Tuesday, December 31, 2024
We Missed a Million Views
Thursday, June 27, 2024
The Blogs I Didn't Finish This Week
Good morning!
This morning is super busy, which is leading into a super busy Friday into a super busy working weekend and into a super busy Monday.
June was already packed full and then our family had two emergencies at the top of this week.
I had a blog nearly ready to go for this morning when something unusual in the moth world (I'm told) happened to me yesterday afternoon.
So after a later-ish day of working, I started to write this blog when Jasmine and Rebekah decided we were going to Walt's in Joliet for ice cream.
Jasmine and Rebekah had spent the evening dying BryonySeries shirts for the.July 3 Independence Day celebration at the Billie Limahcer Bicentennial Park and Theatre in Joliet.
Well, a really fun feature story sat behind us and the side trip for ice cream turned out to be a time for taking photos and talking to folks while my ice cream melted (that's currently sitting in the freezer).
I hope to finish next week's blog after work this weekend. The working titles are: July 3, 1998, Baby Shower Pictionary, and the The Luna Moth on my Window.
I hope everyone who took the time to to read these ramblings has a Thursday that's filled with many blessings.
And now - I'm off and running, already behind.
Monday, March 1, 2021
Four Bloggers You Should Check Out Now
Four of my writerly comrades blog on a regular basis - so I check out their blogs on a regular basis.
The styles are very different, ranging from inspirational to slice of life.
The authors' names are Mauverneen (Maureen Blevins), Holly Coop, Ken McGee, and Sue Merrell.
Here are a few snippets from some blogs that I've read and enjoyed. Please check them out.
"I had the privilege of having grandparents who lived on The Farm. Not just a farm, but The Farm. I’ll tell you why."
https://kennethleemcgee.com/the-farm-2/
"The shortest month of the year. That means just a little bit less winter."
https://maureenblevins.blogspot.com/2021/02/positively-february.html
"Dang Those Miserable Masks" by Sue Merrell
https://www.suemerrellbooks.com/2020/09/16/dang-those-miserable-masks/
Since our normal has now become – well, what it has become, with this COVID, I want anything but normalcy in twenty twenty-one.
https://hollycoopauthor.wordpress.com/2021/01/06/normalcy/
The principles of those terms may become a necessity, for surviving our current reality.
https://hollycoopauthor.wordpress.com/2021/01/08/nowadays/
There is no dimension
Nowhere in time or space
That we can ever be hidden
From the light of Your saving grace
So thank you for the sunshine, even when our skies are gray
https://hollycoopauthor.wordpress.com/2021/01/10/worship-and-praise/
A new year wakes as we embark on a new age
Embrace a new concept to live a new way
https://hollycoopauthor.wordpress.com/2021/01/11/moon-wink/
"Practice Trolley Riding"
https://hollycoopauthor.wordpress.com/2021/01/13/practice-trolley-riding/
By taking just a couple minutes more, you can care for yourself just a bit more
https://hollycoopauthor.wordpress.com/2021/01/15/snack-break/
"It's white, and it's wondrous, and, except for the crunching of my boots on the snow, it's silent."
http://maureenblevins.blogspot.com/2021/01/positively-frosted.html
"Notions, Yearnings and Choices"
https://hollycoopauthor.wordpress.com/2021/01/18/notions-yearnings-and-choices/
"Labels"
https://hollycoopauthor.wordpress.com/2021/01/20/labels/
If you think going fast down a mountain in a car is terrifying, try it on a racing bike with skinny tires at speeds approaching sixty miles an hour with the wind blasting your face and bugs splattering your sunglasses.
https://kennethleemcgee.com/adventures-in-cycling-part-1/
"Road Blocks"
https://hollycoopauthor.wordpress.com/2021/01/24/road-blocks/
"Let Go Your Ego"
https://hollycoopauthor.wordpress.com/2021/01/29/let-go-your-ego/
"The Junior Class Carnival (and Other Important High School Activities)"
https://kennethleemcgee.com/the-junior-class-carnival-and-other-important-high-school-activities/
Pictured are Kenneth Lee McGee (left) Mauverneen (Maureen) Blevins (top), Sue Merrell, (bottom), and Holly Coop.
