Doors- A locked door at Chislehurst Caves

Photograph of a Door at Chislehurst Caves, London, by Susan Sheldon NolenThis door really had me puzzled. The entrance way was wide and flanked with two stone columns. That massive, but fading  headpiece, made me believe that there was an amazing door hidden behind these two wood panels with a sturdy pad lock on them. ( I did try it! )

I could be wrong and the door behind those plywood doors might just be ordinary. Doors that had been replaced after a WWII bombing raid  with a modern glass door, or it could be a marvellous Art Deco Door! It drove me mental not knowing. I did ask someone at the caves and got an old dear, who clearly thought the heat of the day was getting to me, and replied with…  “What’s behind the locked door? Fancy a cup of tea, love? You look like you might need one. ”

Sometimes it’s hard to explain the power of a door.

Posted in Doors, Tales From The City | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Write on- Well, only if I can Tweet or Pin it.

Awriter'stoolshsI saw a cartoon the other day of a writer’s desk and it brought to mind how intrusive social media can be. The cartoon desk was loaded with social media icons and the actual typewriter or pen to do the writing was buried under Pinboards, Tweet piles, Facebook messages,  etc… Sometimes it’s hard to remember social media is  a tool to connect with readers and other writers, and it cannot be the end all.

You can’t  just Tweet, Pin it, Blog it, Facebook it, Google Plus it, Digg it, Tumble it, Reddit, Link it, Stumble it. ( have I left anyone out? ) It quickly becomes madness. There has to be time to answer emails, connect with your readers on a personal level, not just my new book is out ad nauseum.

How about time to do actual writing?

I was reading an article on the web and there was a place for comments. I like reading comments and seeing the reaction to an article written, but this comment author, who shall go unnamed, wrote..my new book about blah blah blah and I just groaned! Seriously? What on earth does this have to do with the article? Don’t you have an opinion? Your reader’s might find it interesting.

I get the need to find readers and with everything spread so thin and with so many people  trying to get the same reader…I get the frustration. I want readers also. But this kind of abusive commenting on articles or postings will not get me to read the book, and particularly, I will not recommend it. I have a deep distaste for that author’s book without even seeing one word that the author has written. It might have been brilliant!

Social Media is also not just a banner for your latest work..( there is so much of this out on Twitter)- Newest book, read my novel, it’s the best, and actually very little social engaging. Any one who follows me on Twitter is clearly aware that I am hopeless at it. I don’t tweet other than to comment on other people’s tweets, or retweet something I find interesting, or let everyone know my blog post is out.  I clearly am not an outstanding Twitterer.

Tweeters out there…HELP! I just don’t get how to tweet!

Not being on Twitter for a long time, I find that some tweet the same thing day after day, all geared to do one thing, sell. You might ask what is the point of writing if you can’t share it with your readers? Point taken, but I think readers, and I could be wrong, would like to learn a little bit about you. Bare everything? I think not. Tweet my latest coffee choice? ( Americanos) I think not. But I would like to see more comments on the world around them. What books are they reading now? More engagement with other writers. There is one tweeter who actually tweets as their character in their book? How are you supposed to respond to a fictional character? Sorry, I just  don’t engage like that.

There is an underlying sense of panic that if you don’t jump on and capture every social media out let available, you will lose a reader. But if you treat your reader with respect, and focus on writing, readers will find you. They really will. Word of mouth is  still an amazing thing. I recommend books all the time. ( No don’t send me yours to read right now, or I’ll send you mine! )

I’ve settled on two main places to ” sell” I tweet and  Facebook Page, and the rest….if something better comes along and I hope it will, I will move over, but you can’t spread yourself so thin that all you do is social media.

How are you managing your social media? Have you tamed your beast? Can I possibly learn to be an amazing Tweetie Pie?

Posted in writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 14 Comments

Yom HaShoah- Holocaust Remembrance Day Why Remember?

Warsaw Jews being held at gunpoint by SS troop...

Warsaw Jews being held at gunpoint by SS troops. Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, April 1943. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Today is a day of memory. It is Holocaust Remembrance Day and by chance the anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising.  Some 70 years ago, the Nazi’s planned to murder every last person in the Warsaw Ghetto on the holiday of Passover, and by doing so, prove that God had abandoned his people. It was a cruel game. Starved and exhausted, the inhabitants by some miracle learned ahead of time that this slaughter was going to happen, and beyond all comprehensible human endurance, pain and suffering, the inhabitants of the Ghetto found the strength to fight. Did they succeed? I don’t know if that question really matters,  when the world is against you for no other reason than you exist, you have to exist even harder.

But why remember when this happened so many years ago?  Man’s ability to commit horrific acts upon the world is timeless and without boundaries.

We remember to give value to lives stolen, we remember so they are never forgotten,  we remember because this horror can happen anywhere and anytime as long as man exists and wherever it can be found, we too must uprise against this evil.

We remember because it is too painful to forget.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Write On- Mapping your novel

Awriter'stoolshs

One of the marvels of fiction is the ability to go to places you have never been and take your reader there with you. It’s would fabulous if we all could be like Hemingway and go run with bulls, or have a Moveable Feast in Paris, but, for most of us, we are arm-chair travellers, armed with books, maps, and notes. How lucky we are to be living in the era of the internet. With just a quick search you can use Google Maps, to make sure your character when he does run straight ahead, he is not running straight into the river, when he is supposed to be running into a house!

But what if you need to go back into time? There are some fabulous map resources to really help cement your world in the correct time. Things change and so quickly. I remember when my father wanted to take me on a tour of his childhood London and how when we were only about two hours into our day, I could see his spirits falling. Old haunts were now replaced with Big Name Video Shops, even as I write this, I am aware that those Big Name Video Shops are probably now penny for the pound type of places. Google Maps can give you street views so you can double-check.

For other older resources, The British Library and its on-line map collection is just amazing. I can’t wait until they can get the entire library digital. Patience! Patience!

https://imagesonline.bl.uk

And if you are the next Tolkien, you won’t need any of this, as you will have your own world to map!

Posted in writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Sunny Florida!

This gallery contains 6 photos.

On my way to Mexico I had a short lay over in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Sadly not enough time to get into the town center and have a mooch around, but enough time to step into a world that I … Continue reading

Rate this:

More Galleries | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Doors- A faded blue door in Mexico

This gallery contains 1 photo.

I had to walk quite a ways in the back streets of Cozumel to find a door in this poor shape. All the other walls and houses had been painted in bright colours and were free of graffiti. But this … Continue reading

Rate this:

More Galleries | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Ted asks only one question

tedsnowshs2012

Ted and I think all of us want this answer, “If you keep telling me it’s spring, then what is this white stuff?”

Happy Spring Everyone!

Posted in Dogs, photography, Ted | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments

Hola Mexico! -2- The back streets of Cozumel

This gallery contains 8 photos.

It was still early in the morning and apart from the paper boys on their bikes, everyone was still asleep. I loved the colours of the buildings and doors, they felt so alive! It’s always a treat to find nature … Continue reading

Rate this:

More Galleries | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Doors – Sunny Mexico

doorsmexico2

On the back streets, far away from the footsteps of tourists, I found a yellow door in Cozumel. Yellow was a popular colour choice, walls, and doors were splashed with this bold declaration. Just coming from grey wet Seattle, it was like a bit of fallen sunshine captured on this door!

Posted in Doors, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Doors- Mexico

This gallery contains 1 photo.

I left early in the morning to capture some doors in Mexico which proved to be quite difficult. So many were hidden behind courtyards, or behind steel barriers. Very few people were up and about and the world behind these … Continue reading

Rate this:

More Galleries | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments