Tag: Blog Event

  • Saucy Saturday – Poker Face

    \"2016-09-17\"

    Happy Saturday!  Noony here, with some Noos and a sneak peak.  First, The Noos:  Join me and your other favorite authors over at the Romance Studio\’s End of Summer Bash.  You can enter to win a $100 Amazon gift card, prizes from authors, and read lots of great posts.  The party is open through tomorrow, so be there!

    As for \”Saucy Saturday,\” our new feature here at the Nice Girls Writing Naughty – I figured I\’d share a bit of background, and then a bit of a peek into a story that Rachel and I are working on – that\’s Rachel Wilder, the Wilder part of Noon & Wilder – but hey, you knew that, right?  Right.  When the Nice Girls discussed what to do on our blog for you, our Dear Readers, we wanted to have different kinds of posts – some fun, some naughty, and some nice.  Thus, Saucy Saturday was born.  But I never like to follow the rules, which you may already know about me.  So my saucy excerpt today is more \”saucy\” in the sense of having sass, rather than sexy times.

    Besides.  It\’s a post that made me smile, so I figured it might make you smile, too.

    In case you\’re not familiar with our Persis Chronicles, it\’s a cross between the classic Harlequin white-covers trope of the billionaire with his harem girls, and Anne McCaffrey\’s Pern novels – only set in M/M romance.  They\’re a ton of fun to write, and I hope you enjoy reading them as much as we do:


    Excerpt (PG):

    Cheula slipped his feet into heavier slippers and followed Ming out.  He tried to pay more attention this time and managed to not get lost until they were several hallways away from home.  He sighed in irritation.

    “What?” Ming asked, eyeing him.

    “Hmm?”

    “You’re frustrated, if I’m any judge.  What’s wrong?”

    “I’m lost!”  He waved a hand at the halls.  “This isn’t like stone!”

    “True.  But look there, see the glyph in the tent wall?”  Ming fingered an embroidered square.

    “Yeah…”

    “They’re directional markers.”

    Cheula gaped at him.  “You’re kidding!”

    “Yes.”

    He blinked.  “What?”

    Ming started walking again and chuckled.  “Come on, we’re almost to the Hunters’ Pavilion.”

    “Ming!”

    “Come on!” Ming called over his shoulder, still laughing.

    Cheula stomped after him and, probably due to his annoyance, recognized the Hunter’s Pavilion from their last visit.  He came even with Ming and the Asian threw his muscular arm around Cheula’s shoulders as they entered.

    “You met Elder Hunter?” Ming asked, releasing him from the hug.

    Cheula nodded.  “Earlier.”

    “Do you play poker?”

    Cheula could get some of his own back.  “Only a little.”

    Ming cocked an eyebrow but didn’t comment, just led the way over to a table.  A Hunter dressed in dark grey turned and Cheula recognized Quill.  He waved one-handed and finished his conversation, then came over.

    “Good day, Senior Hunter,” Cheula greeted.

    “Call me Quill.”

    Warmed, Cheula smiled at him.  “I will.”

    “Poker?” Ming asked.

    Quill shrugged.  “Sure.  Where’s Feyl?”

    “Sleeping.”

    Tybin entered from an entrance on the far side and saw them.  He smiled and spoke to his Keeper, who disappeared back through the flap.  Tybin walked over to join them.

    “Poker, sire?” Ming asked.

    “I could play a hand or two,” Tybin agreed.  “Keeper.”

    “Sire.”

    Ming shuffled with practiced efficiency and dealt.  Cheula checked his cards and smiled to himself.  This would be fun.

    After five hands, Ming sat back in his chair and threw the cards on the table.  “Cheula, you’re not a novice.”

    “Never said I was,” Cheula murmured.  “Just lost.”

    Ming gaped at him and then guffawed.

    “What’s this?” Quill asked, watching them both with his penetrating grey eyes.

    “Ming was teasing me about finding my way around the passages,” Cheula told him.

    Quill laughed.  “Then you deserve it, Ming.”

    “But…”

    Tybin chuckled, a deep rumble.  “If you don’t know by know that Keepers are trained in poker, you deserve what you get, my son.”


    \"2016-09-17-pic-2\"

    And in closing, Dear Reader, mark your calendars!  I\’ll be participating with the Romance Studio\’s Spookapalooza next month, so keep your mouse at the ready!

    “It takes courage to grow up and become who you really are.”
    – E.E. Cummings
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  • Um…  Xanadu…?

    Um… Xanadu…?

    \"2016-04-28

    A. Catherine Noon here, pinch-hitting for the letter “X” for the A to Z Challenge.  Let’s see.  X.  X marks the spot?  No, did that last year.  X post facto?  No, too esoteric.  What about an X name?  Xander… Xanadu… In Xanadu did Kubla Khan – yes!  Xanadu!  It was a movie, and a famous poem, and a wonder of the world, was it not?  Let’s go find out, sez I!  Intrepid explorer on the tides of Google and WHAT IN THE NAME OF ALL THAT’S HOLY IS THAT?

