Showing posts with label guest posts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guest posts. Show all posts

GIVEAWAY! Blame My BRAIN - Guest Post with Nicola Morgan

I reviewed Blame My Brain – The Amazing Teenage Brain Revealed ;The revised edition, updated with new research and with a new cover. And now here we have Nicola Morgan to guest host. She will be answering question on angst, brain bars, advice on coping with the mood swings, teenagers in love and even a great competition hosted by Nicola. 


UPDATE! I will give away two books, to be in with a chance of wining it, just tweet this post and make sure that you MT me, I am @MoloneyKing You have until Friday 03.05.13 be in with a chance to win - closes at 16:00!



1. Just how much can we blame on the brain for the angst of being a teenager?

Certainly we can’t blame it all on the brain. When I give talks (to adults or teenagers), I say that I think teenagers are different from children and adults in two main ways: stage of life and state of brain. Stage of life includes (and not all these things are the same across all cultures): changing bodies (which can be very stressful), exams, peer pressure, social media pressure, fear caused by new knowledge of the negative things of the “big, wide world”, desire for independence but also fear of it. And state of brain encapsulates the rest – the physical, biological changes which may happen in varying ways and therefore affect each teenager a bit differently (and some a lot differently). Hormones are linked to the brain aspect, because it’s largely the brain that triggers the hormonal changes.


2. How important is it to educate teenagers on the importance of minding our brains? I've tried your recipe for brain bars and love them. [ Here is a link to the recipe.]

Brain bars are delicious, aren’t they?! Feeding the brain well is important and has noticeable effects on concentration and performance. I think all of us, whatever our age, benefit from understanding our brains and how to make them work as well as possible. That includes working with our individual strengths and weaknesses, providing the right nutrition (especially during exam or other extra-hard times), improving sleep, and recognising the negative effects of continued unresolved stress. (I’m actually writing a book on that – CHILL: The Teenage Guide to Stress!) Many teenagers really do want to learn that sort of thing – others don’t – but I feel it my duty to try to tell as many as possible. I’m passionate about empowering young people to make the most of what they are given – especially their brain!



3. I love reading and writing YA  books. Is there still a part of my brain that has emotions from the teenage brain?

I should hope so, because I don’t think the emotions themselves change – though our responses to them and the things that trigger them shift somewhat. Personally, I think one reason why many adults (including me) love YA books is that they tell the same stories as adult books but get there more quickly, with less faffing than some adult writers use. We’re in a rush these day and YA books are the perfect read for rushing adults! I am sure you feel a connection with your teenage feelings because they are universal, just stronger.


4. Teenagers are associated with being moody, what advice would you give to a parent to alleviate this?
I’d say:
1.     We all know that feeling moody isn’t a very nice feeling – so, be sympathetic.
2.     Give your teenager space and don’t hassle them when they are trying to relax with a favourite TV programme – my mistake!
3.     Apologise when you get something wrong or behave badly yourself. Most of us make mistakes but good grown-ups own up.
4.     Try to remember what you were like and how you felt.
5.     Recognise that some conflict is common and may be part of becoming independent – they sometimes have to fall out of love with you a bit, at least temporarily.
6.     Do set boundaries – it’s your job. But be prepared to negotiate them.
7.     It’s a phase. It passes. Hang in there.



5. Teenagers fall in love or are in love with the idea of love. Is this part of the brain pruning or a combination of the brain and hormones?

It’s hard to see how this could be part of neuronal pruning. Hormones play the biggest part here. Evolution needs people to fall in love (or, specifically, be sexually attracted, which is biologically what’s happening) and evolution has provided a strong drive towards this. Part of becoming an adult man or woman involves maturing sexually and an inevitable part of that is going to be powerful feelings of attraction. These feelings, especially when they are new, are heady, confusing and fascinating to those involved. Some problems and stresses come when young people feel peer pressure pushing them more strongly or quickly towards sexual or romantic encounters than they actually want to go.

Thanks so much for asking those great questions! I hope your readers find them interesting!





