Jacqui Murray’s AGAINST ALL ODDS #NewRelease

Staci Troilo's avatarStaci Troilo

Ciao, amici! Today, I’m delighted to host for the first (but hopefully not the last) time, Jacqui Murray. If you read the comments on my site, you’ll recognize her name. And if you keep track of talented writers, you probably already follow her blog. If you don’t, you need to. But not yet!

First, let me share with you her latest release, Against All Odds, book three of her Crossroads series (prehistoric fiction genre). She’s even graciously agreed to share chapter one!

Please help me give her a warm welcome.


Xhosa’s extraordinary prehistoric saga concludes, filled with hardship, courage, survival, and family.

A million years of evolution made Xhosa tough but was it enough? She and her People finally reach their destination—a glorious land of tall grasses, few predators, and an abundance that seems limitless, but an enemy greater than any they have met so far threatens to…

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Two Authors, One Book, and Possible Headaches

Mr Bean

So, I was asked about co-authoring a book a while back.  If I thought it was a good idea or something that I would do in the future was the gist of it.  This isn’t as easy a question as one would think, but that could just be me.  Once I get going with a story, I don’t really play well with others, which colors my opinion a bit.  Still, you see it done all the time and it is successful, so there has to be something to it.

First, what do we mean by co-authoring?  Well, it can be many things from what I’ve been able to tell.  Some partnerships have each other write a section with it either being passed between them or done independently.  Others have the main author and then the other will do the revisions.  Some work completely together with one typing and the other talking with switches happening.  I’ve even heard of authors who write scenes with their characters and hand it off for their partner to fill in for the other half of the cast.  If the system works for you then that’s good.  Some of these seem a bit clunky to me, but it really boils down to the connection between authors.

Artists in general can be rather egotistical and stubborn when it comes to their writing because they have a vision.  It’s rare that the vision will match with that of another or be flexible enough to allow for a ton of input.  Equal footing isn’t easy unless both parties are ready to give up parts of their dream.  This is why it seems like you have co-authoring with one as the primary and the other as a secondary.  The main one writes the story while the other adds in things to make it clean.  Almost like a planner and a pantser working together if you think about it.  You also have anthologies, which removes this problem entirely because each author writes their own independent story.  Even with this, you tend to have 1-2 big authors to draw in readers and help the lesser known ones.  So, there is a hierarchy at play.

Personally, I don’t think I’d be very good at this.  I plan a lot of my story and then I craft it carefully, which is very much a solo process.  I can do some give and take, but my experience in trying tends to make me apprehensive.  Much more take than give from the people I tried to work with or they simply weren’t very good.  Once in high school, a friend and I wrote a short science-fiction story with no problem because we were in synch.  Every time after that became a battle of egos or the story was just bad.  I remember one time I tried to work with someone who demanded a flashback happen on the second page even though we were in the middle of the introductions.  Another time, a person took my entire idea and rewrote it to their vision keeping only two things.  That would be the character name and him being a vampire.  I wanted to do an adventure and this guy wanted to do social commentary on religion, so it fell apart rather quickly.  Since then, I haven’t really wanted to try again because I’ve been burned a lot.  It could still happen if I met someone who I really synched up with, but it hasn’t happened yet.  Not to the extent where a project has appeared.

So, what does everyone else think of co-authoring?

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Thoughts on Parenting an Autistic Child

I’ve been dancing around writing something about this for a long time.  I’ve mentioned that my son is on the spectrum.  Earlier this year, we had the official test . . . or was it late 2019?  Either way, he got an official diagnosis of autism.  It was a much longer phrase that I’ve forgot, but it’s what people used to call Asperger’s.  That doesn’t even work right now, but knowing has made things both easier and harder.  It explains why my son does what he does, but it makes it more of a challenge to help him through it.  Let me try to explain in my own words.

Yes, these are my own words, thoughts, and opinions.

