Have you ever wondered how Writer’s Corner came to be? A blogger friend recently asked why did you start your blog? I once said that I would never blog or write. I was in a job search at the time and it was not going anywhere. So I decided that I would work on my writing. I found a nonpaying writing position with chicklitclub.com . I started Writer’s Corner initially to practice what I wrote for that site. The next part of the journey was meeting some great ladies that some of you know well Samantha Janning at Chick Lit Plus , Melissa Amster and Amy Bromberg from ChickLit Central , Laura Kay from A Novel Review , Pia from So Many Books So LittleTime , and last but not least Liz and Lisa fro...
I am glad to be back sharing three wonderful new books and a recipe. This is a blog hop which will run from April 18 th through April 27 th . There is also a grand prize is an ereader of their choice (up to $200 value) with second prize a $25 gift card to the ebook retailer of your choice. You must visit each site in the hop giveaway to qualify for the grand prize, and leave a comment with email to be counted. Grand prize winners will be announced on Bloomin Thyme’s websites. The recipe is once again from Pinterest. This time I decided to take the Impossible Cheese Burger Pie recipe and convert into the Impossible Chicken Cheese Pie. I loved it! Who says you can’t tweak a recipe to your own tastes? J I have one copy of Susan Meissner’s As Bright As Heaven . The second book is The Lemonade year by Amy Willoughby-Burle and has just released. The third book is the paperback release of One Perfect Lie by Lisa Scottoline. (T...
Photo by Rebecca Weiss A couple of years ago, there was a debate in the literary world about “likeable” characters. The question, essentially, boiled down to this: must a character be unpleasant, whether angry or aggressive, selfish, or all gloom-and-doom in order to be taken seriously as a literary character? When the debate arose, the focus was primarily on female characters— if a female protagonist has too many redeemable qualities as a person, does this detract from her substance as a character in a story? This query nagged at me and took on a new shape during my writing Trouble the Water , as I watched my two main protagonists undergo journeys of personal growth that left them both decidedly more pleasant than the people they were when the story began. The question I needed to answer was whether depth and meaning are negated by personal recoveries? My own take, as a reader, is that if I am going to spend hours reading a novel, hanging out with cha...
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