There’s a fun Blame My Brain competition running on Nicola’s blog at the moment. www.nicolamorgan.com/heartsong-blog/new-bmb-competition-for-schools-and-individuals/
Opportunities for schools and individuals of any age to win books, have their questions answered and learn about the fascinating thing that is the teenage brain!

Roll up! Roll up! Top Five Detectives


Rob Lloyd Jones
Have a look at the other
stops on his blog tour
 Please welcome Rob Lloyd Jones to the blog. 


Those of you that have read Wild Boy will know that this novel is set in Victorian London with a very special main character. Wild Boy uses his skills of observation to gather clues.


I loved, adored and even now try to practice this skill. You simply must read Wild Boy. To tided you over, here is Rob discussing his top five detectives as part of his blog tour. 

I see a correlation between interesting authors and fantastic books. Have a look at the About Rob below.*



Hello, and thanks for having me on the Moloney King blog!


             I am, however, feeling a little sheepish. I wanted to write about detective stories, which made sense seeing as I’ve written one (although my hero – Wild Boy – is a bit different to most detectives. He’s a performer in a freak show for starters). But here’s the thing; I don’t love all detective books. I love some of them, for sure. But too many, especially those from the 1920s and 30s (the ‘Golden Age’ of mystery writing) leave me cold. They’re all about the puzzle – usually some impossible crime – and not very interested in the character that solves it. Every detective story needs a fiendish mystery at its heart, but I prefer the ones that also have heroes we can really root for. So I thought I’d recommend my top five detectives, in no particular order... 




Emile and the Detectives (Emile and the Detectives by Erich Kästner)
There are actually 25 detectives in this wonderful tale of a gang of Berlin boys who team up to bust a gang of thieves. Their plan isn’t exactly ingenious, but it’s brilliantly organised and the gang’s downright love of the hunt is a joy to witness. This was the only one of Kästner’s stories to survive the Nazi book burnings. I like to think that even Hitler didn’t fancy taking on Emil and his pals.



Sally Lockhart (Ruby in the Smoke by Philip Pullman)
Wanna make things really hard for your detective? Make her a woman in the 1800s. At the heart of Pullman’s twisting and fantastically melodramatic mystery is a detective we care about deeply – smashing down social boundaries in her quest for justice.



Claudia and Jamie Kincaid (From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler by E.L. Konigsburg)
Every detective must be good at sneaking and hiding. Few, though, have hidden as well as Claudia and Jamie Kincaid, after they run away from home and take up residence in New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. At night they roam the empty museum and become entangled in a mystery surrounding one of the exhibits. They could easily give up and head home, but keep going for the sheer thrill of the puzzle.


Inspector G. Lestrade (created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle)
You can’t talk about detectives without mentioning Sherlock Holmes. But I’d rather give a nod to the downtrodden Lestrade, the bulldog inspector who comes barking whenever Holmes calls. While Holmes only accepts cases that challenge his intellect, Lestrade is presumably solving the others – those murders, kidnaps, and boring old burglaries that the famous consulting detective deems beneath him. Poor Lestrade – no one ever raised a statue of him on Baker Street.




Miss Marple (created by Dame Agatha Christie)
For me, Miss Marple is the queen of the Golden Age of mystery stories. That said, I’ve always been suspicious of the kindly old detective. The body count in her village, St Mary Mead, is staggeringly high. And beside each fresh corpse, there is Miss Marple, waggling a wrinkled finger at somebody else.

*About Rob
Rob Lloyd Jones was born in San Francisco but grew up in London. He studied Egyptology at University where he learnt hieroglyphics, and often goes on digs with the Egypt Exploration Society. He is a senior editor at Usborne, for whom he has written over thirty books – mostly historical non-fiction, but also adaptations of classics such as JEKYLL AND HYDE and THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO. Rob is also a volunteer reading helper at a primary school in Clerkenwell and wrote episodes of the children’s TV show ‘Bernard’s Watch’ for Carlton Kids. He lives in south London with his wife Sally, and 14-month-old son Otis


Thank you, Rob, for the insightful post about the top five detectives. I look forward to the next book in the Wild Boy series.

Is Technology Inherently Evil?




Please welcome author of There Comes a Prophet David Litwack.




