Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Setting the Mood - Scentual Healing

At some point, we have all "set the mood" - whether that's a romantic mood, a calming mood, a rollicking mood, a meditative mood, or a writing mood.

As a writer, mood is very important to me. In setting the mood, I want all my senses to be entertained, to be moved to write.

I like to see a clutter-free space.

I like to taste a nice hot cup of coffee or a chilled glass of wine or ice-cold bottle of beer, depending on the mood being set.

I like to hear music that calls to mind images connecting me to my story.

I like to be comfortable enough in my space so that when I touch the keys, I feel nothing but pure writing energy flow through me.

I also like to set the atmosphere with the right smell.

No matter the mood I want to set, my mind knows that my nose needs to smell a fragrance that kick-starts my internal engine. A scent that makes me smile, that wakes me up, that makes me feel alert.

Usually, this scent comes from candles, and recently, I came across a scent that makes me feel so good: Ginger Lime from Gold Canyon.




Ginger Lime Wickless Candle Scent Pod


The scent of the lime provides a zesty kick that sparks my mind, keeping me up and active while I write. I'm a fan of the wickless pods as seen in the picture above. I've used it every day for the last week and a half, four hours each day, and still working on the first pod. The pods last a good long while, and the scent lasts far past the four hours used. Just taking the lid off the pod emits the fragrance all over the place.




Ginger Lime Wickless Candle Scent Pod and White Candlestick Scent Pod Warmer


Ginger Lime is just one of many scents by Gold Canyon. My next purchase will be GC's Cakebites Specialty Scented Candles--more for their look (they are so adorable), but also to try out their scents: vanilla, cherry pie, and lemon ice.




Cakebites Specialty Scented Candles


I would consider Ginger Lime a scent for all, men and women. There is a hint of sweet, but the tart, zesty kick at the end of the scent definitely makes it a great scent for guys to try, too. Scents abound, from birthday cake and mint ice cream to pomegranate and coconut mango.

In addition to the awesome candles to set the right scent, there are also bath and body products to set the right you. Because, let's face it, if you are good, your mood to do whatever can be set quite easily.
If you'd like to set your scentual mood, then definitely check out Gold Canyon.

At checkout, you can use the code 5559738. You'll be asked if the order is part of a party, and that's when you will type in this code--because this is the SET THE MOOD Par-Tay!

And, as if you need another reason to set your mood and set it now, this week, all Heritage jar style candles are 15% off. When you go to the site, type in Heritage in the search and see the wonderful selections.

If you pick up the Ginger Lime, tell me what you think -- though I already know you'll be raving about it!

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

The Corner Cafe's Shonell Bacon on Being Moved to Change

Have you ever been moved to change?


It's a question that's at the heart of my short story "I Wanna Get Off Here," which is available in the wonderful, eclectic collection, The Corner Cafe: A Tasty Collection of Short Stories.



available for only 99¢ at Amazon


On June 14, fellow CC author, Morgan Mandel, talked about life-altering events in real life and in fiction at Straight from Hel. In most life-altering events, the choice to be moved to change presents itself.

A choice is definitely given to Bay, the main character of "I Wanna Get Off Here."

In the story, Bay is a sweet, quiet bus driver with a dream in one hand and a bucket full of pain in the other hand. Her dream is one that many of you reading have or have achieved: to write and to more importantly DO something with her writing. In the bucket full of pain, we find low self-esteem, we find familial strife, we find a relationship that leaves so much to be desired. Much of the pain she endures keeps her from believing she could be better, that she could do something with the words she writes.

Does she ever find herself moved to change: to face the pain head on and say, "Enough is enough! I'm doing me now?"

Well, you'll have to pick up The Corner Cafe and read my story to figure that out.

But that move to change, that final hurdle, obstacle where you have to make the choice to fight to the death to obtain your desires or to tuck tail and call defeat is a powerful one. It's what we read stories for. It's often what makes the most significant moments in our lives.

I know about the move to change.

The summer of 2001, I was trying to figure out what to do next in my life. I knew I wanted to pursue a master's degree, but I had so many passions in my life it was hard to narrow down to one thing. One day, in an online group digest e-mail, I read about a school in Louisiana that was looking for students to apply to its MFA program. Only thing I knew about Louisiana was the stereotypical things I knew about Mardi Gras from TV. But something stirred in me to apply. Writing stories had been a part of my life since I was ten, and being able to better my craft and teach appealed to me. On a whim, and with the new semester beginning in a month (Gah!), I applied, and two weeks later, the fiction professor called me. We shared the best two-hour phone call I've ever had. In the end, the professor said, "We want you, Shon." I felt a warmth spread in my chest as I said, "And I want to be wanted." I had the choice to continue trying to figure out what to do with myself or to take a leap of faith and follow this path. I was moved to change, and that move has changed my life.

