Thursday, October 30, 2008

Girlfriends

I'm usually not much of a joiner, but cyber groups seem made for us loner-writer types. And God knows it's hard out here for a novelist. Trying to write and promote on your own...shudder! So I'm happy to announce I've joined up with the Girlfriends Cyber Circuit, a group of writer-bloggers who help each other through cyber tours on each other's blogs.
And can I just say I'm glad "Girlfriends" is available in syndication cause these ladies crack me up.
I'm sure that the Girlfriends in the GCC dress up like this for their blog tours, right? :)

Monday, October 27, 2008

Lynda Barry illuminates creativity



I've found my companion for NaNoWriMo: What It Is, by Lynda Barry. Do you know Barry, author of Ernie Pooks Comeeks (unofficially the story of Marlys)? What It Is is a book about creativity and how the big bad critic in us tries to kill it. It's Barry's plea to everybody to keep that playful part of themselves alive. And, by the way, Barry reminds us that when kids play it's not all joy. There's a lot of anxiety involved. When children play they are very focused and concentrated.



But what made me buy the book is this exchange in one of the comics in the book:


Worried about your book?

Oh there's my book, the war, the laundry, things I said 15 years ago, the environment, my double chin, unanswered mail, what an ass I am, what a dirty house we have -- and I've had "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" playing in my head for days.



Sound familiar? In a funny aside, when I first discovered Barry I thought she was black. (She grew up tossing bologna to the mean dog in the alley too!)



Go here for an excerpt from What it Is.


Who else is doing NaNoWriMo? What will you be reading/doing to make it through?

Friday, October 24, 2008

Where women really stand

My friend Marion did a little research to see how women are standing in this country. Here are the statistics she found and resources she used.

1. MONEY: Women earn 77 cents for every dollar a man earns. Wage equality has not been achieved 45 years after the Equal Pay Act.

2. WORK: Women are 47% of the labor force.

3. EDUCATION: Women were NOT allowed to attend college until 1833. While women now outnumber men in college, they earn less in the workplace.

4. HEALTH INSURANCE: From 1980 to 2005 health insurance coverage has fallen for both men and women. By 2007, 43 Million Americans had no health insurance.

5. HEALTH: Not until 1973 did women have their own reproductive rights. Before 1991, many prescription drugs were not widely tested on women.

6. CREDIT: Until 1974, a woman had no right to credit in her own name. A woman could not borrow for a car, home or other property without the signature of a man.

7. RETIREMENT: Women’s median Social Security is 70% of men’s. The overall value of women’s pensions is 50% that of men’s.

8. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE: Nearly 5.3 Million intimate partner victimizations occur yearly among women 18 and older. Violence results in nearly 2 Million injuries and 1,300 deaths.

9. RIGHT TO VOTE: For 219 years White Men have been granted the vote -- Women for the past 88 years. [Voting Rights: White men: 1789. Black men: 1870. Women: 1920. Native Americans: 1924.]

FACTS: 1. U. S. Census, 2007; Equal Pay Act 1963; 2. U. S. Department of Labor, 2007; 3. Oberlin College became coeducational in 1833; U. S. Department of Labor 2005; 4. U. S. Census 2005; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services: Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 2007; 5. U. S. Supreme Court, Roe v Wade; National Institutes of Health; 6. Equal Credit Opportunity Act, U. S. Department of Justice; 7. U. S. Government Accountability Office (GAO); 8. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services: Center for Disease Control and Prevention; 10. U.S. Constitution.

America and American women have come far.
We need to keep moving forward.
A vote for Democrats is a vote for women and men.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Whoo hoo! I voted!!!!

Though it went better for me than it did for Homer, it was still a pain. Our polling place ran out of ballots for our precinct on the morning of the 1st day of early voting! Let me repeat that: they ran out of paper ballots within hours. And a guy from the county clerk's office announced it happened at every early polling place in the city! Way to be prepared, Denver!

We waited about a half of hour and were then told we could come back (after more ballots were printed, whenever that might be!) or we could vote on electronic voting machines. We voted using the machines, and I'm hoping that the decertification and recertification of our electronic voting machines means they worked correctly.


via videosift.com

On the upside, after we worked up an appetite exercising our constitutional rights, we went across the street to a taqueria and had tacos and Mexican Coke (Did you know that Coca Cola made in Mexico tastes better and is probably healthier?). Viva la democracia!

Monday, October 20, 2008

Speaking of movies....





So far, this is the pedigree of the TV movie version of Orange Mint and Honey:



The network: Lifetime Movie Network. It will be an Original Production. Most recent example was Little Girl Lost: The Delimar Vera Story.

The producer: Damon Lee, who produced This Christmas, which was out in theaters last year and comes out on DVD on Nov. 11.

And the latest addition to the team is screenwriter Elizabeth Hunter, who wrote The Fighting Temptations and has written and produced for television, including episodes of ER!

Yes, um hum, yes, I am psyched! Y'all, we'll have a SCRIPT pretty soon! After that, as I understand it, if all goes well, Lifetime and Damon Lee will hire a director and start casting. There's some folks in the movies and shows mentioned above who would be GREAT for Orange Mint. Not that I'm getting ahead of myself or anything!

