It's been four months since I blogged, but I have a great excuse- I fell down.
Backwards. Really far. In Colorado, a week after my last post.
I'll spare you the details except to say my right wrist- my writing hand- broke in 12 pieces. It was quite dramatic.
Anyway, I am still healing, but while I was broken I continued to write- albeit painfully
slower and with only one finger.
A writer writes!
And we continued to travel and we will in 2018. On this last day of 2017- a horrible, very good year- the Los Angeles Times published my essay about living on the road.
http://beta.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-reed-rv-life-is-not-so-bad-20171231-story.html
Enjoy and happy New Year!
Sunday, December 31, 2017
Sunday, August 13, 2017
We don't want to smell like Fish!
Benjamin Franklin famously said that, “Guests, like fish, begin to smell after three days”...or that's what the Internet claims.
Whoever said it was right—you don't want to overstay your welcome.
Which, while on this road-trip, we have tried not to do.
While I
have been writing for my client, marketing my book and working on my new book while
headed to Colorado and staying in campgrounds in garden spots such as Shelton,WA and Rawlins, WY, we’ve also hit up friends for their driveways and guest
bedrooms.
Sometimes this worked out, others not so much.
In
Puyallup, WA, we tried not to overstay our welcome with an old pal and her
husband from San Diego, but for some reason they kept asking us to stay longer.
Thank God they are good Christians! (Pretty sure that’s why they allowed us to
stay so long.)
In Mad River, CA (formally know as Kuntz,) we stayed in the driveway overlooking beautiful Ruth Lake and in Salt Lake City we were welcomed by old friends— their three dogs—not so much. (Only anxiety attack of the trip for me.) There were a few others that I will keep to myself, but we still had fun.
In Mad River, CA (formally know as Kuntz,) we stayed in the driveway overlooking beautiful Ruth Lake and in Salt Lake City we were welcomed by old friends— their three dogs—not so much. (Only anxiety attack of the trip for me.) There were a few others that I will keep to myself, but we still had fun.
We
stayed with our son for five days in Canada, but that doesn’t count. He stayed
with us for 18 years, so he kind of owes us.
The
first of August we rolled into our friend Deb’s place in Loveland, CO. and took
over not one, but two bedrooms and so far, she hasn’t sicced the dogs on us.
She
also had the cajones to invite us to the beautiful home of a writer friend of
hers (and mine on Facebook) in Steamboat Springs and we stayed two nights. (We’ve
got this 2-night minimum thing down.)
At
everyone’s home though I was able to write and find fodder for my next book.
(All good! Except for Utah.)
We have
three more weeks at Deb’s home in Colorado and hopefully one afternoon we don’t
come back from the lake and find our bags packed and sitting on the porch. That
has only happened once and it was a joke. I think.
Saturday, July 8, 2017
There’s No Crying in Self-Publishing!
Last month I finally self- published my novel, Vixens
of Vanishing Island and I cried.
Not only did I cry, but I
cried in the Applebee’s in
Geeze, what a baby.
But I gotta say, I needed
the release. I had been
creating and writing and editing for 18 months — as
in 'I could have given birth twice —if I were 20 years
younger.'
I used to stick my nose up
at self-publishing, and
then I published with a big-shot publisher and wasn’t
impressed. Sure, the book earned rave reviews, was
in TIME Magazine and got me
TV appearances
nationwide.
I sold a ton of books and
still made only enough on
royalties to…eat at Applebee’s!
This time around I decided
to make all the decisions - warts (and typos) are all on me.
But Goddamn, don’t you
love the cover?
I love this cover so much I could eat it. |
But back to Ukiah…the
Warriors were playing their
last BBall championship game and it was on all 20
TV’s and I logged on to Amazon and found that my
book was LIVE!
I broke down.
“Umm, what’s wrong?” The
Husband inquired over
will win, don’t worry.”
I shot him a look of pure evil, pointed to my phone
and
stomped out, finding a bench to sit and sob out
A few minutes later, I dried my eyes, pulled my
underwear out
of my ass and walked back into the
restaurant and people cheered. I looked up
and
beamed that I was finally getting the respect I
deserved as a writer— and
quickly realized the
Warriors had clinched the title. But that was fine, The Husband was waiting, stood up and hugged me tight.
“I am so proud of you,” he whispered into my ear.
“And I
saved you an egg roll.”
I would love to hear your stories about publishing both with a big-shot publisher and self-publishing!
Monday, June 12, 2017
Writing a Novel in an RV is a Novel Idea
Sir Walter Scott crafted “Marmion,” his bestselling epic poem, on horseback, Gertrude Stein discovered that the driver’s seat of her Model T Ford was a perfect place to write and my personal muse, Agatha Christie created her plots in a large Victorian tub while eating apples.
I have also written in my car - I find the backseat has more room for my espresso and notebooks, and for years I wrote in the tub. (Pre-computers.) I wrote my first two non-fiction books in an old trailer outside my home in the countryside years ago and I still miss it.
Now, as you might have guessed, I write in my 30-foot, 1984 motor-home which The Husband and I named Walter, not knowing the 'Breaking Bad' reference until our children both informed us. Too late, Walter it is.
For the last two years we have made our home in the RV, the only home we have presently and we love it. Oh please, don't feel sorry for me because I don't have a normal home- I've had one and I'm over it. Next question?
Anyhoo, love the RV, love the life and our travels inspire me. No offense, but living in a gated community just doesn't get the creative juices going.
Most of the time I write in my boudoir- my little bedroom in the back of the RV...only a step away from the bathroom- which is nice.
I wake up early to write before work- which is writing for other people who pay me - and then again late at night if I haven't had too much Chardonnay- you know how that goes.
I started my newest book- 'Vixens of Vanishing Island,' deep in the forest of Northern California one autumn night. I had a dream- not a very nice dream- of former gal pals and when I woke up, Agatha Christie's bestselling novel, "And Then There Were None,' came to me. I began writing on a notepad, making up characters and wove mean things women have said to me or I have heard them say to other women. Seriously, do some women never stop being mean girls?
I found the name 'vixens,' at Northtown Books in Arcata, CA and wrote up and down the coast of California as well as in a cool campground in San Diego.
I am also self-publishing this time around; not because agents and publishing houses don't want me (actually I don't know if they do or don't as I don't care) because my first book was published by the largest publisher in the country and I sold 30K books and hardly made enough to buy a pair of Jimmy Choos. (Just because I live in an RV doesn't mean I don't love the good life.) I also want control over what I write, not hand it over to a bunch of 20-something college grads who think they know what's best for my words.
No thanks.
I just sent my final pages and cover (it was a process- trust me) to Amazon and my novel- based on Agatha's Christie's 'And Then There Were None,' should be for sale in 72 hours.
I'm feeling a little sick and anxious, but unlike my character Cookie Armstrong, I don't take Xanax. I am however, parked in my RV in Napa and the tasting rooms are calling my name.
Check Amazon on Friday, order my book, "Vixens of Vanishing Island," and let me know how you like it.
Until then...
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