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Thursday, May 22, 2025

I'm Still Here by Liz Flaherty

Late again, but a good reason, I promise! I had surgery Friday, a serious but textbook removal of a carotid artery blockage. It went well, although it came with surprises. It was worse than expected. More than expected. I came home late the next day, feeling pretty good, pretty proud I'd gotten through it all easily.

Then, on Sunday, my oxygen saturation tanked and my lungs developed a grouchy crackle and slurped up more fluid than to which they were entitled, and back to the hospital I went. Not the same one--a smaller satellite of the same group. 

My care was great, staff was great. Even the food was good. After two days, I came home. I have family support, love, and care. I have quite literally no complaints.

But I'm feeling strange.

I take medicine for blood pressure, for cholesterol, for depression. Small dosages that keep me level. I wish I didn't need them, but there you go. I also take vitamins and calcium and a few other supplements. 

But over these past days, I've been filled with medication. With anesthesia whose contents list went on forever. With stuff to make me pee. Stuff to allow me to clear other things. Stuff to help my lungs get back to normal. Stuff to keep my oxygen on track. I've done very, very little for myself. My husband even brings me my laptop when I need it. I haven't cooked or done laundry. I emptied the dishwasher this morning and felt like Wonder Woman. 

I feel pretty well, although heavy with what is still in my head, in my arteries. My wrists and the insides of my elbows are still bruised from needles. I've laughed with others about my now having a dramatic story to tell. But I'm slow. I can't think of words. I'm ... well, vague. If any of you remembers Marion Lorne, I have her persona down pat.

I am ... oh, so very happy to feel well, so grateful to the ones who've helped me on that path, but I'm anxious to have myself back, too. I want, when I say or write those words I'm still here, to be sure of who I am and where here is.

I'm not back to writing yet, but my Harlequin Heartwarmings are on on sale. If you've never read one, I hope you'll give them a try.

Thanks for coming by! 

 



Friday, May 16, 2025

Wallflower of Wildflowers by Joan Reeves

I'm a bit late in posting today because I just arrived home from a few days in the country.

The wildflowers are blooming in the fields around our house there, but I was a bit dismayed in how many bull nettles have popped up.

Like wallflowers that no one wants to dance with, these wildflowers are the ones no one wants in their landscape. Why? Because everything about the plant except for the bloom is covered with stinging little spiny things.

If you ever touch or brush up against a bull nettle, you'll always remember to be careful around them in the future.

Why so many this year? Because we had feral hogs using our land as a playground back in the winter. Their hooves dig deep in soft earth and their snouts do even more damage.

Where the soil gets torn up, bull nettles follow. 

My first inclination was to put on my jeans and boots and dig up as many as I could. However, the blossoms on top of the 2 foot tall stalks are pretty. Usually these over-sized blossoms droop rather than stand straight up.

I never knew much about this Texas wildflower so I decided to learn something about them before I decimated their number.

SURPRISE! WRONG NAME

I learned that the plants in my field were probably not Texas Bullnettle aka Cnidoscolus texanus, a spiny, deep-rooted, herbaceous perennial in the Spurge family. They're probably the White Prickly Poppy aka Argemone albiflora, a nettle-like spiny plant that also grows tall.

White Prickly Poppy has spiny prickles, but it's not the stinging hairs that cause severe irritation like those on the Texas Bull Nettle, renowned for its stinging hairs that can cause a painful rash and irritation upon contact. (I shudder to think about what a real bull nettle might feel like.)

Taken at Johnson City, TX
Both plants have striking green foliage with jagged leaves and they bloom in the same time period, April through September with pretty blossoms. The true bull nettle flower isn't as showy as the prickly poppy.

They have a strong taproot system so can survive drought and hard winter freezes. Livestock will not eat either of these plants even in periods of drought because they're so prickly.

Quail and dove eat the seeds of the prickly poppy, and native Americans used it for various ailments, but it has to be expertly used because it can be toxic.

The bull nettle seeds are edible when ripe and were eaten by native Americans. The root is supposedly edible, but I don't plan on digging a plant up and boiling it like a potato unless we descend into a post-apocolyptic era. 

The plant has medicinal uses, and Native Americans have used it for various ailments, but it can be toxic if not used properly.

LEARN SOMETHING NEW EVERY DAY

I became fond of these 2 native plants—yes, I have both varieties in the fields—and I decided to leave them alone. They look a little strange growing almost 2 feet above the other wildflowers, but I imagine them as sentries, looking out over the field of flowers, keeping watch for danger.

I'll love them from afar because I'm not getting within a foot of either of these plants. I learned my lesson long ago when I wanted to pick them for a bouquet. Outch! Ouch! Ouch!

WANT MORE WILDFLOWERS?

My friend Kara O'Neal has a wonderful series, Wildflowers of Texas. Check out SUNFLOWERS FOR HER, a new release that is Book 4 in the series. 

I think you'll love it.

SPECIAL DEAL FOR READERS

I have another special deal for readers this month.

I've been running Facebook ads in the US and in the UK which is why I've been making the first book in a series on sale.

Last week I started an ad campaign for another of my romantic comedy novels, THE TROUBLE WITH LOVE.

