Monday, October 31, 2011

NaNoWriMo

This week, I've been catching up with school assignments and taking a break from reading.  So today, instead of reviewing a book, I'd like to talk about something starting tomorrow: National Novel Writing Month!

Known to those who participate in this event as NaNoWriMo, November is a month of challenges and frenzied typing.  The adult program, for anyone 13 or older, challenges writers to complete a 50,000 word novel in exactly 30 days.  Writers begin this enormous task on November 1, and must 'turn in' their completed first drafts by midnight, November 30.  Time zones are taken into account, and each writer sets their time zone when they fill out their author information.  Forums are available for participants, as are web badges, NaNoToons, and pep talks from several famous authors.

I had never heard of NaNoWriMo until halfway through November of last year, and I figured by that point I might as well wait.  So I did.  In fact, I almost forgot to register this year.... until I followed a cool-looking link on TeenInk's website.  Guess what I discovered?  NaNoWriMo's Young Writers Program!  This is similar to the original NaNoWriMo site, but it's geared towards kids 17 and under.  You can sign up as a K-12 teacher who wants their whole class to participate, or you can join as a student of such a class or an individual.  Pep talks, web badges, and forums similar to those on the original site are geared towards the younger participants.  Flyers, handbooks, and other resources are also available for spreading the word or getting ready.  The major difference between the regular program and the YWP is the word count - original participants must meet the 50,000 word goal to win.  YWP participants set their own goals, based on their own situations.

I signed up for NaNoWriMo YWP 2011, and I invite all of you to join me!


Saturday, October 29, 2011

30 Day Challenge: Day Six - What's In Your Purse?

This is the day I rejoice that I no longer carry those giant bags that hardly qualify as purses.  Let's see what we've got...

My purse is actually a going-away gift from when I left Okinawa.  Yes, it's a real Coach.


(Excuse the mysterious hand on the sanitizer.  It belongs to a baby I'm watching.)

Obviously I have hand sanitizer, a cool little bottle made to fit in the rubbery holder thing Bath & Body Works makes.  It's Sugar Lemon PocketBac and it smells soooo good.  On the other side of the purse, there's a metal clip with gazillions of pressed pennies attached and a few bracelet-type charms.

Inside the outer pocket I have basic stuff: foldable hairbrush, Band-Aids, wet wipe, hairbands, lip gloss, and some trash.  :P  In the main pocket, I have hand lotion (B&B's Carried Away :] ); a few random papers; a mini notebook; more trash?; my favorite Blistex; a Northland card from their display on Wednesday night; two pencils; four pens; and a medicine case with Motrin and the like.

Then, in the inner side pocket, I have my "wallet."  The pocket pretty much serves as a pocket since my wallet won't fit with the notebook in this purse.  It holds my wallet stuff: money, military ID, driver's permit, library card, Coach card that came with the purse, photo of my boyfriend, 3 tracts, and a Chick-Fil-A gift card.

Oh, and when I don't have it on the charger on my desk, I have a pretty blue cell phone.  :)  It's got a really good camera on it.

And that's my purse for you!

Friday, October 28, 2011

Friendlight Friday



...we define ourselves by marriage. Our unmarried years are marked by filling hope chests, overcoming crushes and trying to keep that binding verse: "She does him good all the days of her life." For all practical purposes, we're married to him presently.

This becomes sticky when we start making life decisions. We fear going to college because what if that super cute, super spiritual boy at home won't pursue us if we're in another state? Or we go to college because that's where we find the good ones (to paraphrase godly women). We don't start this project or pursue that interest because, well, it doesn't really look good on a homemaker's transcript. Once precariously in the position of eligibility and yet perhaps on the brink of fifty years of spinsterhood, we stop asking, "What is Your will, Lord?" and start asking, "How will this help me find a husband?"

This is frustrating because on the one hand of course we want to keep in mind that we are lovely, eligible young ladies any young gentleman would kill to marry. Of course we remember there's a good chance that this second he will drive up in his white convertible (I saw you look out the window just now). Of course we don't want to waste time and money on a career or an endeavor that will plunge us into debt and will defamiliarize ourselves from the home, which, besides being imprudent, makes us horribly ineligible-looking.

On the other hand, how do we know we're not slotted for the miserable state of nonmarriage, either for a few years or eternity?

Read the rest of this post here...

Visit Bailey here...

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Teens and Their Supernatural Pursuits {Guest Post}

For today's post, we have a famous teen author writing our very first guest post.  :D  Melody Carlson is a personal favorite of mine; I've read all of her Carter House Girls and On The Runway series, as well as some of her TrueColors books and one Diary of a Teenage Girl.

Have you even wondered why some teens are drawn toward things like Ouija boards or psychics? Or why séances are still popular at sleepovers? Does it just have to do with Halloween and that spine-chilling need for a good scare? Or could it be something more? And, as a Christian, should you be concerned?

            Those questions, as well as some confused reader letters, prompted me to tackle the “supernatural” in one of my teen novels (Moon White, TrueColors, Nav Press). And whenever I write an issues-based novel, I’m forced to research—and often in some dark places. So I began scouring websites, learning more about Wicca and the occult, trying to grasp what was really going on with today’s teens—and how I could write about it in a helpful and relevant way.

But, as usual, when I write a teen book, I go back to my own adolescence...trying to connect with my inner teen...and I suddenly remembered a short era when a friend and I got very interested in witchcraft. I had honestly forgotten about this time and was fascinated to recall how we scoured some witchcraft stores on a local campus—I think we even purchased a few things. Fortunately, this interest was short-lived and I became a Christian not long afterward.

