Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Armchair World Tour with Jill Dobbe


   FORMER WISCONSIN EDUCATOR WRITES MEMOIR ON
LIVING, TEACHING, AND TRAVELING OVERSEAS


HERE WE ARE & THERE WE GO
TEACHING AND TRAVELING WITH KIDS IN TOW

Who says you can’t travel with kids?  My husband, Dan, and I do just that as we set off with our two very young kids, first to live and work on an island far out in the Pacific, then on to the continent of Africa with a few stops in between.  Armed with strollers, diapers, and too much luggage, we travel to over 25 countries throughout a 10-year span, while working together as overseas educators. After surviving typhoon Yuri, almost being mauled by lions, and, nearly shot by a presidential guard, we happily endure all of the good times and bad, while living life to the fullest.  A decade’s worth of experiences and lifelong memories remain with us, as we return to the U.S., now with two teenagers in tow, and begin to experience our very own version of reverse culture shock.

I wrote this book mainly because I wanted to share our many travel stories with others who are contemplating living and teaching overseas or enjoy traveling, with or without children.  I want others to know that it can be done if you are willing to make it happen and are open to living a life full of adventures. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:   

Since writing her first memoir about her travels, Jill Dobbe has lived in Cairo, Egypt, Gurgaon, India, and Tegucigalpa, Honduras, where she now resides with her husband.  A Shawano, Wisconsin native, Jill continues to work as an elementary administrator overseas and writes on the side. Her two children are now adults and continue to travel on their own.  Every June, they all meet up together at their home on a lake in Wisconsin. Connect with Jill:     www.facebook/JillDobbeAuthor
Publisher: Orange Hat Publishing, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, www.orangehatpublishing.com
190 pp
ISBN: 9781937165215
c. 2012
$5.99 eBook
 
Buy from all online retailers
 
My review:Educator Jill Dobbe, along with her husband Dan, recount their journey to live and teach and visit all over the world. Thirty countries later, Jill shares this not-quite-over memoir of life abroad.
 

Beginning in 1991 in Guam, Dobbe discusses the culture, tidbits tourists would miss about living among different cultures – for instance, although tourism is a major trade in Guam, the beaches are dangerous. The first ten years and four countries of working overseas, Jill taught elementary school and Dan high school science. It wasn’t easy adjusting, especially as different cultures treat education much differently. Discipline, language, lifestyle, and childcare were all issues the Dobbes had to deal with.
 

Jill relates several lessons about traveling and working, such as most people wait months and months for household shipments to arrive and pass through customs; by which time the items arrive, they are nearly forgotten or the Dobbes had learned to do without.
 

Some of the more quirky, frightening and poignant experiences of Guam, Singapore, Ghana, and Mexico include having to pinch pennies until the first payday and needing to sell off possessions and keeping or throwing out even teaching materials, a babysitter who wanted to take one child on a family visit in another country; living through natural disasters of earthquakes and hurricanes; two attempted adoptions; maps that mean nothing, uniforms in daycare, needing day and night guards, shopping, shopping, shopping, lizards, cockroaches, and touring all over the work during holidays and vacations.
 

The Dobbes raised their children from one-year-old Ali and two-year-old Ian for ten years overseas. When the children were old enough to be in school, life got a little easier, and Jill wrote many times about how grateful she was to raise her kids globally. From 2001-2007 the Dobbes experienced a reverse culture shock in the craziest of all lifestyles—American—while they lived and worked in Wisconsin until Ian graduated from high school. After that, they returned to work overseas in Egypt and India.
 

While Here We Are and There We Go is primarily a memoir, I enjoyed the universal appeal of Dobbe’s story. Wisconsinites do tend to feel as though we need nothing else to complete us, and I well understood her complaints of enduring the usual Wisconsin questions, why would you want to go there, why are you doing that, how can you take you kids so far away? We don’t deal with things like cat scratch fever and mango fly infestations too commonly in the States.
 