Autism is a spectrum disorder because it isn’t a ‘one size fits all’ situation.  Every person who has autism has their own flavor of it.  Some are non-verbal while others never pick up on when they have to be silent.  Some have physical challenges while others are strong as an ox and fast as a cheetah.  Some are terrible students while others get straight A’s.  It always comes down to the individual, which people seem to forget.  So, what helps one could be an utter disaster for another.  That’s why getting advice and opinions can be so frustrating because it doesn’t usually take your specific kid into account.  Over the years, I’ve had many things that irk me as a parent in both what people say or how things work, which is what this post is really about.

Are You Sure He’s Autistic?

I truly hate this question when somebody asks me about my son.  Yes, he is talkative and able to run around with other kids.  People seem to expect him to be non-verbal or socially distant.  The thing is that an autistic person can be very social.  They simply don’t get all of the cues, which is what my son is like.  People will ask this question and then I’ll tell them to watch.  After a few minutes, they’ll see that there is something different about him when compared to the neurotypical children.  It’s a rough question to tackle because it comes off as insulting.  Do you think I say it to get special attention or give him an excuse for some of his behaviors?  No!  That’s ridiculous because these things make life harder for him.

I Can’t Wait Until They Cure Autism

This goes along with ‘Autism is a disease’, which I’ve heard out of one or two parents.  All I have to say here is ‘FUCK YOU!’  Seriously, this isn’t a disease.  There won’t be a cure.  It’s how these children and adults are naturally wired, which is different that what we have established as ‘the norm’.  More on that nugget later.  I truly find this line of thinking infuriating because it means you think my son is sick.  That he’s defective and the only thing to do is cure him instead of helping him become the strongest him that he could be with this.  Note how we say this for mental disabilities and not for physical ones too.  I don’t see many people saying that those born deaf are diseased.  Those that do are rightly yelled at.

Parents of Autistic Kids Are Falliable

Maybe it’s just at me, but I always get the feeling that I’m expected to be the perfect saint when it comes to raising my son.  I’m writing a playbook for raising him as the game is progressing.  Most of the time, I feel like I’m doing it by myself too.  So, I’m going to get frustrated and exhausted and stressed.  I think every parent of an autistic child, especially single ones, hit a point where they are about to break.  If you don’t get to pull back then you explode a bit in terms of yelling or crying.  This is reality.  We don’t like to admit this and those on the outside tend to judge.  It’s just such a whirlwind because:

  1. Part of you examines the past on how you could have done better.
  2. Part of you is locked into the present and trying to handle what is happening.
  3. Part of you is worried about the future of your child since:

Society Really Wasn’t Designed for Autism

Right to the point.  One of the biggest reasons an autistic person has trouble is because the strict guidelines of our society don’t factor them in.  The flexibility we see is entirely for the tightly packed differences in neurotypical populations.  Accommodations that are made have to be fought for and they make the child stand out, which can bring about negative side-effects.  I still remember a sub job in Florida where a class bully would set off the autistic child to stop the lessons.  You also have children and their parents thinking it’s ‘unfair’ that an autistic child gets ‘special’ treatment.  That’s only school too.

Autism comes with a difficulty in understanding social cues.  That means, things can be said ‘incorrectly’ or misunderstood.  People are very quick to assume the worst and autistic people don’t walk around with a sign on their chest.  They don’t step into a room and loudly declare it either, which shouldn’t be how it goes anyway.  So, mistakes happen during interactions and it can roll out of control.  I watch my son make a slip and it becomes a disaster for him because he’s aware that things went wrong.  Autistic kids can be very focused on themselves because we raise them to be highly aware of what they say and do.  While this can help them be cautious in their interactions, it also means they are more likely to take their mistakes to heart.  It turns into it always being their fault when that simply isn’t true.

What Are His Special Skills?

At some point, people began to believe that those with autism are savants in some field.  It is like they think the difficulties in other areas means they’re a genius in others.  That really isn’t the case.  I’ve seen my son show skills in multiple areas, but the challenge is getting him to work hard and stay on the path.  He gets impatient when things get tough and decides that he’s mastered enough, so he moves on.  This is fairly common in autistic kids, especially if they are afraid of having a meltdown and decide that it’s easier to stay away from stressful situations.  As a parent, I try to nurture my son’s interests and skills without pushing too hard.  At least with my situation, I’ve found that he doesn’t gather interests and skills, but replaces old with new.  Time to learn fractions?  Now, he doesn’t seem to try with division.  Reading ‘My Hero Academia’?  Not sure he wants to go back to ‘Captain Underpants’.  Personally, this worries me about things because society demands that people be multi-purpose instead of singularly focused.  Be nice for all of us if the latter was allowed without shame and criticism.

