Tuesday, November 12, 2019
Sure, I am Southern, but drop the attitude...
This has been stuck in my craw for a while, so I need to get it unstuck.
There is, of course, a bit of a backstory...
Recently, I enjoyed brunch with a good writer friend at a small local eatery. Wonderful company. Of course we discussed our works-in-progress and an upcoming writers' retreat we attend each year. At the next table--inches away--a clutch of men of varying ages discussed books they were reading, or had read. Couldn't help but overhear.
Being the kind of person who often talks to strangers, I stopped by their table on our way out, to compliment them, as the future of the written word is important to me, as a fellow reader and author. The men smiled and nodded, pleased, I suppose.
I mentioned as an aside, that both my friend and I were authors. The youngest man--the one with the loudest opinions--asked what I wrote. When I replied "fiction set in the South," he leaned back and crossed his arms over his chest. "I'd never read anything Southern." Mean tone. Snarky, huffed laugh. Judgment intended and received. He went on to further talk down this part of the country.
Those of you who know me well, know I am seldom at a loss for words. His comments stunned me mute for a beat. We managed to smile and wish them a good day. After my friend and I stepped outside, all I could manage was "wow."
As with such things, I thought of a handful of rebuttals afterward. How I might have listed notable Southern authors or somehow stood up for us, for myself. I am not one for conflict, being raised to step away from such. Given the current mood in our country, perhaps being able to zip it and walk away is in my best interest, not wanting to wake up dead.
So...here I sit with my indignation still simmering. I don't cotton to simmering indignation; it keeps me from moving on to more useful projects, like the current work in progress.
Just because I am from the South, do not EVER decide I am illiterate, racist, or narrow. Yes, there are things I do not like about this part of the country. But there is much to love, too. Biscuits. Big ones--catheads--with butter and Tupelo honey. Chicken 'n' Dumplings and pecan pie and pickled everything. Country roads carpeted with sugary sand. People who will nod and smile, and wish you a good day and mean it. People who'd rather pass the time on a rocking chair porch, shelling peas and listening to the crickets sing. People who will put down the dang phone and actually look you in the face. People of differing races and creeds who are doing their dadgum best to reach across the abyss and forge a better future.
I feel better now. I'll forgive, but being Southern, I probably won't forget. Somewhere down the line, in one of my novels, I shall get the last say.
Writers do that, you know.
Y'all have a good day.
Rhett DeVane
Southern fiction author
Rhett's website
Saturday, March 30, 2019
Writers4Higher congratulates Pat Stanford
Welcome back, Pat! Tell us a little about your new book.
I have been writing poetry practically as long as I
could first hold a pencil, and have other poems published in several
anthologies. This is my first attempt at publishing a whole bunch of them at
the same time.
My mother had several of those little clothbound
write-in books filled with her poems. They were mostly simple little ditties,
but she still had fun with them and wrote them, matching the ink color to the
color of the cover. That is what poetry is to me—just having a bit of fun with
words. I never laid claim to being a “serious” poet and I doubt mine are “for
the ages” yet there are a few gems here, so say friends.
Much of my poetry rhymes because I like the added
challenge, and the fact that many of them came to me as songs back when I could
still play the guitar. (Lopping off a fingertip stopped my career as a
troubadour.) Most appear in quatrains, couplets, or similar formats, because
that is the influence that most stuck with me, although I have been stretched a
little by several local poetry groups where we explored new and obscure forms.
I most like writing “off the cuff” as we sometimes do in our meetings, but I
always go back and “mess with them” some more, simply because I can’t help
myself.
Here, I present thoughts on many topics written
throughout my “seasons” of life. Some thoughts have changed along with those
seasons and I may no longer embrace what was written in the same way. Rather
than destroy some poems, I either left them totally alone to remind me how far
I have progressed since they were first conceived or have edited them to be
more contemporary.
1.
Tell me about yourself. Your
book(s), your life, your inspiration.
