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Monday, November 25, 2013
Happy Thanksgiving!
Wishing all a very Happy Thanksgiving! I'm taking a break today to prepare for the hectic days ahead, but I'll be back to blogging next week!
Monday, November 18, 2013
Healthy Black Bean-Hominy Chili
The
last time I posted a recipe, I promised I’d provide my favorite vegetarian
chili next time around. This delicious
dish was created by Pam Anderson and appeared in USA
Today Weekend’s December 30, 2011-January 1, 2013 edition. If you’re a big-time meat lover, add some chorizo. Enjoy!
Healthy Black Bean-Hominy Chili
- 1 quart good quality vegetable broth (e.g. Pacific,
Kitchen Basics or Imagine brand)
- 1 can (14.5 ounces) petite-diced tomatoes
- 1 generous Tb. vegetable oil
- 1 medium-large onion, cut into medium dice
- 1 bell pepper, color choice is yours, cut into medium
dice
- 3 Tbs. chili powder
- 1 tsp. each ground cumin and oregano
- 2 cans (15.5 ounces each) drained black beans
- 2 cans (15.5 ounces each) drained hominy
- 3 large garlic cloves, minced
- 1 ounce bittersweet chocolate
- 1/4 of chopped fresh cilantro
Directions
1. Microwave broth and
tomatoes in a microwave-safe container on high power until steamy hot, about 5
minutes.
2. Meanwhile, heat oil
in a Dutch oven or small soup kettle over medium-high heat. Add onions and
peppers; sauté until soft and golden brown, about 5 minutes. Add chili powder,
cumin and oregano: sauté until fragrant, a minute or so. Add beans and hominy
along with hot broth mixture. Bring to a simmer, reduce heat to low and simmer,
partially covered, until vegetables are tender and flavors have blended, about
20 minutes. Stir in garlic, chocolate and cilantro; simmer a couple of minutes
to blend flavors. Turn off heat and let stand a few minutes if there's time.
Adjust seasonings and serve.
This is my very favorite
vegetarian/black bean chili! Must be the hominy and the chocolate! I’d never
had hominy (unless you count grits) until I tried this dish. Have you ever tried hominy? Also, do you have a favorite vegetarian chili?
Thanks for visiting and
have a great week!
Monday, November 11, 2013
Writing Your Author Bio
Today I'm featuring another selection from the archives. Whether traditionally or independently published, you'll want to craft an effective author bio! This post originally appeared on November 8, 2010.
"There is properly no history; only biography." Ralph Waldo Emerson
You've finished your novel--that was the easy part! Now you've overcome your fears and written the query letter. In addition, you fought the idea of condensing your "baby" to five pages, but finally did and wrote a synopsis.
Good to go, right? In some cases yes, but not when the agent/publisher requests an author biography! Writing your bio isn't as daunting as it is challenging for those of us who lead average, run of the mill lives.
Some people have experienced exciting and adventurous lives as army brats, or pursued glamorous professions such as corporate law or international business. Even some not so glamorous professions can be rather exciting, such as truck driving or jail wardening.
But if we're not lawyers like John Grisham, or doctors like Robin Cook, how can we make our lives (as housewives, sales clerks, accountants, insurance salesmen, etc.) sound a little more--robust?
First of all, you're not required to write a book! Usually no more than a paragraph is expected. You can take any significant experience in your life that has shaped you as a writer and put it in your bio.
Include your education if relevant to your writing background or your subject matter. If you were an English major or have an MFA, great! If you're a nuclear physicist, who's written a thriller about a nuclear physical disaster, by all means, state that.
Even if you don't have an MFA, or didn't go to college, you can take the life you've lived and work with it. However, don't "toot your own horn." Author bios are written in third person. Your mother may think you're the greatest writer alive, but leave that to the agent/publisher to decide.
A previous published article (even if you weren't paid) and where it appeared can be mentioned in your bio. Working in a job that used (or uses) your writing skill is also relevant info (such as news script writing for a local news station).
If you're a native of a notorious town (Las Vegas), popular tourist destination (San Francisco), or a historic city (Cincinnati), that fact can be used in crafting your bio. Perhaps your hometown's crime history, famous prison, or relationship with the Underground Railroad tapped into your creative juices as you wove your story about the Mafia, Alcatraz, or an escaped slave.
As an avid reader, you can mention the authors who've influenced your work, such as Thomas Fleming and Eugenia Price for historicals, or John Grisham and Scott Turow for legal thrillers.
If you experienced an exciting trip to an exotic locale (this can be a trip in the mission field, or that trip to Europe you took with the high school senior class), you can describe how that experience inspired you in creating your story. Perhaps the people, the history/culture, or the art made an impression upon you.
Lastly, if you belong to a writers' organization (e.g. Romance Writers of America), and a critique group, place that in your bio. This shows that your serious about your writing career and are working to improve your craft.
Here are a few basic points to keep in mind:
Have you written your author bio yet? Thanks for stopping by and have a great week!
You've finished your novel--that was the easy part! Now you've overcome your fears and written the query letter. In addition, you fought the idea of condensing your "baby" to five pages, but finally did and wrote a synopsis.
