“Anyone who wishes to become a good
writer should endeavour,
before he allows himself to be
tempted by the more showy qualities,
to be direct, simple, brief,
vigorous, and lucid.”
~ H.W. Fowler, lexicographer ~
Gifts for My Writer Friends:
Working
on non-fiction or historical fiction? Kathy Temean has a great post by Erika
Wassall HERE on research tips.
Wonderful article HERE by Toni Morrison called Write, Erase, Do It Over: On Failure, Risk and Writing Outside Yourself.
We
all have times when the well seems to be dry. My friend and fellow writer
Jennie Hansen sent me the link to a good article HERE, 14 Surprising Ways to
Boost Creativity.
Last week, I promised a copy of Augusta Scattergood's latest novel, The Way to Stay in Destiny, to one of you. Our winner this week is Sue Heavenrich, a science writer and photographer. Congratulations, Sue! I will be sending your book out this week. If you don't know Sue, check out her THREE blogs. I can hardly keep one going, but Sue has three. Wow. You can check them out by clicking on their titles: Sally's Bookshelf, Archimedes Notebook, and The Marcellus Effect. She has book reviews and sometimes giveaways on the first two, so don't miss those. I have another great giveaway this week, so keep on reading.
Another of the people I've met through the Highlights Workshops is Kathy Wiechman who writes historical fiction. Kathy and I had known each other for some years via the internet before we actually met at the Whole Novel Historical Fiction workshop. She had a manuscript that was pretty close to being acquired and we were all thrilled to hear that it happened for her not long after the workshop. That book, Like A River: A Civil War Novel, is coming out on April 7. That is the book I want to tell you about. It's terrific. Here is the review I wrote for the San Francisco Book Review.
Leander is
fifteen and lives in his older brother’s shadow. Nate, eighteen, is everything
Leander wants to be. When Nate announces he is joining the Union Army with his
friend, Given, Leander sees the decision drive a wedge between his parents.
Days later, Nate is badly injured and will never walk again. Leander signs up
in Nate’s place. He and Given are in a fierce battle and Leander loses his arm.
While recuperating in a field hospital, Leander meets Paul. Paul has a big
secret. When Paul’s injured father dies, Paul joins a fighting unit, ending up
in Andersonville Prison where he meets Given, and they help each other survive.
“He wondered what her
real name was, and was she making up those stories about hunting possum,
rabbits, and deer? Those didn’t sound like things a girl would do.”
Kathy Cannon Wiechman has written a compelling story of loyalty, survival,
friendship, and love for young people caught up in the most terrible of times and places during the Civil War. It is clear Wiechman did a great deal of good research to bring such a level of realism to this excellent story. The characters are rich and well-rounded, the settings nearly palpable, and the writing is beautiful and powerful. This should have a much wider readership than the middle-grade and teen audience for which it is intended.
Kathy Cannon Wiechman |
You can read a more extensive review of this book and a wonderful interview with Kathy HERE on Jennifer Sommer's blog. It has lots of good information for writers and readers. Do check it out.
I have a gently read ARC of this terrific book for one of you. To win, all you need do is have a
US address, be a subscriber or follower and tell me that in a comment
you leave on this post. If you are reading this in your email, click
HERE to go to the blog so you can leave a comment. If you would like
extra chances, please spread the word by posting the link on a Tweet,
blog post, Facebook, or any other way you like. Let me know what you
have done in your comment, and I will put in extra chances for you for
each that you do.
Don't forget to check out Shannon Messenger's wonderful blog HERE for many more Marvelous Middle-Grade Monday reviews and giveaways.