Monday, August 31, 2020

A Beautiful Back-To-Work Monday Morning

See this old blurry cell phone photo of me and two of my cats?

One is Midnight, who is going under anesthesia this morning for dental work (good thoughts, please) and the other is Hope, who is having a carefree and happy life in Morris, and I can't wait to see her again!

So this photo was taken of me on January 7, 2014, at my oldest son's former apartment in Channahon, where I often worked when we lost our home when I and my three youngest adult kids were staying with my mother.

January 7 is Old Calendar, or Julian Calendar, Christmas. It's the day our immediate family celebrates Christmas as an immediate family.

It was less than one week before I became an employee of Shaw Media, who had just bought (at that time) The Herald-News in Joliet.

I had built a freelance career as a single parent, starting in 1998. But by 2014, my husband had dementia, we had lost our home, the pay for freelance writing was decreasing, and a new company now owned the publication where three-fourths of my freelance earnings came.

My youngest two kids were at Joliet Junior College. My oldest had just graduated and was working part time, the most he could do, because he and I (mostly he) had the most flexible time to break down a house with eighty years of living packed inside it (my husband's parents had built that house; we moved into it fall of 1999).

The money writing was on the wall. I needed to find a full-time job somewhere. The writing career, as a full-time career, was done, although I hoped to juggle a few assignments a week to keep my skills sharp.

I had just wanted to get past Christmas before I started looking in earnest. And I wanted to give myself some time and space to say good-bye to that chapter in my life.

But after January 7, an amazing whirlwind of events transpired.

I was asked to come into The Herald-News to interview for the features editor position.

I was told to keep working on assignments because the company still wanted me to freelance even if I wasn't hired.

Two days after the interview, I received a call and a job offer, which I, of course, accepted.

I continued working as a freelancer for The Herald-News until my start date of January 15.

On the start date, I was completely overwhelmed (I didn't realize until the end of the day I was sick). At the end of the day, I went to the managing editor's office and quit.

She told me to stay.

I did.

And I muddled through those first blurry days of learning new procedures and technology sick. I was sick three times in the first eight weeks.

However, I have not, yet to this day (although that can't possibly last forever), taken a sick day.

Why is this important today?

Because I'm just coming off the first bit of unregulated time since before my junior year in high school.

It was hard-earned time, and I made good use of it.

But you will not hear me moan - not ever - about "having" to come back to work.

Watching the journalism industry change all those years of freelancing (fifteen in all), I never dreamed I would work as an actual employee. I didn't even aspire to it. So have that all change "in the blink of an eye" was life-changing.

I am blessed, and I do mean blessed, to be working in that industry as an employee today. Sure, I have days where I'm mentally done by the end of it. Sure, I have days where I'd rather chase a rabbit trail than get to task. Who doesn't?

But I'm not only grateful to have a job I can not only work from home, but where I'm told to work from home, during a pandemic, I'm grateful to have THIS job, and I am happy for to work this job for as long as this position is available to me.

So today I return to work. And I am happy and grateful to be here.

So below were my goals for last week.

If it looks like a lot, you're right. But it feels good to be done with them, too.

Again, I'm very happy to be back to work.


All the even chapters of The Phoenix or fifteen chapters. DONE.

Finish formatting Lycanthropic Summer. Moved to next weekend. Art is about half done. We also have a companion book in the early planning stages to be released with this one. But I'm not sharing details for now.

Finish the last two chapters of Cornell Dyer and the Old Folks Home. DONE. And the next two are in "talks." The goal is three a year. Hopefully I'll be busy writing them this fall.

Finish formatting WriteOn Joliet's fourth anthology. DONE

Get the content Rebekah needs for a new website. DONE-ish. Struggling with some phrasing. Working with her on it.

Get Rebekah the photos she needs for the new Bertrand the Mouse book.  DONE. We should have three books ready in time for holiday gift buying.

MISCELLANEOUS GOALS:

Go through boxes with Rebekah: We broke down all but three. Most of them contain various memorabilia with place to put those items right now. We moved them from the downstairs closet to my bedroom closet.

Exercise: I made or came pretty close to my step/calorie burn per day (20,000 to 23,000 steps and eight to ten miles). Yoga and weights declined drastically. One day of weights, one of yoga.

Three letters to write and mail: Two DONE. Hoping the last one goes today..

More than 1,000 pieces of email that piled up this week. More than half was work email. I've made a small dent there this morning. I hadn't anticipated some training on Sunday afternoon (see below).

Made a Monday list for work and one phone call: DONE.

Cleaned my room: DONE

Finished residual edits for a client: DONE

Looked through a manuscript for a potential client: DONE

Pandemic short story: More on this later. On my list for a LONG time. NEARLY DONE. More done than I thought I'd get it.

One Note/OneDrive Training: DONE-ish. It will take more than one training for me to get it right.







Saturday, August 29, 2020

Just Two Days Left of the At-Home Writing Retreat

So am I meeting my goals?


All the even chapters of The Phoenix or fifteen chapters. DONE. Rough first drafts for most of them, some better than that. Super tired by 8:30 p.m. last night and almost decided "good enough." But I put on a cup of coffee (something new Rebekah bought), settled down at the desk with Faith (my calico cat) on my lap, and finished the last chapter.

Then I skimmed through the entire novel, making sure the pieces connected and adding details where they didn't. I'm glad this morning I didn't cave last night. This was the main project, and the sense of accomplishment is huge.

Finish formatting Lycanthropic Summer. Projected release date is Oct. 1. Texted back and forth with the artist for this late last night (yes, as I was skimming through The Phoenix). Illustration looks stunning. Cover art is about halfway done.

We also have a companion book in the early planning stages to be released with this one. But I'm not sharing details for now.

Finish the last two chapters of Cornell Dyer and the Old Folks Home and copy edit it. Tomorrow.

Finish formatting WriteOn Joliet's fourth anthology. Today

Get the content Rebekah needs for a new website. Today or tomorrow.

Get Rebekah the photos she needs for the new Bertrand the Mouse book. The goal is three a year, and I should now make that goal in time for Christmas purchases. The planning is either done or in progress (depending on the book). Rebekah is working on it.

Bonus: Jotted down some very early ideas for The Emporium Orphans because so many good ideas pop into my head while I'm trying to go to sleep, so I sleep with pen and paper. 

Also, while The Emporium Orphans sounds like a very strange title for a book, those who've read Staked! might not think so. That book (most likely) is a couple years down the road, but who knows?

