Thursday, November 29, 2007

I heart Target

And Target hearts me!* Since Therese (a fellow Ballantine author) has made the big announcement, I'm going to go out on a limb and assume I can too. Target has selected Orange Mint and Honey as a February Breakout Title!!! What does that mean? According to their site, breakout titles are the ones "everybody's going to be talking about." It also means that the book gets into Target in the first place. As my pal Judy (a fellow Ballantine author whose book All the Numbers was also a Target breakout title) pointed out, most Target stores only stock 100-200 titles. So just getting in the door is great. But there's even more. Breakout titles are sold on the endcaps in special displays. Just the bestest news!

On February 12, look for Orange Mint and Honey and Therese's book, Souvenir, at a Target (or indie bookstore, sorry just couldn't forget the indie stores) near you! Go Ballantine Babes! I think we need t-shirts! :)
*I should say WE heart Target and Target hearts us, huh Therese and Judy?

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Stuck in the middle with....

Lisa tagged me for the middle name meme, and this isn't one I've seen before, so I'm in.

  1. You have to post these rules before you give the facts.
  2. Players, you must list one fact that is somehow relevant to your life for each letter of your middle name. If you don't have a middle name, just make one up...or use the one you would have liked to have had.
  3. When you are tagged you need to write your own blog-post containing your own middle name game facts.
  4. At the end of your blog-post, you need to choose one person for each letter of your middle name to tag. Don't forget to leave them a comment telling them they're tagged, and to read your blog.
I have the middle name from hell for this meme!


Y-Young at heart. What else you gonna do with a y? Seriously though, I do have a youthful spirit (not body, but spirit). I'm a Gemini, "the child" of the Zodiac.

V-Vajajay: I have one, and saying it makes me laugh. Valedictorian: I wasn't one. Vacation: I need one! Vampires: Totally don't get the popularity of "urban fantasy." I mean, I watched Buffy and several Draculas and I read some Ann Rice...but there are so many vampires now. Don't get it.

E-Eastern medicine. Acupuncture helped me go off sugar almost a year ago. I had dinner with friends last night at 8 Rivers Cafe, a Jamaican restaurant. It was my first time having jerk chicken (very good, but very hot!). The waitress was kind enough to make up some sangria for us with Splenda instead of sugar. However, it was still way too sweet for me! I had to cut it with soda water.

T-Timing is everything. Today is the last day for Frontier Airline's Christmas sale and we're booking flights for my parents, grandmother, brother and sister-in-law and best friend to be here for my launch party!

T-Tree. Yesterday, I decorated one of our pines for Christmas.

E-Earth. Hubby calls me an "earth muffin" because of how I dress sometimes and because I eat flax seed and drink green tea.

I'm breaking the last rule and tagging Sherry (Happy Birthday!!!) and Rebecca.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Damn good book trailer

Though I still kinda can't believe it's come to authors doing videos, this is my kind of book promotion! Funny, soft-sell, AND actually makes me interested in her book.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Setting-Colfax Avenue

One of the settings for Orange Mint and Honey, Colfax Avenue, was in the NY Times today. I had a hard time with Denver as a location. I had to stop and think about how I see the city and how my characters would see the city and then give a little info (debunk some myths, like that Denver is not in the mountains) for folks who know nothing about it. So Colfax Avenue is in the book, as is Park Hill, Five Points, Capital Hill, Aurora, and I-70 up to the mountains (because to write about Denver and not mention the Rockies would be silly). Local haunts in the book include City Park, the Tattered Cover , Blackberries, Liks, and the Mercury Cafe. So far the locals who have read it approve.

Friday, November 23, 2007

Healthy Holidays!

Like millions of women around the country, I spent hours in the kitchen yesterday. (Unlike billions of women around the world, I only do that a few times a year. Hubby is the cook in our home, and God bless him!)

I roasted a turkey, mashed potatoes, cooked cranberries and...drum roll please...made stuffing from scratch with herb bread I made myself (in the bread machine) and for the first time EVER I made good gravy. Yummm. Oh, and I made a low-sugar gingerbread. Recipes, you ask? But of course.

