The Teacher Who First Inspired My Life Path

This past June marked thirty years since I graduated from that eponymous time of life known as high school. It pains me to think how quickly those thirty years have flown by-as if I were just shy of eighteen with the whole world and life ahead of me yesterday and now I am staring down the road of middle age. Its a stark reminder to always remember and cherish the good times and the good people in your life. But as this milestone in my life passed I began to ruminate on those halcyon days of high school and one teacher kept a brighter light in my memories than any other.

That would be Mrs. Schwartz, my senior year English teacher.

Mrs. Schwartz was unlike all the other stuffy and staid teachers in my school. She was vibrant and colorful, sassy and opinionated and above all she was a literature lover of the highest degree. She was unlike all my teachers before or any of the teachers who came after. She was a one of a kind impetus in my life. She inspired me to explore great and obscure literature. And it was after that year in her English class I remember thinking I might like to go into teaching one day.

Mrs. Schwartz was a lively, involved and incredibly charismatic teacher. She brought literature alive for me in each of her lectures and discussions with the class. I was most definitely an introvert in high school and extremely shy and quiet in class. This particular class had many type A , high achieving , popular personalities in it and I always found myself feeling less than adequate when compared to these classmates.

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I was not at the top of the popularity mountain though I did have several very close friends and as I think back on those days I only remember one or two of my friends being in that class of thirty. So while I loved the class for all its focus on books and writing , I also remember being acutely anxious and awkward and trying to not be noticed or stand out when in class. I definitely remember not wanting to be in the spotlight ever! Which meant giving out an opinion or sharing in the lively class discussions was torturous for me. Yet, somehow Mrs. Schwartz saw past all my insecurities and was active in encouraging me to participate and she always encouraged me to keep writing.

She made it a point to leave lengthy comments on my essays that offered constructive criticism while building me up and encouraging my writing. Often times, she would read excerpts from student essays to the class that she found particularly well done or had a unique point of view, and although she never named names I know that she always included my work. It made me feel warm and happy inside. I felt like I was making her proud and it meant the world to me!

I also remember Mrs. Schwartz was a bit of a rebel in those days. I remember her showing us the full, uncut version of the movie 1984 after we had read the Orwellian classic in class. It may be considered tame by today’s standards but in the early 1990s showing a movie with frontal nudity in a high school class was a risque teaching move. But she said that since we were all on the cusp of adulthood we should be able to handle of few moments of nakedness with out being immature . She was right of course even if my dad thought it was not a great movie for a seventeen year old girl to watch.

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Mrs. Schwartz was definitely a trailblazer in my eyes because she was always presenting her students with opportunities to experience literature with raw, over-arching themes that made you think about the world at large and not just your own little bubble. She taught me how to explore differing viewpoints, how to formulate my own viewpoint, and how to express those viewpoints in writing. She influenced me with her ability to find and explain the deeper meaning in texts, she taught me how to read like a writer and pull out the meat and marrow from what ever piece of literature I was reading.

She was a teacher devoted to her students and to the literature she was teaching. She was one of the first people to encourage me to write and keep writing. She built up my confidence when it was insecure and on shaky ground. She helped me to see that I was just as capable and just as intelligent as any of the other top students in class. She always took the time after class to talk with me and give me reading recommendations and she even lent me some of her own books!

If there is one thing I remember most about Mrs. Schwartz it is that she made me feel seen and heard and understood. And for me who was a teenage girl struggling with self harm and depression that was like handing me the rope to keep hanging on. Her vibrant teaching and caring demeanor and personal attention kept me going during a time I didn’t think I wanted to keep living- I absolutely lived for her class in every sense of the word.

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When I look back on that time in Mrs. Schwartz’s classroom I will always see her radiant smile, her crazy hair, her sassy vibe and her voice drawing me into the discussion and into the wonder of literature. She was the catalyst in my life even if I didn’t know it at the time. A few years later and a couple of college major changes it was Mrs. Schwartz I thought about when I finally decided to become a teacher. I wanted to be able to affect just one child the way Mrs. Schwartz affected me. I wanted to bring passion and depth to my teaching. I wanted to light a fire in my students the way she lit a fire in me.

I spent the most amazing fifteen years in elementary education until I became a stay at home mom. And I can only hope that one day, one student will think I did half as good a job as Mrs. Schwartz did in her teaching career. I never got to tell her all of this before she passed and that is a regret I will always have in my heart. So tonight I raise my glass and toast the indomitable and enduring spirit of my favorite teacher- Mrs. Schwartz. Cheers!

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Does My Writing Matter?

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I often think about if and how my writing matters in the big scheme of things. In this age of twenty- four hour news streaming, social media platforms, Covid, politics, cancel culture and viral videos is what I write even heard above all the technological and media based noise?