I graduated Florida State University with a B.S.in
Secondary Education, which was never used for its intended purpose.
I won second place in the 2004 Seven Hills Contest
with my short story, Divorce Sale,
and am working on other short stories. Fixing
Boo Boo is my first novel length work, which won gold for Florida non
Fiction at Florida Authors and Publishers Association Presidents Awards in 2017.
After being introduced to growing roses by my father,
I created my own rose garden and frequently photograph them to share in social
media. I served as President of the Tallahassee Area Rose Society and am a
bronze medal recipient with the national organization, the American Rose
Society.
I live in Tallahassee, Florida with my husband, a
rambunctious puppy and a quirky cat.
.
2. Where do you see your
writing taking you in the future?
I began a fiction set in Mongolia work over ten years
ago, but it got bogged down in research, so I put it in a drawer. I now think I
am better equipped to finish writing it. The characters are talking to me again
after being shoved to the back of the room several times. I hope they will get
their chance to be heard in the near future.
Aside from gathering up more poetry for a possible second
volume, I am working on a second book about the many types of brain Injury. I’ve
met a lot of people who talk to me at festivals and fairs and they have a
different story to tell. I interviewed and transcribed over 20 stories and now
the real work begins. To make their story interesting and compelling to a
casual reader looking for general information. To make them stop and actually
think about the stories being real people whose lives were interrupted.
Then maybe a sequel to the Mongolia story. I am open to
the muses!
3. How do you use your talents/time to
help others?
With
the publishing of Fixing Boo Boo, I
begin a whole new chapter of helping people who are not disabled understand
what they don’t understand. I have partnered with the Brain Injury Association
of Florida and the Florida Disabled Outdoors Association in order to help them
in their annual public awareness events and have information at my signing
events to help people with questions on disability.
In
my role as President of the Tallahassee Writers Association, I try to encourage
new and timid writers to ask the tough questions that will help them become
better writers. I also love to see newly published writers in their first
experience at the Downtown Marketplace, a chance to be out and talking about
their work.
CONTACT THE AUTHOR:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/wordhacker_pat
www.rhettdevane.com
Saturday, March 23, 2019
Writers4Higher Congratulates Scott Archer Jones
Writers4Higher Congratulates
author Scott Archer Jones
Thanks for
having me on the blog again, this time to talk about And Throw Away The
Skins.
The first
question your readers will ask is why they should want to read this particular
book. This
is a story of personal triumph, and it takes place in a beautiful place. Its themes include loving that-which-will-kill-you,
religion, the Afghanistan war and how it comes home, scars, bankruptcy,
infidelity, and a village Santa Eulalia de Mérida. Its setting is aggressively
blue-collar and poverty bound–true to New Mexico in general. Its jumping off
point is the Church of a Thousand Pews and its finish is in a mountaintop with
a blizzard coming in.
And
then, I guess, the reader will want to know something of the story shape. The
protagonist, Bec
Robertson, is starting over. She's broke, recovering from breast cancer, and
lives in a rundown cabin in northern New Mexico. Her husband is deployed in
Afghanistan and can't stand to touch her. Her villagers are mountain-crazy and
take advantage of her good nature, and her hawk Amelia can't keep up with the
mice. She lives next door to a dubious veterans' center. As if she hasn't
invented enough problems for herself, she has a love/hate connection with an
unstable Marine. Being Bec is tough–but she lives under the numinous skies of
New Mexico.
All books have a back
story, and this one began with a character invented for a short story. The
protagonist Bec is named after a famous New Yorker/New Mexican, Rebecca
Salsbury James, who rode a motorcycle and taught Georgia O'Keeffe to drive. The
story kept growing to fit my Bec's personality. Bec let me know in a hurry that
she was opinionated, strong, and completely unsentimental. From that point, I
just caused her trouble for four years, and then–bang–we had a book.
