C. Lee McKenzie

Young Adult and Middle Grade Author

  • Home
  • Young Adult
  • Middle Grade
  • Teachers & Parents
  • Appearances
  • Contact
  • About
  • Links
  • Blog

The Art of Making Doughnuts, An Interview

September 14, 2022 By C. Lee McKenzie

Amazon . Barnes & Noble . iTunes. Kobo .
Scribed . Goodreads

I’m excited to welcome Linda Budzinski, the author of the lead story in the most recent Insecure Writers’ Support Group Anthology. Thanks for joining us here today, Linda.

Lee:
What’s the greatest lesson you’ve learned as a writer?

Linda:
This is such a tough question because I’ve learned (and am still learning) so many!
Certainly one of the most helpful lessons has been that inspiration tends not to “strike.” It often comes slowly, through hours of toiling and noodling. Those hours can be difficult, frustrating, and even
painful, but ultimately they are what result in those fun flashes that make writing so rewarding.

Lee:
What has been the biggest surprise of your writing life?

Linda:
How incredibly supportive the writing community can be. I belong to a lot of writing groups on social media, and people are always so willing to offer advice and critique for those who ask, encouragement for those feeling discouraged, and congratulations for those with good news.
Writers by and large are just really kind people. (If only the rest of my social media would follow suit!)

Lee:
If you could choose a metaphor to describe yourself as a writer, what would it be?

Linda:
Ahaha, great question! I wish I could say I’m a spider meticulously weaving a web, but I’m more like a blind squirrel trying to find that nut. Every once in a while, I succeed!

That’s a great contrast in metaphors. Love it. Thanks, Linda.


https://www.facebook.com/LindaBudzinskiAuthor
https://twitter.com/LindaBudz

Linda Budzinski writes sweet YA and adult romance. She lives in Northern Virginia with her husband and two rescue pups. In between creating meet-cutes and happy endings, she works in non-profit communications and outreach.


So what’s this story and this anthology about?

First Love: The Art of Making Doughnuts
An Insecure Writer’s Support Group Anthology

The sweetness of first love…

Could a fiercely independent cop’s heart be stolen by the guy who makes her favorite doughnuts? Will a maid who used deceit to snare a mail-order husband get a dose of her own medicine? Can her handsome neighbor rescue a modern-day “princess” from a tenacious ex-boyfriend? Can two strangers in a rideshare be honest enough to fall in love for real? Can you remember your first love? How about your second? Third? Fourth?

Featuring the talents of Linda Budzinski, Melissa Maygrove, Michael Di Gesu, Sylvia Ney, Katie Klein, Kim Elliott, Templeton Moss, S.E. White, Denise Covey, and Sammi Spizziri. Hand-picked by a panel of agents and authors, these ten tales will touch your heart and rekindle lost feelings. Prepare to return to that first love…

Release date: September 6, 2022
Print ISBN – 9781939844880, $14.95
EBook ISBN – 9781939844897, $4.99
Romance - Clean & Wholesome (FIC027270) / Contemporary (FIC027020) / Historical (FIC027050)
186 pages, Freedom Fox Press, an imprint of Dancing Lemur Press, L.L.C.

Founded by author Alex J. Cavanaugh and a Writer’s Digest Top Sites for Writers, the Insecure Writer’s Support Group offers support for writers and authors alike. It provides an online database; articles; monthly blog posting; Facebook, Twitter, & Instagram groups; #IWSGPit, and a newsletter.
https://www.insecurewriterssupportgroup.com/


I hope you’ve enjoyed meeting Linda and finding out more about First Love: The Art of Eating Doughnuts. Be sure to get your copy, read it, and by all means, leave a review!

Amazon . Barnes & Noble . iTunes. Kobo .
Scribed . Goodreads

Filed Under: Anthologies, Linda Budzinski

WE’RE HALFWAY THROUGH!

June 2, 2021 By C. Lee McKenzie

I just flipped my paper calendar from May to June. It seems more important when I change the months on my colorful kitchen calendar than when I click on my digital Google one. So month six has arrived-June from the Roman goddess Juno, patroness of marriage and the well-being of women. I’m expecting a lot of good this month, but when I add up the + and -, it’s a wash.

  • In California, we get to unmask as the 15th! *Score one on the bright side.
  • Our vaccination percentages are still on the rise-over 55% *Score two.
  • We’re facing a major drought and already the farmers’ water allotment has been dramatically cut. Watch those food prices go up even higher. *Oops. Subtract one bright side for June.
  • We’ve been in the fire season since May, very early. *Alas, subtract another.