Stuffing
To my regular 1/2 wheat 1/2 white (King Arthur Bread Flour) bread recipe, I added:

1 teaspoon dried sage
1 teaspoon dried thyme
1 small handful of rosemary from my garden
1 teaspoon dried parsley
1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
1/2 teaspoon dried marjoram
1/2 teaspoon onion powder

I let the bread get stale for a couple of days, cut it into cubes, then added:
more sage (maybe a teaspoon?)
more thyme (ditto)
more onion powder (maybe 1/2 teaspoon?)

I sauteed a couple of onions and celery stalks in 2 sticks of butter (yep, 2 whole sticks--for me it's just not Thanksgiving without butter--however, you could add less butter and more broth), and added that to all the dry stuff. Then I added about 2-3 cups of turkey/chicken broth (I always cook the turkey giblets mixed with some chicken broth on top of the stove for extra broth).

We always stuff our bird (or "stuffing delivery system" as we call it) and cook it to an internal temp of at least 180-190 degrees, and every year I worry we're going to die of turkey poisoning, but so far, so good. This year I was even brave enough not to cook it until it was dry as dust. (Oh--we also always get a Red Bird turkey and brine it overnight, which helps greatly with the dry thing.)

Cranberries
1 bag of cranberries
about 2/3-3/4 cup of crystalized fructose (fruit sugar)
1/2 cup grape juice
1/2 cup water
Lower sugar, still kind of tart, but quite good!

Gingerbread
1/4-1/3 cup canola oil
1 container of baby food prunes (maybe 1/4 cup?)
1 egg
1/2 cup dark molasses
3/4 cup unbleached white flour
3/4 cup whole wheat pastry flour
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon dried ginger
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda


Beat the wet ingredients together for about a minute. Add the dry ingredients and beat until smooth. Pour into a pan and bake at 350 for about 35 minutes. My gingerbread was kind of flat, so I'll try adding more baking powder next time; the wheat flour and molasses are pretty heavy ingredients, so more leavening might be a good idea.

Served with whipped cream made with heavy whipping cream and 2 packets of Splenda. Even Hubby liked it!!

I wish I could give you a recipe for the gravy, but I just kept adding stuff (flour, butter, turkey drippings, chicken broth, milk, salt & pepper) until it worked. The trick was that this year I had some great pan drippings, so the gravy tasted like turkey and not like weak chicken broth.

And for lunch today? Turkey-lettuce wraps with mayo (again mayo is more of must for me than bread, especially because I will be having more stuffing for dinner tonight).

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Gratitude

Bella Stander is posting stories of gratitude on her blog, Reading Under the Covers. I'm happy to say that I sent her one thanking some friends of mine and she posted it. In addition, last year she ran beautiful stories from Therese Fowler and Judy Larsen (who also has a lovely new posting on gratitude).

I encourage you to send your own stories to Bella and to read the ones she has posted. They are definitely in the feel-good category!

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Authors' podcasts

You might recall I heard Ann Packer read about a month or so ago. Well, her reading is now available online at Authors On Tour-Live. Burst Marketing (owned and operated by my buddies Rob and Marisol Simon) podcasts different authors live from the Tattered Cover Book Store. Check it out-lots of interesting authors and discussions!

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Breaking news!

We interrupt our regularly scheduled programming with a note from my editor:

The Black Expressions Book Club has selected OMAH for one of their titles. Their membership is several hundred thousand readers strong!

About the other thing...wasn't supposed to say that just yet!

Okay, back to my blathering about bulbs....

Fall planting

Yesterday I finished planting 130 more daffodils on the west side of the house. That brings the bulb total to about 500. So next spring, we'll have even more of this.


Most of our bulbs are a variety of "naturalizing daffodils,"

which I bought in big mixed bags. These, I believe, are "Las Vegas."

Some are a little more exotic, like these, whose name I can't remember,

but they might be "Pink charm." I also have some "Tahiti" and a few other

exotics. There's a great big world of daffs, beyond yellow.

Though a sea of yellow in March is a lovely sight.

