Wednesday, February 5, 2020

I DO BELIEVE


IT'S TIME FOR THE
INSECURE WRITERS SUPPORT GROUP BLOG DAY
The first Wednesday of each month, members of IWSG announce a question that members can answer in their IWSG Day post. These questions may prompt you to share insight or a personal experience or story. Remember, the question is optional. IWSG was founded by Alex J. Cavanaugh and is a forum of writers who gather to talk about writing and the writer's life.The awesome co-hosts for the February 5 posting of IWSG are:  Lee Lowery, Ronel Janse van Vuuren, Jennifer Hawes, Cathrina Constantine, and Tyrean Martinson!
February 5 question – Has a single photo or work of art every inspired a story? What was it and did you finish it?

I have posted before...
About things that scared me while growing up...
Like watching Bela Lugosi in Dracula on TV.
Many nights with my head under the covers.....
I believed Dracula was going to morph into a bat...
Fly in my bedroom window...
And turn me into a vampire...
So I kept my window open just a few inches in the summer.
My dad would always come in and open it wide...
“No, daddy,” I’d squeal, “don’t open the window all the way.”
“But it’s too hot in here.”
“But I’m afraid a bird will fly in.”
(Yeah, I wasn’t thinking bird, I was thinking bat)
Reluctantly he’d close it.
But bats and vampires...
Weren’t the only things that scared me.
My parents had quite an interesting  library...
And even before I could read...
I’d peruse the illustrations in those books...





Like Milton’s Paradise Lost















And Dante’s Inferno












Both book illustrations influenced my first book, Azael’s Lot that included angels, fallen angels, and demons





But there’s one illustration... 
In Eugene Field's Poems of Childhood...
That even today gives me the shivers...










It's "Seein' Things at Night"...
Illustrated by Maxfield Parrish.
And why you ask...
Does it still give me the shivers?
Because ghosts...
Are in my “Realms of Possibilities”
Of things that do go bump and boo in the night. 




And you?
Did an illustration or photo ever influence you?

Always,
Em-Musing

Wednesday, January 8, 2020

POE, ET AL


It’s the
INSECURE WRITER’S SUPPORT GROUP
BLOG DAY

IWSG was founded by Alex J. Cavanaugh and is a forum of writers who gather to talk about writing and the writing life.
The first Wednesday (2nd this month) of each month, a question is posted that members can answer in their blog post. These questions may prompt you to share insight or a personal experience or story. The question is optional.
January 8 question: what started you on your writing journey? Was it a particular book, movie, story, or series? Was it a teacher, coach, spouse, friend, or parent? Or did you suddenly just “know” you wanted to write? It’s all about connecting

The awesome co-hosts for todays posting are T. Powell Coltrin, Victoria Marie Lees, Stephen Tremp, Renee Scattergood, and J.H. Moncrieff!

First...
Happy New Year! And congratulations to the winners of the DecemberWEP + IWSG Writing Challenge!

Now me...
My love of writing all started when I was ten...
Influenced by two men: Poe and Rathbone...
I often feigned being sick to stay home from school..
I did it so well...
That my mother believed me...
And, I got a free pass...
Well, not so free...
My mother insisted I stay in bed all day...
And I don’t know whether she wanted to teach me a lesson...
Entertain me...
Or scare me to keep me from doing it...
But no sooner had the school bell rung...
Out came the phonograph...
And a stack of 33 1/3 albums.
Often it was  Mussorgsky’s Night on Bald Mountain

And then Basil Rathbone narrating 
"The Raven".

I listened to Basil so many times...
That I knew every word of that poem...
And every inflection of his performance.
I actually performed “The Raven” in school one time for extra credit.
And oh, how I inflected.
I guess no one was surprised...
When doing voiceovers became one of my vocations. 
At ten I also started reading Poe...
I loved all his somber, foreboding literary tones:
 "Masque of the Red Death,"Annabel Lee," "The Telltale Heart", etc.
Years later...
I channeled all those dark stories into my teenage angst...
Writing dark poems and short stories.
Continuing on to adulthood...
Stephen King satisfied my need to be creeped out. 
(currently reading DOCTOR SLEEP. LOve it!!)
As for me and my writing?
I have written Supernatural Thrillers...
But...
Ten years ago...
Something in me shifted ...
And I moved on to writing  humorous women’s fiction... 
I know! Go figure, right?
If I had to choose just one genre I love to write...
Hmm?I couldn’t!
Love then both!
So?
How did your writing journey start?
And how many turns have you taken, if any?

Always,
Em-Musing