My personal half-year recap:

I’ve just signed a contract to publish a new book, so to celebrate that I’ll be doing a special GIVEAWAY. To win a signed copy of this book, you can follow my Weekly Wednesday posts here and on Facebook starting this month about the characters you’ll meet in the story. I’ll give a book to anyone who comments (50 book limit) and answers a simple question that will be at the end of each post. Hope you’ll join in and play the game. I’ll try to make it fun.

And now for the rest…

Carmel Beach Walk
  • After I finished my round-trip from San Francisco to L.A. (mileage count, not a real trip) I kind of flaked for a few weeks, then started walking again. I’m not as rigid in my 4 miles/day anymore, but sometimes I walk longer. My longest day walk so far is 10 miles. 
  • I’ve received a lot of feedback on one of my WIPs, and I’m going through the comments before I tackle my next edit on that manuscript.
  • I finally chose to get vaccinated. There are a lot of things I want to do, starting this month, and to do them, it’s easier with proof of vaccination. 
  • Maybe the big news is my cherry pie success. The cherries are here after a long winter wait. My mouth watered for a fresh-baked pie, so I made one. Here are my Before and After shots. I intend to eat it all.

Now for the First Wednesday of the Month News!

IWSG Anthology Contest

Submissions are open for the Seventh Annual IWSG Anthology Contest.
SWEET ROMANCE

For submission guidelines, list of judges and their bios, click HERE.


#IWSG
Join Us Today

Let’s rock the neurotic writing world!

Our Twitter handle is @TheIWSG and hashtag is #IWSG.

Every month, we announce a question that members can answer in their IWSG post. These questions may prompt you to share advice, insight, a personal experience or story. Include your answer to the question in your IWSG post or let it inspire your post if you are struggling with something to say. 

Remember, the question is optional!

June 2 question - For how long do you shelve your first draft, before reading it and re-drafting? Is this dependent on your writing experience and the number of stories/books under your belt?

The awesome co-hosts for the June 2 posting of the IWSG are J Lenni Dorner,Sarah Foster,Natalie Aguirre,Lee Lowery, and Rachna Chhabria!

I’m afraid I don’t have a great answer to this month’s question simply because I don’t know the answer. Some first drafts sit on my C Drive for years, others a few weeks. My writing experience doesn’t seem to help me out in deciding when to re-write. Wish it did.


Thanks to Chrys Fey and her mom Elaine Kaye, my adventurous boys are going to the MOON!

Another special thanks to Susan Kaye Quinn for her exciting and unique idea that has engaged so many authors and will send their books on a fabulous journey.


Quote of the Month: “How did it get so late so soon? It’s night before its afternoon. December is here before its June. My goodness, how the time has flown. How did it get so late so soon?” – Dr. Suess

Filed Under: Anthologies, Contests, Insecure Writers Support Group, WEP

The Great Conjunction

January 6, 2021 By C. Lee McKenzie

There wasn’t a lot to be excited about in 2020, so to make up for Covid arriving at our doorsteps, the skies treated us to a once in a lifetime spectacle. Yep. Unless you were here 400 years ago, you never saw Saturn and Jupiter so close together (a 10th of a degree apart) in their orbits around the Sun. They seem to catch up to each other about every 20 years, but they’re not this close and the event often happens during daylight.

Because I couldn’t miss something this fantastic, I sat outside, huddled against the December chill, and gawked as Jupiter steadily gained on Saturn, finally passing it. How close they seemed, and yet they remained hundreds of millions of miles apart in space. Watching the night sky, knowing I’d never see this again, trying to grasp the concept of just how immense our universe is was a humbling, but inspiring experience. Some things were as they should be, and that was surprisingly comforting as I got ready to say goodbye to a year in which nothing seemed to be as it should be.


#IWSG
Join Us Now

Our Twitter handle is @TheIWSG and hashtag is #IWSG.

Every month, we announce a question that members can answer in their IWSG post. These questions may prompt you to share advice, insight, a personal experience or story. Include your answer to the question in your IWSG post or let it inspire your post if you are struggling with something to say. 

Remember, the question is optional! 

Being a writer, when you’re reading someone else’s work, what stops you from finishing a book/throws you out of the story/frustrates you the most about other people’s books?

