Articles and Essays

Author Interview | Sheila Deeth

Next Wednesday, November 2nd, I’ll host author of Spiritual Speculative Fiction, Sheila Deeth, on Book Talk, Creativity, and Family Matters.

Until then, enjoy her interview below.

Tell us a little about yourself, Shelia.

I’m an English American, a mathematician who can’t add up, a writer who can’t spell (blame the “born in England living in America” bit), and a Catholic Protestant (I call myself a Mongrel Christian Mathematician). I have three grown-up sons, one husband, and currently no dogs (but if one should land on our doorstep that would change in a heart-beat).

What personal experience allowed you to write your recent publication, Flower Child?

Flower Child tells of a mother whose first pregnancy ends in miscarriage, and whose next child is born soon afterwards. This happened to me, and left me feeling like I couldn’t grieve the lost child without betraying the babe in my arms.

What is your major message or the major theme in Flower Child?
That there’s more to life and death than human thought can comprehend.
How long have you been writing?
I’ve been telling stories since I learned to talk (possibly before, but no-one’s sure), and writing them since I learned to write.

How long did it take you to write and revise Flower Child?
I wrote it the first draft pretty quickly, just in a week or so. That usually happens if something grabs my interest. It was a very short first draft of course, and once I had the beginning and the ending written I spent a few weeks longer extending the middle. Then came editing and, after I’d sent it to Gypsy Shadow, working with my editor, Denise Bartlett—a really enjoyable experience since she does a great job of teaching at the same time as suggesting edits.

How do you categorize your books–what genre?
I’d say my Gypsy Shadow books are all spiritual speculative fiction. I’ve self-published some Christian books too, and I have a contemporary literary novel coming out with Stonegarden next summer.
Have you ever taken writing classes?
I had an English teacher in junior high who was very critical (as I thought then—now I know she was a godsend!). But I studied mathematics at university—I liked the way answers could be right or wrong instead of open to debate. I never stopped writing though, or dreaming of being published, or telling stories (I even taught chess lessons to kids with stories wrapped round the games).

What is your greatest difficulty in writing?
Finding time—writing is my chocolate to be enjoyed when all the work’s been done.

What is your greatest joy in writing?
See previous question. Mmm. Chocolate.

What is your process when writing a book? Do you outline?
I start, and sometimes what I’ve started keeps growing, in which case it ends up as a book. Other times it comes to a natural conclusion and I’m done. Once I know I’m writing a book I might write a few outlines, just so I remember who’s who and where I’m going. Often the outline comes after I’m finished so I can tell if the characters gave me the events in the right order. For me, writing feels like listening to my characters tell stories—while feeding me chocolate of course.

How often do you write–every day, every other day?
Whenever I can.

Do you write full-time?
I don’t have any other full-time job, if that’s what you mean, but I spend longer cooking, cleaning, shopping, washing, doing yardwork etc than I do writing.

What is one thing you have learned in writing each of your books?
I’m beginning to realize that identity is a common theme in what I write. I wonder if that comes of all the contradictions in how I describe myself.

What do you have on the agenda for your next book?
I’m writing a story set in the future that I’m hoping will turn into a novel. I had to stop writing to take a vacation though (a once-in-a-lifetime trip to Alaska—it was brilliant!) and my fingers are itching to get back to it.

How can interested readers get in touch with you?
You can email me from my blog http://sheiladeeth.blogspot.com or leave a message on my book site http://sheiladeeth.weebly.com

What is a word of advice you would give anyone interested in writing?
One word. Write.
More than one: Write and, if you can’t stop, you’re probably a writer, so keep going. But always be ready to improve and throw stuff away.

How can readers purchase your book?
It’s available on Gypsy Shadow’s website: This link takes you straight to Flower Child on my page there: http://gypsyshadow.com/SheilaDeeth.html#Flower
It’s available on Smashwords too, but I don’t think it’s on Amazon and Barnes and Noble yet. It should be soon though.

Thank you so much for interviewing me!

Sheila Deeth
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

You are quite welcome, Shelia.