Readers also might want
to know something about the author. Rest assured, I'm not a serial killer and I
don't really believe in Atlantis. The book is dedicated to our Labrador
who passed as we were working on final galleys, so I can demonstrate a soft and
squishy side. I'm currently trapped within my sixth novel and first novella up
here in New Mexico's mountains, after stints in the Netherlands, Scotland, and
Norway–plus less exotic locations. I
worked for a power company, grocers, a lumberyard, an energy company (for a
very long time), and a winery. I'm currently the treasurer of Shuter Library of
Angel Fire, a private 501.C3, and desperately need your money to keep the doors
open.
You can get the book at www.fomitepress.com
Or at my author page on
Amazon: Scott Archer Jones Amazon Author Page
We even offer the book
in Kindle, Nook, Kobo, iTunes, and Smashwords.
My website: www.scottarcherjones.com
Facebook: Scott Archer Jones Facebook Page
Thank you, Scott! Writers4Higher wishes you success as you continue your writing career.
Rhett DeVane
blogmaster and head cheerleader for W4H
Friday, September 21, 2018
Writers4Higher Pays Tribute to Piggy the Muse Cat
Writers4Higher Pays Tribute To Piggy
The Muse Cat
If you are an animal lover
as I am, you understand two basic truths: all pets are special, and most are
more noble than the majority of humans. Every now and then, one particular
critter shares your life, one that can practically read your mind, one that
digs deep into your heart and shares your spirit.
Such was my muse cat, Piggy.
He came to our home at eight
weeks of age, a fuzz ball, gray tabby born in a lumber mill. The name we
provided the vet was Sisko, but he
rapidly outgrew that title. For the next seventeen years, he answered to Piggy,
based on the fact he never met a food bowl he didn’t love. One of his kitten
pictures shows him sprawled across a pie tin half-filled with kibble, face
down, satiated, and fast asleep. I posted that picture on Facebook years ago,
and it traveled around the globe. A while back, I found Piggy in that full-on
face plant pose, nestled among other snapshots of equally funny animals. The
title of the slideshow compilation: Have
you ever been so tired that . . . ?
Piggy was no ordinary cat.
Even folks who normally didn’t warm to felines liked him. He came when called,
drank from the bathroom sink, ate nearly every human food allowed, carried on animated
conversations, and was happiest when he was close to his people. I wrote
thousands of words with him reclining next to the laptop, watching me with huge
green eyes, commenting every so often.
In winter, he doubled as a toasty
lap cover during TV time and a pillow hog in the night hours. Did I mention he
was an alarm clock? Oh yes. When he was young, and could still hear the coffeemaker
crank up, he initiated a daily, pacing meow-a-thon that nothing could thwart.
In his senior years, when age diminished his abilities, he slept in the
threshold to the kitchen so he wouldn’t miss the end triple-beep of the Cuisinart.
He saved energy enough to hop onto the bed to awaken the lazy two-legged
creatures. Humans do serve a function, you see. They possess opposable thumbs for opening cans: vital, since no edible vermin or birds share the interior of
the house.
For the past two years,
Piggy battled failing kidneys and pancreatitis. Aided by the kindest veterinarian
anyone could wish for, Piggy pushed away from the Reaper time after time, with
a fierce determination to live.
But a guy gets tired. And he
did.
On his last day, Piggy
managed to pad down the hall, meow the alarm, and meet us in the kitchen. But
he ate only one bite. And, as he had for the past three days, he barely touched
his food and did not drink.
This past Wednesday, on a
morning as ordinary as any, we had our final chat. I am not sure what he said,
as I am a mere human who can’t decipher his language as well as he could mine,
but I believe it was last-minute instructions on how to carry forward without
him. Along with the other felines and canines that shared this earthly passage,
he will be waiting, and it will only be the swish of a furry tail before we
meet again.
Godspeed, Piggy, sir. You
were a good cat, a faithful muse, and one heck of a friend.
Saturday, September 15, 2018
Writers4Higher Welcomes Cameron J. Quinn
Writers4Higher features
Cameron J Quinn
Hi, Cameron. Welcome to
the Writers4Higher family!
1. Tell me about yourself. Your book(s), your life, your inspiration.
I
grew up in a small town in New Hampshire. You know the play "Our
Town"? It's based on the place I grew up. Seriously. And a lot of the
people there are more interested in making sure your historic home is painted
the proper shade of white and keeping out drive-throughs than getting to know
their neighbors.
It
was a happy place to grow up (mostly). Whether it was because of the lack of
McDonald's or in spite of it, I'll let you decide. As my dad warred with his
neighbor, the town zoning board member, about whether or not he could run a
scrap metal yard out of his house I was playing in the woods, making up
stories, and playing with my three older siblings. This place inspired a lot of
my writing. It is truly a beautiful and magical place to grow up with big
fields, enormous pines, and mountains on the horizon where ever you
turn.
My
mom is the reason I love reading and books. And the reason I started writing.
She used to write these stories for children about a little frog. I literally remember
nothing about the frog. I remember sitting in the living room by the computer
completely captivated by this story and the woman who'd created it. She was my
mother. I've been obsessed with stories ever since. Writing my first series of
books in first grade. And attempting a few novels in high school. I always
received good feedback for my short stories but I wanted to write a
book.
When
I met V.S. Holmes (Author of the Reforged Series and The Nel Bently Books) and
we became close I never imagined we'd end up where we
are.
After
high school, I got married and followed my husband to Camp Le Jeune North
Carolina where he was a machine gunner in the Marines. V went to college in
Canada, we kept in touch but it was mostly out of sight out of mind. Then,
after I had my first child, she reached out to me. "Remember that book I
was writing? I finished it" I'd also been working on my book so I offered
to exchange first chapters. When I got the email I was incredibly excited. When
I finished reading it I was horrified. She'd written these beautiful passages
and a compelling story and I'd just sent her a bunch of drivel! She inspired me
to keep going and keep honing my craft. And never called me out on the crap I
sent her. (Her next chapter was not so polished so I felt better about sending
her pieces).
Fast
forward a few years, I have three kids, have published 7 books (a serial The
Starsboro Chronicles), V has published 5 and we own and operate a publishing
company.
My
books are all based on myths and legends. Two things I am absolutely fascinated
with. (Except the one that's inspired by serial killers. I wanted to be in the
FBI prior to having kids).
2. Where do you
see your writing taking you in the future?
On
the open ocean. My husband and I have a had a rough go of it. Not that I have a
problem with that, adversity helps you grow, but when we decided to shift our
focus from living in a house to buying a boat, life's possibilities truly
opened up. Traveling with three kids is expensive and well... horrible. But, if
we live on a boat, it costs about $25k a year and we get to go where ever the
wind takes us.
But,
you need ways to make passive income. That's where online business and books
come into the equation. I write because I love to, but if I can finance the
majority of our living expenses with the press and my books, as I write from
the trampoline of our Catamaran (they are pretty expensive don't be thinking
you can get a Cat for $25K lol that's living and travel expenses) then I will
be living the life.
3. How do you use
your talents/time to help others?
I
love marketing. Especially book marketing because it's truly easy to get behind
the product. I can't tell you how many times I've been asked to sell something
that's really not worth it. You feel gross and just want to run and hide in a
dark corner somewhere. Books are different. Working with an author and their
books is like working with a puzzle. You need to take their personality and preferences
and figure out how to best showcase their talent and their work. Sometimes it's
a battle. All authors say they want to sell books but most authors are also
scared. Scared that their book isn't worth reading, or scared of rejection and
bad reviews. It's sad when they let that fear control them. I had the opposite
problem with my first book. I just wanted to get it out there and I didn't
understand how editors worked. I thought they were the typo police. The editor
I hired for that, left a ton of typos and I had to hire another. And she helped
me with the story a bit and I thought all was well but I was rarely seeing sell
through. So after a lot of contemplation, I pulled it. And I put it through The
Story Grid. And that made all the difference. But I'm not the norm. If you
had a structural edit from a true professional, you revised and you went
through the steps, your book is worth reading. So swallow your fear, read the
one-star reviews of your favorite books, and let's do this thing.