I am not so sure. I like to think that my small fellowship of readers and followers cares what I write about and my creative process and journey. But is that enough? In this fast paced, hustle culture is a small blog on reading books and writing really making an impact on anyone?

I am not of this generation of hustle culture and social media superstardom. I certainly do not understand algorithms (Which seem to be ever changing) , content niching, and how to make a tik tok or a reel. I am lost as to what those things are and why they seem so important to the millions of people in the online space. Sometimes I walk around libraries and see so many people huddled around the computer carousel I wonder if anyone uses the library to take out books anymore. I feel a bit lost in this gigantic space of online life and daily media frenzy.

Am I becoming obsolete?

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I love books. I love reading them. I love holding them. I love smelling them. I love collecting them . I love looking at them so neat and beautiful stacked on my shelves around my house. They comfort me and bring me joy. They take me on adventures and whisk me away in breathtaking dramas. Books are magical and brought to life by only opening up and beginning to read.

I do not get those same feelings when I flip open my laptop, or check my phone or tablet. I feel the complete opposite of comfort and joy. I feel anxious and annoyed. And yes it is all well and good to say well if you don’t like social media then just get off. Well, I can’t since everyone now uses it for updates and information sharing -even my child’s school. So just eliminating the perils of social media from my life is not a real option.

But that is neither here nor there. For the real question remains- Does my writing matter? If I am taking the time to put my thoughts into words and share them is that enough?

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The answer is a resounding yes. I fervently believe that any creative endeavour has value and matters no matter how small the audience for it is this present day. So many great authors, artists, performers were unknown during their lives but still persevered for their art and so too should we. Even in this crazy age of viral videos and Insta-famous people and influencers art and the creative endeavours of all are worth spending time on and bringing to life.

My writing may only touch a few souls each week but it is a my work and it matters to me and that is enough.

I don’t write because I wish to be famous and rich. I write because the fire within me commands that I do so. I write because I have stories to tell and poetry to share. I write because it is what I was born to do.

My writing matters.

Your writing matters

Your art matters

Your music matters.

Your performance matters

All creative and artistic journeys are valuable and matter far more than fame and wealth.

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Until next time – KEEP READING! KEEP WRITING!

Personal Development : A Writer’s Best Friend

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I have always been interested in learning. I was the child who despised summer and could not wait to get back to school in the fall. ( I know nerd overload, right?) However, even after the days of college were over I still always found myself looking for courses to take to increase my knowledge whether it be for professional continuing education credit reasons or a personal learning interest. Personal development has always been a keen way for me to delve deeper into topics that can enhance my life and profession.

Personal development is key to making me a better writer as well . I am always on the lookout for classes and seminars online that can help me with different aspects of my writing or about literature. Some of the most informative and helpful courses I have taken have been free through MOOC programs and global learning initiatives.

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This is a short list of places I have found extremely enlightening and informative writing and literature classes for free or low cost:

  1. International Writing Program MOOC Packs http://www.distancelearningiwp.org/moocpacks/
  2. Masterpieces of World Literature https://learning.edx.org
  3. Classic Children’s Literature https://online.hillsdale.edu/courses/classic-childrens-literature
  4. Shakespeare: Hamlet and The Tempest https://online.hillsdale.edu/courses/shakespeare-hamlet-and-the-tempest
  5. Skillshare courses are low cost https://www.skillshare.com/
  6. UDEMY affordable learning https://www.udemy.com
  7. Coursera offers an array of free and low cost courses https://www.coursera.org
  8. Open Learn offers free university courses http://www.open.edu
  9. Future Learn http://www.futurelearn.com
  10. Khan Academy http://www.khanacademy.org
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There are several reasons why personal development is so important and vital in ones life. First and foremost it expands your perspective. When you expand your knowledge you are growing out of your comfort zone and that promotes awareness and perspective which can help you in innumerable ways.

Secondly, you gain confidence. When you are in the process of learning and bettering yourself you are also strengthening your confidence. You will learn more. You will set goals and achieve them. You become better at what you do and that is a confidence builder.

Third, it helps improve your focus and effectiveness. It provides you with clarity and clear direction. This allows you to focus on what you need to do and be effective in what you are working on each day.

Finally. personal development makes you a stronger person.

As what Lao Tzu famously said:

“Knowing others is intelligence; knowing yourself is true wisdom. Mastering others is strength; mastering yourself is true power.”

When you strive to better yourself and understand yourself both your strengths and weaknesses it enables you to become the best version of yourself. And that my friends is absolutely priceless!

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What are you doing to honor yourself and your goals? Let me know in the comments below!

Until next time – Keep Reading and Keep Writing!

