I'm not quite sure how I got on this kick about Miranda Kerr, the beautiful Australian model (who apparently now lives in the US), but I watched her on a talk show on YouTube, and I was totally taken. She simpers and she giggles, but she comes across as totally real!
Just in case you don't know whom I'm talking about, here's a photo. It looks very much as though she's sitting on a bicycle, but it's hard to tell, but the angle looks very bicycle-like. I love those crazy dimples she has, and she looks wonderful with lipstick, which is rare for a woman. I mean, most girls look a little less than their best unless the lip color has been applied by a professional. With Miranda, she has such a wide smile that it's just as well that lip color works for her. (As soon as I find a photo I like of her with makeup on, I'll post it.) And she has pretty eyes, and beautiful manners.
She has separated from her husband, Orlando Bloom, but the interview I saw was still pre-separation. The news said that she was continuing to speak kindly about her husband, which is something I appreciate. I really dislike ungracious people, and if I'm ever ungracious, I hope someone will remind me of that fact. And Miranda plays the piano, which is all right in my book!
I have to say that I like to hang around with guys more than with girls. I like the way that guys --at least, the guys I like, not romantically, but just as buddies-- act, once you've straightened it out with them that we're not flirting, and turned their attention towards other girls. It's only the exceptional woman who can leave aside being a full-time woman to be a full-time human being. Miranda Kerr comes across as most definitely in the world of being a woman. She's an insider to all the makeup, and the feminine walk, and all that goes with being a traditional attractive woman, but she seems to have gotten it down so well, that when she talks, she isn't busy being a woman, you know? People who're busy being women make me nervous, and make me want to escape! (If you're one of these, let's hope that, if we meet, we have something super interesting to talk about, in which case I get distracted, and I don't obsess about all this sort of stuff.)
I saw Miranda interviewing a musician on YouTube (can't remember his name), and she was utterly relaxed, but not so much that she was being careless about her guest. I would love seeing Miranda interview a woman. I have to look for one, but right now I'm finishing up the end-of-term business with my classes, and I really shouldn't be taking time off to have fun with my Blog. But Miranda sure is cute.
Kay
My blog is intended to be a place where I explain the backgrounds of my writing projects!
Monday, April 28, 2014
Monday, April 7, 2014
A new book at Smashwords
I decided to upload another episode from Helen today. It is an early episode, in a period where Helen had dropped out of school, and had been living with a reclusive former nurse, in the Canadian wilderness. (There is not a lot of actual wilderness in Canada, but I assumed there was more in Canada than in the US!)
The story is that Helen decides to be an assistant at a ballet camp in France. There is more sex in this story than in any of the episodes I have uploaded thus far, and I'm not sure how it will be received. But I love the characters in it, and Helen is really sweet and affectionate in it, and for anyone who likes a sappy story, this is a good one.
I think the cover is beautiful, and I hope everyone agrees.
Kay.
The story is that Helen decides to be an assistant at a ballet camp in France. There is more sex in this story than in any of the episodes I have uploaded thus far, and I'm not sure how it will be received. But I love the characters in it, and Helen is really sweet and affectionate in it, and for anyone who likes a sappy story, this is a good one.
I think the cover is beautiful, and I hope everyone agrees.
Kay.
Monday, February 3, 2014
"Alexandra" is now for sale
My complete book Alexandra was available for purchase on Smashwords on January 28th.
No matter how many times I go through this book, there are always mistakes and grammatical errors I keep finding, and it makes me furious! But I'm proud of the book; I think it stands up to other books in the genre, even if it doesn't have a brilliant plot. I love the characters dearly, even though it seems to grind to an unsatisfactory halt, with everyone only moderately satisfied with their lot. But this is the way the world is; it seems stupid to me to write a story that ends with everybody deliriously delighted with the outcome!
In all my stories, I end up falling in love with all the principal characters, and Alexandra is no exception. The adults, the teenagers, the kids, are all delightful, and the few people there are who aren't wonderful, are at least understandable, and have understandable motives. I would certainly like to make the beginning stronger, but this book was written so early in my writing experience that changing anything really hurts. This is why I'm publishing it privately, and not letting a commercial publisher massacre it!