Experiencing life in many cultures isn’t for everyone, but Jill’s experiences of meeting celebrities like Jane Goodall and the Clintons, seeing humpback whales, learning different languages and adapting to the most unusual customs wherever they went is like a vicarious world tour. Throughout it all, her main lesson is: “Home is not the material place but the refuge where we spent time together.”
 

Readers who love to experience different lifestyles, even from an armchair, will find much to treasure in Here We Are and There We Go.

Friday, December 7, 2012

Carol Wobig's Poached is not an option



By Carol Wobig

 
·         Paperback: 98 pages
·         Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (October 20, 2012)
·         Language: English
·         ISBN-10: 1479139122
·         ISBN-13: 978-1479139125

 
$2.99 Kindle
$9.99 paperback

 
 
About the book:

Eight knockout stories about women who know what "authentic" is really all about.

 
About the author:

Carol Wobig spent a few years in a convent and many more years working in a pizza factory, before she retired and started writing. Her monologues were performed in community theater, and her stories attracted fans in Gray Sparrow Journal, Clapboard House Journal, and on Milwaukee Public Radio's Flash Fiction Friday.

 
My review:

Very real, indeed. Delightful, heartfelt, poignant and hysterical, each story appeals to a different temperament, from parents of young children to the widowed, a lost young girl, a hopeful romantic; a woman who is forced to take charge of her life at the death of her sister, to a woman caught up in modern incivility. You’ll want to cheer and laugh, and certainly take a stand…on something, or at least hug someone and pat her on the back.

 
Wobig tells her stories with a raw, up-front, personal edge that sets the reader right down in the guts of each character. Sometimes first person, sometimes third, tales such as Alice’s twelve-year-old confusion will make you catch your breath; lifer teacher Moira’s decisions, and the recently-widowed Anita who’s afraid of her daughter, will stay with you long after the last page.

 
As in much of Wisconsin, the reader is sometimes plunked down in 1950, sometimes in contemporary times, and often somewhere in between. It’s not an uncomfortable feeling, for in many places time has been jumbled and if you live here, you go with the flow.

 
I got on the treadmill and began to read, but had finished before I knew it was over. When I got the end, I literally shook my eReader in disbelief I had finished the book.

 
What else can I say? Books that are good both for mulling and your health shouldn’t be missed.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Former WI Author Steven Farrell is headed for the big screen with Mersey Boys

Steve says:
Ladies and Gents,

Mersey Boys, my new book at Amazon.com, is being made into a movie (low budget) out in New York-New Jersey. The casting call has gone out. It's being filmed by La Muse Venale, a Broadway group. They're working with MNN, an affliate of Time Warner. The movie is being filmed during the winter and should open at the famous Actor's Temple in the Broadway district.

Cairan Byrne, a Broadway actor, is one of the guys who'll be in it.

I'm not actively involved in the film process. I am providing the first two film screenplay drafts. I also will be going over three headshots on all of the finalists to render my opinions.
 
About the Book:



  • Publisher: World Audience Publishers (November 5, 2012)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B00A2VGDQ2
  • Kindle: .99
    Print: $9.99

    Mersey Boys is a Beatles novel that introduces John, Paul, George, Ringo and Al to the world outside of Liverpool, England. Al? Al! Welcome to a ferryboat ride across the Mersey River and backwards in time by over fifty years into an enchanting musical world that shall never be seen again in history. Join Professor Al Moran, a college art professor of John Lennon, on his magic carpet ride with the four young men who would soon morph into the internationally known Beatles. Gaze upon the beautiful Ginny Browne, the sexiest female character penned in these opening days of the Twenty-first century. Hear the music, dance to the beat and relive the heady days of a long ago golden age in England.


    The book was reviewed favorably by Copperfield Reviews and Small Press Watch Review.