September Plans and Goals

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We have finally arrived in September ! It is the start of my favorite time of the year–Autumn. The crisp, cool air will be here soon and back to school excitement is felt as school buses travel through the neighborhood picking up the school children with their backpacks and lunchboxes. This time of year certainly makes me happy and fills me with joy. I get excited because as a former teacher the month of September always represents a new beginning and the start of something new in my life.

So then September is the perfect opportunity to reevaluate my goals and plans. By taking some time to look over what I want to achieve before the year draws to a close I am able to adjust what I want to do and what I need to do. One of the things that I do want to take time and focus on is building my writing platform through blogging and making my writing routine more effective and efficient so that my projects are finished on time.

One of the techniques I have been using that is so helpful is the Pomodoro technique.

“The Pomodoro Technique is a time management system that encourages people to work with the time they have—rather than against it. Using this method, you break your workday into 25-minute chunks separated by five-minute breaks. … After about four pomodoros, you take a longer break of about 15 to 20 minutes.” https://www.themuse.com/

I find it has been an absolute game changer for my productivity and my own writing. This has allowed me to focus on my blog and my writing projects . I have two writing projects that I am working on at the moment. One is a volume of original poetry and the second is the novel. I break these up by focusing on one project one day and the other project on another. Daily I am trying to blog and publish to Medium in order to continue building my platform as well as working on my writing.

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Next on my list of things I am working on is continuing with the DIY MFA by Gabriela Periera. Which is a self study course designed to give you the MFA degree experience without the cost! I have been deep diving it chapter by chapter here on the blog and I will continue to do so. This book is absolutely worth every minute I spend reading and working with it as I pursue taking my writing to new levels. The basic concept of DIY MFA is as follows from the DIY MFA website:

“How DIY MFA Works
Here’s a secret no one ever tells you. The typical MFA (Master of Fine Arts) boils down to one simple formula:

Writing + Reading + Community = MFA
This means that to create a do-it-yourself version of the MFA, all you need to do is: write with focus, read with purpose, and build your community.

Write with Focus
Learn how to make writing a priority while still fitting it into your existing life.

Why DIY MFA Works
The beauty of DIY MFA is that while it covers most of what you’d get in a traditional MFA, you get to decide how to structure your writing, reading and community so you can reach your goals. Want to write thrillers? Good news! You don’t have to spend hours studying eighteenth century parlor-room novels (unless you want to, of course). You read the books you want to read, books that will serve your writing. When it comes to community, you connect with other thriller-writers. No one’s going to force you to go to a poetry reading or a romance writer’s conference. Of course, branching out beyond your chosen genre will always enhance your writing and can open your mind to new ideas, but you choose how you invest your time in a way that serves your goals.

Balancing the three aspects of DIY MFA can be overwhelming, but if you make a plan it’s easy to stay on track. The best way to keep track of your writing, reading and community is to draw out a pie chart. Each slice on the pie represents how much time you spend on the three parts of DIY MFA. Depending on what projects you have on your plate, your pie may emphasize one area more than another. I find that the best balance for me looks like this:

Of course, sometimes you have to adjust your DIY MFA plan to fit with other things that are going on in your life. For instance, if you’re researching material for a new project, you might find that reading needs to take center stage. On the other hand, during a writing conference, community will probably get the largest slice and the other pieces will shrink down to make room. Be flexible and tweak your DIY MFA Plan. No matter what challenges life throws your way, you’ll be able to keep writing.” –https://diymfa.com

From the DIY MFA official website

I can not recommend this book enough! It is life changing and game changing for me as a writer.

Finally on my list of plans and goals is to continue with my 100 Classic Book Challenge. I have completed Lost Horizon by James Hilton and The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway. I am now reading The Colussus of Maroussi by Henry Miller. My goal for September is to read 15 books …more if possible. I know fifteen is doable for me and my insomniac brain …haha!

My To Be Read List for the month of September is :

  1. Under the Volcano by Malcom Lowry
  2. Beloved by Toni Morrison
  3. The Colussus of Maroussi by Henry Miller
  4. To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
  5. Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
  6. The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers
  7. Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger
  8. The Ice Storm by Rick Moody
  9. The Curious Enlightenment of Professor Caritat by Steven Lukes
  10. Restoration by Rose Tremain
  11. A Passage to India by E M Forster
  12. Ironweed by William Kennedy
  13. Joy in the Morning by PG Wodehouse
  14. Out of Africa by Isak Dinesen
  15. A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway

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So what are your plans and goals for the upcoming month? Do you plan out your month or just take it as it comes?

Let me know in the comments!

Until next time — Keep Reading and Keep Writing!