My life would be moved again in 2008. At the time, I feared that I would be losing my job soon, and I didn't know what to do with myself. I lamented over money, had a hard time finding another job, and I was right at the point of thinking I was a loser. How could I have all of this education, yet no one want to hire me? One day, while I walked across campus, a breeze touched my face, and I heard God say, "Apply for your Ph.D." I had thought about doing so numerous times in the past, but always said no, thinking I wouldn't get in, fearful of taking the dreaded GREs again (I absolutely SUCK at standardized tests). God made things even more interesting for me when he told me to apply to one school and even told me which school to apply to. Who did that--applied to one school? Wasn't the goal to hedge bets and have at least one "safe" school--just in case? Again, life had build itself up in a way where I had two choices: go for the gold or tuck tail and stay lamenting. Again, I chose to act instead of retract. And again, the move changed my life, presenting me with new experiences, new friends, new milestones achieved, and new dreams to fulfill.

Like Bay from "I Wanna Get Off Here," like many other characters, like many of you reading this, there always comes a moment when we are finally made to choose between breaking through fear and achieving a goal or walking away with our dream still in one hand and our bucket of pain and regret heavy in the other hand.

Have you ever been moved to change?

What choice(s) do you give your main character to face in your latest work? 




[Join The Corner Cafe Tour tomorrow as it chugs on to Alberta Ross' blog!]

Friday, June 15, 2012

New Website Word Xpress Looking for Writers


Word-Xpress.com, a soon-to-go-live community website for writers, is currently looking for contributing writers that can provide advisory/tutorial articles on the writing craft, publishing, and the business of writing. This is a good opportunity for writers who'd like to contribute to a new community and -- with adding link(s) to the article(s) -- to draw more traffic to their own websites.


Word-Xpress.com is designed to support and encourage up-and-coming authors, writers, poets, and artists who desire to express themselves through written word and visual art.

Interested parties should send e-mail to wordxpress.hville@gmail.com for more information!

Do You Read African-American Mom Blogs? Take This Survey!

Calling all readers of African-American mom blogs!

I am currently conducting a study on the blogging practices of African-American mom bloggers.

I invite you to participate in my study by taking a survey geared toward readers of these blogs.

To understand the blogging practices of African-American mom bloggers, it is important to explore the readers of these blogs. Your participation in the survey will enable me to do that.

The online survey consists of 23 questions. It will take no longer than 30 minutes to complete. Names and e-mail addresses will not be used in this research.

If you are interested in participating, please click the following link that will take you to the survey at SurveyMonkey: [survey link]. Once you arrive at the link, you will read a short introduction before clicking “Next” to begin the survey.

Again, if you are interested in participating, please click the following link: [survey link].

If you have any questions, you can contact me at shon.bacon@ttu.edu. I thank you for your time and consideration.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

The Passion for Writing Series: Author Liz DeJesus





Liz DeJesus was born on the tiny island of Puerto Rico. She is a novelist and a poet. She has been writing for as long as she was capable of holding a pen. She is the author of the novel Nina (Blu Phi'er Publishing, October 2007), The Jackets (Arte Publico Press, March 31, 2011) and First Frost (Musa Publishing, June 22, 2012). Liz is currently working on a new novel.

Learn more about Liz at/on:



The Passion for Writing - From Liz's Pen

Where does your passion for writing come from?
As a child, I didn’t have any way to express myself until I discovered that I could put my thoughts on pen and paper. God, I was always blushing or stuttering…so embarrassing. Once I discovered how liberating it could be to share my thoughts, I discovered a fountain of imagination. Stories that needed to be told, poems to be written, adventures to go on, characters to meet, places to go…I felt free…unstoppable.

If your passion for writing was a color, what color would it be and why?
Indigo. I think that’s the color of imagination.

How do you keep the passion burning in your relationship with storytelling?
I make sure I always have a pen and notebook close by. I even have a small notebook in my purse in case I get a good idea for a story. I love writing. It’s something that is essentially a part of me. I can write while raising two very rambunctious boys, so that should tell you how much I love my craft. I’m pretty sure that if I didn’t write something every day I would be the saddest human being alive. It’s like fuel for my soul. I love every aspect of the writing process. Discovering the idea. Meeting my characters. Helping them through their journey. Learning about them and myself in the process. The climax. The conclusion. The madness! Everything! I love it!