The awesome co-hosts for the January 6 posting of the IWSG are Ronel Janse van Vuuren , J Lenni Dorner, Gwen Gardner Sandra Cox, and Louise - Fundy Blue! 

Of all people, I should be the last to point out “flaws” in other people’s writing. If I look at some of my work, I’ll find every one of these frustrating, book-closing examples. But here goes!

The first thing that stops me cold is a book that tries too hard. When I break this blanket statement down into descriptors the first on my list is the “unique phrase” strategy. I know every writer strives for a voice that’s his or hers, but it’s difficult for me to read on when instead of just telling the story, they reach for clever ways to do it.

The second descriptor is the “gore for effect.” I can read well-written horror, but like comedy, horror requires a lot of skill to pull it off. Give me a good stabbing or ghostly stalking figure, but give it to me with some nuance and some excellent prose.

“Clever attribution” might not make me stop reading, but it does annoy me. I guess I’m old-fashioned and I either like “he said” or some kind of action to make it clear who’s speaking. When people blurt, snort, guffaw, chortle, or howl I’m likely to start skimming.

“Repetition. Repetition. Repetition.” I have to admit that I read one book to the end so that I could complete my count of the word ceaseless. The writer fell in love with that word in the first chapter, and clung to it from then on. There was ceaseless love, ceaseless worry, ceaseless seas, ceaseless…well, you’ve probably already stopped reading.

Now, I’m off to edit some of my books and make sure I didn’t commit any of these irritations.


And here’s what we’ve been waiting for…the next IWSG Anthology!

An Insecure Writer’s Support Group Anthology

Discover dark matter’s secrets…
What is an AI’s true role? Will bumbling siblings find their way home from deep space? Dark matter is judging us—are we worthy of existence? Would you step through a portal into another reality? Can the discoverer of dark matter uncover its secrets?

Ten authors explore dark matter, unraveling its secrets and revealing its mysterious nature. Featuring the talents of Stephanie Espinoza Villamor, C.D. Gallant-King, Tara Tyler, Mark Alpert, Olga Livshin, Steph Wolmarans, Charles Kowalski, Kim Mannix, Elizabeth Mueller, and Deniz Bevan.

Hand-picked by a panel of agents, authors, and editors, these ten tales will take readers on a journey across time and space. Prepare for ignition!

Founded by author Alex J. Cavanaugh, the Insecure Writer’s Support Group offers support for writers and authors alike. It provides an online database; articles; monthly blog posting; Facebook, Twitter, & Instagram groups; #IWSGPit, and a newsletter.

Release date: May 4, 2021
Print ISBN 9781939844828 $14.95
EBook ISBN 9781939844835 $4.99

Science Fiction: Collections & Anthologies (FIC028040) / Space Exploration (FIC028130) / Genetic Engineering (FIC028110)

MEET THE WRITERS

Artificial - Stephanie Espinoza Villamor
Space Folds and Broomsticks - C.D. Gallant-King
Rift – Kim Mannix
The Utten Mission – Steph Wolmarans
Sentient – Tara Tyler
One to Another – Deniz Bevan
Resident Alien - Charles Kowalski
Nano Pursuit – Olga Godim
Resurgence – Elizabeth Mueller
Vera’s Last Voyage – Mark Alpert


What’s Next?

How to Pitch

Quote of the Month:

“Look up at the stars and not down at your feet. Try to make sense of what you see, and wonder about what makes the universe exist. Be curious.” | Stephen Hawking

Filed Under: Anthologies, Insecure Writers Support Group

IWSG Wednesday

September 2, 2020 By C. Lee McKenzie

I’d figured out a way to manage and even enjoy the quiet of the Covid 19 shutdown. My walking challenge carried me over 400 miles in four months. I discovered new trails, enjoyed beautiful oceanfront scenery, and did most of my errands around town on foot. I wore out one pair of shoes, and seriously broke in another. Life was working for me. I’d adapted.

But just when I thought I could see that circle of light at the end of the metaphor, life decided to seal off that promise and sent in her lightning brigade. There’s nothing like a 3 a.m. streak of fire across the sky followed by the sound of large colliding boulders overhead to pump up the old adrenaline. Then looking out the window to find columns of smoke across the canyon shifts you into Emergency mode like nothing else. Find the flashlight (obviously, there’s no power), get out the Must Take With Me list, open the gate and garage door for a quick getaway, turn on battery operated radio, then pace while listening to the emergency alert system. That sound alone can drive you mad.

