Warded, excerpt no. 3
Edward strode down the hallway toward the conservatory, laden picnic hamper in hand, cinnamon sparks tickling the back of his mind.
Edward strode down the hallway toward the conservatory, laden picnic hamper in hand, cinnamon sparks tickling the back of his mind.
Why yes, yes it is Fall! The beginning of the fall of empire (couldn't happen to a better one!) and the temperature and the leaves...
On top of that, I've been so focused on keeping up with the blog that I haven't been working on my actual book. So, I'm going to change things up a bit from here on out.
Hi, everyone. When I said August was the speediest month ever, September decided to take it as a personal challenge.
Distracted again...cats, horoscopes, and AI, oh my!
Then I was reminded of Japan's Maneki-neko, and I decided, that's it. That's the folkloric cat I want to write about this week. So first off, what is the Maneki-neko?
Ok, it was only a matter of time before a bona fide cat lover like myself would devote an entire article to cats. Fine, this is really just an excuse to post a whole bunch of pictures of my cats.
Hi, everyone. I feel like August has been the super-speediest month yet! And September, being my birthday month is likely to bring even more (and hopefully productive) activity.
Decided to do something a little different this week. While I'm still working through my Lost & Found world origin story about a magical stag, I decided to share an excerpt from my current draft of Book 2, currently titled "Warded".
And as I’ve been working on L&F Book 2, I’ve also had a point of curiosity hopping foot to foot in the back of my mind. As I’m exploring the concept of avatars in my series, I’ve been wanting to explore the mythology around Pan-type guardians of nature.
Inspired by our recent trip to the pool (1st time swimming since the beginning of this summer – thanks, global warming), I decided to “dive” (c’mon, had to do it) into researching merfolk in Asian folklore and mythology.