    Among Steve Farrell's many other books, check out:

    Bowery Ripper on the Loose
    "Bowery Ripper on the Loose" is a comic mystery, featuring the notorious Jack the Ripper and the hilarious Irish Clowns of the Lower East Side of New York City. Jack the Ripper, the most infamous serial killer in history, is back plying his bloody trade after a fifty year hiatus. This time Saucy Jack is on the loose on the Bowery, New York's poorest neighborhood, in 1938. A slew of murders beneath the 3rd Street elevated train tracks has the entire city in a state of panic. Is the slaughter the work of the Communists, the Nazis, or Own Madden's West Side Irish Mafia? When Bugs McMaster and his gang, the Irish Clowns, are rounded up as possible suspects, they decide to solve the puzzle themselves. "Bowery Ripper on the Loose" is a leap into the surrealistic world that merges comedy with murder.

    ISBN-13: 978-1935444732
    $20

    Steve says, "Bowery Ripper is a fun read for a rainy Halloween night. It helps if one loves the old Bowery Boys movies of the 40s."

    and

    Liverpool Roared
    Shake hands with the Scousers: Darcy, Conn, Keith, Jem, Roddy, and Al. Al? Dr. Albert Moran, an art professor at a college in Liverpool, recounts his sexy and merry romp through Beatlemania with his mates, the Scousers.

  • Publisher: Bookstand Publishing; Revised edition (March 10, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1589096231
  • ISBN-13: 978-1589096233

  • Visit the author's Amazon biography page to find more books.

    About the Author:

    Steven M. Farrell is a Professor of Speech-Communication at Greenville Technical College in Greenville, South Carolina, as well as a professional public speaker. He is orginally from Kenosha, Wisconsin and is a member of the Wisconsin Writers Association.

     

    Wednesday, October 17, 2012

    Book Review: Journeys: An Ice Age Adventure

    Journeys; An Ice Age Adventure



    By Tim Fox

    c. 2012

    Amazon Digital Services

    $2.99 for e-book for Kindle and Nook

    $12.95 for paperback

    $6 cross-curriculum for teachers

    YA

    202 pages

     

    Tim Fox connected with me through Wisconsin Authors and asked for a review. Although he sent me his story, I did buy the book.


    Fox’s richly-imagined story takes place in Ice-Age central Wisconsin where good and evil and life and death, as they always do, hang in the balance. There are mastodons, boys with candy bars in their back backs, good aboriginals and evil-intended aboriginals, lots of laughter, discovery of new foods and even a highly-embellished language.


    Twelve and ten-year-old brothers Mark and Barry go on a camping adventure at Natural Bridge State Park with their uncle. Uncle Steve and the boys’ father have been estranged since the death of Steve’s sister, Mom to Mark and Barry. Using a mastodon tooth and stone spear point found on the book-opening adventure, the boys travel back in time to Ice Age Wisconsin, where they encounter a lost Ice Age boy and two mastodons. Running from a band of warriors intent to kill them, the odd little family joins together to survive. Through the Natural Bridge, which becomes a time portal, Steve can peek at the events the boys experience, as well as the Ice Age boy’s grandfather. Conquering fear of the unknown encourages life-changing decisions. Fox sums up his story in a quote near the end:


    “There’s a purpose. Are you ready to listen? Somehow it clicked. He (Mark, main character) realized he would never understand it all, but it was enough to know there was a purpose. He realized that the joys, the struggles – they were all part of something greater. It made their lives more than just a collection of experiences. They were a part of a rich tapestry – an interweaving of time, events, people, and animals that challenged and enriched not only their own lives, but the collected experience of creation.”

     
    Although the author, a former school teacher, breaks away from most common guidelines of YA literature, I found the story interesting. Touching up the text by tightening, staying in one perspective per scene, choosing language for the audience – average three years younger than the characters, or elementary set, a few less bathroom jokes, and watching formatting issues, Journeys would make a great classroom read. Fox provides a cross-curriculum guide at extra cost on his web site. Visit http://www.journeysiceageadventure.com for more information.