And while the scribblings in the photos don't seem like much, they're actually placeholders for my thoughts, so a good first outlining is mentally in progress.

I hope Ed Calkins is meeting his goals for Ruthless. Can't wait to read it!


Friday, August 28, 2020

Story Round-Up: Features in The Herald-News, Aug. 22 through Aug. 28 (and Retreat Update)

Story roundup? How can that be? Wasn't I on an at-home writing retreat all week?

Yes - but not all stories post the same day. The ones featured today ran over last week, when I was already mind-deep into the nineteenth century.

Not much has changed from yesterday's retreat update, except that I only have a chapter and a half to finish of an extremely rough draft of The Phoenix, which I really hope I get done today as I have a full list for Saturday and Sunday.

It probably doesn't sound like a lot, but I've been dancing around (i.e. avoiding and skipping over) one particularly troublesome chapter, hoping the muse would kick in eventually (It hasn't).

So...yeah.

Below, you will find all the places I currently hang out on social media.

Below that, are the stories. Pick and choose what interests you. Of course, I hope they all interest you.

Have a great Friday!



Non-bylined features:

Search by topic (people, pets, A and E, faith, health, and food) at theherald-news.com.

Once a week, I do combine a week's worth into a single blog post.

Social media:

Daily updates: I do post the briefs on Twitter during the week, so you're welcome to follow me at @Denise_Unland61.

BryonySeries stuff: I post curated content relating to the BryonySeries at @BryonySeries. And assorted related content at www.facebook.com/BryonySeries.

And of course, please follow the adventures of Bertrand the Mouse on Instagram at bertrand_bryonyseries.

If you're a writer anywhere in the world, you're welcome to join WriteOn Joliet's Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/groups/writeonminooka/?ref=bookmarks. We're based in Joliet, Illinois, but we love to meet and interact with writers outside our area, too.

If you'd like to officially join WriteOn Joliet, we have two tiers of dues. We also have a marketing arm that's getting longer with each year. Check us out at writeonjoliet.com.

Upcoming BryonySeries events:

A full month of virtual events can be found at bryonyseries.com/fetes-and-feasts

Books and Such

Information on my books (including where to buy) along with upcoming events is at bryonyseries.com.

Newsletters:

Sign up for the Will County Go Guide

http://www.theherald-news.com/newsletter/will-county-go-guide/#//


Sign up for the LocalLit Short Story Newsletter

http://www.theherald-news.com/newsletter/locallit/


Sign up for The Munsonville Times

https://www.bryonyseries.com/munsonville-times

Questions?

Email me at bryonyseries@gmail.com.

Thank you for reading The Herald-News. And for reading this blog. And if you've read (or plan to read) any of my books. Your support is greatly appreciated.



LocalLit spotlight: 'Whispering Waves:' Poems for Everyday Grace
(Review comes out this Tuesday)

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/20/locallit-spotlight-whispering-waves-poems-for-everyday-grace/a919u03/


Coronavirus forces Joliet Job Corps to make changes

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/20/coronavirus-forces-joliet-job-corps-to-make-changes/am7flrl/


Annual mental health event in New Lenox moves online this year

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/21/annual-mental-health-event-moves-online-this-year/agnhakf/


A quick and easy way to help a Will County senior

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/21/a-quick-and-easy-way-to-help-a-will-county-senior/ab735e0/


Elwood students return to school with hybrid learning

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/21/elwood-students-return-to-school-with-hybrid-learning/dt0dsen/


Pets of the Week: Aug. 24

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/20/pets-of-the-week-aug-24/dal9hoz/


"Three Joliet area novelists share insights on crime fiction"
Val Bruech, Mike Markley and Sue Merrell discuss their crime novels

(The story is a couple years old, but the insights are the same and the books are still available).

https://www.theherald-news.com/2016/08/30/three-joliet-area-novelists-share-insights-on-crime-fiction/adjm263/



Illustration by Matt Coundiff for "Visage."

Thursday, August 27, 2020

Almost to 500,000 (and Retreat Update)

As I write this, I am just 1, 702 away from 500,000 total views. I realized as I wrote the title that someone might think 500,000 words this week. Ha, I'm not even close to being that good.

Now, it did take slightly over a decade to reach it (My first post was Aug. 1, 2010), and the blog still doesn't show many followers, but I've found anyone can "like" or "follow" and that means little compared to people who read faithfully over time.

And I'm sure any vague number of those views are bots. But not all of them.

Writing, as a career or dedicated hobby, is a long game. While some people may get lucky, or even rewarded or even blessed in the early stages, many of us need to write and revise long and often to build up relationships and trust with readers.

Speaking of relationships and trust, the writing retreat is entering its home stretch. For those who have virtually taken this journey with me in the form of checking into this blog, how am I coming along with the goals with just four days left?

All the even chapters of The Phoenix or fifteen chapters. This is first and foremost. Four chapters to go, two today and two tomorrow. I think it's do-able. Keep in mind most of the writing is weak, sloppy, and not fit for readers at this stage. But it's out of me and into the computer, where it belongs. That's a good start, I think, and we are talking about 30,000 words or so in the span of a week.

Finish formatting Lycanthropic Summer. Since I want to release it by October 1, this is important. However, I am moving this project to next weekend. The art isn't ready to go yet, so I won't gain anything by getting it done this week, and I will lose the time for other projects if I tackle it now.

Finish the last two chapters of Cornell Dyer and the Old Folks Home and copy edit it. My goal is three books in this series a year, and I'm just on the first one for 2020. So, yes, I'm way behind. The plan as of today is to finish writing the last two chapters on Sunday afternoon, a gentle way to end the retreat. Copy editing can wait until next weekend (maybe even one chapter at a time after work this week since the chapters are short and light).

But first on Sunday, I plan to sift through hundreds of work email. I don't want to waste valuable time on Monday with this task, and it's a way to transition my mind back where it needs to be.

Finish formatting WriteOn Joliet's fourth anthology. This is even more first and foremost than The Phoenix. However, the week went askew, so this will be completed on Saturday.

Get the content Rebekah needs for a new website. By Saturday.

Get Rebekah the photos she needs for the new Bertrand book. The goal is three books in this series a year. We released one last year. Again, way behind. A new book, and possibly three, is now in the "works."

Even though the end of the retreat is in sight, it's not over yet, and it's important I stay the course as much as possible. No sleeping hare habits for me!

True, life can intervene. And if it does, I'll have my priorities in order.