    Your guess is as good as mine, Dear Reader, as the location of the image was no help at all:  “Xanadu Community :: Board: Random Thread 2.0.”  Random thread?  No freakin’ kidding!

    That\’ll teach me to go farting around online, unsupervised, looking for inspiration for my blog posts.

    Yeah, I find pictures of cars dressed up like rats.  Complete with whiskers.

    I need brain bleach, Dear Reader.  …  So of course, I had to share with you.

    You\’re welcome.

    “It takes courage to grow up and become who you really are.”
    – E.E. Cummings
    Knoontime Knitting:  Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Ravelry
    Noon and Wilder links: Blog | Taurus and Taurus (NSFW) | Website | Facebook | Twitter
    The Writer Zen Garden:  The Writers Retreat Blog | Forum | Twitter | Meetup
    National Novel Writing Month: NaNoWriMo | ChiWriMo | Blog | Facebook | Twitter
  • Under Cover

    \"2016-04-25

    A. Catherine Noon here, with some thoughts on spies.  Under cover operatives are a common theme in romance novels.  Rightly so, in my view; they\’re fun to write and fun to read.  But it\’s even more fun to be one.

    No, I\’m not about to confess I was a spy in another life.  But I have been a spy in order to write.

    A popular writing exercise is to record snippets of conversations around us as they occur, like in a cafe or on a crowded train.  This helps us get better at writing dialog, because spoken language is a lot different than written language.  It\’s full of incomplete sentences, pauses and nonsense words, fillers, and grammatical mistakes.  But, like, if we, say, wrote the way, um, that we talked, it\’d be fuck of hard to read, don\’t you think?  (All the editors need to pretend they didn\’t just read that sentence.)

    I once assigned this exercise at a crowded cafe for a prompt circle.  When I gave the prompt, I didn\’t realize that most of the tables around us had emptied, and there was just a deuce by the window with a father and son trying to enjoy a cup of coffee and some convivial conversation.  Having twelve adults staring at them, sneaking glances, and scribbling furiously probably put a damper on their father-son night out and they left before the prompt time was up.

    Oops.

    Lesson learned.  If you\’re going to spy, you know, like, be discreet, will ya?

    (And I shall now hide from all my grammar friends.)

    “It takes courage to grow up and become who you really are.”
    – E.E. Cummings
    Knoontime Knitting:  Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Ravelry
    Noon and Wilder links: Blog | Taurus and Taurus (NSFW) | Website | Facebook | Twitter
    The Writer Zen Garden:  The Writers Retreat Blog | Forum | Twitter | Meetup
    National Novel Writing Month: NaNoWriMo | ChiWriMo | Blog | Facebook | Twitter
  • Pictures Worth a Thousand Words

    \"2016-05-19

    Greetings, Dear Reader!  A. Catherine Noon here, with some thoughts on images.  Pictures.  Pics.  Snaps.  Cams.  They\’re ubiquitous now.  A great quote from a television show, \”Instagram is Twitter for people who can\’t read.\”  While funny, I think it\’s unfair.  What\’s charming about it is that we can share moments of our lives with each other.  The more we practice a thing, the better we get; this is as true for photography as anything else.  The more we take pictures in our daily round, the better we get at it.

    And then, the fun starts.

    For example, have you considered trying picture prompts for writing?  Take a photo of something, and then write a story about it.  It doesn\’t need to be long, just a story.  Try thinking outside the box.  If it\’s a picture of a tree, what if the tree were sentient?  \”One day, tree woke up and…\”  Or, alternatively, take a photo a day of a project on which you\’re working:  maybe a craft, or your daily walks, or meals you prepare for dinner.

    When I write, I like to use pictures to generate ideas.  I might look for male actors of a certain description, or browse model sites looking for people to cast in my next novel.  I also love lolcat images, which if you\’ve been reading me a while, you probably already know.  They have the added benefit of being copyright-free, so I can use them while blogging.  This is one reason I have so few mancandy images in my blog posts, because I don\’t own the images that I browse and unless I have rights to use them commercially, I can\’t put them in a blog post.

    But don\’t despair, there\’s Pinterest!  That\’s a way to browse online and collect images without needing to worry about attributions, because the images point back to their original posting location.  I\’m new to Pinterest, and hardly an expert, but I think it\’s a fun way to explore.  I know a lot of authors have expansive Pinterest worlds they use to share character inspirations with readers and to collect things like crafts or locations for settings in their books.

    The ways we can use images has expanded immeasurably from the days of film and darkrooms.  Now, we can snap shots with our smartphone and publish them to a global audience.

     

    What about you, Dear Reader?  What\’s your favorite subject to photograph?

    “It takes courage to grow up and become who you really are.”
    – E.E. Cummings
    Knoontime Knitting:  Blog | Facebook | Twitter | Ravelry
    Noon and Wilder links: Blog | Taurus and Taurus (NSFW) | Website | Facebook | Twitter
    The Writer Zen Garden:  The Writers Retreat Blog | Forum | Twitter | Meetup
    National Novel Writing Month: NaNoWriMo | ChiWriMo | Blog | Facebook | Twitter