     

     

    Thursday, September 27, 2012

    Living, Teaching, and Traveling Overseas by Jill Dobbe


    BOOK PRESS RELEASE
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    Contact: Jill Dobbe, Author
                                www.facebook/JillDobbeAuthor

     

    FORMER WISCONSIN EDUCATOR WRITES MEMOIR ON

    LIVING, TEACHING, AND TRAVELING OVERSEAS


    HERE WE ARE & THERE WE GO

    TEACHING AND TRAVELING WITH KIDS IN TOW

    Who says you can’t travel with kids?  My husband, Dan, and I do just that as we set off with our two very young kids, first to live and work on an island far out in the Pacific, then on to the continent of Africa with a few stops in between.  Armed with strollers, diapers, and too much luggage, we travel to over 25 countries throughout a 10-year span, while working together as overseas educators.

    After surviving typhoon Yuri, almost being mauled by lions, and, nearly shot by a presidential guard, we happily endure all of the good times and bad, while living life to the fullest.  A decade’s worth of experiences and lifelong memories remain with us, as we return to the U.S., now with two teenagers in tow, and begin to experience our very own version of reverse culture shock.

    I wrote this book mainly because I wanted to share our many travel stories with others who are contemplating living and teaching overseas or enjoy traveling, with or without children.  I want others to know that it can be done if you are willing to make it happen and are open to living a life full of adventures.

     ABOUT THE AUTHOR:   
      
    Since writing her first memoir about her travels, Jill Dobbe has lived in Cairo, Egypt, Gurgaon, India, and Tegucigalpa, Honduras, where she now resides with her husband.  A Shawano, Wisconsin native, Jill continues to work as an elementary administrator overseas and writes on the side. Her two children are now adults and continue to travel on their own.  Every June, they all meet up together at their home on a lake in Wisconsin.

    Publisher: Orange Hat Publishing, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, www.orangehatpublishing.com,
    414) 212-5477, Shannon Ishizaki, Owner
    Available:  Amazon.com (Paperback and Kindle)

    BN.com
    The Bookstore, Appleton, WI
    Book World, Shawano, WI

    Tuesday, August 28, 2012

    Lisa Chilar on Writing a Character at AllWriters Workplace

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    Who is this character living in my head and why won’t she leave me alone?

    WAUKESHA – Do you have a voice inside your head? Is he or she coming out in the form of poetry? Let poet Lisa Cihlar help you guide this character through a poetic series! The Poetic Obsession – Writing a Character Series will help you define your character and look at ways to write a cluster of poems that echo each other without being carbon copies. Participants will do exercises, brain storming, and character mapping. Cihlar’s own Swampy Woman, from her new chapbook, The Insomniac’s House, would not slink back into the algae green waters. She had to have her say and to hear what others had to say about her. Let your character crawl out too! Bring along five to ten character based poems and let’s see who shouts the loudest. This AllWriters’ Celebrity Saturday Event will take place on September 22nd, from 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

    LISA J. CIHLAR’S poems have been published in The South Dakota Review, Corium, Green Mountains Review, In Posse Review, Bluestem, and The Prose-Poem Project. One of her poems was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. She is the author of two chapbooks, “The Insomniac’s House,” from Dancing Girl Press, and “This is How She Fails” from Crisis Chronicles. She lives in rural southern Wisconsin.

    This Celebrity Saturday event has a fee of $85, which includes lunch, catered by Café de Art! You can register by calling 262-446-0284, or going online at http://www.allwriters.org/., click on Celebrity Saturdays.

    AllWriters’ Workplace and Workshop offers on-site and online writing courses in all genres and abilities of creative writing, as well as coaching and editing services. A schedule of classes and registration is available online at http://www.allwriters.org/ or you can call 262-446-0284. AllWriters’ is located at 234 Brook Street, Unit 2, in historic downtown Waukesha.

    Kathie Giorgio
    Director, AllWriters' Workplace & Workshop LLC
    Author, "The Home For Wayward Clocks"
    234 Brook St., Unit 2
    Waukesha WI 53188
    Phone: (262) 446-0284

    Kathie's Website: http://www.kathiegiorgio.org/

    Sunday, August 26, 2012

    Fall Writers and Book Festivals!