[purchase today]


For generations, the Frost family has run the Museum of Magical and Rare Artifacts, handing down guardianship from mother to daughter, always keeping their secrets to “family only.”

Gathered within museum’s walls is a collection dedicated to the Grimm fairy tales and to the rare items the family has acquired: Cinderella’s glass slipper, Snow White’s poisoned apple, the evil queen’s magic mirror, Sleeping Beauty’s enchanted spinning wheel…

Seventeen-year-old Bianca Frost wants none of it, dreaming instead of a career in art or photography or…well, anything except working in the family’s museum. She knows the items in the glass display cases are fakes because, of course, magic doesn’t really exist.

She’s about to find out how wrong she is.



Excerpt from First Frost


Bianca got out of her car and ran inside the house. She called for her mother as she searched for her upstairs in all of the rooms. Nothing. She quickly ran downstairs and was ready to go down to the basement when a strange turquoise light caught her eye. She looked out the kitchen window; she couldn’t believe what she saw. Her mother was throwing what Bianca could only describe as balls of turquoise fireballs at a woman wearing a black hood. Bianca couldn’t see the woman’s face, but she could see her pale hands and slender fingers.

Bianca tried to make sense of it all. She kept expecting to see a special effects crew to come out from behind the trees and tell her that it was all part of an elaborate prank. But no such thing happened. All she knew was that a strange turquoise flame was coming out of her mother’s hands.

She knew that her mother sometimes read old dusty books on witchcraft, but she didn’t know she had actual powers. She thought about all the little quirks her mother had. Things that Bianca thought were essentially Rose. Her mother talked to plants and trees. She would sometimes stare off into space as though she were looking at something in another world. Something only she could see. She read tarot cards to random people and would tell them things about his or her life as though she were reading an open book. Bianca always thought she just made really lucky guesses. She chose not to believe in this other world and everything it stood for. Magic represented a life out of the norm, and Bianca desperately wanted to be normal. Just like everyone else.

Bianca pulled herself out of her thoughts. As she looked at the blue and green flashes in the backyard, she quickly realized that this was something she couldn’t escape. Normal was no longer a part of her world. Normal was no longer an option for her.

Bianca didn’t know what to do. She was frozen in place. She was afraid to distract her mother for even a second. She ducked behind the screen door; at least this way she could still hear what they were saying to each other.

“Did you really think I wouldn’t come?” the witch shouted.

“Oh, I knew you’d be back,” Rose replied.

Bianca slowly lifted her gaze and peeked above the screen. She saw her mother standing behind the shed on the left side of their backyard. The witch was still too far away for her to get a good look at her, but Bianca could tell that she was on the far right corner of their yard.

“Where’s the book?” the witch demanded.

“I have no idea what you’re talking about,” Rose replied with a smirk.

“Don’t be coy with me. You know very well what I’m talking about.”

“Sorry. I can’t help you.” Rose’s breathing was becoming more labored and she was drenched in sweat…obvious signs of exhaustion, but Bianca could tell by the look on her mother’s face that she wouldn’t give up.

“The wards in the museum are impressive. I couldn’t get past them. But maybe…she’ll know where the book is,” the witch said as she looked in Bianca’s direction and threw a sickly olive-colored fireball at the screen door.

Bianca shrieked and jumped out of the way. The screen door fell off its hinges and landed on the kitchen floor with a loud thud.

“Bianca!” Rose screamed.

Monday, June 11, 2012

POV: A Story with a View...or Two...or More


When's the best time to shift POV in a story? I talk about this in my latest Writing in 140 post at The Blood-Red Pencil! Come read the post at B-RP and offer your thoughts!

Saturday, June 09, 2012

The Corner Cafe Is Free This Weekend



Guess what? THE CORNER CAFE is FREE this weekend. You have NO reason not to get this collection of eclectic stories, settle in with a cup of joe, and be entertained! Buy, buy, buy ... for free, read, and definitely write a review! My story "I Wanna Get Off Here" is also in the collection. The story is about a female bus driver with dreams of becoming a writer, but before she can reach her dream, she must dismantle the detrimental thoughts, people, and situations in her life. Head to Amazon NOW to buy (whispers: for free) your copy! We're hoping to hit #1 this weekend, so help us do that! The below snapshot was our ranking at 2:37 p.m. today. [note: The Corner Cafe blog tour stops here on June 20!]


