Mammogram PSA

I’m having my annual mammogram this week. It’s not something I look forward to, but it’s an exercise I commit to without fail. Really, in Canada, there’s no reason not to. Annual mammograms are free for women forty and over. At least they are in my province. I believe they are across the board, but I shouldn’t speak to that when I haven’t looked into it.

I don’t know what the situation is in the States, but it boggles my mind that several provinces in my country (if not all the provinces) offer free annual mammograms to women over forty, and yet so many women continue not to take advantage of this service. I’ve offered to accompany friends who still refuse to go. No, your boobs aren’t too small. Yes, it can hurt if you have glandular breasts or schedule your mammogram for the wrong time of month (going in mid-cycle is best). Yes, the first time is embarrassing. Okay, every time is embarrassing. Just like pap smears are embarrassing. But the embarrassment lessens each time you have it done. Breasts are like teeth. To a mammogram technologist. Compared to a dentist. Think of it like that.

Now, go forth and have your boobs squished. Thank me later.

Life’s A Beach

More pictures, as promised:

Tourists on horseback. “She Who Gave Me Life” calls this beach “Horse Poop Beach.”

 

The mission in the town square.

 

“A Day at the Beach.” Not the beach in front of the hotels. We drove and got away from it all.

 

Not a bad way to spend a Sunday, eh?

Okay, back to the grindstone.

Baja-Ha-Ha-Ha

One of the reasons it took me so long to get set up with a new computer recently is that my old one kicked the bucket three days before I left for a week in sunny Mexico. I wasn’t ready to accept that it needed replacing, so I sent it to the computer shop while I was gone. Upon my return, I discovered, yep, it was time for ol’ Delbert to retire, and at that point I needed to research and then shop for a replacement. So while you were all feeling sorry for me, I was actually relaxing (and trying very hard NOT to think about the computer). I didn’t take any work with me, because I planned to catch up upon my return. Ha-ha, joke on me!

Anyway, that’s my convoluted way of explaining why I’m so late sharing some photos with you. But here they finally are!

“She Who Gave Me Life” walking the beach. That’s a fresh water estuary on the left and the Sea of Cortez on the right.

 

I scared the birds at the estuary trying to sneak up on the egret in the foreground.

 

 

Dive-bombing pelican. I followed him with my camera for at least ten frames. This was the shot right before he landed in the water.

 

The elusive Mr. Egret.

More tomorrow!

Who Inspires You?

By Donna Russo Morinrusso_morin_pic

Like so much of life, the inspiration for my second book came to me when I was least looking for it.

I had always been a fan of Katie Couric through the many years she worked on the Today Show. So when she was appointed as the anchor of the CBS Evening News, I tuned in despite my typical aversion to television news programs, feeling a sense of camaraderie and sisterhood for a woman trying to break boundaries. How could I know that just a few weeks into her tenure, a two minute story would provide me incredible fodder for my second book?

It was a feature story about the glassmakers of Murano. While other countries were vainly attempting to imitate the artistry of the centuries old craft, few had come close to revealing the secret of the glass—the particular formula that made Murano glass so exceptional. Laced throughout the story were snippets of Murano glassmaking history. One point in particular caught and captured my imagination: for hundreds of years the glassmakers of Venice were virtual prisoners in their own land, captives of russo_morin_secret_of_glasstheir government, a powerful republic determined to keep the prestige and the profit produced by the glass for themselves.

The percussion of inspiration in my mind was as loud as a foghorn blast in the middle of starkly still night. Within a half hour of viewing the story, I had a two page synopsis written, a complete plot mapped out about a young Murano woman who must somehow save herself while protecting the ‘secret of the glass,’ a phrase that would become the title of my second book.

Other than what I had gleaned from the news, I knew little of Venetian history and that of the glassmakers, though I was enthusiastic to begin my research. Always a favorite part of the process for me, the subject matter would also take me to the land of my ancestors (of full Italian descent, I am but a second generation American as proud of the land of my antecedents as I am of my homeland). Having spent the previous year researching France for work on my first book (The Courtier’s Secret, Kensington, Feb. 09), I couldn’t wait for my time in Venice.

