| Seeking Elora An indie novelist muses about writing, society, and the arts. | | by | |
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Item Size: 572 Entries Created: 9:15pm on 01-03-2007 Modified: 10:26am on 01-16-2010 | |
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![Silent Night [#1628279]
ornament on porch](http://www.Writing.Com/main/trans.gif) ![Silent Night [#1628279]
ornament on porch](http://images.writing.com/main/images/action/display/ver/1261260709/item_id/1628279.jpg)
CNote images - free to send off-site: " Ornament Greetings" 
(photos rotate)
"Maybe Christmas, the Grinch thought, doesn't come from a store."
Theodore Geisel
I'm rather eclectic ... an indie but fairly conservative, somewhat opinionated but open to intelligent discussion, and a rule-follower unless I feel the need to break them for good reason. You never know what you might find. I generally don't know what I'll write here until I sit down to do it.
Elora is Latin for light. I'm a light-seeker. Elora is my muse.
This is my second blog at WDC. You'll find the first here:
" Avant-Garde Aspirations"
"How vain it is to sit down to write when you have not stood up to live."
~Henry David Thoreau
My December Writing.com activities:
creating Christmas CNotes!
What I'm currently reading:
Thin Ice by Liana Laverentz
Always Looking Up by Michael J. Fox
A Night In Twisted River by John Irving
Keeping Faith by Joyce Carol Oates
Pumpkinnapper by Linda Banche
The Death of Adam by Marilynne Robinson
Short Book Reviews: " Reading Notes" 
Highlighted Items:
"On Our Own: Indie-publishing Group" by Voxxylady
"Indie Publishing: Method and Madness" by Voxxylady
"Computer Savvy? Novice? Just Need Help?" by vivacious
"Invalid Item" by A Guest Visitor
"If this work seems so threatening, this is because it isn't simply eccentric or strange, but competent, rigorously argued, and carrying conviction."
Jacques Derrida
My Website: 
http://www.lkhunsaker.com
"Be yourself.
Above all, let who you are, what you are, what you believe,
shine through every sentence you write, every piece you finish."
John Jakes
![Animated Tree 06 [#1190260]
original animation](http://www.Writing.Com/main/trans.gif)
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| 5. and so this is fall and the G20 is upon us | ID #669074 |
| Posted: 9-24-2009 @ 11:07 am EDT |
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So far the only difference here is the falling leaves.
It's fall now. But here in western PA, as in many other states, summer never fully arrived, blending spring into fall without much change. A few warm days that couldn't quite be called HOT sneaked through. It made a lot of us ask just where our local warming was, never mind global.
But these things revolve. They have through the centuries. Climate change is one of the few constants and nothing we do will change that.
And so the G20 is here in Pittsburgh.
Can I say I'm glad I'm not closer to it than I am? The city's been closed, to all extent. Windows are boarded by businesses afraid of protestors. No one except the "authorized" will be getting in or out for the next couple of days. I don't at all blame them. I'm also a bit concerned about the events of the next two days again being so close to home. There is too much anger here right now. I think a country that is more happy with us because of our ... lower world leadership stance of the moment ... would have been a better call for this summit. Pittsburgh? Does anyone realize how small Pittsburgh is? We couldn't even find an open hotel after a rock concert recently. Of course DC isn't big, either, but they are set up for this kind of thing. I just moved away from all that a couple of years ago and now they're bringing it here. Guess you can run but...
Photos from Pittsburgh residents in ready for the summit:
http://kdka.com/slideshows/Pittsburghers.G20.Summit.20.1205240.html
Pittsburgh was chosen because its economy has remained one of the best in the nation in recent times, and because of their "green" technology. I can't help thinking it's more green now because most of the steel mills it's known for have closed. But that's just a common person's outlook and doesn't matter much. Never mind we have the capability right here of producing steel instead of importing it. Never mind the reasons we aren't doing that. But the G20 is in Pittsburgh because it's greener.
Yes, well...
The economy has remained stable because it became flexible. It moved on to technology oriented business. Our tech pres is happy with that. Of course, tech business requires workers with education more than workers with labor skill and the willingness for hard physical work. I'm curious. Where did they go? What are they doing now? Sure, Pittsburgh is still grooving in tech, but what was the payoff?
I don't know. I've been sick for more than 2 weeks and feverish so maybe none of this is pertinent enough to blog about. But I don't value tech more than labor. I don't see how replacing one with the other is so good for us. Truth be told, I'm more attracted to and inspired by those who work with their hands in combination with their minds, who aren't glorified in business suits and briefcases but who wear real work clothes and keep more running than computers.
