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Showing posts with label Sport. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sport. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 April 2011

Writing Progress: 2000 Words

Up relatively early and completed around 2000 words of Ch19; continuing to go well. Remembered I needed to insert a couple of sentences of explanation in Ch17. It's too easy to miss essential information for the reader when you're in creative mode because you live so close to the story as you're developing it.
Had a walk with Valerie after breakfast for exercise and fresh air. Nothing exciting, just a short loop to take in the edge of town and a small section of land set aside as a green space.
Spent time in the garden, trimming the laurels so the magnolia has room to bloom in style. Took some of the height off a fir and reduced the lilac, as it had grown into a very ugly shape and was in danger of obstructing an access path.
Had to rest after this, of course: the only way I can do anything physical is to rest afterwards. But it coincided with today's Grand National, so I saw that live for a change. Hadn't placed a bet, though.
And, now, I have completed the compilation of the love story anthology, sorted the formatting and prepared it for upload to both Smashwords and Kindle, designed a suitable cover picture using a stock photo from that great site, Dreamstime.com, and uploaded the whole to the two sites. Just have to wait for them both to come back with approval and I can let people know it's available to read.

Today's picture is from one of our regular Sunday walks.
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Wednesday, 16 February 2011

Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Yacht

G10 saling craft model sailingImage via Wikipedia
Yacht: noun - a light sailing boat, any light or small vessel propelled by sail or engine, a motorised boat of moderate size equipped for cruising: verb to cruise or race in a yacht.

'Mark loved to sail his yacht in sight of the beach at St Tropez in the hope of impressing the many beach beauties sunning themselves there.'

'Pablo told me you yacht for a living; is that as captain or crew?'

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Monday, 7 February 2011

Stuart's Word Spot: Pace

Diagram showing the names and bounce heights o...Image via Wikipedia
Pace: noun – step, single move in running or walking, distance covered in one step, a unit of length as the distance from where one foot is put down to where the other is set down, rate of stepping, manner of stepping when walking or running, rate of movement or action, the speed of a story, the speed of a ball in sport, the state of a wicket.

'Peters, a pace bowler of renown, took a pace back before setting out on his run up to deliver the ball over a wicket already feared by the batsman for its pace.'

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Friday, 18 June 2010

Review of Torc of Moonlight by Linda Acaster

From time to time, when I come across a book I feel is worth the effort, I'll place a review on this blog. This is the first such. A review of Torc of Moonlight, by Linda Acaster.

In Torc of Moonlight, Linda Acaster gives us a book which is more than simply a damn good read. This well crafted paranormal romance leads the reader through mysteries that are only gradually revealed, frightening us along the route taken by the possessed lovers. She builds empathy for the central characters, putting us inside their minds to explain their motives, drives and fears, and shredding our hearts with their emotional experiences. That she handles the male point of view with as much skill and sympathy as that of the female says a great deal about this writer’s observational powers.

The story concerns a rugby-playing male student and the mysterious, beautiful and surprisingly tough history student he falls for. Her preoccupation with Celtic history and, specifically, the female spirits of sacred springs in North Yorkshire, underlines her very real concern for those she loves.

On a deeper level, though not intrusively, the novel deals with many themes. One that caught my imagination was the parallel of modern contact sports with ancient warrior ways. She portrays, with an understanding suggestive of her unlikely physical participation, the potential brutality of rugby. Her analogy shows how rule-breaking in sport renders the game less worthy and destroys team spirit. In the same way, her anti-hero, Ognirius, in his selfish pursuit of personal glory at the expense of his fellow countrymen, destroys trust and undermines the civilisation of his own time and that of the present day.

Linda handles sex scenes and love scenes with equal veracity, lending emotional honesty to the loving relationship of the main characters and contrasting this with the usage and guile displayed by those who indulge in sex merely for their own gain.

Detailed pictures of the city of Hull, its university, and the moorlands of North Yorkshire bring life to the setting of the novel without ever slowing the story. The plot moves, twists and turns to surprise, confuse and astound as it takes us through emotional, physical and spiritual conflicts to the inevitable denouement.

I could not put this book down and confidently recommend it to all who love well written novels with believable characters, intriguing stories and real settings.