    WWA Fall Conference
    September 28-30, 2012

    Hotel Mead and Conference Center
    Wisconsin Rapids, WI

    See the page for all speakers and costs. Great workshops lined up!


    Edgerton Book Festival
    September 29, 2012

    Edgerton High School
    200 Elm High Drive, Edgerton

    The Book & Film Festival consists of a number of interactive literary events. These include featured speakers and authors who share their insight on their writing and the inspiration for their books. The authors include those who have written best-sellers as well as Wisconsin authors. Through collaborative efforts within our community and those of the literary world we work together to present a weekend full of free reading and film related activities. In addition, a children’s author is selected each year to receive the Sterling North Literary Legacy Award for Excellence in Children’s Literature which is presented at the Book & Film Festival.


    November 7-11, 2012
    The Wisconsin Book Festival is a free, five-day program of public events that takes place every Fall in downtown Madison. It is the state's largest literary festival, drawing thousands of attendees annually.

    Since its inception in 2002, the Wisconsin Book Festival has been a showcase for literary talent from across the state of Wisconsin and beyond. It is a forum for people to come together and sit face to face and side by side, to talk and listen, whisper, laugh, cry, sing, sign, write notes, tell jokes, and give voice to their ideas. The Wisconsin Book Festival is a special project of the Wisconsin Humanities Council, an independent 501(c)3 nonprofit, and works to fulfill the WHC’s mission: Community through Conversation.

    We proudly host authors of poetry, fiction, and non-fiction for readers of all ages; in addition we stage plays, offer hands-on workshops, feature spoken word performances, and more. Our authors have included such well-known names as Grace Paley, Tim O’Brien, Edwidge Danticat, Isabel Allende, Michael Chabon, TC Boyle, Judy Blume, Wendell Berry, Michael Perry, Lorrie Moore, Lynda Barry and Harvey Pekar.

    November 24, 2012
    Southwest Wisconsin Book Festival
    Mineral Point
    Opening Doors, Minds, and Pages

    Join us November 24, 2012 for the second annual Southwest Wisconsin Book Festival.

    We are very excited to announce that the Festival on November 24, 2012 will be a full day of events. The morning will showcase workshops across a range of engaging literary topics for people of all ages. An afternoon of book signing and readings will highlight authors who were selected after submitting their book(s) and being chosen by our Literary Advisory Group. The day will be capped off with a keynote presentation at the historic Mineral Point Opera House by nationally known speakers John Ivanko and Lisa Kivirist. Bookmark the date, we look forward to seeing you on November 24th!

    Thursday, June 7, 2012

    New YA Wisconsin story by author Tim Fox


    Introducing Tim Fox's new book
    Journeys: An Ice-Age Adventure

    About the Book
    Twelve year-old Mark Jamison is a thinker and a worrier. Ten year-old Barry is attuned to nature, but his focus quickly shifts from one item to the next. The brothers’ lives are further complicated by family tragedies. Their dad’s deployment to Afghanistan and their mom’s illness both ended badly. Rather than a wonderful journey, life has been hard. But when the boys discover a mastodon tooth and a spear point in the Baraboo Hills, powerful forces are unleashed that carry them across ages and propel them onto the adventure of two lifetimes. The brothers journey with mastodons and Paleo-Indians amid the landscape of Ice Age Wisconsin. They face giant predatory mammals, as well as predators of the human variety. They witness acts of courage and sacrifice. And through it all, the boys gain more of the strength, wisdom, and hope needed to face the obstacles of life’s journey.

    Journeys; An Ice Age Adventure is a story that inspires excitement, laughter, and tears. Above all, it reminds us of the importance of hope and a sense of wonder.