I’ve been evacuated twice before, so I’m not a novice. Still when it’s dark, when the sky’s raining a billion volts of electrical power (did you know that?) all around you, and you’re thinking maybe Covid 19 isn’t that big a deal, it’s hard not to panic, and that doesn’t serve you well at all. When the sun came up (100+ degrees- thank you for that), I took advantage of natural light and loaded the car with important papers and some irreplaceables. I waited, keeping an eye on the ridge until the air became so thick I couldn’t breath-even inside-then I took off and headed south. Finally, the wind blew the fire and smoke away from my side of the canyon, and for the moment, I could return and stay sheltered in my place, like in the good old days when only a virus threatened my life.

I’m thinking of those who were caught in this maelstrom and hoping they can return to their abandoned homes, although I already know several friends who will be rebuilding or moving.

Life.

Unpredictable.

Challenging.

Fascinating.


#IWSG

Join Us Now

Our Twitter handle is @TheIWSG and hashtag is #IWSG.

Every month, we announce a question that members can answer in their IWSG post. These questions may prompt you to share advice, insight, a personal experience or story. Include your answer to the question in your IWSG post or let it inspire your post if you are struggling with something to say.

Remember, the question is optional!

September 2 question - If you could choose one author, living or dead, to be your beta partner, who would it be and why?

The co-hosts for the September 2 posting of the IWSG are PJ Colando, J Lenni Dorner, Deniz Bevan, Kim Lajevardi, Natalie Aguirre, and Louise - Fundy Blue!

Now that is a great question. And it’s so difficult to answer. If I choose one of those literary luminaries like Dos Passos or Faulkner (one of my favorite and most challenging authors) I know they’d chew up my prose and spit it out after the first paragraph. So how about Hemingway? I treasure his writing, but he shot animals to prove his manliness, not to mention his penchant for not being a very nice guy. So not him. Twain might work. Maybe he could teach me how to capture wit and humor in my writing, how to tweak noses without being pendantic. So moving on…Isabel Allende, Margaret Atwood, Barbara Kingsolver. I could learn so much from them, but, like the others, I would have absolutely nothing to suggest by way of improvement in return. A beta partnership has to be a two-way street.

I think I’ll have to set my sights on a writer who is still striving to improve their craft and who I see doing that each time they publish another book. I want to list my choices here, but sure as I do, I’ll leave out someone and regret this post, so I’ll just say there are a lot of writers I’m connected with who I admire for their diligence and determination. I’ll choose one of them.

I’m eager to see how others answer this question today.


The WEP had an awesome theme this month, so I entered because I love to do Flash Fiction once in a while. It gives me chance to “play” with characterization and dialogue in the short form. Here’s my contribution.

 

 

 

Submissions Are Still Open!

The entries for the IWSG Anthology Contest are coming in like crazy, and they’re good, so readers will be in for a treat when this one comes out.

 

 

 

 


Quote of the Month: “If you evade suffering you also evade the chance of joy.” Ursula K. Le Guin

Filed Under: Anthologies, WEP, YASH

The First IWSG Post for 2020

January 8, 2020 By C. Lee McKenzie

When I read a book, I often wonder if there’s a mini story tucked into the main one. And the reason for my curiosity is that I’ve been guilty of sneaking in some personal allusions in my books. I know I’m not alone. Even one of my writer friends included me as a character in her last book. Lee was a flower seller-a small cameo role-but a role nonetheless. She said it was her way of saying an additional thanks for my support. I loved it.

Not Guilty by C. Lee McKenzie

In Not Guilty, I wrote in a dog named Buddy. Buddy was a real dog. He had his own website with tales of his adventures and his favorite human, Mike. I was so sad when Buddy died. I felt as if he and Mike were good friends of mine. I asked Mike if he would mind if I paid my own tribute to his beloved Canine Couch Potato, and he not only didn’t mind, he loved the idea. Here’s the way I thought of Buddy.

From Not Guilty: By nature, Buddy was a people-loving retriever-mix who had come to him by some unknown chain of dog owners. He had a long history of being in and out of the pound. Their first day at the beach together, Devon found out why. Buddy hated water. He even hated wet sand under his paws. It took a lot of convincing to get Buddy on the sand that first day. Then they’d no sooner settled on the blanket when Buddy let out a yelp and hightailed it back to the asphalt. His leash whipped behind. People jumped out of the frantic dog’s way. Devon didn’t catch him until they’d run the length of Sugar Cove. Over the next few years, Buddy finally agreed to walk on the dry sand, but he never became the beach buddy Devon had imagined. And Frisbees could sail overhead all day without a single blink. He was a failed retriever, but he wasn’t a failed friend.

