Eight years ago when my brother
and I were clearing out our father’s possessions after his death, we came upon
a stash of family treasures. Besides keeping
WWII love letters to our mother and various newspaper clippings about his
children’s accomplishments, he had also saved a tattered, construction paper-covered
book I had hand-written and illustrated when I was eight or nine. The
Mystery of the Golden Slippers—evidently a precious gem had been stolen and
hidden in the toe of the titled ballet slippers. Ouch.
I had forgotten my early,
ambitious foray into writing a novel, just as I had failed to remember a
neighborhood newspaper I had typed on an old typewriter using carbon paper to
duplicate my words. He had saved those
too. Perhaps he was trying to remind me
that pencil lead and ink were in my blood.
He was usually right.
And so I am beginning
this blog and I welcome everyone to read and comment on entries. They will reflect my thoughts on my world, my
small town, and my current novel. The
title of my blog comes from this thought:
She teaches, sews, reads, watches
grandchildren, and loves movies. Oh
yes—and sometimes she writes.
The world of
self-publishing is also a gold mine of topics. I self-published The Education of a Teacher (Including Dirty Books and Pointed Looks) in
2010 with iUniverse publishing. It is a
collection of creative nonfiction stories from my lengthy high school teaching
career. It sold well and is continuing
to sell on major book store websites.
Teachers and future teachers have written their positive reactions about
its inspirational nature and its realistic description of the teaching
profession. This book will always be
special to me and it has its own website and Facebook page. Its publication brought back emotions and
memories and put me in contact with many people who had left my life and—because
of my book—returned.
Over the last five
years I have studied the publishing industry.
Since 2009, I have spent most of my year in Illinois and my winters in
Arizona where I have often visited two independent bookstores, The Poisoned Pen
in Scottsdale and Changing Hands in Tempe.
Each store invites writers to discuss and sign their books, and I’ve listened
to many authors, asked questions, and been inspired by their comments. Changing Hands Bookstore and the South
Mountain Community Library also sponsored a writing conference I attended recently
that brought some of the best minds in publishing together to discuss their
various specialties. Then a year ago I joined Sisters in Crime
(SinC), a web community of mystery writers, readers, agents, and
publishers.
In my new life as a
retired teacher I am now shifting my focus to writing fiction, specifically
cozy mysteries.
Please come along
for the ride and check back for new blogs. I’m changing the focus of my life from
teaching in high school and college to writing fiction. One of my favorite authors, Henry David
Thoreau, decided to change his direction and leave the woods of Walden Pond
because, well, he had other lives to live. Me too, Henry.
Welcome to the blogosphere oh noble teacher, mom, and author. And thanks for the pudding link. I shall reciprocate.
ReplyDeleteWho better to write mysteries than a teacher, as teaching is definitely a mystery! Can't wait for your first novel to come out! Best of luck to you!
ReplyDeleteWell, thank you! And you are so right...many, many days in school were mysteries.
ReplyDelete