deserved vacation is perfect until a
seductive mademoiselle drags him into a dangerous world of intrigue and erotic
fantasy.
Illegal drugs and Russian mobsters take a back seat to a lethal night
of sinful pleasure for Claudette and Don.
BUY LINK
Sloane
Taylor’s books are set in Europe where the men are all male and the North
American women they encounter are both feminine and strong. They also bring
more than lust to their men’s lives.
Taylor
was born and raised on the Southside of Chicago. Studly, her mate for life, and
Taylor, now live in a small
home in Indiana and enjoy the change from city life. She is an avid
cook and posts new recipes on her http://sloanetaylor.blogspot.com
every
Wednesday. The recipes are user friendly, meaning easy.
See what I mean? A woman of many talents. Leave her a comment. Make her day.
Vonnie
Thursday, August 20, 2015
How authors and moviemakers hold their readers' attention
WHAT BUTTONS TO PUSH
By ‘what buttons to push’ I mean what buttons do authors use
to manipulate (yep, being honest) their readers’ emotions, to get them on side
with the characters in their books. For example, perhaps the author creates
unlikeable, evil antagonists and emphasises the sterling qualities of his
protagonists.
The most obvious ploy is the ticking clock. It not only
lends urgency but it yanks the reader along at a rush, keeping him intrigued.
Then there’s characterisation. Of course in this dynamic
world, what worked ten years ago may not have the same appeal in 2015. The
innocent 1960s virgin, so prevalent in romances of that time, would drive a
reader from 2015 to drink. We are much more cynical, well-informed and
downright demanding than we were then. Historically though, some classics
retain their appeal because they are much more than the sum of their
characters’ emotions. To Kill A Mockingbird’s racial tensions are still not
outmoded today, and that lazy description of the syrupy south’s inbred
attitudes is not far from the truth in some out-of-the-way places. And that is
why books like these are classics. They endure not just because of the
characters in the books but because of the settings and historical attitudes.
And Harper Lee manipulated the readers’ emotions. Think of the way she pushes
Scout’s lack of desire to be a ‘lady’ so that the reader is on Scout’s side.
Perhaps today’s writers manipulate the readers in more
subtle ways. What of Dick Francis’s heroes who are often of the working class
up against a criminal upper class or just up against class bigotry where he is
on the outside looking in? Dick Francis does that so well that even if the
protagonist is not your usual Everyman, the reader is still very much on his
side. That’s right. The modern protagonist need not be a perfect hero as he has
been in novels and movies of the past. Some have patchy backgrounds and they’ve
made mistakes.
There’s Lee Child’s Jack Reacher who thrums a string in
every male heart. They all want to be Jack with his freedom and lack of
possessions but with an innate sense of responsibility. And of course Jack has
been in the military and knows how to handle himself in vicious situations.
Every man’s dream. There are a lot of wannabe Jacks out there. And Lee knows
how to manipulate those readers.
Tami Hoag’s heroines are believably imperfect. They make
mistakes and have hang-ups that readers can empathise with and they frequently
have to form alliances with people they don’t trust. There’s that little brush
of reality that lends credence to the stories.
So…empathy and sympathy are the buttons. And the harder
those buttons are pushed by authors and movie makers, the more a reader/viewer
becomes invested in the characters. We need to see how the protagonists get
themselves out of a bind, or if the evil antagonists get their come-uppance.
And the best books of all are where you know darned well that the author is
pushing your buttons, but you just don’t care. The book is so good!
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