Breathe, Carleen. Breathe.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

The jack o'lantern speaks!




Got into the holiday spirit yesterday and carved 2 pumpkins. Hope McCain fans don't find that one too scary!

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Sue Monk Kidd on the movie


Here's what the author had to say about the film based on her book. I have to say, even though I believe any novel stands on its on (books AREN'T dry runs for films), I look forward to the day when I might see my own characters in the flesh this way.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Buzz, buzz, buzz


So I just saw The Secret Life of Bees and I recommend it. For those who read and enjoyed the book, I'd say the movie sticks very close to Sue Monk Kidd's novel. I don't know, but I'd bet she feels really good about this movie.

For those who might be a little wary of a story about self-sacrificing black women taking care of a young white girl, I say...you'll be surprised. The movie makes a lot of hard points (including one character saying "It's funny white people hate us so much when so many of them were raised by black women.") Bees doesn't shy away from the reality of life in 1964 (or 2008).

For those with mother issues, you'll cry. I did. And I heard a whole lot of sniffling in the theater. Dakota Fanning gives a lovely performance as young Lily and Queen Latifah is, as always, warm as butter on the screen. They're all fabulous!

Go see this movie, and see it this weekend. Show Hollywood that a movie written (adapted from the book), directed, produced and starring black women can be a hit!

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Soup season


How can you tell winter is coming? Frost was on the ground this morning. That's one sign. Another is that I've been spending more time in the kitchen. Making cornbread, roasted chicken, and chicken-veggie-brown rice soup.
This soup uses the leftover chicken, some leftover brown rice and a bag of frozen veggies. Add in onion and garlic powders, basil, oregano, black pepper and salt to taste. Voila, you've got soup. Easy and healthy.

Thursday, October 09, 2008

Nikki Giovanni and Kim Reid


Last night was a great night for writers in Denver. Went to hear Nikki Giovanni speak at the Tattered Cover (but forgot my camera! Duh!) She was wonderful. She was here in support of her 2 new kids books, Hip Hop Speaks to Children, which has a CD and includes a recording of Langston Hughes (amongst others) and Lincoln and Douglass: An American Friendship. Both are wonderful! I took a signed copy of Hip Hop Speaks to Children to Head Start today--they loved it! Fun Fact: Nikki has a tattoo that says "thug life" on her arm in honor of Tupac.

In other news, congratulations to Kim Reid, who won the Colorado Book Award last night for her memoir No Place Safe!!!! You can see a pic of Kim with her award on Agent Kristin's blog. You can read an interview with Kim on my blog here.

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

While we're on poetry....


Nikki Giovanni will be reading tomorrow at 7 p.m. at the LoDo Tattered Cover. Afterward, I'm honored to be hosting a little reception for her (I'll post pictures). Since we've been talking about poetry lately and in honor of Ms. Giovanni's appearance, I thought I'd post this poem she wrote for Nina Simone:


The Genie in the Jar


take a note and spin it around spin it around don't
prick your finger
take a note and spin it around
on the Black loom on the Black loom
careful baby
don't prick your finger

take the air and weave the sky
around the Black loom around the Black loom
make the sky sing a Black song sing a blue song
sing my song make the sky sing a Black song
from the Black loom from the Black loom
careful baby
don't prick your finger

take the genie and put her in a jar
put her in a jar
wrap the sky around her
take the genie and put her in a jar
wrap the sky around her
listen to her sing
sing a Black song our Black song
from the Black loom
singing to me
from the Black loom
careful baby
don't prick your finger


From The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni 1968-1998 (which features a fascinating discussion between Giovanni and Jill Scott)

Sunday, October 05, 2008

Fall in the garden

We're having a banner late season bloom. August was very kind to the plants, with plenty of water and cooler temps. Frost is in the forecast this week, though the temps will warm up enough I believe everything will stay alive and blooming.








Friday, October 03, 2008

A favorite poem

Lisa over at Eudaemonia asked her readers today what poem is like an old friend. I've been thinking a lot lately about the poem "Thanks" by W.S. Merwin from the book The Rain in the Trees. Anne Lamott uses it at the beginning of her book Traveling Mercies. Since it was too long to include in Lisa's comments, I'll share it here.

Listen
with the night falling we are saying thank you
we are stopping on the bridge to bow from the railings
we are running out of the glass rooms
with our mouths full of food to look at the sky
and say thank you
we are standing by the water looking out
in different directions

back from a series of hospitals back from a mugging
after funerals we are saying thank you
after the news of the dead
whether or not we knew them we are saying thank you
in a culture up to its chin in shame
living in the stench it has chosen we are saying thank you

over telephones we are saying thank you
in doorways and in the backs of cars and in elevators
remembering wars and the police at the back door
and the beatings on stairs we are saying thank you
in the banks that use us we are saying thank you
with the crooks in office with the rich and fashionable

with the animals dying around us
our lost feelings we are saying thank you
with the forests falling faster than the minutes
of our lives we are saying thank you
with the words going out like cells of a brain
with the cities growing over us like the earth
we are saying thank you faster and faster
with nobody listening we are saying thank you
we are saying thank you and waving
dark though it is