Monday, January 4, 2021
Random Bursts of Goodness
Today is my first day back to work, and I'm happy to be back.
In fact, I spent part of yesterday catching up on email and getting organized, so I'm ready to roar (and write) this morning.
Today, I'd like to share some good news that happened in my community during the holidays and some blogs I enjoyed.
And I'd also like to remind you about the BryonySeries Holiday Sale that ends on January 7.
Be sure to check out the photo at the bottom, too, as it's full of "random bursts of goodness."
Happy reading, happy Monday, and happy 2021!
Some good news around the community:
The Irish American Society of County Will shares holiday donations with local food pantries
Joliet Junior College nursing students earned the program’s 2020 Citizenship Award
Central ES physical education teacher brings lesson to life with video
Santa visits Troy schools: Troy students and their families enjoy a drive-thru visit with Santa
And check out these blogs:
"Positively Sneaky Christmas" by Maureen Blevins
"Santa Claus Is Real… I Met Him In Person" by Kenneth Lee McGee
"Finding Joy" by Tom Hernandez
"Snapshot of God" by R. Michael Markley
do you see what I see? By Holly Coop
BryonySeries Holiday Book Sale:
From now until January 7, you will receive a $1 credit to The Book Market for every $5 worth of books you order directly from me. I have approximately twenty titles of books for nearly every age, so perhaps you might find something that interests you (or will interest someone you know).
Timothy even generated some beautiful coupons that we will email to you. A draft is below. I am paying the credit forward to The Book Market, so money only flows toward the store, not away from it.
This year has been a tough year for many people and businesses, especially small businesses and their owners. By working together, we can bring some holiday cheer to this indie bookstore in Crest Hill.
For step-by-step instructions on how to participate, follow this link: bryonyseries.com/promotions.
The blue tea cup is a gift from Sue Midlock, and the tea cup in the foreground is a gift from Timothy. The potpourri is a gift from Rebekah, and BryonySeries artist Christopher Gleason created the BryonySeries music box to its right.
The tall purple box contains a BryonySeries purple rose from Jasmine, and the BryonySeries purple rose under the clear globe by the blue tea cup is a gift from Cindy.
The yellow scroll art was a project I did with Rebekah at Sue's house - with Sue making one for her book Elspeth.
The dresser was sitting beneath the attic stairs in Ron's Channahon home when we moved in and was holding junk. I found new homes for the junk and claimed the dresser. It's come close to falling apart many times, but Timothy always puts it back together.
Thursday, October 1, 2020
It's Not All About Me: Links to Other Blogs I've Read Lately
http://www.writingandtheprocess.com/2020/07/writing-workshop-contributions.html?fbclid=IwAR17kM491ssiCrwBPAjAKZhJlhNZNphopUh_z_WFsTrwRcXHqaRmJ1z9zZY
A blog about the value of relationships by Allison Rios
Then check out this travel blog, written and illustrated by a local author.
Tuesday, March 17, 2020
Thank You, Aaron D. Brinker
Thursday, October 10, 2019
BryonySeries Throwback Thursday: My very first blog post, Aug. 1, 2010
Monday, September 19, 2011
On The Receiving End...Again
Many of us have grown up learning, "Tis Better To Give Than To Receive," and while we, in certain occasions, grumble a bit when giving is called of us (especially when it's related to a person we dislike, a distasteful task, or inconvenient timing), we are still more comfortable doing the giving than the receiving.
It's funny how God shakes that up.
Decades ago, when my oldest children were young, we were poor, "barely making the rent and relying on people sending food boxes," poor. Now I had grown up in an upper middle class home, so the concept of buying garage sales clothes or creating forty different dishes from condensed tomato soup because someone gave you a case of the stuff was foreign to me.
I remember choking down huge amounts of pride with my white bread and powdered milk until the day arrived when four items on my shopping list were packed neatly inside a box of anonymous food donations: a jar of Hellman's mayonnnaise and three child-sized Oral B toothbrushes. Only God knew I needed them, a stark reminder of who really was caring for us.