#IWSG

Join Us Now


Now moving on to the matters of the First Wednesday on the Second Wednesday. Here’s #IWSG!

THE BIG NEWS IS WE’RE ONCE AGAIN IN TOP 100 WEBSITES FOR WRITERS! CHECK OUT THE LIST ON THE WRITE LIFE.

This month’s optional question - What started you on your writing journey? Was it a particular book, movie, story, or series? Was it a teacher/coach/spouse/friend/parent? Did you just “know” suddenly you wanted to write?

The co-hosts for today’s posting of the IWSG are T. Powell Coltrin, Victoria Marie Lees, Stephen Tremp, Renee Scattergood, and J.H. Moncrieff!

A news article kicked off my writing journey-at least the one that led me to publishing my first book. The Sliding on the Edge by C. Lee McKenziearticle reported that a high percentage of students on three Ivy League campuses admitted to some sort of self-abuse. I wanted to know what would cause a young, intelligent, and-to all appearances-successful person to cut or otherwise harm themselves. When I found out, I wrote Sliding on the Edge. This book was supposed to be my writing career- end of stories, but the publisher asked me for my next one, which I didn’t have, but I side-stepped that little problem and said I’d get back to them. I did, with The Princess of Las Pulgas. By then it was too late to stop, so I didn’t. I’m nine published books into this with three waiting on my C drive and one out to a publisher who asked for a full. I’ve promised to stop soon, but then I did that twelve books ago.

 


Many of you know about this contest, and we’ve announced the amazing winners, but here’s the cover and a synopsis to give everyone a better idea of what’s coming May 5.

Voyagers: The Third Ghost
An Insecure Writer’s Support Group Anthology

Journey into the past…

Will the third ghost be found before fires take more lives? Can everyone be warned before Pompeii is buried again? What happens if a blizzard traps a family in East Germany? Will the Firebird help Soviet sisters outwit evil during WWII? And sneaking off to see the first aeroplane – what could go wrong?

Ten authors explore the past, sending their young protagonists on harrowing adventures. Featuring the talents of Yvonne Ventresca, Katharina Gerlach, Roland Clarke, Sherry Ellis, Rebecca M. Douglass, Bish Denham, Charles Kowalski, Louise MacBeath Barbour, Beth Anderson Schuck, and L.T. Ward.

Hand-picked by a panel of agents, authors, and editors, these ten tales will take readers on a voyage of wonder into history. Get ready for an exciting ride!

Release date – May 5, 2020
Juvenile Fiction: Historical (JUV016000) / Action & Adventure (JUV001000) / Fantasy & Magic (JUV037000)

Print 9781939844729 / EBook 9781939844736


I’d like to give a shout out to another anthology that features some of my writer friends. I’ve known Janet Gurtler since I first started publishing books and Cheryl Rainfield is another wonderful writer and human being I’ve had a long online relationship with. I read this book last year and loved reviewing it.
You TooYou Too? by Janet Gurtler
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This collection of short stories reveals a sad truth about our society where young women are still objectified, and in some cases, abused. Each story is different, but there are underlying themes that run though many of them. “It’s the woman’s fault” is one, guilt is another, and shame. Some made me cry, some made me angry, but all of them made me aware.

View all my reviews


Quote of the Month: “The trouble with writing fiction is that it has to make sense, whereas real life doesn’t.” Iain M. Banks Scottish Sci-Fi-Fi author.

Filed Under: Anthologies, Insecure Writers Support Group

Mark Zuckerberg and Network Science

September 4, 2019 By C. Lee McKenzie

While I was stewing about my slow networking pace, I stumbled (literally because the History Magazine was on the step) upon an interview with Niall Ferguson, author of The Square and the Tower: Networks, Hierarchies and the Struggle for Global Power. His opening remark caught my eye. “Social networks weren’t invented my Mark Zuckerberg.”

So what has this to do with the writers’ world? Glad you asked.

For one, networking is a powerful tool for us. It impacts how our books enter the world and how they’re received by the public. That’s not surprising if we look at how social networks have significantly impacted world events. Look what happened in the 15th century-what Ferguson cites as the “first age of networking.” With the invention of the printing press, ideas spread more widely and more rapidly. The social networks that developed around these ideas took on a force for change. Enter the Protestant Reformation. From then on there was no stopping these powerhouse networks, and they resulted in major shifts like The American Revolution and the French Revolution.