    Links
    Journeys; An Ice Age Adventure website
    *paperback may be ordered here – ISBN 978-0-9856411-0-8
    *teacher guide available here
    http://www.journeysiceageadventure.com/index.html
     
     Kindle version of Journeys; An Ice Age Adventure



    About the Author:

    Tim Fox is a personal fitness trainer and “Olympic-style” weightlifting coach. He can’t resist picking up big, heavy things!

    Friday, May 11, 2012

    Nicholas Dettmann's Debut Novel, A Life Worth Dreaming About



    Carl Robertson, a 32-year-old man, did everything he could to move out of his small Midwestern town, losing many friends along the way. He dreamt of living the elegant lifestyle of New York City. He used his anger and hatred to move out of his hometown, discredit it and never wanted to think about it again. For a while, it worked. Then, he finds his life on the ropes and doesn't know why or how to change it. That is, until he meets a man who will change his life forever and in a way he never could've seen coming. Suddenly, he finds himself trying to catch up to a new reality, just in time to save his life and find his true love.

    Buy Amazon Print
    Buy Amazon Kindle





    Paperback: 236 pages
    Publisher: AuthorHouse (February 2, 2012)
    Language: English
    ISBN-10: 1468543008
    ISBN-13: 978-1468543001

    About the Author

    Nicholas Dettmann is a veteran journalist from Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He has worked at daily newspapers in Idaho Falls, Idaho, Michigan City, IN and West Bend, WI. He has also appeared in numerous newspapers around the country, including the Houston Chronicle, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and the Baltimore Sun.

    He has won writing awards at the local, regional and national levels. Nicholas graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee with a degree in journalism & mass communications. In 2010, Nicholas wrote a story about a high school swimmer who suffered from dwarfism. His dream was to become a Paralympian. The Wisconsin Newspaper Association said, “Good story and nice storytelling getting the reader into the story.”

    Nicholas was first published in 2001 at only 19 years old when he wrote a poem, “Remembering,” honoring the death of a classmate. It received an Editor’s Choice award from Poetry.com.

    Nicholas Dettmann is currently the sports editor of the West Bend Daily News. He has held many positions as a sports writer for various newspapers across the US, but his real passion is that of storytelling. His debut novel A  Life Worth Dreaming About tells the story of Carl Robertson, an egocentric and angry New York City executive, who grew up in poverty in the Midwest and suddenly finds himself searching for a better life after being given a second chance he didn’t know he needed or wanted. A Life Worth Dreaming About will appeal to the fans of Baxter C. Krueger’s The Shack.

    His writing idols include Rick Reilly, Mitch Albom, John Grisham and Tom Hallman Jr. In his spare time, Nicholas enjoys reading and spending time with family and friends.
    Nicholas’ specialty is writing personality profiles.

    Nicholas is married to his wife, Elizabeth, and they have two cats, Daisy and Dory.
    Visit NickDettmann.com
    and Blog: The Stratosphere

    Monday, March 12, 2012

    Masters of Mystery: MJ Williams



    I am Mary Joy Johnson (right), one half of the team writing under the pseudonym M. J. Williams; my sister-in-law Peggy Williams constitutes the other half. We teamed up to write mystery novels.
    Peggy has been a free-lance writer most of her adult life, writing scripts for documentary films, magazine features, and online content. She has taught elementary school since graduating from Michigan State University. She also received a masters degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Peggy and her husband, Mark, have two grown children and one new grandson, who, of course, is the light of their lives. When Peggys not teaching, shes writing. 
    When Im not writing, Im quilting. I retired from teaching writing at Bay College in Escanaba, Michigan several years ago. I earned both a bachelors and a masters degree at Central Michigan University. I also have two grown children, but I beat Peggy in the grandparent department; I have three teenage granddaughters  Since my retirement, I tutor ESL and learning disabled adults and have become very active in Madisons quilting community.


    Weve recently independently-published our mystery novel, On the Road to Deaths Door, the first in a series, featuring a retired small town public safety officer and her husband. Emily and Stan Remington inherit a used RV and begin their travels in Wisconsins Door County where they are thrown into a murder investigation involving an old college buddy of Stans. It is available for the Kindle and as a print-on-demand paperback from Amazon.com.