This is one of my favorites; I believe it's a Cassata.

These are scilla. We have about 150 of these little bulbs.

I also have a tulip bed with about 50 bulbs in it.

I've been pleasantly surprised at how many years I've

gotten out of these bulbs.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

In defense of ugly shoes


Shoe lust has launched many an episode of Sex and the City and provided a plot point in the Devil Wears Prada, the covers for lots of chick lit books and was the subject of an entire novel.
And I just don't get it. For me shoe-shopping goes like this: In my size (11)? Check. Comfy? Check. A reasonable price? Buy.

I don't get handbag mania either. When it comes to accessories, I'm much more inclined to go for jewelry and scarves. But then I'm not exactly known for my fashion sense. I was once given fashion advice by a man who worked as a secretary by day and performed as Brown Sugar by night. The conversation went like this:

Me: May I speak to [his boss]?
BS: She’s not in.
Me: Will you tell her that Carleen called?
BS: Carleen? Are you the one that walks around the office in those big black Army shoes?
Me: Um…yeah.
BS: I saw you! I said to myself, Oh no she didn’t wear those big black Army shoes....

And off he went on a rant about the horror of seeing my ugly shoes one day.

In the latest issue of New York Magazine, there's an assault on ugly shoes. As a founding member of the Ugly Shoe Anti-Defamation League, I take offense. Join us! Jennifer Hudson might be on our side.

Or, if you understand shoe lust, please splain it to me!

Sunday, November 11, 2007

"Juno"

My friend Marisol gave me a ticket to the Denver Film Festival's showing of "Juno" last night. The buzz is that it's this year's "Little Miss Sunshine." I'd say that's a good comparison.


It stars Ellen Page as the title character and also features Michael Cera and Jason Bateman (you might remember them as father and son in "Arrested Development"), Allison Janney ("The West Wing") and Jennifer Garner ("Alias"). Fans of "The Office" don't get too excited; Rainn Wilson is only in one scene.

I've never been to the Denver Film Festival and always wanted to go. The movie was shown at Denver's new Ellie Caulkins Opera House. It was a very cool experience! There was even a red carpet. The director, Jason Reitman, spoke before the film. The only thing missing was popcorn. And it was strange attending a film festival when movie writers are on strike, especially because "Juno's" dialogue and characters left me really fired up about writing.

Jason Reitman also made "Thank You for Smoking," which I wasn't too impressed with. I loved the book by Christopher Buckley, but the movie didn't capture the spirit of the book. He did a much better job with "Juno." Loved it! It opens December 5th and I recommend it.

After my big night on the town, I came home and regaled hubby with erotic tales of my compacted sinuses and the strange whistles my nose is making lately. Scheherazade ain't got nothing on me!

Friday, November 09, 2007

Just say no

I've had a cold for over a week, and today I pulled a muscle in my neck that is slowly becoming a neck-shoulder-back spasm from hell. Needless to say I have not accomplished much this week. And at first this morning I was starting to freak out about it. I know of other writers (you know who you are!) who can hit 2,000 words a day seemingly without breaking a sweat. Something I can't do when my sinuses aren't packed and I can turn my head from side to side like a normal person. Well, I can do it some days...just not every day. Some days, it's 300 words. Some days it's 3,000 words. It just depends. Anyway, I was freaking out because yesterday it was only 800 and today barely any. But then I remembered: I have been here soooo many times before and always, always it works out okay. I am going to end up wherever I end up no matter how I treat myself. Freaking out is completely optional. And, today anyway, I think not.

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Get your mojo workin!



Just in time for fall comes the *long-ago promised Pajama Chat with Stephanie Rose Bird, author of Sticks, Stones, Roots and Bones and Four Seasons of Mojo.


I'm thrilled to have Stephanie here to share with us her views about natural living and creativity. Stephanie and I met a few years ago. She has a lovely essay in the anthology I compiled. When I read in Chicago at the indie bookstore Women and Children First, Stephanie joined me and we had a great time.