*Insert Any Parental Advice*

Look, I know the advice comes from the heart and means well.  Some of it even works, but it gets frustrating when the giver begins pushing.  It doesn’t help when I’m talked to as if I’m either an idiot or don’t know my own son.  You get two camps of shaky advice that can upset you too.  One is another parent of an autistic child who speaks as if what worked for them will work for everyone.  They don’t realize that every person comes with their own flavor, so they give their advice as gospel.  Then, they get annoyed if you point out how it might not work for your child.  The other group are parents who don’t have autistic children and give you the generic advice without listening to you.  That last part is essential because there are parents who give advice, listen, and understand.  With these others, you point out that your child is autistic and they don’t really ease up.  It can really drive home the fact that your child will have a difficult journey when compared to others and that you, as a parent, can’t rely on established methods.  Again, I know these usually mean well, but they can wear down on a person especially if one is simply needing to vent or get their own thoughts out.

We’re All a Little Autistic

I’ll admit that I thought this long ago at some point.  It was when people talked about Aspergers being connected to creativity.  This mentality didn’t last very long because I actually looked into it.  While I had autistic markers according to the list, I didn’t react the way an autistic person does.  That’s a big factor.  My son and another child could be hit by the same stimuli.  Both can become unfocused and stressed.  The neurotypical child will get upset, but can be brought back fairly easily.  My son could lose it and act like the entire world is collapsing around him with very little ability to pull back.  He’s gotten a lot better, but things still happen.  Parents of autistic kids always fear regression because it can be triggered by a single event that most would consider benign.  So, we really aren’t all a little autistic.  It’s just that both groups can share the react types, but the size and scope of such reactions differ greatly.

This is a longer than usual post because I felt like I really needed to get this off my chest.  I deal with people and events that connect to these things both in real life and online.  I’ve never reached a point where I’d hide that I have an autistic child, but I’ve seen others go that route.  Parents of autistic children are already under a lot of stress because the love of their child is matched by their worry.  Some of us even get upset that our love isn’t enough to handle the situation when things get really rough.  Venting to others tends to come with judgement even among the autism circles since many prey upon these groups with the promise of cures and causes.  I never imagined the minefield I would wander into when I became a father, but it does feel like a daily battle to keep myself on the right path.  Every time I’m made to feel like a failure, idiot, or loser by strangers or those who are close to me knocks me down a few pegs.  Can’t stay there for long because then I become useless to my son who needs me to at least try.  This is a difficult journey that most don’t understand, so I hope this does clarify a few things.

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It’s Coming! The Binge-Worthy Book Festival by N.N. Light!

Every weekday of August will be an exciting event with authors, giveaways, and books!  It’s the 2nd Annual Binge-Worthy Book Festival by N.N. Light!  Bookmark those sites and enjoy the fun every day.  Maybe you’ll find a new favorite author or reunite with an old face.

Click here for the  Festival!

Clicker here for the Rafflecopter!

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Welcome to August and Our Newest Round of ‘WTF, 2020!?’

First, I have to announce something big!  Starting on Monday is the Binge-Worthy Book Festival run by N.N. Light.  It’s their second year doing it and it’s a lot of fun.  Check out new authors and books every day.  There will be contests too.  I’ve got Beginning of a Hero, Loyalty, and Life & Times of Ichabod Brooks being presented on various days.  Click on the banner to check out the site.

Second, I want to say that having pollen allergies, anxiety, and running myself ragged these days is a bad combination.  This is more so since we had a few birthday parties, but they were predominantly outside.  Still, I begin to cough and my mind goes to the wrong place.  I stress myself to sweating and feeling overheated, so I take my temperature in case it’s something else.  Feeling run down after a long week has me end the day thinking of long swabs up the nose.  Doesn’t matter that I go to bed and wake up feeling okay because I’ve read that covid-19 can make you feel okay one day and horrific the next.  Call me paranoid, but . . . Well, that’s pretty much it.

