I'm in a reading mood. I adore getting lost in a story, reading through the hours until my body is stiff and my dogs are chewing on my leg, trying to get me to let them out....
Okay, maybe not that.
I've been working on a presentation for my RWA chapter (go MoRWA) on Killer First Lines. Authors are warned away from several starts, one is this classic Snoopy line, "It was a dark and stormy night." We're told not to use it. It's weather and setting and boring.
Except, if you're Madeleine L'Engle and writing A Wrinkle in Time. I loved that book growing up. As a fatherless child, myself, this story gave me hope that my dad too, was just on another planet, waiting to be magically pulled back to my life.
Yes, there are reasons I'm an author. Like my mom asked, "How do you make up all these stories?" I would have thought she knew I'd been doing it all my life.
Authors don't give up their imaginary friends, we just give them lives in our books.
Another book I loved as a kid was The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster. I loved the story of a little boy driving through the fantasy world through a tollbooth that showed up in his room, just because he was bored.
Boredom doesn't happen for authors as we're off imagining a new world. And it that gets boring, I need to change up the story.
So what was your favorite book as a kid? Was it mystery related?
Lynn
Oh, and if you want a bit of romance for your Valentine's Day, I have a novella in My Sexy Valentine. My story, The Twelve Days of Valentines, twists the classic Christmas song into a how to win your love in 12 days.
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