Your Guru is a Snake Oil Salesman

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There are many things social media has given rise to over the past decade from allowing us to easily connect with long lost friends, to strengthening family ties, to building community support, to giving rise to more small business visibility and allowing us to access goods and services from a global marketplace. What social media has also given rise to is the online “guru” or the person or even teams of persons who will change your life, motivate you to be better, and scale you to 10k months and six figure business enterprises! Oh my!

I thoroughly and readily admit that I too fell under the hazy spell of motivational speeches, vague strategies for improving one’s life and the all elusive make tens of thousands of dollars just from being on social media workshops and trainings. All of the “gurus” I followed had several things in common:

_They were predominantly women

_ They had a believable if slightly indefinite or unclear backstory of overcoming hardship

_They offered a plethora of low cost or free programs on motivation, productivity, self improvement

_They had an aura and charisma that spoke to me but also a down to earth mentality that was appealing

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I readily and whole heartedly bought into all of it. I signed up for newsletters and downloaded apps. Jumped on coaching calls and followed their You Tube and Instagram accounts in hopes of soaking up their “knowledge” and “wisdom”. But slowly I began to notice a shift in my favorite gurus and their messages to their audience. The message went from “Empowerment and motivation and strategies on how to be the best version of yourself” to a message of “Leveling up your business, scale to 5k months, scale to 10k months, become a six figure earner!”

The low cost offers and free workshops, and usable content suddenly gave way to increasingly higher and higher priced programs and courses. These women no longer seemed to be aiming their offers or content at the original audience that had given them their success in the first place but instead were looking to become exclusive high priced coaches for other high priced business. It seemed as if these women who had once been keenly aware of the impact of motivation, business building, networking and creating a community had scaled themselves up into an elite tier and no longer had any use for their original audience (namely people like me who were trying to navigate the world of online business as a writer and as a woman and stay at home mom).

Over the time the useful weekly newsletters became less and less frequent and eventually many of them stopped altogether. I just received a “newsletter” from one lady whom I hadn’t seen in my inbox in almost a year inviting me to register for a six figure earners only retreat in Bali. Had she stayed on top of where people like I were in her audience she may have realized that I was no longer her target audience as six figures is so far not what I earn. LOL.

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That seems to be the way of the social media “guru” as they outgrow their original audience and focus less on the self improvement aspect and more on the “scaling up” of a million dollar business. I do not have a million dollar business (yet) but even if I did I don’t think these so called gurus could teach me anything I can not find out and learn on my own. They are not offering any real information that one can not find out for themselves. All they are really offering is the luxury label and the Instagram worthy highlight reel.

I want substance and clarity. I don’t want someone throwing up videos of themselves lip syncing while they post motivational mantras. Give me an actual class on SEO or write a business book filled with actionable steps on how to take a business from idea to actual product. I certainly do not care about your latest “rebrand” and how you are fully stepping into your “authenticity” so you got your nose pierced. Somehow you think that is the content that is going to teach me how to be authentic in business. Newsflash…it does not.

I can go to the business section of any bookstore or library and find a plethora of valuable resources that will help me more than a ten minute video on You Tube of a “guru” parroting back soundbites they have heard from other coaches on the internet. Look, I am all for the hustle and for building a viable business. But when your business is telling other businesses how to be a business there is something amiss.

If everyone on social media is a business coach catering to other businesses who make 5k months or more than what what about the rest of us just chugging away creating our own small business? Are we not valuable enough to be seen? Are our services not worthy? Of course we are but first you have tune out all that nonsense about 5k and 10k months. While there are plenty of business who are in fact generating that income, not everyone who says they are- actually are making that kind of money in their business.

GASP! People do not tell the truth or the whole truth on the internet??

No they do not and we need to be more cognizant of the fact. Anyone can make their life look like a dream in an Instagram post but the reality is for most people their life is nothing like a carefully curated post on social media. What we as freelance writers, creatives, and other small business builders need to do is focus on our services, our products and working hard each day to build and expand to the next step on our journey. We don’t need a perfectly coiffed coach telling us what we need to do because we can figure out the next step for ourselves. We don’t need a to buy a five thousand dollar coaching program just so someone can tell us that we need to “prioritize ourselves” and “work on self care”.

Its bullshit. Its snake oil. They say all the things you want to hear but in the end they don’t really do anything for you and your out five grand.

So here’s my thought on the matter — Ignore all the business hype beasts out there. Ignore the hustle till you puke culture. Ignore the “FIVE DAYS TO 5K” bullshit. What you need to do, what I need to do is get up everyday and do what needs to be done. Write. Paint. Create. Invent. Test. Sell. Build a website. Make the phone calls. Hire more help.