While I'm not desperate for everyone to buy it, I can't bring myself to give it away free; it is some 300,000 words of effort, so you're getting about 500 words per penny. If you don't think that's worth it, read the first 40% for free, and let me know how you hate it!!!
Regards,
Kay
No matter how many times I go through this book, there are always mistakes and grammatical errors I keep finding, and it makes me furious! But I'm proud of the book; I think it stands up to other books in the genre, even if it doesn't have a brilliant plot. I love the characters dearly, even though it seems to grind to an unsatisfactory halt, with everyone only moderately satisfied with their lot. But this is the way the world is; it seems stupid to me to write a story that ends with everybody deliriously delighted with the outcome!
In all my stories, I end up falling in love with all the principal characters, and Alexandra is no exception. The adults, the teenagers, the kids, are all delightful, and the few people there are who aren't wonderful, are at least understandable, and have understandable motives. I would certainly like to make the beginning stronger, but this book was written so early in my writing experience that changing anything really hurts. This is why I'm publishing it privately, and not letting a commercial publisher massacre it!
While I'm not desperate for everyone to buy it, I can't bring myself to give it away free; it is some 300,000 words of effort, so you're getting about 500 words per penny. If you don't think that's worth it, read the first 40% for free, and let me know how you hate it!!!
Regards,
Kay
Friday, December 27, 2013
Christine
It seems as though I write a book a day! By now you must know that I have been writing for about fifteen years, and I just have a lot of half-written manuscripts which I'm publishing as the opportunity arises.
This one: Christine's Amazing Musical Christmas (for lack of a more creative title) was written a few years ago —at Christmas time, obviously— when I was fascinated with the Bach Christmas Oratorio. I had just sent out for, and received in the mail, a second version of the Oratorio, this time by John Eliot Gardiner and the English Baroque Soloists, and was thoroughly enjoying it. I'm pretty sure I have little or no German ancestry, but the Oratorio puts me in a very pleasant German frame of mind, and I wanted to write a story around it.
This one is rated G: absolutely nothing adult about it; in fact, I strongly suspect that the audience for it would be teenagers interested in music, and possibly adults who know teenagers interested in music. There are strong feelings, both romantic and Platonic between the characters, and in a follow-up book I want to resolve most of them satisfactorily. I think one of the difficult things one has to deal with, growing up, is that it is possible to have very strong feelings for more than one person, but our society frowns on establishing more than one of them legally. It does appear that for a large majority of people, especially those who want to have children, that it makes sense to establish a single relationship —heterosexual or homosexual, it does not matter— around which to build the family. But I strongly believe that, while this is the simplest familial structure, it is not necessarily the only structure that can work. We have to bear in mind that any new structures we invent must also make sense for the society in which this non-traditional family will live. Kids will make friends in school, you want to have people over to play cards, whatever; friends will have to deal with whatever relationship underlies the family unit. People, I feel, should be able to fall in love with more than one person at a time, and codify that love in some relationship.
The reason I bring this up is that the main character, Christine, loves four different people in this story, and I hate to have to make her decide on only one of those as the main relationship. For the first time, I think I have managed to create a heterosexual relationship that I'm rooting for, but I think Christine's feelings for the three women in the story need to be taken seriously. But, in any case, there is absolutely no sex in this piece of writing, and no intimacy beyond a kiss.
Kay

This one is rated G: absolutely nothing adult about it; in fact, I strongly suspect that the audience for it would be teenagers interested in music, and possibly adults who know teenagers interested in music. There are strong feelings, both romantic and Platonic between the characters, and in a follow-up book I want to resolve most of them satisfactorily. I think one of the difficult things one has to deal with, growing up, is that it is possible to have very strong feelings for more than one person, but our society frowns on establishing more than one of them legally. It does appear that for a large majority of people, especially those who want to have children, that it makes sense to establish a single relationship —heterosexual or homosexual, it does not matter— around which to build the family. But I strongly believe that, while this is the simplest familial structure, it is not necessarily the only structure that can work. We have to bear in mind that any new structures we invent must also make sense for the society in which this non-traditional family will live. Kids will make friends in school, you want to have people over to play cards, whatever; friends will have to deal with whatever relationship underlies the family unit. People, I feel, should be able to fall in love with more than one person at a time, and codify that love in some relationship.
