RITA and Golden Heart Shout-Outs

My phone didn’t ring once this morning when RWA board members were making RITA and Golden Heart calls (Penny entered the RITA). Usually, I get at least one phone call so I can pretend I’m a finalist in those briefs moments before I pick up the phone. The year it actually happened, I was doing laundry. I’ll never forget the excitement.

Congratulations to all my fellow RWA members who finaled! I’m not going to list everyone here, but I do want to give shout-outs to a select few. Click the headings to read the full lists of finalists.

RITA

Best First Book The Gladiator by Carla Capshaw – fellow GH 2007 finalist sister!

Best First BookStolen Fury by Elisabeth Naughton – another GH 2007 finalist sister!

Contemporary SeriesA Not-So-Perfect Past by Beth Andrews, who won the Golden Heart in the Long Contemporary category the year I finaled. So…another GH 2007 sister!

Contemporary Series: Suspense/AdventureThe Christmas Stranger by Beth Cornelison– my Facebook Wordscraper buddy! (Who better let me win now).

Contemporary Series: Suspense/AdventureCold Case Affair by Loreth Anne White – fellow member of the Greater Vancouver Chapter of RWA.

InspirationalCarla Capshaw again for The Gladiator – 2007 GH sister!

Romance Novella – “Annelise and the Scandalous Rake” in The Diamonds of Welbourne Manor by Deb Marlowe – 2007 GH finalist sister!

Romantic SuspenseElisabeth Naughton again for Stolen Fury! 2007 GH sister.

Romantic SuspenseDark Country by Bronwyn Parry – 2007 GH finalist sister!

Young AdultThe ABC’s of Kissing Boys by Tina Ferraro – fellow Brainstormer, Scrabble aficionado, and my friend. I’m especially super excited for Tina. Congrats, girl!!

Golden Heart

Contemporary Series: Suspense/AdventureBreathless by Kimberley Howe – GH 2007 sister!

Contemporary Single TitleSharing Spaces by Laura Graham Booth – GH 2007 sister! And a driving force behind our former group blog.

HistoricalBetween Heaven and Hell by Jacqui Nelson – fellow chapter member of RWA-Greater Vancovuer.

Novel with Strong Romantic ElementsSwitching Sides by Maureen McGowan – GH 2007 sister!

Regency HistoricalMy Dearest Rogue by Elizabeth Stock – GH 2007 sister!

Romantic SuspenseDeadly Recall by Donnell Ann Bell – GH 2007 sister!

Young AdultBloom by Shelley Coriell – GH 2007 sister!

Young AdultWelcome Caller, This is Chloe also by Shelley Coriell – GH 2007 sister!

I’ll be cheering all of you on in Nashville. Congrats!

Recent Reads

Well, if you count that I read these books in January, they’re “recent.”

First up, THE TIME TRAVELER’S WIFE by Audrey Niffennegger. Sandorf Verster (a.k.a Claudia Zenk) lent me TTW several months ago. I saved it for my holiday to Mexico, when I had to read it so I could compare the movie version on DVD when I came home.

I’d heard about this book for years (like everyone else), but I didn’t pick it up because, for some strange reason, I thought it was about astronauts and spaceships. I thought it was about some guy who zipped off to Saturn or wherever, leaving his wife lonely back home. Well, the hero does zip off, but not in the way I thought. And now I’m wondering if there’s another book out there where the hero does zap off into space, and I’m getting them mixed up. Help me if you know I am.

Anyway, THE TIME TRAVELER’S WIFE was worth the wait. I very much enjoyed it. I especially liked how the author handled the story and characters jumping around in time. I always knew what year it was and which character’s viewpoint I was reading. No confusion.

Have you read this book? What did you think? Did the movie version do the book justice? I think it did. The movie was a bit depressing compared to the book, but in my opinion was an accurate reflection of the story.