Do whatever it is you need to do to build your business and make it successful on your terms. Only you can make it happen. No guru no matter how big a following they have -can make you successful. Only you can and you will. I will as well.

Till next time–KEEP READING! KEEP WRITING!

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MY 100 CLASSICS READING CHALLENGE

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I have been reflecting upon my reading habits and the choices I have been making when it comes to my personal reading. I believe that for the last year or so I have been reading less than stellar literature. Now I am not saying there is anything wrong with sizzling romance or blockbuster contemporary fiction those are fine and wonderful reading journeys to embark upon. My thinking has always been if you enjoy what you read then that is what matters most.

When I say that I have been reading less than stellar literature I am merely speaking of my own ideas of novels I want to read. I like to be challenged and immersed in my reading and I think lately I have been reading books just so I can make a check on my Good Reads challenge list. But the quantity of what I read is not as important to me anymore as the quality of the literature I read.

I took a long hard look at my bookshelves and realized that while I have a beautiful and expansive collection of books lining the shelves there are far too many classics that I have bought and not read. Those lovely books sit so beautifully with their unblemished spines facing out into my sunny living room. And while, I love an aesthetically pleasing bookshelf as much as the next book obsessed person on Instagram does. My pretty bookshelves are not increasing my knowledge or expanding my worldview. It is time to make a change and start to actually read those books and not just look at them. I want to own the books not just on my shelves but in my heart and in my mind.

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How am I defining Classic Literature? I used the following definition as my guideline for choosing the books for my challenge:

Classic literature is an expression of life, truth, and beauty. It must be of high artistic quality, at least for the time in which it was written. Although different styles will come and go, a classic can be appreciated for its construction and literary art. It may not be a bestseller today due to pacing and dated language, but you can learn from it and be inspired by its prose.” Lombardi, Esther. “Literature Definitions: What Makes a Book a Classic?” ThoughtCo, Aug. 27, 2020, thoughtco.com/concept-of-classics-in-literature-739770.

My goal was not to buy more books but to read the ones I already owned. I compiled and cross refeenced my collection against the books mentioned in the following publications:

100 Must Read Classics https://www.penguin.co.uk/articles/2018/100-must-read-classic-books.html

100 books everyone should read before they die (ranked!) https://www.businessinsider.com/100-books-everyone-should-read-amazon-goodreads-2015-3

100 Books to Read Before You Die | Reedsy Discovery https://www.google.com/search?q=100+classics+everyone+should+read&rlz=1CAWPBA_enUS909&oq=100+classics&aqs=chrome.2.69i57j46i512j0i512l4j46i512j0i512l3.5599j0j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#:~:text=https%3A//reedsy.com/discovery/blog/best-books-to-read-in-a-lifetime

BBC’s Top 100 Books You Need to Read Before You Die – List … https://www.listchallenges.com/bbcs-top-100-books-you-need-to-read-before-you-die

The Telegraph’s 100 Novels Everyone Should Read – The … https://thegreatestbooks.org/lists/115

The Rory Gilmore Reading List: How Novel | Book Riot https://bookriot.com/rory-gilmore-reading-list/

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Here is my 100 CLASSIC BOOKS READING CHALLENGE LIST (These are all books I already own and have been languishing unread on my bookshelves)