Stephanie is a spirituality and health writer, educator, visionary artist, solitary green witch, hereditary intuitive and contemporary rootworker. (And I might add a beautiful writer and a really nice woman.) She has an MFA from UC San Diego.


Without further ado*, here's our chat:


Pajama Gardener: You write about hoodoo and working roots. What are these practices and how/when did you become involved with them?


Stephanie Rose Bird: Hoodoo is a unique collection of folkloric practices of African American people. People from diverse cultures including Native American (Southeastern North American groups) as well as people from Appalachia and immigrants from Europe, particularly those from northwest and eastern Europe, became involved with its development. The tradition is about self-determination, and may include healing or harming as the Hoodoo practitioner sees fit. Early on, Hoodoo, like other African-based traditions was used very proactively to help enslaved Africans in the Americas gain freedom. This is well documented by scholars. This was accomplished by using knowledge obtained in Africa of venom, poisons and herbs to effect slave holders (the masters) health or otherwise influence them so that a revolt could take place. Hoodoo healing was also used proactively and very positively, as plantation medicine, because blacks and even many whites were not able to see mainstream (allopathic) doctors. Hoodoo also involves the intersection or crossroads were humans and the spirit realm meet.

I focus my work on Hoodoo as a healer's tradition. Hoodoo can be used to help people have a better quality of life. Folk medicines are used for healing common ailments using the roots, berries, seeds, flowers and leaves of plants, typically called herbs. Matters of everyday life include finding and keeping a life partner, creating domestic tranquility, putting an end to vicious gossip, finding and keeping a job, increasing prosperity, doing well at school and maneuvering through the challenging passages of life like pregnancy, childbirth, adolescence, marriage illness and death are all addressed. There are people who use Hoodoo to bring terrible harm to others. I am not interested in that particular application and it is not something I am involved with. As someone interested in history, I am much more interested in the ways Hoodoo demonstrates how African culture has survived and continued in the United States. I am interested in the diversity of expression of Hoodoo, for example Hoodoo's appearance in blues songs, folkloric uses of plants for healing, the folkloric stories that grew from within Hoodoo and art objects used such as mojo bags, handcrafted brooms and magical soaps. I see Hoodoo as an interesting application of ethnobotany that is uniquely American.


Hoodoo and Voodoo are not one practice. Voodoo is derived from the word Vodoun, a well-developed belief system that began in West Africa and evolved in the New World, very strongly manifesting in Haiti and in New Orleans. There are priests and priestesses of Vodoun and an in-depth ordination process. There are also deities lending it a religious tone that doesn't necessarily exist in Hoodoo. There are commonalties between Vodoun and Hoodoo yet they are not one in the same. Just like Hoodoo is not Santeria, Obeah, or Candomble although there are certainly some crossovers.

So Hoodoo is not a religion yet it is practiced by an eclectic group of people. In the past most of the practitioners were involved with the Protestant church as Baptists, Methodists and Pentecostals, while a few were African Moslems. Today, Hoodoo continues to attract an eclectic group of people regardless of their religious affiliations. There are Hoodoos who lean toward West African traditional faiths like Ifa of the Yoruba people like myself; others look towards Khametian practices of the ancient Egyptians, still others come from a background of Wicca, Witchcraft, Paganism, Shamanism and other practices.

PG: When did you know you wanted to be a writer?
SRB: One of my favorite things to do as a child was reading. I devoured books and all my favorite teachers were either Language Arts teachers or teachers of other arts like visual art, dance and singing. I loved Shakespeare growing up and dark tales. I grew up in the country and there was a very large series of food storage buildings that captivated me; they were covered in quotes of the wise from throughout time. I found them to resonate and as a combination of their omnipresence and the rhythms of people like Shakespeare, T.S. Elliot, Langston Hughes and Edgar Allen Poe, soon enough I was writing poetry of my own and reciting it. As a teenager I was involved with a small group of African American teenaged poets under the direction of an elder poet Ms. DuBois. Still, writing remained overpowered by my chosen art forms for much of my life which was dance and fine art. It wasn't until about 1999 that I got the call--something or someone spoke to me across time and said, "Hey! You should write." Still, before that many of my artist friends were calling me a writer because whenever I had the chance I was incorporating writing into my art and utilizing nonfiction writer's processes in my art, like planning & research, research, research!