    The next book in the series, which takes place in Boston, is in production (read that as were still writing it).

    Find us on Facebook.

    Thursday, March 8, 2012

    Contests! $100 first place prizes

    Wisconsin Writers Association is still accepting submissions for the Spring Contests

    THROUGH APRIL 1



    WWA Contests
    All mailed contest entries must be sent to the Contest Registrar:

    (snail mail on the contest site)
    contests[at]wiwrite.org

    (to enter online, see below)

    To enter online follow these steps:
    1. Download and read the full 2012 Contest Rules
    2. Click one of the contest entry links below
    If you have questions about entering any of these contests, please contact the Contest Managers below:
    • Al P. Nelson Journalism Contest Manager ncmgr[at]wiwrite.org
    • Florence Lindemann Humor Contest flmgr[at]wiwrite.org
    • Jessica Nelson North Contest ctwg [at] wiwrite.org

    Monday, February 20, 2012

    More Writers and Book Festivals in Wisconsin

    The Tenth Annual Spring Writers Festival at UW-Milwaukee
    March 9-11

    http://www4.uwm.edu/SCE/conference.cfm?id=561

    Write Camp4 Milwaukee at Mercy Hill Church
    May 19

    http://www.writecampmilwaukee.com/


    Southeast Wisconsin Festival of Books at UW-Waukesha
    June 15-15

    http://sewibookfest.com/

    Friday, February 10, 2012

    Two Upcoming Conferences

    Power of the Pen - Fox Valley Tech, Oshkosh Campus

    The Oshkosh Area Writer's Club announces:

    The 8th annual "Power of the Pen" will be held Saturdays, March 10 and 17, at a new location: Oshkosh Riverside Campus.


    Sessions include Adventures with a Short Story, Character Development, Unearthing the Poem, Writing for Kids, Microfiction, and others. Classes are $16.29 each or $5.20 for those 62 and over.

    For more information, or to register, visit Fox Valley Technical College or e-mail thull@fvtc.edu for a brochure.

    Fox Valley Technical College
    2320 Industrial Drive
    Neenah, Wisconsin
    phone: 920-720-6800
    website: www.fvtc.edu/neenah


    Geek Kon - Madison

    1-17-2012 Pre-Registration and Hotel Reservations
     
    Don't forget to pre-register for Geek.Kon.2012 on September 7-9! Online pre-registration is only $20 until March 15, so be sure to take advantage and register now. While you're at it, make sure to book your hotel room at the Madison Marriott West so you won't have to leave all weekend!

    Thursday, January 19, 2012

    Waters of the Dancing Sky, a love story


    "There is a land of the living and a land of the dead, and the bridge is love - the only survival, the only meaning." Thornton Wilder



    About the Book: Sometimes you must tiptoe across that bridge linking this world with the next. Sometimes, it is the only way to put the twisted pieces of one's life back together again.


    Beth Calhoun is a middle-aged woman haunted by a tragic past - the drowning death of her young mother, the shame of having no father. Escaping from an abusive marriage, she retreats to her family's wilderness island home on Rainy Lake along the Minnesota/Ontario international border. Here she embarks upon a journey of self-discovery that flows through a series of wilderness adventures, past and present. As she delves into her mother's old diaries, she discovers long-held family secrets including the identity of her mysterious father. Spirits of the past emerge as she struggles through a complex web of emotions and shifting relationships. Can she forgive and put the past behind her? Can she learn to trust and to love again?


    Waters of the Dancing Sky is an inspirational love story, an intriguing blend of fact and fantasy that weaves an appreciation of nature and local Ojibwe culture into mankind's eternal search for meaning.



    About the Author: Janet Kay lives and writes on a lake in the North Woods of Wascott, Wisconsin. Drawn to nature since she was a child, she sees it wonders as a source of renewal, reflection, and connection with something greater than oneself. Her lifelong passions include creative writing, photography, travel, and spending time with family.