100 CLASSIC BOOKS READING CHALLENGE LIST

  1. The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger
  2. Midnight’s Children by Salman Rushdie
  3. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
  4. Ulysses by James Joyce
  5. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
  6. Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
  7. Moby Dick by Herman Melville
  8. Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
  9. A Passage to India by EM Forster
  10. Beloved by Toni Morrison
  11. Don Quixote by Miguel De Cervantes
  12. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
  13. Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
  14. Atonement by Ian McEwan
  15. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
  16. To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
  17. The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway
  18. The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers
  19. The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
  20. I, Claudius by Robert Graves
  21. The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
  22. Swanns Way by Marcel Proust
  23. Of Human Bondage by Somerset Maugham
  24. The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon
  25. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz
  26. The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera
  27. Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowry
  28. Ironweed by William Kennedy
  29. My Antonia by Willa Cather
  30. I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith
  31. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
  32. A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L’Engle
  33. Joy in the Morning by PG Wodehouse
  34. Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
  35. Bel Canto by Anne Patchett
  36. Out of Africa by Isak Dinesen
  37. Les Miserables by Victor Hugo
  38. Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray
  39. The Quiet American by Graham Greene
  40. Restoration by Rose Tremain
  41. The Last Unicorn by Peter Beagle
  42. Last of the Mohicans by James Fenimore Cooper
  43. Siddhartha by Herman Hesse
  44. Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson
  45. Watership Down by Richard Adams
  46. The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
  47. A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
  48. The Colossus of Maroussi by Henry Miller
  49. Tess of the D’Ubervilles by Thomas Hardy
  50. Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand
  51. Dracula by Bram Stoker
  52. A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
  53. The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
  54. SPQR by Mary Beard
  55. Orlando by Virginia Woolf
  56. Walden by Henry David Thoreau
  57. As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner
  58. Night by Elie Weisel
  59. Coraline by Neil Gaiman
  60. Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
  61. Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne
  62. The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro
  63. Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
  64. Angela’s Ashes by Frank McCourt
  65. The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
  66. The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson
  67. All the Light We Can Not See by Anthony Doerr
  68. The Secret History by Donna Tartt
  69. The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
  70. Possession by AS Bryant
  71. Lost Horizon by James Hilton
  72. The Crimson Petal and the White by Michel Farber
  73. The Luminaries by Eleanor Cotton
  74. The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley
  75. The Curious Enlightenment of Professor Caritat by Steven Lukes
  76. Flatland by Edwin A Abbott
  77. A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles
  78. The Awakening by Kate Chopin
  79. The Mirror and the Light by Hilary Mantel
  80. Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel
  81. Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel
  82. The Ice Storm by Rick Moody
  83. Hawaii by James Michener
  84. Tales of the South Pacific by James Michener
  85. Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
  86. Howards End by EM Forster
  87. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
  88. The Hours by Michael Cunningham
  89. For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway
  90. A Night to Remember by Walter Lord
  91. Les Liasons Dangereuse by Pierrie Chodoleros de Laclos
  92. Arcadia by Ian Pears
  93. The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje
  94. All the Kings Men by Robert P Warren
  95. The Prophet by Kalil Gibran
  96. My Brilliant Friend by Elena Ferrante
  97. Marathon Man by William Goldman
  98. Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders
  99. I was Jack Mortimer by A Lernet Holena
  100. The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy
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I tried to choose a wide variety of books from what I already owned. Some of the titles I chose based on the lists I had used as research and some of the titles were chosen simply because they have been sitting on my shelf waiting to be read for far too long. As I begin this reading adventure I hope you will join me either by reading along with my list or compiling a list of your own. I intend to check back frequently and make this a series of posts detailing my journey and my thoughts as I work my way through the list.

What are some books you would have added to my list? Let me know in the comments below!

Until Next Time KEEP READING AND KEEP WRITING!

WRITERS MUST READ

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In order to write well and have the words flow through you as a writer you must read. Not just skim a book or read a bestseller once in awhile. You must read obsessively, vociferously , and broadly. You read not just to enjoy the story but to take the reading even deeper and read like a writer.

What does this mean?

“You should never read just for “enjoyment.” Read to make yourself smarter! Less judgmental. More apt to understand your friends’ insane behavior, or better yet, your own. Pick “hard books.” Ones you have to concentrate on while reading. And for god’s sake, don’t let me ever hear you say, “I can’t read fiction. I only have time for the truth.” Fiction is the truth, fool! Ever hear of “literature”? That means fiction, too, stupid.” — John Waters

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To read like a writer you must do the following:

  1. READ A VARIETY – You must not read the same type of books over and over again. No! You must expose yourself to all sorts of literature and genres. You must expose yourselves to different writers, different thoughts and different experiences in order to broaden your own scope of writing. If all you read id historical fiction then branch out and try science fiction. In order to grow and develop your unique writing voice you need to hear the voices of many different authors. You are not just reading the book for the pleasure of the story , you are reading in order to learn.
  2. TAKE NOTES: I always carry a notebook when I am reading because I personally do not like marking up my books. But if you do not mind writing in the margins or annotating, then please do so because it is important to take notes and jot down thoughts and ideas that come to you as you read. Consider what the author is trying to convey with their writing. Ask yourself questions about how the plot is structured , character traits, or themes that emerge,and note any words you are unfamiliar with. As you read a book you are engaged actively with it by taking notes and highlighting what is important or noteworthy.
  3. ASK QUESTIONS: Jot down your questions as you are reading a text. Take note of things you ask yourself about different aspects of the story and what they pertain to as you dig deeper. Some questions to consider are :A -What am I learning as I read? , B-What is the writer trying to say or achieve? , C- What is successful within the narrative? What is less successful? , D-What is the writers strength?
  4. HAVE WRITING RESOURCES: Every writer should have a writing resource library at their use . Resources they can turn to assist and help with technical questions, concepts (such as point of view) as well as grammar. Use the sources you enjoy and are most comfortable with but a good place to start is with six resources. My six essential Writing Resources are :

*100 Ways to Improve Your Writing by Gary Provost

*The Elements of Style by Strunk and White

*Art Matters by Neil Gaiman and Chris Riddell

*DIY MFA by Gabriella Pereira

*Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott

*The Writers Journey (3rd Edition) by Christopher Vlogler

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“A good book is an education of the heart. It enlarges your sense of human possibility what human nature is of what happens in the world. It’s a creator of inwardness.” — Susan Sontag

Fade Away or Stay

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This has been a strange week. There is definitely a shift in the universe or a quantum leap taking place. Or perhaps it is just my own brain chemistry going haywire. I am not sure of the reason for the abject sadness and loneliness that has settled upon my soul this week but yet here it is grasping and squeezing until I can’t breathe.