The reason I bring this up is that the main character, Christine, loves four different people in this story, and I hate to have to make her decide on only one of those as the main relationship. For the first time, I think I have managed to create a heterosexual relationship that I'm rooting for, but I think Christine's feelings for the three women in the story need to be taken seriously. But, in any case, there is absolutely no sex in this piece of writing, and no intimacy beyond a kiss.
Kay
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
Helen vs. Handel's Messiah
Christmas is a special time for me. My family has always enjoyed the days around Christmas, especially as my mother loved Christmas music. Perhaps because of this, or for whatever reason, there are usually interesting episodes surrounding Christmas in almost every story.
My very first story, Helen, begins when Helen is about sixteen, and I stopped writing it when she was about 39, and was a partial amnesiac and Cancer survivor. There were, in principle, some 23 Christmases I could have written about for Helen. The first three are lost; they are trapped inside my first computer, which went on the fritz around 2005. About the 13th one was when Helen had run away with the two adopted girls, Gena and Alison, met Penny and her daughter Erin, and fled with them to California, where they remained hidden under false names for a year. The 14th Christmas marks the point where Helen was mightily pregnant with James, and is given refuge at Ferguson School in Minnesota. James is born in April, and after some adventures, Helen comes to Westfield to teach.
The 15th Christmas is spent at Westfield. The next two were spent at Woodford, in England (16, 17), the next four in Philadelphia (18, 19, 20, 21).
The episode described in Helen vs. Handel's Messiah takes place after Helen has come to live in Philadelphia for one complete year. I was writing at a furious rate, and pages and pages practically wrote themselves. (I know writers often say this about one particular piece of writing or another, but having lived it, I know it really does happen.) I was angry about something or another---probably about the hostility towards alternate lifestyles some years ago, and how certain conservative elements had a brief period of successfully vilifying gays and lesbians, and trying to 'heal' them by adopting various psychological tactics akin to deprogramming.
I've had difficulties representing Helen as a decent person. Because she is a fictitious character, it would be easy to write her storyline as being that of a woman with no flaws in her character. What happens is that I put her in perfectly ordinary situations, quite similar to situations that I have observed myself, and in my mind, I see Helen reacting to them just as I would, quite honestly, but more boldly. Sometimes I create romantic opportunities for her simply because I'm bored, and then as the situation develops, it does look as if Helen is a lot more promiscuous than an ordinary person should be. So she oscillates between being ultra-moral and responsible and decent, and a sybaritic slave to her hormones, because my life oscillates, and whatever I can't safely do, I sometimes make Helen do, and she ends up being just a little short of a hopeless slut. This is why I burdened her with such a number of children, wanting to make her slow down! But whatever makes her less than perfect has very little to do with her sexual preference. I honestly believe that, if a woman finds herself falling in love with other women, that does not make her a monster. But certainly, trying to seduce a weaker individual, one who does not have the strength to withstand her emotional attack does make a woman (or a man, for that matter) a monster. Taking advantage of those who are weak is always despicable.
Once I made Helen meet Maryssa, I tried very hard to make her more restrained. This episode is the beginning of Helen's fight to feed her artistic soul, as it were, and free it from the manacles imposed by conservative elements. The production company that stands by her, Galaxy Studios, gets most of her creative energy, but a small fictitious community college is also a channel for her talents as a teacher. And this Christmas encounter with a TV program based on Handel's Messiah, of all things, is what makes her determination to put herself in artistic hibernation finally snap! I'm not a religious person, but the pivotal moment is an aria in the Messiah about death and resurrection, which is a strange topic, but a lovely aria.
