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Viewing Blog: Like a Cat's Eye, Most Recent at Top
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Cat Fleming looks into writing, relationships between women & men and our sometimes delightful, mostly confusing post-postmodern culture.
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1. Julie Luek commented on the blog post '[MAKING THE LEAP] Finding Your One Thing'

Julie Luek commented on the blog post '[MAKING THE LEAP] Finding Your One Thing'

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2. DelRica Jackson added a discussion to the group Why Do You Write and What's Your Process

DelRica Jackson added a discussion to the group Why Do You Write and What's Your Process

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Name Change

I've changed the name of my blog, for those who were already following me, to www.delricawrites.blogspot.com.  Please follow at your leisure.  I'll be updating soon.See More

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3. DelRica Jackson joined a group

DelRica Jackson joined a group

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Why Do You Write and What's Your Process

As an author, psychotherapist, wife, and mother who also does abstract paintings and studies her dreams I am incredibly interested in hearing authors discuss what brought them to writing, and the process by which they continue creating.

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4. Kathy Purc liked Theo Pauline Nestor's blog post A Brief History of the Memoir

Kathy Purc liked Theo Pauline Nestor's blog post A Brief History of the Memoir

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5. Erin Graves replied to the discussion 'In Six Words: "My Earliest Memory of Writing"'

Erin Graves replied to the discussion 'In Six Words: "My Earliest Memory of Writing"'

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6. Erin Graves joined a group

Erin Graves joined a group

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Funny Women

I want to encourage women to submit to humor venues. I urge you; I implore you. Let’s start a revolution and change the world’s mind about who’s funny. Your heart will swell with accomplishment and your breasts will become larger. This I promise.

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7. Erin Graves liked Harriet Hodgson's discussion Setting a Writing Schedule: Your Path to Success

Erin Graves liked Harriet Hodgson's discussion Setting a Writing Schedule: Your Path to Success

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8. Jennifer Bell commented on the blog post '[TIPS OF THE TRADE]: The Best Writers’ Group'

Jennifer Bell commented on the blog post '[TIPS OF THE TRADE]: The Best Writers’ Group'

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9. Meg Waite Clayton posted a blog post

Meg Waite Clayton posted a blog post

[1st Books]: Cathy Marie Buchanan: Finding the Writing Life

Earlier this year, when Cathy Marie Buchanan asked if I'd read her new novel, The Painted Girls, I jumped at the chance. I loved her debut, The Day the Falls Stood Still, and this new one ... Sisters, dance, art, ambition, and intrigue in late 1800s Paris - what was there not to like? I'm just delighted to see how well it is doing now that it's out: it's a People Magazine Pick, a Good Housekeeping Book Pick, an Indie Next pick, a USA Today New and Notable selection, a Barnes & Noble Staff Pick, and an Entertainment Weekly Must List pick - and already a national bestseller in Canada! And she's one of that rare breed of writers: someone who didn't want to be a writer from the time she was in diapers. Or one of us who is willing to admit she took some time to settle into the writing life. - MegI’m often asked if I always wanted to be a writer, and I answer is a definitive no. My teenage years were spent disgracing myself in high school English, often getting upwards of twenty percent deducted for spelling mistakes on exams.  When it came time to head off to university, one of the criteria I used for picking my courses was that no essay writing?that is spelling?was required.  I ended up at Western University and graduated with a degree in biochemistry without writing a single essay.  Afterward I went on to do an M.B.A.I spent the bulk of my non-writing work life at IBM—ten years, in fact—at first in finance and then in technical sales.  It was while I was at IBM that spell-check started to be commonly used, and all of a sudden my world shifted.  Shocking though it was, I became the departmental wordsmith, the person who would give the proposals the final read through before they were sent off to the customers. Still, I suspected this supposed ability to write had more to do with the fact that I was mostly working with engineers, and math and computer science grads.  It wasn’t so much that I could write but that they could not. Given my education and early work life choices, you probably would not suspect it, but there was lots of evidence early on of my creative leanings.  In high school, I was quite serious about classical ballet, spending four or five nights a week taking class or performing, and I sewed and designed most of my clothes.  I think now that I was able to satisfy my creative yearnings through the dance and the sewing. While I was working at IBM, I was always enrolled in a continuing education course, always something with an artistic bent, no doubt an effort to fuel my creative side.  I took drawing and painting and art history and woodworking and interior design.  Eventually I hit on creative writing but taking that first course was more of a whim than anything else.  I had a continuing education catalogue at home and was flipping pages and thought, well, why not give creative writing a try?  Right from the first class, though, I was smitten.  Long last, I’d found what I was meant to do. - CathyThis post originally ran on 1st Books: Reading, Writing, and Travel, hosted by Meg Waite Clayton, author of The Wednesday Sisters (a writing group novel), the forthcoming The Wednesday Daughters, and other novels (all available from Random House/Ballantine). 1st Books features award-winning writers blogging about how they got started writing and publishing, as well as other readerly and writerly delights.See More

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10. Kathleen Pooler commented on the blog post 'Tinted Memoir Writing---and Why You Should Do It'

Kathleen Pooler commented on the blog post 'Tinted Memoir Writing---and Why You Should Do It'

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11. Juliet Wilson posted a status

Juliet Wilson posted a status

"my haiku on Daily Haiku today is here: http://www.dailyhaiku.org/haiku/2013-january-25 …"

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12. jackie edwards liked Brooke Warner's discussion She Writes Press News: Announcing Americashire, by Jennifer Richardson

jackie edwards liked Brooke Warner's discussion She Writes Press News: Announcing Americashire, by Jennifer Richardson

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13. Rheanna Raynes commented on the group 'Novelists (Struggling or Not)'

Rheanna Raynes commented on the group 'Novelists (Struggling or Not)'

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14. Jennifer Richardson posted a status

Jennifer Richardson posted a status

"At last, I have a website. Check out americashire.com and let me know what you think (and what needs fixing!)."