In the interview, Ferguson comments on how influential Henry Kissinger was during the Nixon era. But why was he more powerful than any other person in during that time? That’s what Ferguson questioned. He came up with the fact that Kissinger was “the best connected person in the Nixon administration.” Using network science, he graphed Kissinger’s connections, and they far outstripped any other politician in the White House at that time. Ferguson did the same kind of graph for Paul Revere, and discovered that because of his “trusted” network among the revolutionaries, his warning of the approaching Redcoats, was believed and spread without question.

Well, this made me think about my own social network and here are the questions I asked myself:

  • Who am I connected with?
  • Are these people I trust and admire?
  • Am I a trustworthy person inside this network?
  • Will my network support me when I need it?
  • Will it provide me with the visibility I need to succeed in marketing my books?
  • How can I be a better/more effective person inside my network?

Any thoughts about your own network?


#IWSG

Join Us Today

As everyone knows this is the first Wednesday of September, and we are once again here to do a bit of networking-the best kind-the supportive kind. Thanks again, Alex for this brilliant networking idea.

Our Twitter handle is @TheIWSG and hashtag is #IWSG.

Every month, we announce a question that members can answer in their IWSG post. These questions may prompt you to share advice, insight, a personal experience or story. Include your answer to the question in your IWSG post or let it inspire your post if you are struggling with something to say.

Remember, the question is optional!

If you could pick one place in the world to sit and write your next story, where would it be and why?

The awesome co-hosts for the September 4 posting of the IWSG are Gwen Gardner, Doreen McGettigan, Tyrean Martinson, Chemist Ken, and Cathrina Constantiner! Be sure to visit their sites and thank them for co-hosting!

 

I had to give this some thought. Finally, I came up with a lot of places around the world, and all of them would inspire me to write. Istanbul would probably make me churn out an exotic mystery set in the bazaar or in the shadows of St. Sophia Mosque. In London I’d definitely create a spy story with lots of fog and Big Ben looming in the background. And then there’s Dublin, and I start thinking romance and fern groves. No, let’s go to the island of Sifnos in the Aegean and have some kind of historical fiction story. On second thought, I’d like to write something mystical, so I’ll head to New Zealand and go out onto Doubtful Sound for that inspiration. If it’s going to a humorous and lighthearted tale, I have to buy a ticket to Cancun. But if I’m going for a ghostly tale I’ll drive up to Auburn in Northern CA. Well, there are too many wonderful writing locations to choose from and too many exciting genres to jump into. So, in the end, I’ll probably write where I often do-in my garden, by the pond. And I’ll probably write a contemporary/realistic young adult or an adventure/fantasy middle grade book. After all, there’s no place like home, and there’s nothing like writing what you love to write.

 


A HUGE THANK YOU to everyone who has taken an ARC for NOT GUILTY. If anyone else would like to give me hand with this launch, please email me at [email protected] I have a mobi, pdf, and ePub file. Here’s the blurb.

A blood-smeared knife. One young man’s word against another. A lifetime dream crushed.

The evidence points to Devon Carlyle. He was there when it happened. Everyone knows he had it in for Renzo Costa. And Costa says Devon was the one. In the judge’s rap of a gavel Devon’s found guilty of assault. The star of the Oceanside High’s basketball team loses his shot at the one thing he’s worked so hard for—the championship game where college scouts could see how good he is.

Now he makes his great shots in Juvenile Hall with kids far different from those that have always been in his life.

Angry? Hell, yes.

He’s bent on finding who did the crime. He’s bent on making them pay because he’s Not Guilty. But can he prove it?

 


Now speaking of writing…did you come up with a Flash Fiction piece or poetry or something that would grab the reader’s attention for the August WEP? I hope so because it’s a great way to meet new writers and stay connected with those you already know. Remember networking is key, and the WEP people are giving you a great opportunity to do just that. I’ve read the entries this month, and there are some real winners. Be sure to stop by the sites and let the writers know what you think. HERE’S the link to the sign up list.

 


Quote of the Month: “Networking is not about just connecting people. It’s about connecting people with people, people with ideas, and people with opportunities.”
― Michele Jennae, Author

Filed Under: Anthologies, Insecure Writers Support Group, Networking

The Power of the Written Word

May 1, 2019 By C. Lee McKenzie

#IWSG
Join Us Today

The awesome co-hosts for the May 1 posting of the IWSG are Lee Lowery, Juneta Key, Yvonne Ventresca, and T. Powell Coltrin!