Have we become civilized enough to open Pandora’s box? Or is technology inherently evil?

Years ago, I developed a successful software product that was used extensively by lots ofbusinesses. One week, two orders came in. One was from a well-known but not well-regardedcharacter, someone most people would consider unsavory. But he ran a large organization and like any other such business, he needed computerized systems to operate. The next day, we received an order from the children’s hospital of a large city. I felt bad about doing business withthe unsavory guy (though he ran a legitimate business and was breaking no laws), but good about the hospital.

A year later, I had the opportunity to visit the children’s hospital. A room full of doctors told mehow my software had helped save lives and made the hospital experience so much better for theiryoung patientsI felt great but learned that technology is amoral, nothing more than a tool. The morality comes from the mind and heart of the user. It’s we who are the problem.

There Comes a Prophet poses the following questionsCan we be trusted to wisely use the ever increasing power that comes with new technology? And if we believe the answer is no, do wehave the right to restrict the human need to learn, to explore, to invent, and to fulfill our potential?

The story takes place in a society devoid of technology, the result of an overreaction to a more advanced past where progress had overtaken humanity and led to social collapse. The solution—an enforced return to a simpler time. But Prophet is also a coming of age story, a tale of three friends and their loyalty to each other as they struggle to confront a world gone awry. Each searches for the courage to fight the limits imposed by their leaders, along the way discovering their unique talents and purpose in life.

Its villain, the arch vicar, is far from evilIn his youth, as he progressed through the ranks of thetemple clergy, he became fascinated by the secrets hidden in the archives, the hidden wonders that wizards of the past had created. But he was also appalled by the horrors they caused. He made what he believed to be a moral choice: to suppress the people’s desire to be more than theycurrently are in the name of maintaining a peaceful world. He chose repression and stagnation asthe moral thing to do.

On the other hand, the three young protagonistsNathaniel, Thomas and Orah, start out unaware of how much had once been accomplished, viewing the few remnants of lost technology as “temple magic,” something to be feared. As they discover the wonders of the past, their response is not fear, but a desire to know more, to learn how to create and invent as their ancestors once had.

They had never witnessed the horrors technology can bring. Were they right, that progressshould be allowed to go on without boundaries or restraintOr did the Arch Vicar hold the high moral ground, aware of the holocaust that had occurred in the distant past and committed to keepit from happening again?

Today, in our own world, the pace of progress is actually accelerating. Are we ready for what we might become?

Top Five Detectives

On April 5th this blog will have the pleasure of welcoming author of Wild Boy, Rob Lloyd Jones. Rob will be telling us about detectives  His book is a great example of mystery, adventure and clue hunting, so it is great that he shares some cool detective knowledge with us.


Rob will also be posting the following cool topics:

Where ideas come from.

Wild Boy's location.

Not another story set in Victorian London.

No fun at the fair.

Making a hero.

How not to write a detective story.

Lesley Richardson and her Week at The Writers Retreat - Tyrone Guthrie Centre

I would like to welcome new blogger to my one year old blog, the fantastic Lesley Richardson. 

Lesley  is a freelance copywriter based in Bangor-by-the-sea, County Down. She has written one novel, Biddy Weirdo, which was almost published but is now back on the slush pile, and is currently writing her second, The Possibilities of Elizabeth, with the support of an Arts Council, Lottery funded, grant. Last year Lesley was awarded a bursary to attend the Tyrone Guthrie Centre in County Monaghan. She has recently launched her blog and hopes that one day soon she can drop the ‘copy’ part of her job title and introduce herself as a writer. 