Then, a dozen years ago, ironically as a single parent, finances looked up. For the first time in my child-rearing years, I was paying all my bills on time. I had money in the bank, was remodeling my house, and didn't freak out every time a child got sick or needed a pair of shoes.
That trend continued after I married my second husband. We worked long, hard hours, but the money we made well compensated for it, enough that we invested quite a bit into our church and founding, running, and funding its youth programs.
Once the recession hit, the budget grew ugly. I thought, "I have lived through lean times. I can do this." And I cut and cut and cut until I had no place left to cut. So, instead of worrying over what I could not control, I tapped into my imagination and wrote a story that had lurked there for over twenty years, "Bryony."
A year ago, my husband lost his job and with it our health insurance. He called to tell just as I was callling him to say I was being admitted into the hospital for a yet undiagnosed disorder.
So, it's been a tough year, but for every challenge, problem, concern, crisis, emergency, we've had an unexpected blessing running parallel to it: prayers, gifts of motivational books AND chocolate, a former pastor sending monetary gifts by mail and our current pastor bring weekly bags of groceries, and new friend also going through a crisis sending a surprise gift at just the right time.
Once again pride stepped in and made the acceptance of that love hard. I shared my difficulty with my pastor, a former salesman that, when he gives a contrived compliment, I in return retort, "I don't need an insurance policy," but he is also a God-fearing man and a friend for more than thirty years. He only quietly said, "Maybe you have inspired some people along the way."
Because of the recession I wrote "Bryony," and because of "Bryony," I've learned more about writing than I ever could have gained otherwise, which sent additional paying gigs knocking at my virtual door. I've also met some kind-hearted, generous individuals that have been equally excited about the project, some of whom I know call friends.
Recently, someone volunteered some additional marketing services and a second person offered to professionally format my manuscripts, all free of charge. With the first, I'm swapping some editing for his book, but the second insists that she doesn't want to trade services; she just wants to something nice for me.
I've asked them both why they reached out to me in this fashion and both said, "Because God told me to do it." So how can I object to that?
"And this same God who takes care of me will supply all your needs from his glorious riches, which have been given to us in Christ Jesus." Philippians 4:19
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Anyone Else Having Trouble With Blogger? (Whine)
I'm hoping it's just a system problem, but I have my doubts because technology and I do not get along. I don't even understand my telephone, but my kids tell me it has a camera and a flashlight. If you text me, I'll answer only if a child is nearby and can text back the answer. At work, I'll be typing along, hit a wrong button, and POOF! my story is deleted, never to be seen again. When my oldest son Christopher, a self-taught computer whiz and the only person I allow to administer my computer, talks about memory and bytes, I just nod my head and sagely smile. No, I don't post pictures on Facebook. Heck, I didn't even set up my Facebook page or my blog. I joke that I need directions for a can opener, but seriously, if someone doesn't show me how to use it (and allow me to practice under a watchful eye), I'll forego the cans.
So, please, make my day. Tell me you're having trouble with Blogger, too.
Monday, August 1, 2011
The BryonySeries Blog Is One Year Old Today!
When I first began the blog, I committed to daily postings, but worried about running out of material. How wrong I was! The more blogs I write and the more auxiliary material I find and post, the more the ideas flow.
In the last year, the BryonySeries blog has covered:
• the editing experience
• the marketing behind the novel
• updates on the auxiliary projects, such as the book trailer, music video, cookbook, and fundraisers for Big Brothers Big Sisters of Will and Grundy Counties
• interviews and glimpses into other members of the Bryony team
• blog postings composed by one of Bryony’s characters, Ed Calkins, the Steward of Tara
• the author’s fictional, Irish genealogy
• informational postings, interviews, and/or video clips on topics related to Bryony: Arabian horses, bats, bryony (the weed), croquet, dandyism and foppery, dreams, fishing, food (Victorian and ‘70’s-style), all things Irish, the language of fans, leeches, leprechauns, limericks, memories, piano music, roses and the meaning of their colors, rowboats, vampires, and Victorian clothing.