I hope very much that anyone who reads this will at least read the first quarter or so of the short story Helen vs. Handel's Messiah, because it is one of my favorite episodes, and expresses strong feelings about being the kind of artist Helen is.
K. B.
My very first story, Helen, begins when Helen is about sixteen, and I stopped writing it when she was about 39, and was a partial amnesiac and Cancer survivor. There were, in principle, some 23 Christmases I could have written about for Helen. The first three are lost; they are trapped inside my first computer, which went on the fritz around 2005. About the 13th one was when Helen had run away with the two adopted girls, Gena and Alison, met Penny and her daughter Erin, and fled with them to California, where they remained hidden under false names for a year. The 14th Christmas marks the point where Helen was mightily pregnant with James, and is given refuge at Ferguson School in Minnesota. James is born in April, and after some adventures, Helen comes to Westfield to teach.
The 15th Christmas is spent at Westfield. The next two were spent at Woodford, in England (16, 17), the next four in Philadelphia (18, 19, 20, 21).

I've had difficulties representing Helen as a decent person. Because she is a fictitious character, it would be easy to write her storyline as being that of a woman with no flaws in her character. What happens is that I put her in perfectly ordinary situations, quite similar to situations that I have observed myself, and in my mind, I see Helen reacting to them just as I would, quite honestly, but more boldly. Sometimes I create romantic opportunities for her simply because I'm bored, and then as the situation develops, it does look as if Helen is a lot more promiscuous than an ordinary person should be. So she oscillates between being ultra-moral and responsible and decent, and a sybaritic slave to her hormones, because my life oscillates, and whatever I can't safely do, I sometimes make Helen do, and she ends up being just a little short of a hopeless slut. This is why I burdened her with such a number of children, wanting to make her slow down! But whatever makes her less than perfect has very little to do with her sexual preference. I honestly believe that, if a woman finds herself falling in love with other women, that does not make her a monster. But certainly, trying to seduce a weaker individual, one who does not have the strength to withstand her emotional attack does make a woman (or a man, for that matter) a monster. Taking advantage of those who are weak is always despicable.
Once I made Helen meet Maryssa, I tried very hard to make her more restrained. This episode is the beginning of Helen's fight to feed her artistic soul, as it were, and free it from the manacles imposed by conservative elements. The production company that stands by her, Galaxy Studios, gets most of her creative energy, but a small fictitious community college is also a channel for her talents as a teacher. And this Christmas encounter with a TV program based on Handel's Messiah, of all things, is what makes her determination to put herself in artistic hibernation finally snap! I'm not a religious person, but the pivotal moment is an aria in the Messiah about death and resurrection, which is a strange topic, but a lovely aria.
I hope very much that anyone who reads this will at least read the first quarter or so of the short story Helen vs. Handel's Messiah, because it is one of my favorite episodes, and expresses strong feelings about being the kind of artist Helen is.
K. B.
Saturday, December 21, 2013
I'm in Love!!
Just kidding!
You probably don't know, but ... I don't get out much! I don't have TV, and I don't listen to the radio. I mean, I do have a radio, but I only listen to it when I happen to know that a certain program is on.
So, the main point is: I don't know what's going on out there, for the most part. Imagine my astonishment when I discovered the existence of this incredibly attractive woman! The woman I'm talking about is Hope Solo, someone about whom everybody else on the planet is evidently very knowledgeable! I'm going to post a picture of her for the sake of anyone who is just as much out of touch as I am, but I have it on good authority that, ever since the Olympics of, I believe, 2000, she has been the star of the US Olympic soccer team. And, in my eyes, she is stunningly beautiful. And, most importantly, this girl is almost exactly how I imagined Alexandra, down to the grey eyes, the streaky hair (though I imagined a girl a lot more blonde), and the beautiful, athletic body, (though, again, I imagined a girl somewhat less stripped, initially, though I imagined that she would lose a lot of fat on the voyage back from Belgravia). And the smile is just how I imagined that Alexandra would smile!