Still - it would feel nice to make the goal.

Don't you agree?

Illustration by Kathleen Rose Van Pelt for "Bryony."

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

Halfway Point (Yes, a Retreat Update and Encouraging Words for All)

Today is Wednesday, and it's usually the day I become grouchy and fed-up with the entire process.

I actually kind of hit that Monday through yesterday, in pieces. I think I'm over it.

What helped?

Last night I was working on a chapter I'd started one night because it was a good chapter for writing at night, you know, mood and all.

But to get back into it, I had to re-read parts of it. And some of it was actually pretty good. That was extremely encouraging.

So if you need encouragement today, here's my suggestion. Step back from the trees a moment and look at the forest. Review what's gone right and what you've done well.

It sounds simple, right? So simple, we often don't do it.

Lose your temper today? Remind yourself where you kept it.

Missed an opportunity to be kind? Remind yourself when you didn't.

Bathroom won't pass CDC inspections? Yes, but all the laundry is done. (OK, some of the laundry. Or at least you've bought laundry detergent).

Burned the chicken? But the mashed potatoes are wonderfully fluffy.

Your writing sucks? So does mine. But apparently not all of it.

You fell off the diet? But you've also spent weeks increasing your portions of fresh vegetables.

Build on the comments at the right. Root out the other ones, the weeds in your goals.

Keep planting your dreams and celebrating your harvest.


All the even chapters of The Phoenix or fifteen chapters. I can't tell if I'm slightly behind or slightly ahead. I'm looking at two partial chapters today and one complete one. So right on track?

Finish formatting Lycanthropic Summer. Since I want to release it by October 1, this is important

Finish the last two chapters of Cornell Dyer and the Old Folks Home and copy edit it. My goal is three books a year. I'm just on the first one. So I'm way behind.

Finish formatting WriteOn Joliet's fourth anthology. This is even more first and foremost than The Phoenix.

Get the content Rebekah needs for a new website. Can't move forward without this. Better make it a priority.

Get Rebekah the photos she needs for the new Bertrand book. The goal is three a year. We released one last year. Again, way behind.

So far:

Nearly two chapter drafts of The Phoenix each day, and that's it.

Slightly behind, but yesterday was a day of intermittent interruptions and one health emergency for my oldest son.

But at this rate, I'll have all of the chapters of The Phoenix drafted by Saturday morning.

And I'll still have the weekend to finish the plan.

That is the plan from a Wednesday morning point of view.



Illustration by Christopher Gleason for "Staked!"

Tuesday, August 25, 2020

Going Backwards (and Retreat Update)

While many writers enjoy the exhilaration, creativity, and freedom of first drafts, I'm not one of them.

I felt that slew of emotions with the first two and half books in the "drop of blood" trilogy and then I hit some serious writer's block and abandoned the third for a few months.

By then, I had a contract with a small press and had begun the serious editing process. Watching my words take on the shape of what I had really meant to write was the real sense of satisfaction.

First drafts are not like that.

As are many "firsts" in life, I suppose.

All sense of polish and shine aren't the writer's friends in those early drafts. In order to get the words out, especially in such rapid fashion as I'm doing this week, you must resort to weak and clumsy and cliche - everything writers try to avoid.

Writing this way feels like going backwards. But you know the old saying.

But even as writers push forward, a part of them should remain comfortable with their own sloppy writing. During the drafting stage, it's important not to get hung up on phrasing, mood (except to simply state it), deep characterization and setting, the five senses, etc. until to, again, state the intention.

The clean-up comes later. But you can't clean-up a mess you didn't make. You can't prune a plant you didn't grow. You can't refine words you didn't write.

So for any writer out there (or anyone, really) in their same routine who thinks I'm currently sitting in a dreamy, caffeinated haze while swimming in my imagination, that's not happening.

But the words are happening. And I'll be very happy I wrote them when, next weekend, I want to spend Saturday editing a chapter I wrote this past week. And I'll be happy the following Saturday, too, when I want to do the same thing.

I'm happy now, too, of course. Happy that I work for a company that gives me vacation time. Happy for the opportunity to spend a week working on a goal. Happy for a family that supports my rather pointless writing and isn't spending too much luring me away from it. Happy for the calico cat who lets me have nearly have my desk chair.

Happy for the hot weather this week that makes it sensible to stay inside writing. And happy, of course, for coffee and imagination.

So am I hitting the goal?


All the even chapters of The Phoenix or fifteen chapters. This is first and foremost. And I started on it yesterday afternoon and wrote until my brain shut off at 9:30 p.m. (but I did have an extremely short night of sleep Thursday into Friday).

Finish formatting Lycanthropic Summer. Since I want to release it by October 1, this is important

Finish the last two chapters of Cornell Dyer and the Old Folks Home and copy edit it. My goal is three books a year. I'm just on the first one. So I'm way behind.

Finish formatting WriteOn Joliet's fourth anthology. This is even more first and foremost than The Phoenix.

Get the content Rebekah needs for a new website. Can't move forward without this. Better make it a priority.

Get Rebekah the photos she needs for the new Bertrand book. The goal is three a year. We released one last year. Again, way behind.

So far:

Nearly two chapter drafts of The Phoenix each day, and that's it.

Slightly behind, but yesterday was a day of intermittent interruptions and one health emergency for my oldest son.

But at this rate, I'll have all of the chapters of The Phoenix drafted by Saturday morning.

And I'll still have the weekend to finish the plan.

That is the plan from a Tuesday morning point of view.

Illustration by Kathleen Rose Van Pelt for "Bryony."

Monday, August 24, 2020

Boxes (and Retreat Update)

I started an at-home writing retreat this week, a little modified from the ones I took back in 2018.

That time, I wrote and only wrote, forsaking both social media and exercise.

This year, I'm still exercising. It's foolish to stop, and I do quite a bit of mental writing this way, which makes me more efficient at the computer.

Also, the subject matter is dark, so keeping some positive connections is a healthy thing to do.

So instead of fourteen to sixteen hours of writing a day, it's looking more like ten to twelve.

Here are the goals. Below that, what I've accomplished.

All the even chapters of The Phoenix or fifteen chapters. This is first and foremost. And I started on it yesterday afternoon and wrote until my brain shut off at 9:30 p.m. (but I did have an extremely short night of sleep Thursday into Friday).

Finish formatting Lycanthropic Summer. Since I want to release it by October 1, this is important

Finish the last two chapters of Cornell Dyer and the Old Folks Home and copy edit it. My goal is three books a year. I'm just on the first one. So I'm way behind.