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15. Pam McGaffin liked Julie Luek's blog post [MAKING THE LEAP] Finding Your One Thing

Pam McGaffin liked Julie Luek's blog post [MAKING THE LEAP] Finding Your One Thing

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16. Kelly Hand replied to the discussion 'Our Published Novels!' in the group Novelists (Struggling or Not)

Kelly Hand replied to the discussion 'Our Published Novels!' in the group Novelists (Struggling or Not)

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17. Kelly Hand added a discussion to the group Novelists (Struggling or Not)

Kelly Hand added a discussion to the group Novelists (Struggling or Not)

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Introducing myself and my novel

I'm new to She Writes. Thanks to Meg for being a great moderator. I enjoyed reading your inauguration piece in my former hometown newspaper.  My new hometown is DC and I was on the National Mall for the inauguration, but hardly heard a word of Obama's speech due to the jumbo-tron malfunctioning!Just before Christmas, I published my novel Au Pair Report independently (I'm avoiding the term self-published because of comments I've read about that phrase reinforcing old stigmas surrounding "vanity publishing") via Kindle Direct Publishing and Smashwords. I had two major reasons for choosing to go the indie route.  One was that I had queried agents for a full year for a previous novel, and got lots of partial or full requests, but no contract; this time around, I did not feel I had the time to waste on queries, although I felt this was a more marketable book.  The other reason was that I didn't want to wait two years or more to get published traditionally.  Au Pair Report is a novel about the politics of child care in Washington, DC, and it has electoral politics as one of its sub-themes.  With a work-from-home counselor for au pairs and host families as its protagonist, Au Pair Report has as its antagonist California Senator Carolyn Quiver, who dreams of winning the Republican nomination for the 2012 presidential election. The novel is set in 2010, and I wanted to get it to readers while the election is still fresh in their memories.On Monday, I blogged on my website (www.kellyjhand.com) about my thoughts on the inauguration and its connection with my novel. The protagonist of Au Pair Report finds a way to highlight the issue of child care for the Democrats laying the groundwork for the 2012 election, and one of my regrets about the actual election (as opposed to the one Senator Quiver targets in my novel) is that child care was not an issue at all. What's holding women back from the equality they deserve is the utter absence of social policies that support working parents and families. As a novelist and avid reader of fiction, I think stories are the best way to engage people politically.I sometimes wish that I had tried harder to get published traditionally, and it's a goal I am still considering. However, the process of learning about independent publishing has led me to reach out to other writers and readers in a way that has been almost as interesting as being part of a wonderful writing group.See More

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18. Ryshia Kennie liked Katrina Maloney's blog post What happens when you ask the universe for help

Ryshia Kennie liked Katrina Maloney's blog post What happens when you ask the universe for help

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19. Ryshia Kennie replied to the discussion 'Our Published Novels!' in the group Novelists (Struggling or Not)

Ryshia Kennie replied to the discussion 'Our Published Novels!' in the group Novelists (Struggling or Not)

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20. Ryshia Kennie liked Meg Waite Clayton's group Novelists (Struggling or Not)

Ryshia Kennie liked Meg Waite Clayton's group Novelists (Struggling or Not)

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21. Judith Marshall commented on the group 'Novelists (Struggling or Not)'

Judith Marshall commented on the group 'Novelists (Struggling or Not)'

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22. Renee Restivo commented on the blog post 'She Writes Her Life: A Call for Submissions'

Renee Restivo commented on the blog post 'She Writes Her Life: A Call for Submissions'

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23. zaji commented on the blog post 'She Writes Her Life: A Call for Submissions'

zaji commented on the blog post 'She Writes Her Life: A Call for Submissions'

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24. Sophie Schiller commented on the group 'Novelists (Struggling or Not)'

Sophie Schiller commented on the group 'Novelists (Struggling or Not)'

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25. Phoebe Wilcox posted a blog post

Phoebe Wilcox posted a blog post

Almost snagged on the Hermit's Cage

And almost dropped the dinner dishes. Am I talking about the cage of a....?A. hermit crabB. a six-foot tall hermit w/a long beard and a bad attitude who lives in my dining niche and actually thinks that that's sufficient housing.C. a nerd?D. A diva who chose the name ironically and who leaves sequins everywhere?E. An independent author who rarely gets out?F. A Barbie doll with a hobo purse and a hermit motif?Well, I don't know but I got at least one poem accepted for publication today, two if they don't mind a reprint. The mag is Petrichor Review and "The Editors" sent me a wonderful acceptance letter.www.phoebewilcox.comP.S.--if anyone w/$$$ reads this, don't forget about people in your local community who may not have enough money for heating oil. Consider a donation to a local helping agency, as they are all strapped for cash too. It's COLD out!See More

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