PG: You are something of a modern Renaissance woman: you write, paint and dance. How do visual art and dance inform your writing and vice versa?
SRB: I have to give credit for these overlays to my parents. I grew up in an unusual household. My mother studied dance for many, many years and she made sure I did the same, from the time I was 4. My parents were very artistic and we had a craft business. We spent a lot of time creating together and discussing aesthetics of what worked and what didn't, what people might like and why or why not. That upbringing made it natural to be creative and not to really compartmentalize each one but to just do it. That's how it was and it has begun to be the same way for me. I've given myself that freedom. I've been dancing for about 7 years as an adult-spread out over time. Most recently, I've become heavily involved with American Tribal Style Belly dance. Right now I'm also studying Kahiko, which is ancient Hawaiian Hula and Spanish folk dance. I try to also take West African workshops whenever possible and have it on my to-do list to learn classical Indian Dance and the dances of Java. At the same time I paint and I write, every day. As I said earlier, it is a natural way of being for me, started in my childhood. The three-forms are all centered around a nexus of creativity and they are inspired for my passionate interest in world cultures. As I paint and write I listen to world music and classical music typically--the music will spark inspiration also for potential dance choreographies to try out.

PG: A lot of writers and aspiring writers read the Pajama Gardener, what Hoodoo might help writers (encourage creativity, combat writer's block, build self-confidence)?
SRB: Here are three different ideas choose one or try different ones on different days but not all of them at once.

(1) Buy a few unscented pillar candles of about 4" x 6" --in the colors red, orange and/or white. While intently focused on overcoming your creative block, take a couple tablespoons sweet almond oil or sunflower oil and crumble in a handful dried pink rose buds. Stay focused and breath deeply--stay relaxed. Next, roll the candle(s) in the floral oil (this is called a candle dressing). Roll dressed candle in an ample sized piece of tin foil covered with a paper towel--let sit this way overnight. Before you attempt your creative work picture a pure white dove flying away from you carrying a red mojo (bundle) in her beak--the mojo is your bringing creative block with her. Open a nearby door or window and imagine fresh inspiration blowing into your life with the breeze. Keep breathing consistently even, slow and deep until you feel completely relaxed and willing to accept the return on your creativity. Close the window or door after you complete your visualization. Light the candle(s) on a fireproof plate and as you breathe in its sweet scent look for inspiration in the fire of the candle(s). Blessed Be! You'll be creating in no time.

(2) Neroli helps ease inhibitions and promotes relaxation as well as ethereal visions; dab some of this on your pulse points before bed so that creative dreams and visions may come to you.
This oil is sold by many different aromatherapy and herbal suppliers online and it is carried at various local health food stores in most communities. Seek out pure, organic oil--Aura Cacia is a decent brand.

(3) Sprinkle magnetic dust under your work desk and chair, discreetly (don't get carried way). Imagine you are planting the seeds of creativity, inspired visions and a fertile imagination. Magnetic dust brings what you seek. It is an attraction, drawing powder. It can be purchased through various online suppliers.

Generally I suggest:

(1) I like the strength, warrior spirit and tenacity represented by the metalsmiths, metal gods and embodied by metals. Sprinkle pennies in your work space to invite and please the ancestors. Hang a horse shoe in your studio/office--cup shape and prongs facing upward to hold the energy that comes from the great beyond.

(2) Having fresh fragrant flowers in your workspace--the fragrance attracts good spirits and inspires interesting thoughts out of the ordinary.

PG: In your book Four Seasons of Mojo, you talk a lot about the "profound impact each season has on our spiritual lives." As we head into winter, what ritual or practice would you recommend for those of us who get a little blue during the cold dark months? And any suggestions on how to stay physically well?
SRB: We've just been engaged in that time of the year when the veil between worlds--spiritual and earthly; human and ancestor is thinnest. This is the time to truly delve into the spiritual in whatever way you feel most comfortable. Furthermore, it is the time to pay attention to family and to ancestors--whether this means learning more about your ancestry, visiting family cemetery's to pay tribute or as simple as cleaning and reflecting upon family photographs fall is for family and ancestors. It is also nice to break bread with family and with friends--very good for the soul when you are with good people.