We’ve also had a fair amount of guest posters (message us at bryonyseries@gmail.com if you’d like to guest post) and a contest to name the Bryony cookbook.
If you’re new to the BryonySeries blog, check out the tags for topics on past posts or simply select a month and start reading. For additional fun, “like” the Bryony Facebook page (www.facebook.com/BryonySeries). Each day, that page offers additional fun posts, up-to-date information, book quotes and book-related quotes, photos and more.
For those that have followed us the entire year (We’ve passed 11,000 page views), thank you! To the new fans: the fun is just beginning. Stay posted!
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
So, What's on the Writer's Desk This Morning?
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
A Most Profitable Conversation
Back in January, I noticed the Bryony team needed another member. I prayed for guidance, asked God to please deliver, and even checked out a few possiblities, then waited to see if those doors would open or close.
A few weeks ago, someone I had not considered for the role knocked on my virtual door and made the inquiry. Now, although nothing is official yet--since some of it hinges on his finishing Bryony (He's read one-third and likes it so far, but it's early....) and deciding for sure if that's a project for him--we've had one dynamic meeting and a couple of productive phone calls, including the one a few hours ago.
So why am I considering someone I had not approached?
1) He brings some interesting marketing qualities to the table.
2) He's interested in collaborating with the existing Bryony team members.
3) He's followed the Bryony website, blog, Facebook, etc., etc., etc., and so was already familiar with the project.
4) He's proactive. We have a "maybe" deal, but he has already sent out feelers and done some homework.
5) Lastly...and to me, most importantly...he came with three qualities only God could have arranged which, when put together, form something greater than a coincidence. No matter how prepared he was to list the reasons why we should work together, he couldn't have contrived this last. (No, I'm not saying, either, but they concern details from the third book in the Bryony series, first draft completed over a year ago).
Basically, here's how I work. If an opportunity feels like it's coming from God, I trust Him enough to take a chance. If I'm wrong, He'll slam the window shut and open another. God's plan is worth a a few pinched fingers.
"The LORD sees not as man sees; for man looks on the outward appearance, but the LORD looks on the heart." Samuel 16:7.
Monday, April 11, 2011
Bryony Business Cards....
These plastic-coated cards features the Bryony logo, complete with Bryony's signature vines (created by Kathleen Rose Van Pelt (http://www.imaginarylinesstudio.com/), tagline (a drop of blood, a deceptive fantasy), and contact information: website, blog, Facebook page, and email.
THANK YOU Christine at CAL Graphics, Inc. (http://www.calgraphicsinc.com/) for designing a fabulous logo!
Best of all, they cards are FREE!
If you'd like some, contact me at BryonySeries@gmail.com, and I'll send you some.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Sarah Stegall's Thoughts on Bryony, Part 3
"When I created the FB page, I was disappointed because we didn't have a coinciding website to further direct readers. As a reader, when I become interested in a series, I check out all that the series has to offer online. Where was the website? Where was the blog? Ugh, so frustrating."
12) Why was creating the Bryony website important to you?
"I felt I was contributing to getting projects accomplished. In my head I was crossing off my own checklist and I was racking up new experiences left and right. We needed a website and I was eager to learn how to make one."
13) What will people find on the website?
"Mass information involving the team behind the book, additional links directing readers to other sites, interactive pages where they can submit their own short stories, view unique pictures, eventually listen to the theme song and purchase related merchandise, and possibly be able to play different types of games."
14) Why are those elements there?
"To draw readers into the world Denise has created with the Bryony Series and to immerse themselves in all things Bryony. We want readers to be able to get their fill. I don't want anyone left hanging."
15) What else do you hope to add?
"Anything that is demanded. Our site features a guest book where comments and questions can be left. Oh, and games. I have all these nifty ideas for games and nobody that knows how to design them."
Sunday, March 27, 2011
"Every man shall give as he is able." Deuteronomy 16:17
Monday, March 14, 2011
So, Is There Really Going to be a Book?
Monday, March 7, 2011
Will the Real Julie Drake Please Stand Up?
I agreed and asked for the sister’s name and number. I almost dropped the telephone when the voice on the other end said, “Julie Drake,” and proceeded to give me the number.