SNOWDROPS AND SMILES

Last summer, for reasons best know to themselves, the kind people at North Down Borough Council awarded me a bursary to attend the world renowned Tyrone Guthrie Centre in County Monaghan for a one week writers residency. The Centre at Annagmakerrig is the former family estate of the celebrated theatre director Tyrone Guthrie, which he bequeathed to the Irish State on his death bed for use as an international, multi-discipline, artistic retreat. I knew of it, of course. I’d heard about its magic. I’d dreamt that maybe someday I might go there, perhaps. But I only applied for the bursary to shut up a friend and previous recipient who’d been badgering me about it for months. She is a talented visual artist and when she returned from her own residency she called me up and told me I absolutely, definitely had to apply for the bursary myself. She had met so many brilliantly fabulous writers, she said, from all over the world, and I would love it. Just love it. Yep, I replied, sounds amazing. Really. And it did, but way beyond my lowly reach. Me, sharing space with brilliantly fabulous writers from all over the world? As if…



I took my week at Annaghmakerrig in February and it couldn’t have come a moment too soon. My writing had stalled. Again. The story was swimming around my head, constantly. Actually, it seemed to be drowning: splashing and flailing and gasping for breath. If only I could get it out of my head and onto the page, drag it from the depths of my consciousness onto a computer, it might just survive.

As my week approached I thought, this will fix it, fix me, reaffirm my belief in myself as a writer. And then of course, the big black cloud of doubt set in. Writer? Who do you think you’re kidding? You shouldn’t even be going to such a cultural Mecca in the first place. It’s for proper writers, published writers, people who have credentials, not pretenders who can’t even manage to, well, write. A sense of panic began to engulf me. What if the place is packed with high brow intellectuals who speak in tongues I can’t understand, and analyse books I haven’t read, and gush about artists I’ve never even heard of? I knew I was stepping out of my comfort zone, but what if I was completely out of my depth and spent the week, just like my book, struggling to stay afloat?

The journey down to Annaghmakerrig was difficult. My legs shook, my stomach churned, sweat dripped down my back. They’re going to turn me away, I thought, they’re going to say, sorry, but there’s been some mistake, we only let proper writers in. Or if, by some miracle, I do make it through the doors, I won’t be able to talk to anyone. Nobody. Not a word. Because if I do, if I open my mouth and say something, anything, they’re going to know. They’ll see through me in a second and they’ll all gang together and turf me out laughing and jeering and pointing their fingers. One or two might even spit. And there I’ll be, lying in a heap outside the door, sniffing and snivelling and sobbing that I’ll never, ever, ever dare to call myself a writer again. I promise.

When I arrived, the beauty of the landscape escaped me at first; such was the level of my anxiety. The security gate presented my first hurdle. I’d been given my own personal gate code and as I drew Daisy, my little yellow car, level with the intercom and typed in the number with a trembling finger, I waited for an automated voice to snarl: ‘sorry, but you are not authorised to pass this gate. Please turn around and go back to wherever the hell you came from,’ or words to that effect. Deep down, part of me was probably hoping that I would be denied entry as then I wouldn’t have to face the excruciating humiliation which was bound to follow.

But the gate opened. I did think about turning around anyway, but Daisy had other ideas. She isn’t used to such long journeys. No flaming way, I could feel her say, I’m not doing that drive again without a rest. Now get me up this drive, park me in a nice spot with a nice view and bugger off.

So up the drive we went. We passed a cluster of grey stone cottages arranged around the courtyard; perhaps I should have stayed in one of those, I thought, at least then I could hide for the week, wouldn’t have to speak to another soul. I’d nip up and down to the convenience store in the village when it was dark and stock up on Pringles and toffee crisps. Maybe the odd egg sandwich. I could survive on that for a week, no problem. Then suddenly, there it was, the Big House, in all its enormous glory, glaring at me. And though I was swallowing down little mouthfuls of sick by this time, something else happened, something odd. I felt a little quiver of excitement. Maybe this will be okay, I thought. Maybe I can bluff it. As I parked Daisy in a bright little spot at the corner of the car park which was speckled with pale, timid, snowdrops, I suddenly noticed the lake. It was astonishing. Silver and vast and framed by a forest of drumlins.  I hope I get that view, I thought, and applauded my positivity.