I also like candles during this time of the year because they are a source of spiritual warmth and tangible light. Burn candles near your work spaces but always with attention towards health and safety. For some this may mean unscented or beeswax candles, this is helpful for those with allergies. As I mention in Four Seasons of Mojo, avoid lead wicks and synthetic scents. Try out soy candles and other alternative sources. I really like the handmade candles by Pacifica because of the essential oils they scent the candles with--they burn in a very pleasing manner and scents such as orange, grapefruit, neroli, lavender and mint are very uplifting. Adding river rocks to the fireproof plate brings in the earth element and rocks are very grounding--something we need during this spiritual time of the year.

Also in Four Seasons of Mojo I provide numerous recipes for healthy seasonal foods and drinks. I recommend colorful roasted root vegetables (which I'm actually baking right now), these include parsnips, carrots, sweet potatoes or yams, red & purple potatoes, red onions, garlic, rutabagas, turnips and leeks. The more varied the better--this is chock-full of antioxidants.

Peppermint tea with honey and lemon is soothing and peppermint has numerous medicinal qualities. I like teas for fall and winter. Honey and lemon are medicinal and I speak about many of their benefits to the immune system in Four Seasons of Mojo. Lately I've been enjoying the health benefits of white tea with ginger which is very warming and good for the digestion in our season of heavy foods.


PG: What are you working on now?
SRB: I have two new books in the works: A Healing Grove: African Tree Medicine for a New World (Lawrence Hill Books; Chicago Review Press) and Light, Bright, Damn Near White: Biracial and Triracial Culture in America (Praeger Books, Greenwood Press--both will be out 2008 or 2009.
My daughter and I are dancing together and hoping to perform together sometime within the next year. I've been studying my genealogy both traditional paper trail and deep ancestry through a series of DNA tests--Fascinating doesn't quite describe it. I have a solo show opening Feb. 15th in the Chicago area, so I'm painting as much as possible.



Stephanie, can't wait for your next books. Thanks so much for your time!


*Lafreya, this one's for you. Thanks for being patient!

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

The wisdom of tea

This morning I noticed some helpful advice on a box of peppermint tea: "Remember that everyone you meet is afraid of something, loves something, and has lost something." It's from Life's Little Instruction Book.

This is a good thing to remember about characters. I was up till 1:30 a.m. making notes about 2 of my characters, 1 of the sisters and her significant other. I've come to a point in my writing when I need to know much more about him to know how things progress. I know a lot of people write bios for all their characters before they dive into the story, but somehow that doesn't work for me. I have to do things kind of simultaneously. I had a brief sketch about him, but he's become more pivotal in the story so I need to know more.

I reread parts of Brothers and Sisters by Bebe Moore Campbell over the weekend. A wonderful book about race, gender and class, and a great primer on character motivation. Even her bad guys have insecurities that are sympathetic. It reminded me to think about all my characters' secrets and fears.

All this work and all I needed was to read a box of tea.

Monday, November 05, 2007

The first review

From Publisher's Weekly:

In Brice's accomplished debut, African-American Shay Dixon, a burnt-out grad student, has a “visitation/fantasy/fever dream” featuring Nina Simone, the high priestess of soul, who counsels Shay to “go home.” To do that, she must face Nona, the drunken failure of a mother she's not spoken to in seven years and blames for a harrowing childhood that left her emotionally scarred. Still, she takes Nina's advice, heads home to Denver and discovers that Nona's now an A.A. member with a good job, a lovely home and an adorable three-year-old girl, Sunny, Shay's half-sister. Their reconciliation is complicated by Shay's stubborn anger, Nona's A.A. sponsorship of a troubled young woman and Shay's sexual awakening. Brice's straightforward prose is dead-on in describing the challenges Shay and her mother face as they reconnect.