Of course, I had to tell Julie Drake about Bryony, because one of Melissa’s Munsonville friends is also named Julie Drake. Even more coincidental, the “real” Julie Drake has a husband named David. In later books, Julie’s boyfriend (and, eventually, her husband) is also named David.
“I can’t wait to read this book,” Julie said. “When I thought it was going to come out last December, I had told my two nieces about it because they love to read. When I first met Denise and spoke to her about, I knew we were supposed to meet. It was so comfortable talking with her.”
Recently, Julie agreed to let me interview her for the BryonySeries blog and see how she compares to the fictional Julie Drake, especially since both Julies grew up in the 1970s.
The three-part interview will run Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. The first part is posted here. Parts three and four will be posted Tuesday and Wednesday.
Thursday, March 3, 2011
A Christmas Memory Worse Than Head of Cod
Well, this is a test of the BryonySeries blog system. I'm about to find out if my parents read the blog.
As children, my sister and I enjoyed coloring, and so we owned voluminous amounts of coloring books. Our favorites--and we had many--were Christmas-themed coloring books.
I can't remember just how young my sister and I were the December we were seized with a sudden inspiration, but certainly young enough to not consider the consequences. We decided to fill several of these books and hang our masterpieces on the paneled walls of the finished basement as a Christmas surprise to our parents.
For weeks, we sat at the round play table in that basement, listening to old Christmas records and coloring, coloring, coloring. We carefully pulled the completed pictures from the binding and tucked them away for Christmas morning.
My sister and I had our own tradition of "playing Santa." We would rise in the middle of the night, gather our presents, sneak through the house to the basement, and descend the dark stairs to the tree.
One year, we actually tumbled down the stairs and, surprisingly, woke no one (which could have been bad if we had broken a leg or our necks). An even earlier year, Santa had brought us makeup and tiny transistor radios, which DID wake up our parents. I can still see my father's furious face, scrubbing makeup off my baby sister at 1 a.m.
This Christmas was no different. After we placed our presents around the tree, we began taping our pictures to the wall. We hadn't gone for before we ran out of tape. No matter. We had plenty of Elmer's School Glue.
The next morning, we thought better of it. While my mother cooked breakfast, we dashed downstairs to remove the zillions of pictures and clear all traces of glue from the paneled walls. No one ever knew...until now.
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Branding for Dummies
I ran downstairs to get the morning chores done (what better time than two a.m.?) and returned to find an email from my publicist to the Bryony team about an upcoming a trailer meeting. Confirming a date was the easy part. Then, I read the rest of the message.
Attached to that email were some concepts to ponder-in question format, of course--regarding branding, promotions, marketing, and communications. It was like walking into a pop quiz and quickly remembering you had forgotten to read that chapter.
I had figured once a publicist was on board, I just had to agree with her ideas and show up. She, however, is not letting me off that easy. I guess this means I'm supposed to be part of the process. She even suggested I write a blog post on branding. (Accomplished).
Actually, I see this as a series of blog posts that will give updates on my adventures into the world of marketing, sort of like ye olde school progress reports.
I have two weeks to formulate answers to her questions. Time to dig a new furrow in the aging brain cells, because this is definitely, for me, the untraveled road.
Wish me luck!
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Faithfulness
I laugh and say, "No," then add that the publisher e-mailed me this week and said she might have a better idea of a publication date after this round of edits. Actually, three o'clock in the morning is the perfect time to write vampire stories, but I have newspaper deadlines to meet, so fiction can wait.
As a working, homeschooling mother who's husband just lost his job (along with the medical insurance), it can be dificult to carve the time for the fun writing: i.e. those pieces no one assigned and that, sometimes, no one reads, but me. Also, if I waited until the decks were completely cleared of all duties, well, I wouldn't even be writing this blog.
Of course, I occasionally long for a month-long writing vacation where I can completely focus on a project, with no interuptions. Yet, the older I become, the more I see how being faithful in a certain area actually facilitates another, even one that is unrelated.
More on this tomorrow.