    Waters of the Dancing Sky is her debut novel. It has earned excellent reviews and a 5-star rating on Amazon.com. It is available for $16.95 through her publisher, Llumina Press, via her website; Amazon.com; Barnes & Noble; Ingram; Baker & Taylor; and many bookstores. E-books are also available for $5.95 through Smashwords, Kindle, Nook, Apple, Diesel, Sony, and Kobo.


    For more information, check out her website. It includes her blog, Janet Kay's Journey, a photo gallery, and opportunities to enter her promotional contest.


    She is currently working on her next novel, tentatively titled Amelia 1868. It will be set in the antique country town of Walnut, Iowa and the old western ghost town of Virginia City, Montana. A sequel to Waters is also in the works, based upon numerous requests from readers.



    What Others Are Saying About the Book:


    "An elegantly told story filled with twists and turns, pain and tenderness, conflict and resolution. Touched by spirits of Native Americans long passed from this world, emboldened by the majesty of the North Woods, this is a story about the universality of life - a book about the magic of the human spirit and the often wisp-like will of the humann mind. Highly recommended reading for lovers of life everywhere." Don Bacue, Executive Editor, International Features Syndicate


    "All great storytelling is about love, death, and birth. This book transported me into Beth's world, making me feel its mysterious magic and stark reality. Not since Tolkien's Trilogy have I fallen into a book so completely." Gary Hetts, Member of St. Croix Writers, Solon Springs, WI


    "The hero seeking light in the fog of an unsettled past, in the swirl of a disturbing present, and finding courage to embrace the unknown future...all elements of a true mythic story. Waters of the Dancing Sky is a soul journey that unfolds like a plot of a Hallmark Channel movie." Frank Zufall, Spooner Advocate


    "...a true communion of place, character, and plot. Waters of the Dancing Sky is a complete vision, one with reverberating depths and serious surprises." Laura Kasischke, author of The Life Before Her Eyes


    Wednesday, January 18, 2012

    POETRY FESTIVAL IN MADISON SUNDAY AFTERNOONS!

    I HOPE SOME OF YOU CAN JOIN ME FOR THIS TERRIFIC SERIES OF READINGS FEATURING THE BEST POETRY IN MADISON AND SURROUNDING AREAS. IT'S FREE!

    James P. Roberts


    2012 WINTER FESTIVAL OF POETRY
    SPONSORED BY THE WISCONSIN FELLOWSHIP OF POETS
    HOSTED BY JAMES P. ROBERTS
    SUNDAY AFTERNOONS 2:00 - 3:30 P.M.

    AVOL'S BOOKSTORE 315 GORHAM STREET, MADISON


    JANUARY 22: Shoshauna Shy, Andy Gricevich, Jacki Martindale, Andrea Potos, Steve Tomasko, Gay

    Davidson-Zielske.


    JANUARY 29: Margaret Benbow, Steve Fortney, Paraska Tolan, Judith Zukerman, Tom Boswell, Brenda

    Lempp.


    FEBRUARY 5: Lynn Patrick Smith, F.J. Bergmann, Naomi Extra, Fabu, Bill Rodriguez, Alice D'Alessio.


    FEBRUARY 12: Susan Elbe, Robin Chapman, Tim Walsh, Morgan Harlow, Geoff Collins, Lori Lipsky.


    FEBRUARY 19: Wendy Vardaman, Martha Kaplan, Derrick Harriell, Sara Parrell, Mark Lilleleht, Sandy Stark.


    FEBRUARY 26: Katrin Talbot, Miriam Hall, Chuck Cantrell, Kimberly Blanchette, Stacia Star, Paul Terranova.


    MARCH 4: Brent Christianson, Peg Sherry, Jeri McCormick, Lisa Cihlar, Richard Roe, Mark Kliewer.


    MARCH 11: Nancy Jesse, Marilyn Annucci, Catherine Jagoe, Rusty Russell, Mary Linton, Lenore Coberly.