By the time I stood outside the front door with my ridiculously large suitcase (I like jumpers, and it was February) I’d managed to plaster a smile on my face – and it wasn’t entirely false. I was going to greet whoever let me in with enthusiasm, tell them how excited I was to be there,  that I was so looking forward to my week, that I’d get ever so much of my book written whilst I was with them and I half believed my hype. After all, despite my terror I did want to be there. I was excited, and I really, really, really wanted to write. Really. The only problem was, I couldn’t find the doorbell. I must be thick, I thought, there’s bound to be a doorbell. But, after several minutes of searching, I finally concluded that it wasn’t there. Obviously it had been removed prior to my arrival as they’d gotten wind of the fact that I was a fraud, a charlatan, a pathetic delusional middle aged woman who believed she could be a writer.  I knocked anyway, overcome by a wave of defiance. Okay, you might be right, I muttered, but this is just plain rude. I knocked again. Nothing. I pushed the door, I rattled it, I practically hammered the damn thing down, but still no one came. So, what should I do? Sit down on the step and wait? Someone was bound to come along sometime. Get back into Daisy and go home, whatever her objections? Drive to Dublin and live off my credit card for a week? Just as I felt the tingle of tears tickle the back of my eyes, the door opened and a bright voice said ‘hiya, trying to get in? This door only opens from the inside, the main door’s round the back,’ all in one long breath. 

I looked up and a dark haired girl stood on the threshold grinning. Don’t worry, she laughed, everyone does that their first time here. I did, and I came back. There was something familiar about her. I think I know you, I said. Turns out we went to the writers group at Queen’s together several years before, but my relief at finding a comfort blanket quickly vanished when she told me she was leaving. She’d had a brilliant week with lots of cracking people but her time was up. I’m envious, she said, yours is just beginning. Aren’t you lucky?

And it turns out, I was.

Quite simply, I had one of the best weeks I’ve had for a very long time. The room I was allocated was, apparently, the best one in the house. Lady Guthrie’s, no less. Sumptuously spacious, with an enormous bed, an elegant chaise longue, books as old as time and, best of all, the most exquisite writing desk you can imagine with a view across the lake. A writer’s room. Apparently I had been expected after all, and wanted, and welcomed. It’s going to be okay, I breathed, as I opened up my lap top. It’s going to be brilliant. And it was.

I met some incredible people: artists from Canada, Wicklow, just up the road, and just around the corner; musicians from Russia and Scotland; writers from Slovenia and all corners of Ireland. We made quite an eclectic, eccentric bunch but we clicked; we moved around each other, finding our place then slotted together like pieces of stickle brick. The pattern we formed was vibrant, colourful and unique – never to be repeated again.  And that, surely, is one of the most wonderful things about the Tyrone Guthrie Centre: over the years it has created a multitude of people patterns, week in week out, each one dazzling, intricate, multi-layered and individual - a rare and priceless work of art.

Throughout the week my confidence bloomed and I grew as a writer. I compared notes with the other writers who came and went, some published, some not, some poets, some novelists, some a combination of both. Each one of us had a different approach to our art and a different story to tell. The relief that we all felt uncertain and anxious now and then, convinced at one time or another that we would be exposed, caught out, revealed as the frauds we truly were, was palpable. But we were also unanimous in our desire for recognition and approval in the world we had chosen to be part of. Above all, we wanted to write more, we wanted to write better, we wanted to accomplish our goals, and, ultimately, we wanted to be read.  

And as the week progressed I did write more, reams more than I had written in a very long time. My story came together, sorted itself out, revealed some startling plot twists I hadn’t previously been aware of. In the silence of my room the characters chattered loudly, sometimes to me, sometimes to each other and I would sit at my desk which overlooked the lake joyfully transcribing those conversations on my laptop. Sometimes hours would pass by and I hadn’t even noticed, what luxury. 

Each day I walked along the Lakeland path on problem solving missions, seeking ways to settle a particular dilemma. On my first excursion, as I chatted madly to myself, a little dog appeared as if from nowhere. A ragamuffin character, he trotted merrily beside me indulging my insanity. He listened patiently, he nodded his approval and when I asked for his opinion he answered with a bark.  Once for yes, twice for no.  I never saw my little chum hanging out around the house, but somehow he always joined me on my walks, and thanks to him I finally found the courage to delete a large but clumsy section of the book I had known in my bones must go. It was hard to lose so many words, but my little buddy was correct, and he’ll be there in my acknowledgements when I’m done.