I guess I am a true romantic at heart. A man who looks like a man and works like a man geared in jeans and workshirt and sporting muscles earned from labor instead of a gym is incredibly appealing. A guy in a business suit clean cut coming out of a health club? Not so much.
This romantic realism writer would much rather go cruise Pittsburgh on a normal day when people are at their best doing normal everyday things than now with the "rich and powerful world leaders" cluttering up the city and barricading it.
*sigh*
Don't let them get to you, Pittsburgh. Let it blow over and move along.
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| 4. About Blogging: by Jane Friedman | ID #667709 |
| Posted: 9-14-2009 @ 1:21 pm EDT |
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"For fiction writers and poets, blog should exercise your creative muscles and let you write in an unpressured way. Sometimes it can help you stumble on insights, as well as new friendships. However, for an aspiring writer, you have to be careful it doesn't detract or replace the "real" work of writing the book or the manuscript."
http://blog.writersdigest.com/norules/2009/09/14/ShouldYouBlogAndIfSoWhatAreBest...
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| 3. Pentagon September 2001 | ID #667365 |
| Posted: 9-11-2009 @ 3:46 pm EDT |
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![Pentagon September 2001 [#1598934]
about a week after September 11th](http://www.Writing.Com/main/trans.gif) ![Pentagon September 2001 [#1598934]
about a week after September 11th](http://images.writing.com/main/images/action/display/ver/1252698255/item_id/1598934.jpg)
My photo.
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| 2. Longevity: a weekend blog contest | ID #666415 |
Posted: 9-4-2009 @ 10:21 am EDT Edited: 9-5-2009 @ 4:05 pm EDT |
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Abraham Lincoln: "You can't make a weak man strong by making a strong man weak."
Anyone up for a flash fiction contest?
It's my birthday as well as WDC's birthday and I'm giving the gift -- a merit badge for a well-thought-out and well-written mini story or essay relating to the quote and to longevity. Post the item link here in my comments. 1,000 words max. No higher than 18+
Runs through WDC time Sunday, midnight. Extended to Monday midnight since it's Labor Day weekend!
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| 1. So It's September | ID #666069 |
| Posted: 9-1-2009 @ 8:46 pm EDT |
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WDC is 9, I'm ... a year older in a few days, and my account is nearly 7 years old!
Fall arrived early here in Pennsylvania. To be honest, it's mainly been either spring or fall most of the year. We didn't get much summer. But then, it's been a crazy year - not the norm. So they say. Let's hope.
In a couple of weeks, I'll be hitting last edits and early promo hard. First, I'm birthday bashing. I haven't been very active here on the site, but I have been considering how best to start giving back, specifically how to share the writing and publishing knowledge I've gained through the 13 years I've been noveling with serious intent. The On Our Own group is wonderful and I'm glad to have so much interest. It's not quite as interactive as I was hoping, so another thought came to mind: a publishing blog.
Here it is:
So far I have only an introductory post up but I'll start sharing my journey with indie publishing, what I've learned and am still learning, mistakes I've made, and where I'm heading next. It's open only to registered WDC authors -- a bit of a gift to the community. Comments are enabled so feel free to ask questions and suggest topics you'd like covered. I would love feedback by other authors who have taken the 'do it yourself' route with their books. I'd also be glad to host guest authors there. Let me know if you have interest.
This week is also the grand opening of Classic Romance Revival's website! I'm an affiliate author and group moderator there, as well as a reviewer. It's growing fast and gaining views and speed and recognition already, so I have high hopes it will do well. Classic Romance: non-erotic romantic fiction featuring lots of story and little heat between one monogamous couple. Romance has lost a lot of readers because of how graphically intense much of it has become; it's erotica under the term "romance" much too often. We're trying to counter this, to say fine, there's a place for that, but there's also a place for us who don't write so graphically, for those of us who believe in committed relationships and all the glorious charm and heartache and happy endings that go with it. It's a revival of Real Romance.
On Friday, I'll be introducing myself on their blog.
On Thursday, I'll be talking about weeds on my own site blog.
Tomorrow, I go meet the Marching Band and Football Team at my son's school.
Today ... I'm tired. Guess I better go to bed early instead of staying up reading how-to fiction books to brush up on the details of the craft in preparation for my final edit.
Guess I'm getting too old to party hard, so I'll have to settle for Birthday Bashing In Moderation.
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