“The ability to
simplify means to eliminate the unnecessary so that the necessary may speak.”
~Hans Hofmann, painter~
Some Gifts for My Writer Friends:
Click HERE for a fun little article telling about odd jobs some
great authors had before they got their big breaks.
Randy Ingermanson has a terrific post on making
your characters sound different from each other in dialog. Click HERE to read
it.
Becca Puglisi and Angela Ackerman have sage advice
about the difference between Conflict & Tension. Not to be missed by
writers. Click HERE.
We have a WINNER! Nancy will be receiving a copy of The Adventurous Deeds of Deadwood Jones very soon. Congratulations, Nancy, and thanks for being a reader of my blog. I'll be sending out the book this week. If you did not win, stay tuned. There will be another giveaway at the end of this post.
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Yankee Girl is set in Jackson, MS against the backdrop of the the beginning of school integration.
Alice Anne Moxley has just moved to Jackson because her father, an FBI agent has been transferred there to help with the expected violent reactions to the integration. Alice, a transplanted Yankee, is not welcomed in her new school. The kids pretty much shun her and refer to her as a Yankee, clearly a terrible insult. But Alice has no idea how bad in could be until Valerie Taylor, daughter of an African-American clergyman, comes into her class. Author Mary Ann Rodman, herself the daughter of an FBI agent who moved to Jackson in 1964, pulls no punches in this book and uses the vernacular of the local citizens in her fine book. It is a true coming-of-age story steeped in the history of its setting. This is a terrific read for anyone from middle grades on up. ![]() |
Augusta Scattergood |
Glory Be is set in a small town in Mississippi, also in 1964. Gloriana Hemphill is eleven, but very close to her twelfth birthday. All of her birthdays since she could swim at a very young age have been celebrated with a party at the community pool. Glory is upset that no one seems interesting in helping her plan for her party, especially that her older sister Jesslyn is too busy to care. Now it is less than two weeks before that auspicious day, and Glory hears the pool is going to be closed. The official story is it is closing for repairs, but it is well-known around town it is being closed to avoid having it integrated. A new girl in town, Laura, is visiting for the summer from way up north in Ohio with her mother who has come to help set up a free clinic for the poor in town. Being with Laura is a real eye-opener for Glory, and the time and happenings in the town set Glory on a path to a fast spate of growing up. The writing is simply terrific, as is the story. I was absolutely transported by this book. I recommend it highly. I promise you will not regret this choice for your precious reading time.
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Don't forget to check out all the Marvelous Middle-Grade Monday books at Shannon Messenger's blog which you can find by clicking HERE.