Or perhaps I do know. Perhaps I am all too well aware of the reasons and the pain is just too intense. Perhaps all I can do is feel it and release it. This was not the blog post I had intended to write this week. I had planned a rather chipper spring book reading list post but I could not really find it in me to write that. So here I am baring my soul to the empty ether that is the internet.

This week started off with a friend I thought was a friend …not being that friend . I was taken aback by a tone of possessiveness and control that I had not felt since my near fatal attack some years ago. Granted we were only friends on line…never met in real life, but I was happy to have someone to talk to about books and music and the daily trivalities of life. However, a terse and rather angry message out of the blue from this so called friend and suddenly I was back in that dark place struggling for air. I did what is common to do in this day and age I removed this person as a contact and then blocked them from my presence. It is the rational thing for me to do to protect myself and my mental well being.

I thought “Okay , done and done. Moving on…” Ahhh silly me and my silly naivete that that was the end of the story. Oh no …my brain said “Hold up this is familiar…let me give you the most vivid, bring you to your knees series of flashbacks for the next twenty four hours.”

“Oh you want to sleep?” my brain mocked me “Ha! Let me give you nightmares that have you screaming and sweating like a maniac. You can’t just be done with anything that easily.”

Oh no…no, no, no I can not just shut the door on certain things and walk away. My demons are fast little critters, they always slip through the cracks.

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And as I sat with my demons and let them crawl all over my mind and my heart. I began to spiral into that deep, dark place where no one touches me and no one sees me and no one wants me. I stared at my hand and watched as it began to disappear , as I began to disappear. The negative mantras began running in a loop — “No one has touched you in years….no one has hugged you or comforted you or cared in years…no one wants you…”

Over and over and over like the banging of a drum in my mind while my hand disappeared and my world fell away. And I thought to myself “Fade away or stay?”

Fade away into the darkness and the shadows or dig my way inch by inch back to the light. I sat with that thought for a long time yesterday. I thought about driving my car into the river, but then thought that it would be a very cold and painful way to die. I thought about just taking every pill I have in my house, but then the thought of little miss finding me made me rethink that scenario and cross it off the list. I thought about locking the bathroom door and slitting my wrists in the tub, but then I thought that would be too much of a mess for the husband to clean up.

Nothing seemed to be the right answer…

Fade away or stay?

I really had no choice…I had to stay. I had to fight those demons and stomp them back into their hole. I put on my armor and I slayed those beasts. I had to will myself out of the dark place and make my hand reappear. I had to fight back the sobs and focus on control. I had to do it…there was no other choice. In the darkness of night, alone in my bedroom I fought a battle in my mind with my mind. I was at the edge of reality and about to fall into the abyss forever. But one little tiny spark inside me burned brighter than the darkness could contain. It made me want to see the light. See my daughter in the morning. Have that first sip of coffee. Write poetry and read books. See the sun rise and shine upon my face. My mind is a worn battlefield of pain and desolation but every once in awhile that little light warms me, renews me and gives me hope. So I continue on to battle and steady myself against the blows of my demons.

I had to write this down so that I can see that I fought this battle and won. And by putting words to paper I can see that I am stronger than the illness. I am here. I fought back and won this round. The war in my mind is far from over, but today I stand victorious. And that is worth celebrating and remembering. There is power in words–good and evil. But today, my words are written for the good..written to stay.

Fade away or Stay?…

Today I choose to stay and if you are struggling I hope you choose to stay and fight alongside me.

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Welcoming 2021 with Open Arms

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To the New Year
BY W. S. MERWIN
With what stillness at last

you appear in the valley

your first sunlight reaching down

to touch the tips of a few

high leaves that do not stir

as though they had not noticed

and did not know you at all

then the voice of a dove calls

from far away in itself

to the hush of the morning



so this is the sound of you

here and now whether or not

anyone hears it this is

where we have come with our age

our knowledge such as it is

and our hopes such as they are

invisible before us

untouched and still possible
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A new year has finally bloomed! 2020 seemed like an epic season of ruthless reality television! My season finale culminated in a severe bout of pneumonia which left me bedridden for the last two weeks of the year. Needless to say, I am happy to say goodbye to 2020 but by being so ill it has left me very behind on my writing and reading so I am keen to catch up!!