REVIEW

"ENCHANTED AND THOROUGHLY DELIGHTED" 5 Stars. A thoroughly delightful romance. The story of not one but three separate and equally lovely couples. The first is Suzannah and Hogan. An FBI agent and a beautiful Deputy Sheriff enbroiled in a little drama, that deftly introduces the second pair.

Rory, Suzannah's mother, a recluse from a bad young marriage and Walter a long time widower and Mayor, Hogan's step uncle. 

They in turn bring in the third grouping Yvonne, Hogan's step-mother and an aging Jewel thief, of English/Scottish orgins called McConnell.

What a merry chase this story is. I absoluted loved how it all wove together to create a satifying and lovely romance.

THE TROUBLE WITH LOVE is on sale for 99¢ or read it "free" on Kindle Unlimited.

Thanks for dropping by today. I hope you found the wildflower post interesting.

Have a wonderful May. I'll see you again next month.

(Find me online: SlingWords * Website * Facebook * Romance Gems...Authors & Readers Meet.)


Joan participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, affiliate advertising designed to help websites earn advertising fees by linking to products on Amazon. If you click an Amazon link in her post, she may receive a small commision at no extra cost to you.

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Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Trauma Diaries~ Sherri Easley

 

So last weekend, I was getting dressed to go watch my grands play soccer, feeling kinda cute in my new Spring clothes and I decided to wear my contacts. I wear my glassed 99% or the time.

Oh my! I had no idea my face, especially under my eyes, was so wrinkled- probably from the magnified sun through my glasses all these years!

I immediately got online and ordered every Mary Kay product with retinol and vitamin C I could find, but I am still a bit traumatized.

I will say though, the quicker remedy was just to remove the contacts- now I can’t see the wrinkles (or much of anything else) - problem solved.

Okay, so real work (or therapy in my case)…

Last month I talked about changing things up on my writing so my daughter "might" read something I've written. It is really hard to dedicate a novel to someone who won't read it. I am not sure why I was shocked that this is the type writing she likes, after all, I took British Lit and several other literature classes as electives for my degree in Math.  

So, here is my shot at Romantasy –

The opening to Chapter 1- (of 35). It has been rewritten no less than 10 times and I keep having to undo my doing. It is possible to overwrite I am learning … repeatedly.


Chapter One: The Scribe

I used to think ink was safe—less dangerous than blood, less binding than prophecy.

That was the lie I fed myself every time I dipped my quill. That if I kept my head down and my hands busy, the world wouldn’t see me—and the only trace of me would be in the words I left behind.

My writing was good, not fancy, just plain, precise, and legible. It lacked the extravagant flourishes favored by nobles and the courtly elite, and that was by design. Not because I lacked the skill. I could craft letters with as much gilded flair as any palace-trained scribe—but I chose not to. Simplicity kept me unseen. Safe.

I was content with the simple life I had, working beside Master Faren, the village historian. He and his late wife had shown me kindness when they had no reason to, offering food, shelter, and the warmth of a hearth for my help in transcribing dusty tomes and reading aloud to them from ancient texts.

Every morning, I started my day the same, sweeping ash from the hearth and stacking the day’s scrolls by subject: histories, hymns, political letters.

The Master liked to quiz me between sips of his spiced tea. He’d pause in the middle of copying a decree to ask about the Fourth Age rebellions or to recite a passage from the Book of the Flame. Our life was quiet, structured, and predictable—until it wasn’t.

My life was more than most orphans in Dalswyth could dream of. The others—those left to survive the streets—found work in the shadows. Their trades were built on deceit, survival, and compromise. I knew many by name, few by choice. I knew better than to judge them, for it was only by fate that we were on opposite sides of the glass.

I watched their world from my window, but I lived among the countless realms hidden within the pages of Master Faren’s sprawling library. While the seasons turned outside, I devoured epics and verses, memorized the wisdom of the old gods, and could recite the Exaltation of Inanna, composed by Enheduanna, high priestess of the moon god Nanna, in no fewer than three tongues.

I could do many things that most mortal girls of seventeen winters could not do. I could decipher runes, debate philosophy, and translate dead languages whispered only in temples long turned to dust.

And yet, for all I knew, for all I was, one thing remained forever out of reach.

My childhood.

 

Friday, May 2, 2025

What's your favorite?

By Caroline Clemmons

I just finished a book that will release this summer and am pondering what to write next. I thought you could help me decide.  The book I recently finished and sent to my editor is one of ten in a MAP (multi-author project) called Guns for Hire. Obviously it could be one of many time periods, but it's a sweet historical western. Mine is set in 1881 and takes place mostly in northeastern New Mexico Territory. The Title is SHAD and it is available for preorder here.

My questions are:

Do you prefer a series from one author or a M/AP? 

Do you read single titles or look for a series?

What is your favorite trope?

I'm in a quandary and really need your input. I have so many plots I want to write but can't decide which one to use. With the threats to our retirement funds, I need to keep the royalties rolling in. Okay, mine sort of limp instead of roll, but I still need them.

A $10 gift card to the person whose suggestion I use or whose suggestion most inspires me. ends 5/9/2025.

Thanks for stopping by.