We need more awesome co-host for June, July, and August. Want to be one? Let us know.

This month’s optional question is “What was an early experience where you learned that language had power?”

It must have been when I first took the book away from my mom and started reading to her. Magic happened in that moment. I was inside a story and I could stay there as long as I wanted.

[Read more…] about The Power of the Written Word

Filed Under: Anthologies, Insecure Writers Support Group

A Full First Wednesday

November 7, 2018 By C. Lee McKenzie

When I started to plan this blog post, I couldn’t believe how many things I wanted to share with you today. So beware, this could be a long post.

#IWSG

Join Us Now

Remember, the question is optional!

How has your creativity in life evolved since you began writing?

The awesome co-hosts for the November 7 posting of the IWSG are Ellen @ The Cynical Sailor, Ann V. Friend, JQ Rose, and Elizabeth Seckman!

If anything creative has happened to me since beginning to write, it has been that I’m more aware of people and events around me. I talk less, listen and look more. I’m more inside my head than interacting or sharing what I know or think I know. And as I’m soaking up voices and images, I’m turning them into scenes. Of course, these scenes have no stories to complete them, but they’re stored away for sometime when they’re needed. A small example happened a few years ago. I was in an ice cream shop and three boys all about ten years old came roughhousing their way inside. They were noisy, but not rude, just having some boy fun. They bought their ice cream and sat at a table in front of me, so I could see and hear them.

“Lookit,” one of them said. “My mom’s picking me up at 3, so we got us some time. What do you guys want to do?”
https://www.bookdepository.com/Great-Timelock-Disaster-C-L-McKenzie/9781732010314A few years later when I was writing The Great Time Lock Disaster, here’s what happened.
“Lookit. . . Dr. Wraith,” Weasel said, “I don’t like time travel. I hate it.”

 

Then with Sign of the Green Dragon, Joey’s voice had a lot of this in it. “Let me see that.” Joey snatched the yellowed paper from Sam. “We got us just one small problem.”

I’m not sure this counts as creativity, but maybe it does. Since I began writing, I’m taking snippets from real life and using them in my stories.

My EMAIL CONNECT this month is called NETWORKING 101, and that’s because I just attended a book event at a local library where I picked up some interesting ideas, so I wanted to share those with my followers. If you’re not on my list and want to be you can link up HERE. I’m also featuring DENISE COVEY. She’s a great writer to know and she does some very interesting online networking.

I hate this picture. I look kind of ghoulish (October appropriate, but definitely not a good November look). However, it does show some of the authors I sat on the Fantasy/Sci-Fi panel with. L-R: Donald Craghead, Andrew J. Stillman, Ajax Minor, Brian Paona, Ned Huston moderator, R.L. King (not shown) and me.

Authors' Day Monterey Library

Fantasy/Sci-Fi Panel at Monterey Library, October 2018

 

 

 

 

 

BIG NEWS: [Read more…] about A Full First Wednesday

Filed Under: Anthologies, Insecure Writers Support Group, Networking, WEP

If It’s Wednesday, It Must Be #IWSG Time

August 1, 2018 By C. Lee McKenzie

#IWSG

Join Us Now

It is #IWSG Time again!

And there’s some excitement.

Drum Roll Giphy

 

You now have a chance to enter an anthology contest! Here’s all you have to do and all you have to gain.

The 2018 Annual IWSG Anthology Contest

  • Word count: 3500-6000
  • Genre: Young Adult Romance
  • Theme:
    Masquerade
    A Masquerade can be a false show or pretense, someone pretending to be someone they aren’t. It can be a ball, a fancy dress party, it can be a mask. Open to interpretation.

Submissions accepted: September 5 - November 4, 2018

  • How to enter: Send your polished, formatted (Double spaced, no page numbers), previously unpublished story to admin @ insecurewriterssupportgroup.com before the deadline passes. Please include your contact details, your social links, and if you are part of the Blogging, Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter IWSG group.
  • Judging: The IWSG admins will create a shortlist of the best stories. The shortlist will then be sent to our official judges who will be announced September 5.
  • Prizes: The winning stories will be edited and published by Freedom Fox Press next year in the IWSG anthology. Authors will receive royalties on books sold, both print and eBook. The top story will have the honor of giving the anthology its title.