But first, I wanted to share with you all my Reading and Writing goals for the New Year 2021.

BLOG GOALS 2021

  1. This year I am focusing on creating more meaningful, creative and consistent content here on the blog. I have been working on planning out my content ideas and developing an editorial calendar to help keep me focused and on track. My goal for the first half of the year is to consistently publish two posts a week. Then I want to increase it to five published posts each week for the second half of the year.

2. I also want to explore and create a writers book club using the DIY MFA by Gabriela Pereira. This is a fantastic book on creating and developing your own MFA in Writing. She breaks it down into three focused areas:

  1. Write With Focus
  2. Read With Purpose
  3. Build Your Community

I will begin the blog series on this starting in February. I hope you will join me!

3. My final goal for the blog is to work very hard to up-level my game and focus on growing a larger audience and building my platform. I want to be able to share my love of books and writing and get to geek out over all things bookish with a greater number of people!

PERSONAL WRITING GOALS 2021

This year I am focusing on really honing my craft and developing a more structured writing habit. I have been very lax in this area over the years, as I have always tended to write when inspiration hit. But I can not do that anymore if I want to be a truly successful writer. I have put several plans in place to ensure that I have the most successful writing year of my life.

  1. I have invested in a deep dive writing course to find and strengthen my authentic writing voice that takes place over 52 weeks.
  2. I am excited to work on the DIY MFA project here on the blog. I think it will not only help me develop better writing habits and a more purposeful practice but it will also enable me to connect with you guys even more!
  3. This year I will get my novel finished and ready to go to press. It has been a long time coming and I am thrilled that I will get to see my project completed!

READING GOALS FOR 2021

I always have several reading goals in place because I am such a mood reader that its nice for me to be able to choose what I’d like to focus on each week or month by theme or category. My reading goals and plans include:

  1. This year my goal is to read 175 books which is 25 more books than last year. I am feeling pretty confident I can reach it because there are so many books on my TBR right now!! LOL
  2. I want to read 10 CLASSICS I have never read .
  3. I want to make sure I read at least one book on faith or spirituality, as well as one book on personal development each month.
  4. I want to keep my Reading Journal updated as well as keeping up with my reviews on Goodreads.
  5. I would also like to complete 3 Reading challenges this year.

So those are my Reading and Writing goals for this bright new year! What are your goals? Do you make goals like this for your reading or writing?

Let me know in the comments below!!!

As always keep reading and keep writing!

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Five Spooky Reads for the Season

Hello October!

My favorite time of year is finally here! I am talking about crisp weather, pumpkin patches, apple orchards , corn mazes, haunted houses, hayrides, warm apple cider and pumpkin spice everything!!

Autumn has arrived in my hometown and my heart is happy!

One of my favorite activities to do in this season is to cuddle up on the sofa with a cozy blanket , a cup of tea, and a scary novel. I love being able to transport myself to a Gothic mansion full of ghosts or to a dystopian world filled with zombies. This is the perfect time of year to indulge myself with scary stories late into the night. Mind you, I probably wont’ sleep very much after reading some of these books, but the thrill will certainly be worth it during the Halloween season!

So without further ado, here are the 5 spooky books I recommend that you should sink your teeth into! (Pun intended!!)

THE TURN OF THE SCREW by Henry James is technically a novella, but it is a classic scary story! A group of people are listening to someone read a manuscript written by a dead governess. It tells the tale of two creepy children and the governess who tries to help them. This novella has all the hallmarks of a ghost story with a twist.

DRACULA by Bram Stoker tells the story of the classic vampire through letters, diary entries and newspaper clippings which immediately transports you with Jonathan Harkeness into the world of the haunting and frightening Count Dracula.

SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES by Ray Bradbury is the terrifying tale of a traveling circus, two young boys and a mysterious Ringmaster that brings sinsiter deeds and evil to an unsuspecting town.

The GRAVEYARD BOOK by Neil Gaiman is a modern day classic. This story of a young boy and his undead mentor in a graveyard full of quirky ghosts is a wonderful story full of spooky fun. The Graveyard Book, a modern classic, is the only work ever to win both the Newbery (US) and Carnegie (UK) medals.

SHUTTER ISLAND by Dennis Lehane is not a spooky story in the classic sense but it is a psychological twister that both thrills and frightens you at every turn. Nothing is what it seems on Shutter Island and that is what scares you the most!

Those are my top five picks for a spooky read for October. How many of these have you read? Do you think they are spooky?

What is the spookiest book you have ever read? Let me know in the comments below!!

Happy reading!