Good to go, right? In some cases yes, but not when the agent/publisher requests an author biography! Writing your bio isn't as daunting as it is challenging for those of us who lead average, run of the mill lives.
Some people have experienced exciting and adventurous lives as army brats, or pursued glamorous professions such as corporate law or international business. Even some not so glamorous professions can be rather exciting, such as truck driving or jail wardening.
But if we're not lawyers like John Grisham, or doctors like Robin Cook, how can we make our lives (as housewives, sales clerks, accountants, insurance salesmen, etc.) sound a little more--robust?
First of all, you're not required to write a book! Usually no more than a paragraph is expected. You can take any significant experience in your life that has shaped you as a writer and put it in your bio.
Include your education if relevant to your writing background or your subject matter. If you were an English major or have an MFA, great! If you're a nuclear physicist, who's written a thriller about a nuclear physical disaster, by all means, state that.
Even if you don't have an MFA, or didn't go to college, you can take the life you've lived and work with it. However, don't "toot your own horn." Author bios are written in third person. Your mother may think you're the greatest writer alive, but leave that to the agent/publisher to decide.
A previous published article (even if you weren't paid) and where it appeared can be mentioned in your bio. Working in a job that used (or uses) your writing skill is also relevant info (such as news script writing for a local news station).
If you're a native of a notorious town (Las Vegas), popular tourist destination (San Francisco), or a historic city (Cincinnati), that fact can be used in crafting your bio. Perhaps your hometown's crime history, famous prison, or relationship with the Underground Railroad tapped into your creative juices as you wove your story about the Mafia, Alcatraz, or an escaped slave.
As an avid reader, you can mention the authors who've influenced your work, such as Thomas Fleming and Eugenia Price for historicals, or John Grisham and Scott Turow for legal thrillers.
If you experienced an exciting trip to an exotic locale (this can be a trip in the mission field, or that trip to Europe you took with the high school senior class), you can describe how that experience inspired you in creating your story. Perhaps the people, the history/culture, or the art made an impression upon you.
Lastly, if you belong to a writers' organization (e.g. Romance Writers of America), and a critique group, place that in your bio. This shows that your serious about your writing career and are working to improve your craft.
Here are a few basic points to keep in mind:
- Write in third person
- List facts
- Cite relevant experience
- Write tight
Have you written your author bio yet? Thanks for stopping by and have a great week!
Monday, November 4, 2013
Twelve Years A Slave
When I started writing The Unchained Trilogy, I read several slave narratives to help me with my research. I had not read Twelve Years a Slave, and wasn't even familiar with it. But now I have the opportunity to read the book--and see the movie.
If you're like me, and unfamiliar with the real Solomon Northup, here's some information, courtesy of Wikipedia:
Slave narratives are fascinating, but very sad and truly difficult to read. Although reading Solomon Northup's story will be heart wrenching, watching the movie will be even more tortuous.
According to The Boston Globe:
Is Twelve Years A Slave on your "To See" or "To Read" list? If you've had a chance to read it, or already seen the movie, what did you think?
Thanks for visiting and have a great week!
Solomon Northup |
Solomon Northup (July 1808 – after 1857) was a free-born African American from Saratoga Springs, New York. He is noted for having been kidnapped in 1841 when enticed with a job offer. When he accompanied his supposed employers to Washington, DC, they drugged him and sold him into slavery. From Washington, DC, he was transported to New Orleans where he was sold to a plantation owner from Rapides Parish, Louisiana. After 12 years in bondage, he regained his freedom in January 1853; he was one of very few to do so in such cases. Held in the Red River region of Louisiana by several different owners, he got news to his family, who contacted friends and enlisted the Governor of New York, Washington Hunt in his cause. New York state had passed a law in 1840 to recover African-American residents who had been kidnapped and sold into slavery.
Slave narratives are fascinating, but very sad and truly difficult to read. Although reading Solomon Northup's story will be heart wrenching, watching the movie will be even more tortuous.
Scene from Twelve Years a Slave |
Hollywood’s portrayals of American slavery have run the gamut — from all but romanticizing it in “Gone with the Wind” to riffing ironically on it in Quentin Tarantino’s “Django Unchained.” A new film, “12 Years a Slave,” offers something different: a faithful, unvarnished depiction of everyday life as a slave, and of all the horrors that went with it. Based on the 1841 kidnapping into slavery of Solomon Northrup, a free black man from Saratoga, N.Y., the film is told from a slave’s point of view, with Northrup’s agony eloquently portrayed by Chiwetel Ejiofor. One thing that comes through is the arbitrariness of the institution; slaves deemed unsatisfactory or rebellious were whipped, or strung up, in a blind rage by their owners. Other owners harbored moral conflicts about the “peculiar institution,” but nevertheless allowed slaves’ families to be broken up.I want to say I'm looking forward to seeing the movie--and I am--but it'll be hard. I'll be sure to have tissues handy.
Is Twelve Years A Slave on your "To See" or "To Read" list? If you've had a chance to read it, or already seen the movie, what did you think?
Thanks for visiting and have a great week!