August 1 Question - What pitfalls would you warn other writers to avoid on their publication journey? Remember, the question is optional!

I suppose I’d caution writers not to rush to publication. I did that the first time tried my hand at Indie publishing. I’d always had excellent editors in my corner with my other books, so I was over-confident and thought I’d created a “perfect” manuscript. I hadn’t. How embarrassing! Save yourself that embarrassment by hiring a good editor. It’s worth the time and the money.

The awesome co-hosts for the August 1 are Erika Beebe, Sandra Hoover, Susan Gourley, and Lee Lowery!


News Flash!

IWSG and WEP are teaming up!

 


ENTER TODAY

Now that all of the really new news is finished, here’s my hello to bloggers and writers and friends. I’m missing our contact, and I’m trying to sort out all of the business side of my life so I can return and be more engaged in the community again. I didn’t think it would take months, but I was really wrong. Every day there’s something that has to be taken care of-usually past due-and every day there’s a learning curve involved. I am, however, much better at reading legalese than I was before. I think I’ll make a quick glossary of terms for surviving spouses if there isn’t one already.


Quote of the Month: “I do not think much of a [person] who is not wiser today than he was yesterday.” Abraham Lincoln

Filed Under: Anthologies, Insecure Writers Support Group, WEP

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h59dYGrVQvs

Blogroll

  • Alex J. Cavanaugh
  • Author, Elizabeth Mueller
  • Beth Camp
  • Bish Denham
  • Book A Day Book Reviewer
  • Book Sage Reviewer
  • Bookd Out
  • Cathrina Constatine
  • Christine Rains - Writer
  • Damyanti Writes
  • Denise Covey
  • Deniz, Girdle of Melion
  • Diane Burton
  • elements of emaginette
  • Elephant's Child
  • Elizabeth Craig
  • Erika Beebe
  • Evernight Teen
  • Everyday Writer, Tyrean Martinson
  • Everything Must Change
  • Fiction Books Book Reviewer
  • Fundy Blue
  • H.R. Sinclair
  • Insecure Writer's Support Group
  • Joylene Butler, Suspense and Mystery Author
  • JQRose Book Blogger
  • Just Jemi
  • Laws of Gravity
  • Literary Rambles
  • Loni Townsend
  • Mama Diaries
  • Michael De'Gesu
  • Musings
  • My Hogwarts Sabbatical
  • My Pet Blog
  • Nick Wilford, Speculative Author
  • Oh Look Another Book
  • Olga Godim
  • Pensive Pens
  • Play Off The Page
  • Positive Letters …. inspirational stories
  • Reader Buzz Book Reviewer
  • Sandra's Blog
  • Shady Dell Music & Memories
  • Shooting Stars Mag
  • Sonja Droga
  • Storey Book Reviews
  • Straight From The Library Librarian
  • Susan Says
  • Tara Tyler Talks
  • The Secret Files of Fairday Morrow
  • The ToiBox of Words
  • The Warrior Muse
  • Thoughts in Progress
  • Welcome to My Magick Theatre
  • Word Pop by Yvonne Ventresca
  • WordDreams…
  • Writer In Transit, Michelle Wallace
  • Writing In The Crosshairs
  • Yvette Carol

Find Lee Online:

Email Facebook Twitter

LinkedIn GoodReads Google+

Archives:

Recent Comments:

  • Melissa Maygrove on It’s Wednesday, but not just any one…
  • C. Lee McKenzie on It’s Wednesday, but not just any one…
  • C. Lee McKenzie on It’s Wednesday, but not just any one…
  • C. Lee McKenzie on It’s Wednesday, but not just any one…
  • C. Lee McKenzie on It’s Wednesday, but not just any one…

Tags

2009 Deb Blog Tour 2009 Debs' Tour 2013 A-Z Blog Challenge Alex Cavanaugh Alligators Overhead Arlee Bird AtoZChallenge2015 AtoZChallenge2016 Blog Hops Book Signings C. Lee McKenzie Christmas Contest cover Damyanti Double Negative Email Connect Halloween hat's of corner Heather M. Gardner Her Grammarness Insecure Writer Interview IWSG Jeremy M.J. Joachim marketing Middle Grade Monday Monday Miscellany Monday Moods New Books Nicole Ayers Pam Small Things Hop Stephen Tremp Story Collection Throes of Thursday Tina WEP WIP writing YA Young Adult