I
also have a podcast (The Amphibian Press Podcast) where I help readers find
authors and vice versa through author interviews and books reviews. And I
have a blog for authors to help them navigate today's publishing
challenges.
And
last (for now) I'm working with a local high school to create a workshop for
students so they can see the benefits of being a writer. It's not true anymore
that you can't make a living from your writing. So, I teach them different
exercises and then at the end, we compile and anthology and I publish
it. This is the first year but I'm hopeful about the prospects.
Would you
like to find Cameron?
Check out
the links to this talented author:
Be sure to visit the Writers4Higher Market! We have gear for the
writer in you.
Rhett DeVane
Fiction with a Southern Twist
Sunday, June 10, 2018
Writers4Higher welcomes singer/songwriter Deanna Squeaky Miller
Welcome, Deanna.
This time, Writers4Higher takes a slightly different direction, highlighting the artistic writing and singing talent of Deanna Squeaky Miller.
Writing and giving back are the backbone of so many artistic endeavors. Enjoy learning a bit about his multi-talented entertainer!
Tell me about yourself.
Your songs(s), your life, your inspiration.
I am a Tallahassee native. My city is my living,
and I love it! Family, friends, community, and music is right here for me.
Everything here inspires my art as a singer, songwriter, and performer. I truly
believe God is Love and we should show love to one another through our actions,
and words. My lyrics come from my heart. Some people see it as being too
positive, but I think there’s enough negative music adding fuel to our burning
fires. Spiritual soul does the opposite, uplifting and inspiring the listener
to believe in the power of Love. So, when they hear “Give to You Love”, “Keep
On Praying”, and “Good Medicine” the message is about gratitude and living in
love.
Where do you see your singing career taking you in the future?
Well, it’s only been three years as an indie
artist and this journey has opened some awesome doors. I’ve been blessed to
share the stage with artists/musicians like Royce Lovett, Tim Guitargoodness
Clark, Cody ChesnuTT, Isabel Davis, D Swint and international opera singer Mr.
Curtis Rayam, Jr. ,to name a few, and many others I highly admire.
I see myself collaborating and writing with some
big names in the music industry within five years, and want to do some touring
, after I release my first full album. Hopefully that will be this year! It’s
not an easy thing.... putting an album together. I am learning as much as I can
about the art of singing, too.....I just want to be a better Deanna Squeaky
Miller in every new opportunity presented to sing for the people!
How do you use your
talents/time to help others?
Serving through singing means everything to me!
That’s my purpose and I understand what is required of me to fulfill it! You
have to have an unselfish mindset to serve, and I thank God that comes easy
for me.
I perform at fundraisers and community events
all the time. I mean to witness the joy on individuals’ faces, you know are in
need of a moment to forget about their problems just gives me a sense of
purpose! I love people and I love to serve. That’s why I call my music “love
ministry”. It’s all about showering love in action through music to inspire and
heal our community.
Wish to listen to a bit of Squeaky's magic voice? Tune into her YouTube channel or join her on Facebook:
Thank you, Deanna. Best of luck and love to you and your singing career.
Rhett DeVane, blogmaster
Southern Fiction author
Saturday, February 24, 2018
Writers4Higher congratulates Randy Wayne White
Congratulations to our Writers4Higher
author and friend
Randy Wayne White
Writers4Higher has featured the author Randy Wayne White in the past. Can't say enough good things about this fellow. He's back with another wacky Doc Ford Novel, Caribbean Rim.
Doc Ford fans, hold onto your sunshades and make sure your beverage of choice is fresh. Randy Wayne White is ready to take you to the wild, reckless, non-touristy Caribbean, the side cruise ships don't count into their shore excursions. Murder, sunken treasure, pirates, and general mayhem add to the quirky cast of characters.