Finish formatting WriteOn Joliet's fourth anthology. This is even more first and foremost than The Phoenix.

Get the content Rebekah needs for a new website. Can't move forward without this. Better make it a priority.

Get Rebekah the photos she needs for the new Bertrand book. The goal is three a year. We released one last year. Again, way behind.

So far:

Nearly two chapter drafts of The Phoenix each day, and that's it.

Under the circumstances, not bad.

"Circumstances" being I didn't start until mid-afternoon on Friday, my second son Joshua (child number three) turned thirty-five yesterday, so I spend some time on the phone with him, and we had a family issue come up yesterday, too.

Oh, and I took a two-hour nap on Saturday and a two-hour nap on Sunday. So that really cut into my writing time, too. (I really, really needed those naps).

What about the boxes?

Well, I still have boxes to unpack from when we lost our home in 2013. Since we discarded mostly everything, I don't have many. But they're still there.

I promised Rebekah we would unpack a box a day during the retreat, to be continued on each vacation day to the end of the year, until all the boxes are unpacked.

I think that's do-able, don't you?



Illustration by Kathleen Rose Van Pelt for "Bryony."

Saturday, August 22, 2020

It Has Begun...

Thanks (or "no thanks") to covid, I am not gong to Raleigh this year to spend a week with Sarah and her family.

I also won't be seeing my parents, who live near her and are in their mid-80s.

So I'm off to Munsonville instead, which exists nowhere except in my mind and in the mind of anyone who's read my books, and in this beautiful piece of art at the bottom of this blog.

Translation: I'm taking an at-home writing retreat.

I have an ambitious list and don't intend to waste the time or the coffee.

Having taken a similar retreat a couple of these two years ago when airfare was prohibitive, I know how the progression works.

The first few days feel awesome, like a kid on summer vacation. My schedule and my routine is gone, and the alarm clock is silenced. No deadlines! No homework! Just "play" writing! Yay!!!

But the feeling is a lie. Because I have a self-made list of goals and deadlines sitting at my left. I can't miss it anytime I glance down. And if I'm sipping coffee, i'm glancing down a lot.

And like any summer vacation, the at-home writing retreat will get stale, usually by Tuesday afternoon. You know that feeling when all you eat is confectionery? Yeah, it's like that. The first few bites of a dark chocolate bar are amazing. But try working your way through a three-pound bar, ugh.

By Wednesday, I'm still waking up early and immediately staggering to the computer. By now I'm cranky and sick of everything: sick of writing, computers, coffee (hard to believe, but true), my BryonySeries, walking, music, the current project - all of it.

By Thursday afternoon, the pressure returns. My list of uncrossed items stares me in the face as I write, reminding me the list was way to prolific and that I won't get it done.

By Friday, I'm wondering where the week went and where I lost the time.

And by Saturday, even though it's a weekend, my mind is straying back to work and preparing itself for Monday.

So what's on the list?

All the even chapters of The Phoenix or fifteen chapters. This is first and foremost. And I started on it yesterday afternoon and wrote until my brain shut off at 9:30 p.m. (but I did have an extremely short night of sleep Thursday into Friday).

Finish formatting Lycanthropic Summer. Since I want to release it by October 1, this is important

Finish the last two chapters of Cornell Dyer and the Old Folks Home and copy edit it. My goal is three books a year. I'm just on the first one. So I'm way behind.

Finish formatting WriteOn Joliet's fourth anthology. This is even more first and foremost than The Phoenix.

Get the content Rebekah needs for a new website. Can't move forward without this. Better make it a priority.

Get Rebekah the photos she needs for the new Bertrand book. The goal is three a year. We released one last year. Again, way behind.

Wish me luck. I'm gonna need it.

(First side note: Why do I do this? Especially since, you know, I'm a local self-published author with a handful of readers. Well, I do it for the readers. This is paramount, and I'm very serious. If just one person wants to read it, I want to write it. Second, it develops me as a writer, which is useful for my work writing, the most important writing I will ever write. Third, it develops my imagination, which I think keeps me creative and mentally young. Both are traits for a good life, I think).

(Second side note: An interview with this very talented artist of the illustration will be coming the week after the retreat. And she, along with my other artists, are available for hire).

(Third note: Please excuse any typos, please and thank you).







Friday, August 21, 2020

Story Round-Up: Features in The Herald-News, Aug. 8 through Aug. 21

Good morning!

I have twenty-three stories to share so I will keep commentary to a minimum.

I didn't post a roundup last week because I was still struggling in the aftermath of the derecho (uneven electrical power and internet).

Today I am wrapping up some work stories because I'm off work until a week from Monday as I  have vacation time I have to use. Since I can't go to Raleigh and visit family (Falls Lake, I'm looking at you, too), I am taking an in-home writing retreat.

I did a similar retreat a couple years ago when I couldn't justify the outrageous airfare. Last time I stayed off social media and concentrated only writing (like sixteen hours at a time for over a week - this was not fun).

This year, because my topic matter is so dark, I'll most likely pop in and out of social media I don't think it's healthy, frankly, to stay in a dark place for that many hours for that many days on purpose, even for the sake of "great art." (wink).

OK, that's enough from me.

Keep scrolling to find all the place I hang out online.

Below that, are the stories. Pick and choose what interests you. Of course, I hope they all interest you.

Have a great Friday!



Non-bylined features:

Search by topic (people, pets, A and E, faith, health, and food) at theherald-news.com.

Once a week, I do combine a week's worth into a single blog post.

Social media:

Daily updates: I do post the briefs on Twitter during the week, so you're welcome to follow me at @Denise_Unland61.

BryonySeries stuff: I post curated content relating to the BryonySeries at @BryonySeries. And assorted related content at www.facebook.com/BryonySeries.

And of course, please follow the adventures of Bertrand the Mouse on Instagram at bertrand_bryonyseries.

If you're a writer anywhere in the world, you're welcome to join WriteOn Joliet's Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/groups/writeonminooka/?ref=bookmarks. We're based in Joliet, Illinois, but we love to meet and interact with writers outside our area, too.

If you'd like to officially join WriteOn Joliet, we have two tiers of dues. We also have a marketing arm that's getting longer with each year. Check us out at writeonjoliet.com.

Upcoming BryonySeries events:

A full month of virtual events can be found at bryonyseries.com/fetes-and-feasts

Books and Such

Information on my books (including where to buy) along with upcoming events is at bryonyseries.com.

Newsletters:

Sign up for the Will County Go Guide

http://www.theherald-news.com/newsletter/will-county-go-guide/#//


Sign up for the LocalLit Short Story Newsletter

http://www.theherald-news.com/newsletter/locallit/


Sign up for The Munsonville Times

https://www.bryonyseries.com/munsonville-times

Questions?

Email me at bryonyseries@gmail.com.

Thank you for reading The Herald-News. And for reading this blog. And if you've read (or plan to read) any of my books. Your support is greatly appreciated.


Family of special needs Joliet West teen desperately needs a new van 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/19/family-of-special-needs-joliet-west-teen-desperately-needs-a-new-van/adzoebq/


LocalLit book spotlight: 'Lost in Peter's Tomb'

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/06/locallit-book-spotlight-lost-in-peters-tomb/akx542x/

And the review

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/09/locallit-book-review-lost-in-peters-tomb/ae5se2z/


Bringing veterans together while keeping them apart
Free monthly event in Manhattan pays respect to those who served

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/06/bringing-veterans-together-while-keeping-them-apart/albq4yk/


Joliet honors the city's most outstanding yards 

https://www.theherald-news.com/lists/2020/08/06/bc04983611c441bbbc5b88dce5af9077/index.xml?page=1


Former Homer Glen resident won #Emmy for work on 'The Kelly Clarkson Show' 

https://www.theherald-news.com/lists/2020/08/07/a8317623f2914dc495913cf7f8b5c0f7/index.xml?page=1


Pets of the Week: Aug.11

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/06/pets-of-the-week-aug-11/djw8bx1/


LocalLit book spotlight: 'Into the Hidden Lands'

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/12/locallit-book-spotlight-into-the-hidden-lands/aci5yb0/

And its review

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/17/locallit-book-review-into-the-hidden-lands/a4jgqaw/


An Extraordinary Life: 'He gave up his band for his family'
Joliet man exemplified faithfulness to the end

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/09/he-gave-up-his-band-for-his-family/dsvcxfc/


"Residents 'of every color imaginable' gather to clean up storm debris in Joliet subdivision"

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/11/residents-of-every-color-imaginable-gather-to-clean-up-storm-debris-in-joliet-subdivision/d7e9vb/


Plainfield store gave away hundreds of boxes of free produce in 90 minutes 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/12/plainfield-store-gave-away-hundreds-of-boxes-of-free-produce-in-90-minutes/d65gbc6/


Brooding about covid? Shred instead
Joliet bank hosting 2nd annual shred day to bring people together

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/12/brooding-about-covid-shred-instead/aa8x0em/


An Extraordinary Life: 'She would not watch TV without picking up her needles'

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/14/an-extraordinary-life-she-would-not-watch-tv-without-picking-up-her-needles/d4bz34l/


Joliet woman rescues baby squirrel displaced by Monday's derecho

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/14/joliet-woman-rescues-baby-squirrel-displaced-by-mondays-derecho/abcvlgj/


Pets of the Week: Aug. 17

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/14/pets-of-the-week-aug-17/d3ktwmy/


"Photos: Derecho devastation on Joliet's west side"

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/10/photos-derecho-devastation-on-joliets-west-side/dhwzvk0/


A really sweet story I wrote for The Herald-News


Despite unrest in Chicago, 'No one is going to go hungry' at Ronald McDonald House
House near Lurie's was not shot, staff and food was on-site that night

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/12/despite-unrest-in-chicago-no-one-is-going-to-go-hungry-at-ronald-mcdonald-house/alaanyi/


Joliet cancer patient celebrated his 2nd birthday at home after all

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/11/joliet-cancer-patient-celebrated-his-2nd-birthday-at-home-after-all/d4a0b3r/


Joliet toddler with cancer missed 2nd birthday at home due to Chicago riots
Discharge from Chicago hospital delayed, great-grandma says

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/10/joliet-toddler-with-cancer-missed-2nd-birthday-at-home-due-to-chicago-riots/a5q9sad/


Mystery Diner: McWethy's Tavern in Romeoville will keep you coming back for more

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/17/mcwethys-tavern-in-romeoville-will-keep-you-coming-back-for-more/dculx4y/


"Couple 'devastated' about losing home, cats, photographs in Joliet explosion"
State fire marshal spokesman had no information on investigation of incident

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/19/couple-devastated-about-losing-home-cats-photographs-in-joliet-explosion/ayrwnrn/



Illustration by Matt Coundiff for "Visage."

Thursday, August 20, 2020

BryonySeries Throwback Thursday: The Upside of a Crisis

Stumbled upon this post from two years ago...


Tuesday, August 14, 2018

The Upside of a Crisis


Lately, I've been sifting through the drafts folder of this blog, looking at posts partly begun or, more the case, studying titles that are nothing more than titles and wondering about my intent.

This is one I titled on Oct. 14, 2010. And the other day, I stumbled upon this Bible verse:

 "Though the fig tree should not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines, the produce of the olive fail and the fields yield no food, the flock be cut off from the fold and there be no herd in the stalls,  yet I will rejoice in the Lord; I will take joy in the God of my salvation." Habakkuk 3:17-18

I can't say exactly what I intended to write that day. But I can certainly guess...and perhaps guess why this post was never written.

In August of that month, I had my eighth surgery (I've had six C/sections, one adrenalectomy, and the eighth to repair damage from the other seven). Recovery was fine for a couple weeks and then I had a HUGE flareup of hives (I've had chronic hives since 2002).

It sounds simple, but it wasn't. First of all, it's a chronic immune disorder, and I can't describe how awful the combinations of chemicals being released in one's body feels. I remember a nurse at one point taking my blood pressure and backing off a bit, because she could "feel" them.

A couple different medications were added to the regime. My body reacted pretty badly to them, and they didn't help the hives. Right around Oct. 14, could even have been Oct. 14, in the late afternoon, my doctor decided to hospitalize me.

I called my husband to tell him, and he said he was just going to call me. He had lost his job. And he wasn't laid off.

His job was half our income. And our insurance would be gone in two weeks. We had two weeks to figure out my health issue (which took another two months). He never did get another job; and we eventually lost the house his parents had built.
  
We've done a lot of rebuilding since then.

But during that time, when our fig tree didn't blossom, and we didn't have fruit on our vines, and the produce of everything we had built on that property (including the places we remodeled and added to accommodate a youth group we ran for four years) stopped yielding, and our fields (and sometimes our cupboards and refrigerator) had little food, and we were cut off from our folds, and our herd of cats went to live in a small apartment, we never NOT rejoiced in the Lord.