And there, between the pages that brought the old world to life, I found Galileo. I was unaware of how much time he had spent in the magical city, unaware how prominently the land figured into his story and he in Venice’s. I was astounded when I learned that, like myself, the professor suffered from a chronic illness. The more I read, the more sure I became that, had the astronomer been privy to modern day medicine, his diagnosis would have been auto-immune, like my own. I found kinship in his tale of determination, one echoed in the story of the land itself and the people that had made it so unique.

It became a daily thrill to tell their story, to give breath to these marvelous characters. On every page are the words their inspiration gave to me.

Tell me who inspires you and why and enter to win a copy of my latest release, THE SECRET OF THE GLASS.

***

Leave a comment or question for Donna to enter to win THE SECRET OF THE GLASS. If you’re reading this post through a feed on Facebook, Goodreads, or another social network, please visit the comment trail at Muse Interrupted to be eligible for the draw.

To read Donna’s bio and the back cover blurb for THE SECRET OF THE GLASS, see yesterday’s post. To learn more about Donna and her books, check out her website.

Donna Russo Morin Guest Blogs Tomorrow!

Tomorrow I’ll welcome repeat guest blogger Donna Russo Morin back to the blog. Donna’s blogging about what inspires her and is giving away a copy of her latest historical romance, THE SECRET OF THE GLASS.

About THE SECRET OF THE GLASS:

At the dawn of the 17th Century, Murano glass-makers are celebrated, revered, and imprisoned by the Venetian government. Sophia Fiolario, the daughter of a glass making maestro, has no desire for marriage, finding her serenity in the love of her family and the beauty of the glass. She learns of its secrets at her father’s side, where a woman has no right to be. But the life Sophia loves is threatened and she’s thrust into the opulent world of the Venice court, becoming embroiled in the scheming machinations of the courtiers’ lives. The beauty of Venice, the magnificence of the Doge’s Palace, can only be rivaled by the intrigue and danger that festers behind their splendid facades. As she searches for an escape, she finds the arms of another, a man whose own desperate situation is yet another obstacle in their path.

Amidst political and religious intrigue, the scientific furor ignited by Galileo, and even murder, Sophia must do anything to protect herself, her family…and the secret of the glass.

About Donna:russo_morin_pic

Donna Russo Morin began writing in elementary school, when talking animals and numbers who were in love, filled her imagination. She is a graduate of the University of Rhode Island where she obtained two degrees.

Her short fiction has appeared in critically acclaimed anthologies and she has published more than twenty-five non-fiction articles and more than sixty book reviews in newspapers and magazines nationwide. Since she was seventeen, Donna has also worked as a model and actress and has appeared in everything from an automobile supply commercial where she changed her own oil, to Martin Scorsese’s film, The Departed.

For most of her life, her writing took a back seat to her responsibilities, and Donna would fit it in between working a day job and caring for a home and her two children. In 2004, after being diagnosed with chronic Lyme Disease and losing her father to cancer, she asked herself…if not now, when?

Donna’s first historical novel, The Courtier’s Secret was released in February of 2009, when she was fifty years old. Her second book, The Secret of the Glass, goes on sale next week, and she is currently hard at work on her third novel. Her goal is a book a year until she turns 70, when she’ll cut back to one book every two years.

Donna lives close to the south coast of Rhode Island with her two sons, Devon and Dylan, her greatest works in progress. You can visit her website at www.donnarussomorin.com.

Valentine Give-Aways–All Month!

Red Sage Publishing is hosting a series of give-aways all month long over at Red Sage Revealed. Today, Valentine’s Day, features a blog post by Penny and her Volume 28 compadres. Enter by commenting on today’s post at Red Sage Revealed to win a download of Secrets 28. Yes, you heard me. Secrets are now available as ebooks as well as the ever popular trade paperbacks! Check out Secrets 21 and Secrets 26 while you’re there.