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On Optimism

b “’Optimism,’ said Candide, ‘is a mania for maintaining that all is well when things are going badly.’” -Voltaire, Candide   Optimism, quite frankly, suffers from a bad name. This has been going on for quite some time. All the nasty people, it seems, go down in history: Benito Mussolini, the Marquis DeSade, Atilla the Hun, Donald J. Trump. All the cheerful ones repose in obscurity. This is a...

“On Memories, Keepsakes, and Cigars”- First Place Winner – Gal’s Guide to the Galaxy Anthology

       I love eccentricities. I will value you if you are kind, witty, and a good listener, but if you sing off-key with gusto, wear a signature bow tie, or tend to laugh at your own jokes, I will love you even more. After all, when Albert Einstein’s doctor forbade him from buying tobacco for his pipe, the genius circumvented his doctor’s orders by stooping to pick up discarded cigarette butts...

FROM THE ROAR TO THE STENCH: IN PRAISE OF JUSTICE SONIA SOTOMAYOR

FROM THE ROAR TO THE STENCH: IN PRAISE OF JUSTICE SONIA SOTOMAYOR The Women’s March on Washington transformed America’s women. After January 21, 2017, women ran for office, launched non-profits, and raised their voices like never before. Thousands of women had descended on the nation’s capital, arriving by plane, by bus, by car, by motorcycle, by skateboard, by foot. They were wearing sneakers...

My Easter Wish for You – Rolling Back the Stone

My Easter Wish for You – Rolling Back the Stones (Written for an Easter Service at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship in Dayton, Ohio)              A stone, officially defined, is simply a piece of rock.           What characterizes it, to my mind, is its hardness.           Stones may be large or small, heavy or light, rounded or irregular in shape, but all of them are hard.          ...

Pictures Worth A Thousand Words

I’m a visual learner. And pictures, the kind called visual images, show up in my books. In KINSHIP, the important visuals are the trailers in Happy Trails, the trailer park setting for the novel. In UNCOMMON FAITH, the important visuals picture groups of women stitching and the quilts that display directions for the Underground Railroad. In FALLOUT, the important visuals include the...

Where Do You Get Your Ideas? Introducing Diane Chiddister

     Diane Chiddister always intended to write fiction, but it was a long journey between her MFA in fiction writing from the famed Iowa Writer’s Workshop in 1981 and the publication of ONE MORE DAY, her first novel. In between, she’s been a journalist, serving as a reporter  and columnist for the YELLOW SPRINGS NEWS. Until retirement, Chiddister had served as editor of the paper for...

Where Do You Get Your Ideas? Introducing Carol Siyahi Hicks

“Where Do You Get Your Ideas?” is a series of blogposts whose goal is to support writers by answering a question readers often ask. Today’s blog introduces Carol Siyahi Hicks and her debut novel, The Color of Acceptance. The idea for Hicks’s book is rooted in her experiences in the 1960s civil rights movement.  As a 19-year-old college student, she had traveled south to...

Where Do You Get Your Ideas? Introducing Journalist Teri Rizvi

One question writers are often asked is, “Where do you get your ideas?” In this series of posts, I’m hoping to introduce you to authors to honor their work and to explain their creative process to curious readers. Here’s Teri Rizvi, journalist and essayist, whose recent publication is ONE HEART WITH COURAGE: ESSAYS AND STORIES. “I’m a journalist by training, so I’m...

Where Do You Get Your Ideas? Introducing Fictional Memoirist Sylvia Petter

I’ve started a series of blogposts both to (1) support other authors and to (2) answer a common question readers ask: Where do you get your ideas? Here is an introduction to Sylvia Petter, author of ALL THE BEAUTIFUL LIARS, who tells us where she got the ideas for her fictional “memoir.” “It won’t leave you alone,” her mother said of the story that took Petter 20 years to write...

THE ROAR and THE STENCH

On January 21, 2017, thousands of women descended on the nation’s capital, arriving by plane, by bus, by car, by motorcycle, by skateboard, by foot. They were wearing sneakers and sandals, Crocs and Doc Martens, Army boots and orthopedic shoes. They carried backpacks and fanny packs, cell phones and water bottles, even babies in slings. They had heard a newly inaugurated President proclaim that...

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