The staff in the Big House were wonderful, from Lavina the fabulous chef come nanny come resident counsellor, to Paddy the ever cheerful always chirpy estate manager. Even Miss Warby, the resident ghost, seemed friendly, kindly holding a door open for me once as I struggled with a tray of tea and Lavina’s yummy lemon cake. (I wasn’t 100% sure of her intentions though, and just in case she decided to bother me during the night, I have to admit, I did sleep with the light on!)

The week was over all too soon and as I said goodbye to my temporary family I felt a tinge of sadness. We would never be us again. But I was excited too, to return to my real family, my real life, and felt more invigorated than I had in years. When I returned to Daisy I noticed that the sprinkling of snowdrops had become a huge white carpet, gleaming and dazzlingly bright. What a difference a week makes, I thought, and I smiled. I smiled the whole way down the driveway. I smiled the whole way home. And there’s a little part of me that’s been smiling ever since. '

You can visit her great blog and connect with her on Twitter.

Do You Dream at All?

Around this time last year I got to know Derek on Twitter, at the time we were both newbies to Twitter and neither of us blogged.

A year later, I have written two books,(I'd hardly call them books yet, they need a LOT of redrafting), taught social media and even did a spot of lecturing in it, as for Derek....well, he has written a book, organised #Tweetup's, started a blog and website and has even released a CD.

Phew!

I have long been a fan of his music, every time you get something new and exciting. As Joseph Addison says, “Music, the greatest good that mortals know, And all of heaven we have below.”


If you want to experience heaven here, then have a listen to Derek Flynns music on his Blog.


You know me, I like my videos...so here is the music video to one of Derek's songs.










If you live in Europe, you can purchase the physical CD here
If you live in Europe, and you want to download it, you can do so here
If you live in the US or the rest of the world, you can purchase the physical CD or the download here
And finally, if you want a signed copy of the CD, from anywhere in the world, send me an email at derek_flynn@hotmail.com and I’ll ship one to you.



You can listen to samples and buy the CD here:
Contact details for Derek -
Website
Blog
Twitter

How a Blog can Help You Reach Goals (part one)


This is part one of a two part series.

The blog will be a year old on April 18th 2012. I original set it up just to get some primary school teaching, but when I realised the power of social media. I reassessed my plan. We all plan, whether we know it or not. Sometimes, we need to sit down and study to come up with a better plan. If you want to be a social media teacher, published writer, make important connections, a better IT teacher, or simply want to know how to set your goals for your blog/life ambitions then stay tuned, stay informed and read on to see how I did it.



When I started to blog I coagulated my IT degree, marketing experience, teaching post grad, financial reporting, web design know how and my stubbornness and spewed out this set of goals. The main ingredient is stubbornness, we all have that, now you just need to apply it.

My blog ambitions:

1. Gain more IT knowledge

2. Share more IT knowledge

3. Read more teacher blogs

4. Get paid to teach IT

5. Read more writer/editor and publisher blogs

6. Get published on other blogs or websites

7. Use the blog to get published on traditional media

8. To get over 35,000 hits at year end April 18th

9. Study the hits to cater even more for the readership

10. Study the hits to grab new readers

11. Grab the non-blog readers

12. To be included in a print newsletter

13. To be seen as a ‘go to gal,’ in IT teaching, creative writing in primary schools, blogging, scratch, social media,

14. To learn more about the areas above

15. To guest lecture somewhere (anywhere)

16. To write book reviews on children’s and or YA (young adult) books

17. To write book reviews on children’s and or YA (young adult) books for powerful bloggers, recognised websites or traditional print media.

18. Become more efficient at curating the best information from Twitter links

19. Write a book

20. Make connections with published writer and publishers



The thing is guys, I am a primary school teacher with a degree in IT, a live lived in financial reporting in the IFSC and I do not want to become a full time primary school teacher, it was never my intention. I always have seen this post grad as a jumping off point. I needed to learn and network. And guess what....its working!


I will post the results of my goal setting later in the week.

Can you see how having goals can help you study and re-align your content; thus aiding you to reach these goals. It is imperative to plan, research, study, and plan again. If I can achieve all of this that so can you. We are all IT-capable.