Shelia is also the author of Black Widow and Refracted.

Flower Child is now available in Kindle Format at Amazon and Nook Format at Barnes & Noble.

Again, I invite visitors to tune into or download my conversation with Shelia next Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011.

Author Interview | Sheila Deeth Read More »

Of “Mausam,” Einstein’s Theory of Relativity and Creating for the Ages…

I recently saw the movie, Mausam, written and directed by Pankaj Kapur, and starring the beautiful Sonam Kapoor opposite the wonderful and delightfully handsome, Shahid Kapoor.

Like most Bollywood movies of its genre, historical dramatic romance, the movie move along taking its time to tell what I experienced as a beautiful love story.

Critics on both sides of the ocean suggest that the pacing could be increased by eliminating various scenes that do not contribute to the overall plot of the story.

I disagree.

The director could have deleted certain scenes and decreased the run time and perhaps maintained the high level of enjoyment I experienced.

But why fix what is not broken?

As an American moviegoer that has grown tired of movies aiming to tell a story with what often appears an ultimate goal of relaying the narrative, in movie format, in the shortest amount of time possible,

Of “Mausam,” Einstein’s Theory of Relativity and Creating for the Ages… Read More »

Of Alzheimer’s, Love and Forgetting What Makes Us Human…

A woman asking for moral guidance for a friend whose wife has Alzheimers…

This is the woman who recently called the 700 Club, hosted by Pat Roberston, a husband for 57 years to his wife, Adelia.

“He says, he should be allowed to see other people because his wife as he knows her is gone…” the woman said of her friend.

To the surprise of many, Roberston, an ordained Baptist Minister for 50 years advised that the man in question

Of Alzheimer’s, Love and Forgetting What Makes Us Human… Read More »

Of Colombiana, Contagion, and Miracles…

“If you are interested in something, you will focus on it, and if you focus attention on anything, it is likely that you will become interested in it.
Many of the things we find interesting are not so by nature, but because we took the trouble of paying attention to them.”
— Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

I saw two movies this weekend. Contagion, for the first time, and Colombiana for the 2nd.

Viewing a movie for the second time, much like reading a book, allows the opportunity to evaluate and inspect what either makes the story work, or remain vibrant in your mind, or the memories of its plot and characters, if you can recall them, slink into the recesses of the forgotten.

I was not excited at the thought of seeing Colombiana a second time.

Yet now as I write, I realize my hesitation came not from the quality of the movie itself, but quite the opposite.

The story of a young woman, who in losing her parents to a villainous killing at the age of 9, then seeking revenge, Colombiana is clearly a character driven story.

Contagion on the other hand, involves many characters whose roles work to tell the story of not a person, but rather display the effect of

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Of Love, Dreams and Waking Up…

“Love is one long sweet dream and marriage is the alarm clock.” BLOOM OF LOVE on Twitter

When reading this on Twitter I immediately thought of how living so closely with someone, waking up to them next to you when your breath does not carry the aroma you would like to hit your nose, never mind that of another, their seeing you sick and the reverse, and their witnessing your various responses to life’s trials can and does reveal your inner core, the essence of your personality.

Yes, love by itself and unfettered by the commitment of marriage, “…for better for worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health…and unto death…”

Of Love, Dreams and Waking Up… Read More »

Of The Military Industrial Complex, Sarah Palin, and Unconditional Love…

I recently read an article on the Huffington Post entitled, Why You’re Not Married.
The author, a TV writer, Tracy McMillan, whose credits include, Mad Men, The United States of Tara, and a memoir, I Love You and I’m Leaving You Anyway offers 6 reasons why the reader, who if unmarried and wishes to be, remains single.

Without belaboring the point of what caught my attention, let me say that reasons 2-6 constitute a repeat of what many articles assert.

And despite the, shall we say, blunt and directness of reason #1, the truth it held forced me, a wife of 29 years, to stop in gratitude after overcoming the initial shock of McMillan’s wording, or more precisely, her word.

“The problem is not men. It’s you. Sure, there are lame men out there, but

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