Some days, rejoicing in the Lord was all we had to rejoice in.

We...I...didn't think about it that way at the time. It was a dark time. I remember telling one son how good God was to prepare us for death by giving us little deaths and losses along the way...

But seeing this verse brought that time to my attention in a particular way. Even when everything (and everyone) else fails us, we can still in the Lord, we can take joy in the God of our salvation.

That is the upside of a crisis.

Illustration by Matt Counfiff for "Visage."

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

No Reach Too Small (or How These Words Made a Big Impact)

...and came full circle, too).

Back in February, my oldest daughter Sarah, who now lives in North Carolina, called me and asked if I could write a story on a Joliet toddler that was just diagnosed with cancer.

Sarah knew the aunt and gave me the phone number. I wrote a story and included the GoFundMe link.

The story was so heart-wrenching, I wrote a second.

And when the GoFundMe page stalled this summer, I wrote another in early July.

This past week, due to exceptional circumstances in the toddler's life, I wrote four more.

After the first of the four, the toddler's mom called me. Chicago media had seen the stories and reached out to her. Overnight the GoFundMe account doubled - and then nearly doubled again a couple days later.

In under a week, the account had grown from $20,000 to nearly $75,000. Most of that, I'm certain, was a result of the Chicago coverage.

But my coverage led to the Chicago coverage. And I'm thrilled to be part of the chain that led to it.

Now I'll tell you about the fourth story. A mother emailed me last Frudat. Her daughter wanted to donate any money that would have been spent on her eighth birthday to the toddler.

This family did not know Sarah, and why would they?

But ironically, they were from North Carolina. The mom had seen the story on Twitter.

So about the stories...

I found the Fox News link so I'm adding it here.

Next I'll add the links to the stories I wrote, most recent to oldest.

Finally, I'll add the GoFundMe link.

The family will need help for a long time. Please consider donating.

The takeaway? 

For those who speak, for those who write: words have reach, words have power.

Your words can be the words someone really needs to hear today.

Or they can be the words someone really does not need to hear today.

There is a time to use words and a time for silence.

But even if your reach is only inches, and you have an important message to say, don't squelch it.

For you never know where those words will travel and whom they will touch, inspire, motivate, encourage, or maybe even shame or discourage, if the intention is for good.

So much attention is given to "viral" and "famous" and "the most."

But "small" and "still" can do mighty things, too.

I was reminded of that last week.

Have a most blessed day!


Parents of 2-year-old cancer patient in Chicago speak out after looters smash door, ransack Ronald McDonald House



A really sweet story I wrote for The Herald-News


Despite unrest in Chicago, 'No one is going to go hungry' at Ronald McDonald House
House near Lurie's was not shot, staff and food was on-site that night

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/12/despite-unrest-in-chicago-no-one-is-going-to-go-hungry-at-ronald-mcdonald-house/alaanyi/


Joliet cancer patient celebrated his 2nd birthday at home after all

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/11/joliet-cancer-patient-celebrated-his-2nd-birthday-at-home-after-all/d4a0b3r/


Joliet toddler with cancer missed 2nd birthday at home due to Chicago riots
Discharge from Chicago hospital delayed, great-grandma says

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/10/joliet-toddler-with-cancer-missed-2nd-birthday-at-home-due-to-chicago-riots/a5q9sad/


Whatever happened to baby Owen?
Joliet toddler still waging the cancer war - and he's not even 2 yet

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/07/08/whatever-happened-to-baby-owen/aqjuntl/


'It's all over his body'
Joliet family staying positive as their toddler battles cancer

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/02/24/its-all-over-his-body/dyjrfsc/


'He was always a happy and smiling baby'
Joliet toddler fighting tumor, family needs financial help

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/02/08/he-was-always-a-happy-and-smiling-baby/db5ec9m/


Help for baby Owen Buell and his Family

https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-for-baby-owen-and-his-family



Photo by Matt Coundiff for "Visage."

Monday, August 17, 2020

How About Some Positive News?

It was a long, hot, dark week for many people in the Will County area after a derecho rippedf up trees and caused power outages for hundreds of thousands of people.

But now that life is getting back to normal, it's not only good to give thanks for all those who worked hard to restore that normalcy, it's also good to remember the great things that are happening in the local community.

For readers of this blog who don't live around here: look for the good in your community today. It's there.

For any readers of this blog: thank you for checking in all week while electricity and internet was iffy. I returned to this blog today to an extraordinary amount of views. I'm truly humbled.

Here's a quick excerpt from last Monday's blog. Could truer words been spoken?

Life isn't always served in neat packages to our liking.

But it's still a new day in a new week full of new opportunities.

For me, new opportunities for writing.

For being kind.

For addressing the health challenges of another.

For who knows what?

Because the day is still uncharted.

And none of that takes away from the above accomplishments. It feels good to start a project, it feels great to finish it.

Welcome, Monday!


Donate school supplies for students this Tuesday in Plainfield 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/12/donate-school-supplies-for-students-this-tuesday-in-plainfield/aqfwnns/


Plainfield Park District photo contest celebrates dog days of summer

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/07/28/plainfield-park-district-photo-contest-celebrates-dog-days-of-summer/afgtuvz/


Workforce Center of Will County held drive-thru job fair

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/07/31/workforce-center-of-will-county-holds-drive-thru-job-fair/aqiml2u/


Follow these tips to safely wear a face mask 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/03/follow-these-tips-to-safely-wear-a-facemask/aptrrk/


Will County forest preserve issues canine casting call for 2021 dog park calendar 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/03/will-county-forest-preserve-issues-canine-casting-call-for-2021-dog-park-calendar/auzd7va/


Abri Credit Union and Enterprise Car Sales donate to Joliet service agencies 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/07/30/abri-credit-union-and-enterprise-car-sales-donate-to-joliet-service-agencies/dsp87d6/


Joliet-area youth orchestra holding virtual audtions for 2020-2021, announces new music director 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/04/joliet-area-youth-orchestra-holding-virtual-audtions-for-2020-2021-announces-new-music-director/aq6cowp/


Frankfort appoints new utilities director

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/05/frankfort-appoints-new-utilities-director/aqcfevo/


Joliet West HOSA students Lucy Magat and Paola Castro Zuniga take top 10 at ILC

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/07/28/joliet-west-hosa-students-lucy-magat-and-paola-castro-zuniga-take-top-10-at-ilc/ad6nbpn/


D. 202 to extend free 'grab and go' meals through Aug. 26 at Plainfield locations 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/03/d-202-to-extend-free-grab-and-go-meals-through-aug-26-at-plainfield-locations/aphdkpl/


Plainfield Park District program bridges gap until start of school 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/10/plainfield-park-district-program-bridges-gap-until-start-of-school/agews15/


Illustration by Kathleen Rose Van Pelt for "Bryony."

Monday, August 10, 2020

Aren't You Excited?

Sort of?


I have no idea what I was thinking when I wrote the this title and first two words.

But I found it this morning in blogger's draft folder. It's dated 2011.

On the other had, "excited" is the mood this morning as I'm feeling accomplishment everywhere.

I finished Lycanthropic Summer over the weekend and began its formatting. Artwork is drafted.

All manuscripts have been returned to clients (four are in progress) for their revisions.

Phyllis' memoir is done, and payment was received. This was a huge, two-year project, and the amount of satisfaction is huge.

I worked for a few hours yesterday and that was extremely productive as I'm now ahead of myself this morning (very unusual for a Monday).

I've scheduled an at-home writing retreat for the week of August 23 since I have vacation time to use.  I took a couple of those two years ago and made wonderful writing progress with the last installment of Before The Blood. My goal is huge (two chapters in The Phoenix a day) but I'll settle for one per day.

Since I'm working this weekend, I hope to finish the six book in The Adventures of Cornell Dyer this Thursday (which will be Saturday) and the following Tuesday (which will be Sunday) so the decks are cleared for the retreat.

Ditto for WriteOn Joliet's fourth anthology, which is nearly formatted.

For anyone reading this blog: I hope you have plenty of reasons to be excited this Monday morning, too.

It's a new day in a new week full of new opportunities.

If your Monday is challenging, I hope enough blessings, even small ones, appear in your horizon to fill you with hope.

These blessings fill me with hope, too. One son was tested for covid over the weekend and another was in the ER with a serious infection in his bloodstream, which we're watching very carefully.

But life isn't always served in neat packages to our liking.

But it's still a new day in a new week full of new opportunities.

For me, new opportunities for writing.

For being kind.

For addressing the health challenges of another.

For who knows what?

Because the day is still uncharted.

And none of that takes away from the above accomplishments. It feels good to start a project, it feels great to finish it.

Welcome, Monday!

Illustration by Kathleen Rose Van Pelt for "Bryony."




Saturday, August 8, 2020

Steward Setback Saturday: The Epic Limerick (so far)


It's been a year and a half since Ed Calkins, Steward of Tara, sent the third installment to the epic limerick he's writing, which takes Staked! into realms I never considered.

Of course, Ed is busying writing his first novel (Ruthless), the epic limerick will just have to go to the back of the newspaper delivery van.

For anyone looking for a bit of nonsense to de-stress from the week, well, epic limericks don't get more nonsensical than this.



For those needing to catch up, here are the links to parts one and two:



For those who have no idea who Ed Calkins is, read this primer:


And, of course, I am MOMI (Mistress of My Immortality)

For your amusement, I've included the installment along with the contents of Ed's most recent telegram. And the "panel" which he refers at the end has to do with the 2019 Calkins Day event.



Dear MOMI,

   
I promise this thing has an ending somewhere but right now, I'm feeling a little like Capt. O' Windfree. This unfinished 'epic poem' has been sitting on my hard drive and I've been telling myself to ignore it and it will go away. It hasn't. I then tell myself, 'just finish it by getting to the point', but there is no point.

The poet tries to blame a Muse

Twelve Muses cast their craft willy-nilly
But this epic has gone from unlikely to silly
Seems I met number thirteen
And she’s making me scream
Cause she’s pulling me by what’s behind my own willy

Seems she’s the very muse of derange
Of two meetings she has put in my range
Both on O’Windfree’s own ship
But her pulling, I can’t skip
Here’s where the whole tale starts to get strange

Next morning, O’Windfree told the crew
Of the new plan that Ed already knew
A place called Egypt they were near
Which would trade their wares for beer
But the next part he didn’t have a clue

(Before the recovery movement or 12 step programs, self help groups were very different
The captain and crew have their Tuesday night meeting about their strange diet).

But when the foursome where away for awhile
Captain and crew had a meeting quite vile
See, the Irish have an affliction
We are prone to addiction
All while floating down the river of denial

Said the Captain, “Welcome to the non-cannibal meeting.
“We reassure each other and there plenty of seating,
that they will remember in song
that we did nothing wrong
But we also must choose who next we are eating”

“I should start this meeting with good news
None here at this meeting will draw straws and lose
Both the captain and crew
Have delivered two new
And for our next meal between the two we choose.”

“Look, If we were thieves, we would rob them
If we were from Sodom we’d nob them
And I hope to make plain
That each should explain
how we don’t have a people-eating problem”

“I’ll go first cause I’m feeling quite shoddy
I brought the women name “O” who’s a hottie.
She’s both funny and sweet
But I see her as meat
But I not the first to only want her body.”

I’ll go next cause I’m Jim the first mate
Let’s remember how we got this fate
Lost at sea for thirty days
With out food or any ways
To fish for food without nets or bait

“The next week we tried anything that we could
Rats, bedbugs, leather, cloth, flies, and even wood.
But Matt’s life starvation halted
And It’s he that should be faulted
Because when we ate he tasted so good”

Then each one here and not had agreed
That empty bellies, thirty days didn’t need.
And as soon as Matt’s meat
The whole crew finished to eat
We would draw straws on who next to feed.

After the next meal we did the fleet proud
By deciding that eating crew was allowed
Since then all agreed with our law
Expect the one drawing the short straw.
Gees there always just one in a crowd

THEN KIRK SHARES HIS 'NOT A CANNIBAL' IDEA

It’s not my name but they call me ‘Cannibal Kirk’.
It’s not true but I’m known as a jerk
But my public service,
Makes the lazy nervous.
I only eat people who wouldn’t be showing for work.