On a side note, I have changed the blog's Facebook fan page to MoloneyKing, in keeping with the brand.
How has your blog helped you achieve your goals?

Has Twitter helped you in any way, either personally or business wise?


The Musings of D.S. Taylor



Guest post by blogger D. Taylor


As I trekked through a wilderness of prose that somehow became a novel, I arrived at some conclusions about writing. Creating a novel is a journey, and just as the characters within that journey grow, so too does the author. If the same person who wrote the first page writes the last, you’re not doing it right.


So crack open my skull and steal my thoughts … pretentious though it may be to claim as much, if you’re a writer, I believe what you’ll find may have some worth.


Good authors write of what they love. Bad authors write what they believe others will love.

Write it, read it, cut it. Then write it again.

No great author was ever born in a creative writing class. The only way to learn to write, is to write.

If in doubt cut.

Give a character ambition, but don’t tell him how to fulfil it. Just sit back and let him take you where he will.

Good isn’t good enough.

Story is nothing, characters are everything.

Sometimes your eraser produces better prose than your pen.

Write like you fight. Your readers are your foes. To stand triumphant on the battlefield you must hit those foes hard, you must hit them fast and you must hit them often.

If you don’t spend your days either writing, or thinking about writing, don’t tell me you want to be an author.

Never let morality get in the way of a good story. If the bad guy kills the good guy, so be it.

“I’m suffering from writers block,” is the succinct, way of saying “I’d rather have a pint and relax in front of the telly, than sit down and do some work.”

A critic cannot create a diamond, only point to its flaws.

See an adjective, cut an adjective.

The line between terrible and terrific is often thinner than the line between good and mediocre.

Write a page. Turn that page into a paragraph. Reduce that paragraph to a line. Telling a good story is not about how much you write, but how much you cut.


To find out more about D.S.Taylor - blog.


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What Do You Want?

I would like to welcome this weeks guest post to the blog, Xavier is a pretty cool guy. So cool, in fact, that I have named a character after him in my YA book!
Onwards
Michelle 

My name is Xavier after St Francis Xavier. My mother is from Dublin and my father was a Tamil from Kuala Lumpur. I was born in Malaysia but brought up in Ireland. I have a Degree in Natural Sciences from TCD and spent most of my life as a secondary school teacher. I have taught in schools from Ireland to Japan and I retired from full-time teaching nearly 7 years ago to set up our own Private Hypno-Psychotherapy Practice here in Peel, Isle of Man, (Setanta Hypnotherapy Clinic) with my wife Mary. I still teach for two hours every morning at the local high school mainly children with learning difficulties and emotional problems. I seemed to always gravitate to children who have slipped through the net and them to me. I love the balance that the teaching, therapy, and my family life have given me.  I wake up every day a very grateful man. My wife Mary is my partner on all levels of our life and as well as being an amazing wife and mother to our four children she is an amazing Hypno-Psychotherapist. We were both trained by Dr Joe Keaney of ICHP (The Institute of Hypnotherapy and Psychotherapy in Ireland) and we are the only Hypnotherapists endorsed by the Department of Health in the UK practising here in the Isle of Man as members of the CNHC (Complementary & NaturalHealthcare Council.)
 
I came across Michelle by chance when I read one of her posts in which she spoke so lovingly of her father. Further posts revealed a caring teacher and a ball of fun. I immediately subscribed and I look forward to receiving her stories in my e-mail every week. Michelle asked me to write a guest post for her blog on any subject so I decided to write one on my favourite topic of all...
Over twenty years ago I had a dream that I remember as vividly today as I did all those years ago. In the dream I met God. He asked me what I wanted. I felt like a child and my mind went blank. I could have anything I wanted and I could not think of a single thing to say. I was struck dumb and I felt like a dummy! He asked me three times the same question...”Xavier, what do you want?”
In the end he answered for me ...”You want me...He said”
With That I burst into tears as he wrapped His arms around me and I sobbed and sobbed and sobbed. I woke up the next morning to a pillow soaking wet through and a pain in my chest that felt as if I had been crying for days.
My question to all of you today is what would you say if you met God and he asked you ...”Child, what do you want?”
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New Experiences