            However, as I reconnected with my inner teen, I had to ask myself—why had I looked into witchcraft back then? Why do teens dabble with it now? Suddenly the answer became crystal clear. I was searching. I’d been calling myself an atheist for several years by then, but I was spiritually hungry—starving in fact. Consequently I was looking for spiritual answers—something that would fill that empty void within me. I wanted a supernatural force in my life and I didn’t even care where it came from. I needed something bigger than me, more powerful than me, something to hold onto. I had no idea at the time that I was really searching for God.

            This realization changed the way I viewed my research. Instead of feeling disgusted and dismayed by the witchcraft/Wicca sites (which are not particularly enjoyable) I began to recognize that these people (mostly girls) were simply searching too. They wanted a power source in their lives just like I wanted one in mine. They just hadn’t found God yet.

            This led to another discovery. A girl who’s attracted to a religion like Wicca is usually seeking to gain some control over her life. Something is wrong and she wants to change it. To do so, she’s often enticed to purchase something—like “magical herbs”—to create a potion that will give her some control over her situation. Unfortunately, she doesn’t even realize she’s being tricked.

            But think about it, wouldn’t you love to have control over a bad situation sometimes? Wouldn’t you love to be able to change the circumstances that make your life unpleasant? So what if someone offered you the “power” to do just that? Perhaps if you’re fifteen, you wouldn’t see that person as a charlatan and you would fall for it.

            Which brings me to another important factor in understanding this generation’s attraction to the supernatural. Follow the money. The more I researched, the more it became painfully obvious that Wicca and witchcraft and the occult are money-making enterprises. Thanks to the internet, these savvy distributors sell anything imaginable—and many things you can’t. That leads to some serious motivation—these marketers want to hook their unsuspecting young customers and reel them in. Of course, these potions and trinkets and how-to books don’t come with a money back guaranty. Nor are they approved by the FDA. Yet they are a multi-million dollar industry.

            So, in a way, it’s a perfect storm. Teens that are insecure, lost, unhappy, and searching...meet up with an unregulated industry that offers supernatural answers and power and control...for a price. And, oh yeah, I never even mentioned how this opens a door for Satan to slip in and wreak havoc. For that...you’ll have to read the book.

           
Melody Carlson is the mother of two grown sons and the grandmother of a little girl.  She and her husband, Chris, live in a cabin in the Pacific Northwest.  Little House on the Prairie inspired her love of reading, and she has been writing for several years.  She is the well-known author of multiple women's, children's, and teens' books and series.  Visit her website here.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

N is for...

Nathan.


My boyfriend. :) Yup, the one with stunning eyes and big dreams.


Oh, and that's my brother Eddie on the left.  You know, all three of us have this photo as our Facebook profile picture, and that makes things really confusing. :P


Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Yesterdays

I've run out of list ideas, and I was browsing Teen Ink when I realized something.  This blog is called Struggles of a (Maybe) Teen Author, and yet I've only shared one piece of my 'real' work.  So now I'll share a little something I've written each week.  Most of these are posted on various websites.

Yesterdays

At times when things are hopeless;

Ones you love are far away;

Remember the cheer and laughter

From a long-gone day.


Read what you wrote in your diary

On a day when you were sad-

Then read what you wrote the next day,

When somebody made you glad.


Look back at a photo taken

Of you with all your friends

Distance can never erase that

Or make a friendship end.


Watch a movie you made at a party

With no real meaning or plot

Hear the laughter and the giggles

And be thankful for all you've got


At times when things seem hopeless;

Ones you love seem far away;

Remember the cheer and laughter

Of a recent yesterday.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Book Review: Taken Away

Taken Away by Patty Friedmann
Summer's little sister went missing in Katrina - and her mother blames her.
Click the cover to buy
Summer Elmwood's parents don't believe in television, or computers, or cell phones, or air conditioning, or caller ID.  They don't believe in evacuation, either - which is how they ended up living in their local Baptist Hospital when Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans.  Summer's little sister, Amalia, was having open-heart surgery a week before the storm... but when Summer's family is forced to evacuate, Amalia is gone.  Now they're living with shallow, selfish, rich Aunt Sharon, and Summer's family is convinced she hid or murdered Amalia.  With a secret cell phone, her best friend Haydn, and a new friend Robert, it's up to her to find her sister.

I had a mixed reaction to this book.  On the one hand, the language and several things about drugs and other activities were simply unnecessary.  Yes, Summer's parents were strange ex-hippies.  Yes, Summer was a 'normal teen.'  This doesn't mean a lot of the content really needed to be in there; the story was perfectly fine without it.  Another problem I had was the writing; the story is told from Summer's point of view, and her thoughts are often confusing.  Half the time you feel like you're a stranger trying to understand a small-town inside joke.  Other times Summer just seems fickle or unrealistic.  (Example: going from 'I love my baby sister and must find her!' to 'I have to find Amalia because my parents won't pay attention to me if I don't.')

On the other hand, the story itself was amazing.  It protrays the various facets of the tragedy called Katrina, along with other issues in New Orleans.  The events pull you in; whether or not you like or care about Summer's family, something makes you want to know - need to know - if they ever find Amalia.  Depending on your feelings towards the Elmwoods, you also end up wondering what happened to Amalia - did someone take her? murder her? who? why? - and who finds her, if she's ever found - Summer? her parents? one of her friends? the FBI?

For a compelling and honest story about a real-life tragedy, I give this book two and a half stars.

I received this book for free from the author in exchange for this review.  All opinions expressed are mine and mine alone.