Seeing as I borrowed it, I no longer have the book to quote the back cover copy, but here’s the product description from on-line booksellers:

A dazzling novel in the most untraditional fashion, this is the remarkable story of Henry DeTamble, a dashing, adventuresome librarian who travels involuntarily through time, and Clare Abshire, an artist whose life takes a natural sequential course. Henry and Clare’s passionate love affair endures across a sea of time and captures the two lovers in an impossibly romantic trap, and it is Audrey Niffenegger’s cinematic storytelling that makes the novel’s unconventional chronology so vibrantly triumphant.

An enchanting debut and a spellbinding tale of fate and belief in the bonds of love, The Time Traveler’s Wife is destined to captivate readers for years to come.

After I consumed TTW, I picked up THE MEMORY KEEPER’S DAUGHTER by Kim Edwards. (Note, if you want to learn more about Kim Edwards, don’t google her name. There are a lot of Kim Edwardses out there. Her website URL is the title of the novel).

I enjoyed THE TIME TRAVELER’S WIFE, but I absolutely, thoroughly loved THE MEMORY KEEPER’S DAUGHTER. In fact, I developed a serious crick in my neck reading MKD on the plane home from Mexico, and I had to go to the chiropractor to get adjusted. That’s one good book when you don’t notice the uncomfortable angle of your head as you’re reading it.

MEMORY KEEPER is a keeper for me.

About the book:

This stunning novel begins on a winter night in 1964, when a blizzard forces Dr. David Henry to deliver his own twins.

His son, born first, is perfectly healthy, but the doctor immediately recognizes that his daughter has Down syndrome. For motives he tells himself are good, he makes a split-second decision that will haunt all their lives forever. He asks his nurse, Caroline, to take the baby away to an institution. Instead, she disappears into another city to raise the child as her own. Compulsively readable and deeply moving, The Memory Keeper’s Daughter is a brilliantly crafted story of parallel lives, familial secrets, and the redemptive power of love.

I worried that the story would end sadly, but, for me, it didn’t. I loved the ending. I know a lot of romance readers really don’t like sad endings, but I’m not one of them. Probably because I devoured literary fiction since the age of 13, long, long before I began writing and reading romance. I find sad endings cathartic. But! I did NOT want this book to end sadly, and I had to keep reading and reading to find out how it did end. Which wasn’t sad in the slightest (at least not for me).

Don’t ask me why MEMORY KEEPER wasn’t made into a big-screen movie. I learned while searching for the book cover that it was a 2008 Lifetime movie starring Dermot Mulroney, Gretchen Mol, and Emily Watson. But I haven’t seen the TV movie, so I can’t compare it it to the book.

Anyone read THE MEMORY KEEPER’S DAUGHTER? Did you catch the Lifetime movie? How did they compare? Which did you like better? Is the movie a fairly accurate portrayal of the book?

If you’ve read both THE TIME TRAVELER’S WIFE and THE MEMORY KEEPER’S DAUGHTER, which did you like better? Why?

You can hand in your book reports at the end of the class. No apples necessary. I’ll take diamonds. Okay, okay! Cinnamon buns. Sheesh. With extra raisins.

Web Thingies That Drive Me Nuts

I love web design. That’s why I design my own websites. Well, also because I fervently believe in self-torture. It builds character. Everyone (as in most writers I talk to) has their own list of website design likes and dislikes. We need to think about such things so when we build our sites (or hire others to design them for us), we only drive our browsers nuts, not ourselves. Here are my website bugaboos:

  1. It should be spelled website. I don’t care that some dictionary says it’s Web site. I will never purposely spell Web site on my website (except I just did).
  2. I don’t understand tag clouds. What’s the purpose? To me, they look like someone threw up their vegetable soup. And the words that are bigger than the others? They look like they’re on an ego trip. I know tag clouds are (practically) the latest thing, but no way, no how, not ever (or at least until I change my mind) am I including a tag cloud on my blog.
  3. I can not abide moving navigation menus. You know, they hang on the side of a web page, and when you scroll down, the menu scrolls down, too? It’s a very clever idea. I liked it the first time I saw it. Then, as soon as I began scrolling, the moving menu creeped me out. The moving menu is far too Hitchcocky/Big Brother for me. It makes me feel like the computer screen’s alive, and we all know I have far too active an imagination to sleep comfortably after that. Honestly, moving menus can make me leave a website nearly as fast as…
  4. Music on websites. It drives me bonky. Whenever I vist a friend’s MySpace page, the first thing I do is shut off the music. I hereby vow that I will never ever ever install music on my MySpace page. I know the idea is that the song individualizes the page, but I find the songs make the pages take too long to load. And, well, I’m not one of those people who writes to music, so I don’t want to surf the ‘net to music, either. (Note, I rarely visit MySpace anymore, but when I did, the music most assuredly drove me nuts.) And music on real websites drives me nuts, too. I really, honestly don’t understand how browsers can focus on the words on the screen with music crowding up their brains.
  5. Animations… I can handle one or maybe two animations per page. Any more than that, and I start to get dizzy, no matter how cute or clever the animations are. I must say that I do like rollovers and remote rollovers and even animations that are somehow built into the web page banner and…this is very important…aren’t intrusive. However, give me more than one thing bouncing around, or, God forbid, following my cursor all over the page, and I don’t stick around very long. Especially when hearts or clover leafs or jack o’ lanterns start following my cursor around! I can’t get away from them! Drives me nuts!

I sometimes joke that I have adult ADD. I DO know I have HAWD (Hyper Active Website Disorder). Because there’s a commonality in my list of website don’ts. Too much visual or aural activity and I go nuts.

What are your website bugaboos? Oh, and “Writers Who Complain About Websites,” “Cindy’s Website,” and “Cindy” are not acceptable answers.

Published
Categorized as Web Design

New Author Photos

I took new author photos in February. Two things inspired me to do this:

(1) I had a birthday and realized my current author photos are 3.5 years old. I’m attending the RWA National conference in Nashville this year. I can’t have people looking for a Cindy from 3.5 years ago and not finding her. I mean, can you imagine? I have wrinkles I didn’t have 3.5 years ago! I have grays (cleverly disguised for vanity) that I didn’t possess then—not counting the skunk streak, which has hidden in an area behind my right ear since I was 6.

(2) I got my hair cut.

Yes, I know, getting a haircut isn’t a very motivating reason to take new author photos. But I never have morning haircut appointments. This time I did. There had to be a reason for that, right? I was fated to take new author photos!

God knows when I’ll get around to loading them onto my website. I’m targeting next weekend.

“Green Cindy” will probably replace the picture on my Bio page (bigger than it is here):

“Purple Cindy” will likely go on my Home page (smaller than it is here):

“Blue Cindy” is for Facebook and the like. I took it to match the colors of my website, then decided I wanted more contrast. Thus the green and purple.

Little Pisser helped me pick them out. So if you don’t like them, tough. I had one in a black blouse, but she said my chin looked like it was attacking the camera. Can’t have that. Damn pointy Procter chin.

Happy St. Patrick’s Day!

Go out and green yourself. I don’t have to worry about it. I have green eyes. I figure I’ve done my bit.

Who’s My Inspiration

A new Q&A is up on my website! At long last! Finally!

I know you have all been waiting with baited breath (which always reminds me of fish breath, so I really shouldn’t say that about my loyal blog readers). (What’s that, you say? It’s bated breath? My apologies).

Okay, I admit, it’s not really a new Q&A. You got me, I can not tell a lie. As I’ve mentioned, I pulled out of my former group blog recently. In fact, as of today, the entire blog has shut down, so it wasn’t just my fault.

Last summer, on what would have been my grandfather’s 110th birthday had he lived another four years (some people do it!), I posted on the group blog about why he’s my inspiration. I didn’t want to lose that post, and now, thanks to Slightly Rude Canuck, who’s been pestering me to move the post to my own website for several weeks, I won’t have to.

Slightly Rude Canuck, you can now find the post on my Q&A page. Thank you for pushing me to put it there, even though the snarky comment wasn’t strictly required.