I was on Twitter last night while I was watching Frozen Planet. Mr. King decided that nature was too cruel to watch so we changed the channel and I became bored. So I grabbed my Archaeology Ireland magazine and sent out a tweet on one of the articles. This article said that in 50 years time historians will be investigating the start of the web. My tweet questioned if bloggers would be included in the investigation. @Greyadder got back to me saying ‘Yes, I think they should; as they contribute so much to it.’ Well, as Graham is a non-blogger I wanted him to contribute so here it is. And it’s a good ‘un!

Enjoy!

It has been said that a journey starts with a single footstep just making sure your facing in the right direction is the tricky bit after all retracing steps can be painful.

So I am surprised and very pleased to say I am writing a guest blog. Never thought I would be asked to blog, and it has started me thinking about all the effort, thought, and stress that goes in to writing one.
Overstatement, well not always! To come up with subjects and write in a way to interest you every time cannot be easy. In fact, it must take a while getting the grammar right too, and yes I have been helped! It is important to select a relevant subject matter and insert humour where and if required.

Sometimes it can be difficult, as in the case of personal blogs, where events that must hurt very much to write, making it even more special and important that they were shared. But these can help to inspire and comfort others.
Plus, to open themselves up to criticism, ninety nine percent of the time nice and constructive, but I am sure the one percent hurts but despite that they carry on.
And in time, the history pages will be electronic too and the blogs of many people will be remembered. So, what is written now will be discussed in the future as a guide to our thoughts hopes and dreams of today.
As with a lot of things in life if you think back to the first time you tried something and you do not always get it right. And if ever I write a story probably for fun........now there is a challenge! I have never been confident in the written word, but I did not think I would ever blog until yesterday, so anything can happen.
I have got a storyline seventy percent there, just to start to work out the characters. And the story and perspective! Put simply; do I write ‘he said such and such,’ and ‘she replied,’ or as if I was in the room with them? Should I be more descriptive with the dialogue? When you have had an idea for the past seven years you do think things through and through and through.
 Did I mention I take my time?
 As for blogging, writing is tough, you read a great story but filling two hundred  pages plus just from your own thoughts and creativity now that takes some doing. You never know on a few occasions the plot might need stretching to make book long enough as you can tell I have given it a lot of thought maybe not always correct but the rights and wrongs of peoples thoughts good and bad another blog another time.
I would also like to thank @MoloneyKing for asking me and I hope for a first try it is OK. It is a new experience for me it has been fun, sharpens the mind too and adds to life’s achievements pleased I have tried.
  
Graham, well done! I really enjoyed reading and sharing your post. I have LOADS of advice on how to set up a blog. The posts are on the top left of the page, just click on the label ‘Blogging.’ In relation to your questions, the best advice I can give you is to do a writing course. Join a writing circle and most importantly read. And make notes of how your favourite writers write. Then follow your own voice and go mad!



If you enjoyed my blog, you can subscribe to the blog by entering your email address in the box on the right hand sidebar ,and sure throw us an aould vote here (just one click). Thanks and Reki Blessings for stopping by; the fact that anyone would be interested in what I have to say still shocks me. :-)

The Greatest of These


Let me hook you up with with the amazing  Derek Flynn.
Enjoy
Michelle



As you all know, Michelle is a teacher. And a great one, by all accounts, if some of the stuff she’s posted about it is anything to go by. I’m continuously amazed at the new and innovative ways she tries to engage and interest her students. Thinking about all this as I prepared to write this blog post, set me thinking about my schooldays. Now before you hit the ‘Close Browser’ button, I’m not going to go off on a whole Angela’s Ashes rant about the Christian brothers, corporal punishment and walking to school barefoot in the snow. (I couldn’t if I wanted to. I went to school in the 80s. We had shoes.) But there is one incident that has always stuck in my mind which, I think, illustrates the difference between teachers who want to engage and teachers who just teach.



It was the summer holidays. In September, I would be going into Third Year in Secondary School and starting to study for my Inter Cert, as it was known at the time.