BOB GOES NEXT

My name’s Bob and I’m not being malicious
But of the losers complaining I’m suspicious
They say they’re not into vore
And they’d like to live more
But then why did they get so delicious

THEN THE COOK HAS HIS OWN IDEA

I’m Chef David and you don’t have a clue
Cause I’m different and smarter then all you
With your life chances you took
But you wouldn’t cook the cook
If a short straw I draw you’ll all want to redo

So I’ll tell you the of our food inventory
It’s a plain tail that tells the whole story
Tomorrow part of a thigh
And tonight, kidney pie
And it the last of meat from young Laurie

Perhaps two days is too far to look ahead
Future meals you don’t worry about when you’re fed
With the planning I cursed by
More cooking fat has the first guy.
The one the uneatable wood sprite call Uncle Ed

MEANWHILE, A MORE IMPORTANT MEETING...

 While the crew talked of who they’d be eating
The remaining had their own book club meeting.
They discussed far future writing
And found three so exciting
That they made “O” list for future summer reading

The cliff hanger is; what three books got chosen?
                                                          

Ruthlessly Yours,
                                                          Ed Calkins
P.S, I look forward to being on the panel the next Calkins day




Friday, August 7, 2020

Story Round-Up: Features in The Herald-News, Aug. 1 through Aug. 7

I'm singing my usual Friday refrain this morning: "I'm already behind, I'm already behind."

It's been a full week, a fun week, a productive week, and yet, it always feels like it's not been productive enough. Ever get that feeling?

Here's a quick point by point recap:

Work writing/editing: I have fifteen pieces to share with you this morning on a wide variety of topics. Scroll through the links, choose the ones that interest you. Of course, i hope they all interest you...

Projects: Phyllis' memoir is officially signed, sealed and delivered.

I have one last chapter to edit in the second round of a non-fiction project for one client, which I hope to finish later today.

A good friend/partner in writing "stuff," is giving another client's novel a read to catch any lingering errors I might have missed (after three rounds of editing, I'm typo blind).

Two more clients are working on their last rounds of edits.

Fiction: I'm hoping to finish Lycanthropic Summer tomorrow so I can give it a good read next Thursday (I'm off because I'm working the weekend). Then off to editing it goes!

I also hope to make good progress on Cornell Dyer and the Old Folks Home tonight.

What about The Phoenix? I have a week of later vacation this month that I've turned into an in-home writing retreat (the first of two for this year). Since I can't go to Raleigh, I'll go to Munsonville.

Aaaaaand: Working on the fourth anthology for WriteOn Joliet.

Have a wonderful Friday: readers, writers, and BryonySeries fans.


Non-bylined features:

Search by topic (people, pets, A and E, faith, health, and food) at theherald-news.com.

Once a week, I do combine a week's worth into a single blog post.

Social media:

Daily updates: I do post the briefs on Twitter during the week, so you're welcome to follow me at @Denise_Unland61.

BryonySeries stuff: I post curated content relating to the BryonySeries at @BryonySeries. And assorted related content at www.facebook.com/BryonySeries.

And of course, please follow the adventures of Bertrand the Mouse on Instagram at bertrand_bryonyseries.

If you're a writer anywhere in the world, you're welcome to join WriteOn Joliet's Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/groups/writeonminooka/?ref=bookmarks. We're based in Joliet, Illinois, but we love to meet and interact with writers outside our area, too.

If you'd like to officially join WriteOn Joliet, we have two tiers of dues. We also have a marketing arm that's getting longer with each year. Check us out at writeonjoliet.com.

Upcoming BryonySeries events:

A full month of virtual events can be found at bryonyseries.com/fetes-and-feasts

Books and Such

Information on my books (including where to buy) along with upcoming events is at bryonyseries.com.

Newsletters:

Sign up for the Will County Go Guide

http://www.theherald-news.com/newsletter/will-county-go-guide/#//


Sign up for the LocalLit Short Story Newsletter

http://www.theherald-news.com/newsletter/locallit/


Sign up for The Munsonville Times

https://www.bryonyseries.com/munsonville-times

Questions?

Email me at bryonyseries@gmail.com.

Thank you for reading The Herald-News. And for reading this blog. And if you've read (or plan to read) any of my books. Your support is greatly appreciated.


Joliet-area hospitals see few COVID-19 patients despite rise in cases 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/07/30/joliet-area-hospitals-see-few-covid-19-patients-despite-rise-in-cases/afprfx5/


Why was that helicopter hovering over St. Joe's in Joliet? 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/07/30/why-was-that-helicopter-hovering-over-st-joes-in-joliet/dqv925z/


LocalLit book spotlight: 'Heart Strings: Forever Wanderer' by Holly Coop of Joliet

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/07/29/locallit-book-spotlight-heart-strings-forever-wanderer-by-holly-coop-of-joliet/arc7ifn/


And the review:

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/02/locallit-book-review-heart-strings-forever-wanderer-by-holly-coop-of-joliet/ajbgvr/


VIDEO: Joliet church helps low-income residents by paying for their laundry

https://www.theherald-news.com/video/id/564cd015-3947-4e07-a53b-286bfc7ca6da.html


An Extraordinary Life: Joliet man was true friend and a walking internet of knowledge
'He wanted nothing more than to be there for you'

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/02/an-extraordinary-life-joliet-man-was-true-friend-and-a-walking-internet-of-knowledge/af7rbcb/


Fire and looting can't keep this little Joliet store down

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/03/fire-and-looting-cant-keep-this-little-joliet-store-down/dev8skz/


Joliet church helps low-income residents by paying for their laundry 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/02/joliet-church-helps-low-income-residents-by-paying-for-their-laundry/dsn2ymm/


Pets of the Week: Aug. 3

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/07/31/pets-of-the-week-aug-3/ds4rqm0/


Could Illinois' next poet laureate hail from Will County?

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/03/could-illinois-next-poet-laureate-hail-from-will-county/at06lq6/


The coronavirus taketh away but the Lord giveth right back

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/03/the-coronavirus-taketh-away-but-the-lord-giveth-right-back/dhv4j00/


"Will County's interim board member doesn't 'push away' from challenges
'You jump on it and do whatever you have to do to meet that challenge.'"

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/04/will-countys-interim-board-member-doesnt-push-away-from-challenges/abdv6jf/


Plainfield mosque adapts to the coronavirus
'You come in, you do the service and you go home'

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/04/plainfield-mosque-adapts-to-the-coronavirus/diuottq/


'Minorities are in great need of organ transplants' - here's how to help 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/05/minorities-are-in-great-need-of-organ-transplants-heres-how-to-help/allrf8i/


Going to Thorntons? You must now wear a facemask 

https://www.theherald-news.com/2020/08/04/going-to-thorntons-you-must-now-wear-a-facemask/a8w39w9/



Illustration by Matt Coundiff for "Visage."