FYI: Don't have a Kindle, no prob. Download a free Kindle reading app for your smartphone, computer, or tablet: go here!



Friday, June 08, 2012

The Passion for Writing Series: Author Maryann Miller





Maryann Miller is an award-winning author of numerous books, screenplays and stage plays. She is also a freelance editor and script doctor, and is the Theatre Director at the Winnsboro Center for the Arts. Her short story collection, The Wisdom of Ages, is available as an e-book and paperback. In addition, she has written several other books: Play It Again, Sam, a woman's novel; Open Season, the first book in a new mystery series that features two women homicide detectives in Dallas; a suspense novel, One Small Victory; and a young adult novel, Friends Forever. All are available as e-books and in paper.

Learn more about Maryann at/on:



The Passion for Writing - From Maryann's Pen


Where does your passion for writing come from?
My passion for writing has always been stirred by things that happen in society that bother me, such as prejudice and injustice or the horribly unfair things that happen to people. Even before I thought about creating stories, I always worked through issues by writing about them.

If your passion for writing was a color, what color would it be and why?
The color of my passion would probably be red. People joke about seeing red when they are angry about something, and I think that applies to me. The social issues I am prodded to write about usually do make me angry; a woman being dumped by her husband, a gay man who isn't accepted by his father, the unfair use of deadly force by police officers, and any other form of discrimination.

How do you keep the passion burning in your relationship with storytelling?
I don't have to do much to keep the passion burning, I just need to make myself sit and write when the fire is hot, so to speak. Like so many others, I write because I can't NOT write, so there is always something inside me prodding, "Get to the keyboard, get to the keyboard."





[purchase today]


Three stories; four men whose lives take unexpected turns. Meet Samson who wonders what is down that country road that draws people so. Should he get in that old truck and go see? Mel and Rube have been having dinner at the Leavenworth Grill every Wednesday for years. One day the menu changes and so does life for Mel. Tom would give anything for his life to change. Can he beat back the effects of a crippling stroke by sheer force of determination? Growing old is not for the faint of heart.



Excerpt from The Wisdom of Ages



MAYBE SOMEDAY

AUTHOR'S NOTE: this story was inspired when my husband and I were on a road trip, and I saw an old black man sitting under a tree watching the cars go by. The story was one of those rare gifts from my muse, and came to me in one great rush that needed little rewrite or editing. The story placed third in the Page Edward's Short Fiction contest in 2004.
 
*****


Samson sat in the meager shade of the small Mimosa tree that graced his front yard, watching the traffic on old highway 79. Granted, there wasn’t much, but every now and then a shiny new car would pass, heading toward the resort Samson knew was somewhere down the road. Or a car full of teenagers would zoom by, the boys laughing and tossing their empties out the window. And as many afternoons as he’d spent out here, it never failed to surprise Samson how much things had changed. On a good day he could count up to a hundred cars going by. Times used to be when one donkey cart coming down the road was cause for celebration.

Those had been the good years. The years Samson had worked for Mr. Watson until he’d given Samson this little piece of land for his own. Some folks thought Watson had lost his mind, giving away his land like that, especially to a black man. But Watson had never treated Samson like most white folks did, the ‘good ol’ boy’ routine that never quite covered the slight hesitation as white flesh met black in a handshake. Watson never hesitated as a man or a friend, and the memory creased Samson’s weathered face in a smile.

But the smile wasn’t just for Watson. It was for Molly and those six youngsters who had been so much a part of the goodness of those years. He wished he could have filled their bellies as easily as they’d filled his heart, but they’d never seemed to mind. They’d always laughed the place up, and any occasion, large or small turned into an opportunity for fun. When the peddler came down the road, the pots and pans clanking in time to the clip clop of his horse’s hooves on the dirt road, the children ran out clutching their dimes, eager to see what new toy or sweet the old man had. You’d’ve thought a carnival had come to their front door.

Then all too soon those good years had passed. One by one the youngsters got up and left. Then Molly had, too. Not of her own choice of course. A body has no choice when it comes to dying, so Samson had been alone these past twenty years. Wasn’t too bad though. Once he got used to listening to the radio instead of Molly and learned how to make passable biscuits. But acceptance didn’t dispel the loneliness that crept up on a man in the dark of night, and Samson wondered if he was destined to carry that loneliness to the grave.