Here's his bio:
Randy Wayne White is a New York Times best selling author
of thirty-six novels, four collections of non-fiction, a cookbook, The Ultimate
Tarpon Book (with Carlene Brennan) and a PBS documentary, Gift of the Game, which won Best of Show at the internationally
respected Woods Hole Film Festival. He
is also an Editor At Large for OUTSIDE MAGAZINE, which was founded by ROLLING
STONE.
Caribbean Rim is the 25th book in his highly
acclaimed series about Florida Marine Biologist, Doc Ford. Previous titles have enjoyed lengthy stays on
best seller lists such as The New York Times, U.S.A. Today, the Washington Post
and the L.A. Times. More than one
million copies of the Doc Ford novels are in print.
White is also partners
in three popular Florida restaurants named after his protagonist: Doc Ford's
Rum Bar and Grilles.
His series of novels
about fishing guide Hannah Smith has also received critical acclaim. HAUNTED, the third in the Hannah series, and
DECEIVED, were both awarded the Florida Gold Medal for General Fiction -- the
only time in history when an author, or consecutive books in a series, have won
this prestigious award. White was
especially delighted because Hannah had to beat out his Doc Ford novels to win.
Over the last decade,
all of the Doc Ford and Hannah Smith novels have appeared on the New York Times
and other best sellers lists, and are wildly popular around the nation. White's novel, SANIBEL FLATS, was chosen by
the American Independent Mystery Booksellers Association as one of the Hundred
Favorite Mysteries of the 20th Century.
In 2012, Randy was
honored by the Florida Historical Society as a Literary Legend. He has been awarded the Conch Republic Prize
for Literature, along with such notables as John Cheever, Peter Matthiessen,
Jim Harrison, and Thomas McGuane. He
also won the John D. MacDonald Award for Literary Excellence, as have Carl
Hiaasen, and Thomas Cochran. He is one
of only five Editors at Large for
Outside Magazine, along with Jon Krakauer, David Quamman and Tim Cahill, and
was a contributing editor and columnist for Men's Journal and National
Geographic Adventurer. In 2009, Randy was
elected an American Fellow by The Explorers Club, New York City. In 2013 Gulfshore Life Magazine honored him
as Man of the Year.
Randy is also active
in Florida civic affairs. He spent four
years serving on the Florida Judicial Nominating Commission, and also four
years on the Florida Bar Association Grievance Committee, appointed by the Florida Bar. He was also a co-founder of Big Brothers in
South Florida.
Randy was a
light tackle fishing guide at Tarpon Bay Marina, Sanibel Island for 13-years,
did more than 3,000 charters, and draws heavily on those experiences for his
novels about marine biologist Doc Ford and his quirky pals at Dinkin's
Bay. In 2003, he became one of the
founding partners in Doc Ford's Rum Bar and Grille, with restaurants on
Sanibel, Fort Myers Beach, and soon to be South Seas Resort, Captiva Island.
Randy and his wife,
singer/songwriter Wendy Webb, live on Sanibel, where he enjoys paddle surfing
and hanging out with old baseball buddies.
I don't know about you, but I gave up counting the times "also" appeared in his official bio. Goodness!
Kudos to you, Sir, from the Writers4Higher family. We wish you the very best on this new novel.
Here's where you can find info about Randy Wayne White:
FACEBOOK
WEBPAGE:
Blogmaster
Rhett DeVane
Southern fiction author
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Deep Thoughts, Bruises and All. First of all, Happy Holidays . No matter your outlook or what you celebrate, I wish you renewed ...

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Welcome to Writers4Higher The purpose of the Writers4Higher blog: to feature authors in a new light, a fresh look at the way w...
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Welcome to Writers4Higher The purpose of the Writers4Higher blog: to feature authors in a new light, a fresh look at the way writ...
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Welcome to Writers4Higher The purpose of the Writers4Higher blog: to feature authors in a new light, a fresh look at the way writ...