There is just no way that I can use photographs of Hope Solo as part of my cover, and seeing her spoils everything for me, because I could never be satisfied with a model that looks any different than Hope Solo! The only alternative I have is to actually draw a cover myself, by hand, loosely modeled on Hope Solo.
K. B.
You probably don't know, but ... I don't get out much! I don't have TV, and I don't listen to the radio. I mean, I do have a radio, but I only listen to it when I happen to know that a certain program is on.
So, the main point is: I don't know what's going on out there, for the most part. Imagine my astonishment when I discovered the existence of this incredibly attractive woman! The woman I'm talking about is Hope Solo, someone about whom everybody else on the planet is evidently very knowledgeable! I'm going to post a picture of her for the sake of anyone who is just as much out of touch as I am, but I have it on good authority that, ever since the Olympics of, I believe, 2000, she has been the star of the US Olympic soccer team. And, in my eyes, she is stunningly beautiful. And, most importantly, this girl is almost exactly how I imagined Alexandra, down to the grey eyes, the streaky hair (though I imagined a girl a lot more blonde), and the beautiful, athletic body, (though, again, I imagined a girl somewhat less stripped, initially, though I imagined that she would lose a lot of fat on the voyage back from Belgravia). And the smile is just how I imagined that Alexandra would smile!
There is just no way that I can use photographs of Hope Solo as part of my cover, and seeing her spoils everything for me, because I could never be satisfied with a model that looks any different than Hope Solo! The only alternative I have is to actually draw a cover myself, by hand, loosely modeled on Hope Solo.
K. B.
Thursday, December 5, 2013
A little dissatisfaction from Smashwords
As you know, I recently decided to publish Alexandra, a complete novel, at Smashwords, the online e-book publisher and sort of agent. In case you didn't know, Smashwords sells the literature that has been placed in their hands directly, online, but they also market these books to Kindle and Barnes & Noble. It seems that those efforts are far more lucrative for Smashwords than simply selling their titles on their own site. They do invest a lot of energy in making their authors conform to standards that these major publishers (Amazon and B & N, and even Apple) have settled on.
My cover for Alexandra, which is not satisfactory, and is a temporary effort (but, of course, Smashwords doesn't know that) depicts two nude women, but a rear view, so that the nudity is barely objectionable. However, Smashwords is pressing me to remove the cover in favor of one without nudity, because, as they explain, some of their partners (Amazon, or whoever) finds any sort of nudity objectionable.
Well, I have a couple of alternatives. I can leave the cover the way it is, which will prevent Smashwords from more aggressive marketing of the book. Or, I could put "clothes" on the women, just as they clothed classic nude sculptures in Victorian times, or I could try harder to find an image that I really want to feature on the cover. (Or I could just make a cover with only text! Ugh.)
Feel free to weigh in on which cover you would prefer! Some of my more conservative (Straight) friends prefer the clothed version, saying that the cover with the nudes suggests that the story is pornographic, which is far from what it is.
Postscript: I worked on this cover (to the detriment of my other responsibilities) and finally came up with a compromise cover. I don't think it's a patch on the original cover, but if I go through the process one more time, without smudging anything, I think I'll have a decent cover for the book. What do you think?
Kay B.
![]() |
Two Choices: Text Only, or Clothed! |
Well, I have a couple of alternatives. I can leave the cover the way it is, which will prevent Smashwords from more aggressive marketing of the book. Or, I could put "clothes" on the women, just as they clothed classic nude sculptures in Victorian times, or I could try harder to find an image that I really want to feature on the cover. (Or I could just make a cover with only text! Ugh.)
Feel free to weigh in on which cover you would prefer! Some of my more conservative (Straight) friends prefer the clothed version, saying that the cover with the nudes suggests that the story is pornographic, which is far from what it is.
Postscript: I worked on this cover (to the detriment of my other responsibilities) and finally came up with a compromise cover. I don't think it's a patch on the original cover, but if I go through the process one more time, without smudging anything, I think I'll have a decent cover for the book. What do you think?
Kay B.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)