A part of it might be that the plan for reopening schools is starting to come together.  It seems that every district is doing some level of in-school classes.  Some are doing more than others, so teachers and staff are voicing their concerns on-line.  I’m scared for myself and my son, but he needs to learn and I need to work.  Wearing our masks and staying away from others just like when we wander out of the house.  It isn’t a perfect plan, but it’s all we’ve got.  My only hope is that if things start to go south that there’s a plan for everyone to go back to remote.  Last thing I want is to catch this and learn that the plan is to let the weak fall to the side in some disturbing ‘survival of the fittest’ strategy.  You may give me looks, but I’ve seen plenty of people claim that we should use covid-19 to clear the sick, weak, and old from our population.  Pretty sure a school district wouldn’t do that though, so I am joking there.

Last week was my son’s 11th birthday, which was a blast.  The party was a simple gathering in a park with a few friends.  One group happened to be in the area for their daughter’s birthday, so the timing was perfect.  The little guy made out like a bandit too with a bunch of FunkoPops.  His collection reached a point where I had to buy a shelving unit for him, which he took as a source of pride.  He got some great art supplies and a camping/nature adventure set too.  The biggest present was a Chromebook that he used for the last of summer school and to do more drawing.  The computer is simple and he uses his school account, so there are plenty of protections.  He was initially upset that he couldn’t change the wallpaper thanks to school limitations, so I made him an account with me as the parent overseer or whatever.  He got the wallpaper, but we found out that the restrictions blocked him from YouTube until he’s older.  Oops.  So, he’s accepted that the wallpaper will be the school one, so he can get some videos.

Writing-wise, it wasn’t a big week.  This is my time to have my son, so I’ve been doing as much as I can with him.  Mostly the pool, watching anime, and playing Uno Attack.  I finally started beating him yesterday.  I did manage to finish all of the October posts and start in on November.  Running out of random ideas for Sunday though.  That’s usually whatever comes to mind like a poem, meme collection, future idea, or thoughts on a specific topic.  For example, tomorrow is a post about ‘PARENTING AN AUTISTIC CHILD!’  You’ve been warned.  Might do more of those depending on the reception tomorrow.

Anyway, book writing was only 2 sections of War of Nytefall: Anarchy when the ex-wife had my son for a bit.  It will take 3 days to finish this book, so it will be next Saturday that I complete it.  I’m going to use the coming nights to work on the outline for War of Nytefall: Eulogy.  This is where things get a bit difficult.  I could start writing the final book right away, but I want to edit War of Nytefall: Savagery first.  That could take the whole week that my son is with his mom, which I’m fine with.  I could start in on the finale, but grad school will appear to cause some conflict.  I don’t know how that is going to work exactly, but balancing parenting, working, grad school, and writing will be a nightmare.  Since it doesn’t make any money or progress, writing will end up being the loser here.  I could alleviate the pressure by skipping a December release and making it February then make 2021 the year I publish the last 3 War of Nytefall books.  It gives me time to outline the next series and maybe work on Do I Need to Use a Dragon? (Fantasy Writing Tips).  Life of a nearly failed author isn’t fun.  Probably need an agent or something, but that’s a whole operation that I’d have to add onto the pile of tasks you see above.

Outside of all that, I watched the first season of ‘Umbrella Academy’ in preparation of the second season.  I’ll slowly make my way through it, which is a problem.  I woke up Friday morning to find that people had already binged it and Twitter was littered with hashtags that were spoilers.  I have Facebook friends that think everyone binges stuff immediately and spew spoilers out there.  I think I did the 30 day silence on all of them.  I should finish it by the end of the week, which means I can jump right into season 4 of ‘Seven Deadly Sins’ or binge season 1 then go into season 2 of ‘New Legend of Monkey’.  This is what I do at night when I finally run out of steam.

So, goals of the week?

  1. Fun and games with son!
  2. Finish writing War of Nytefall: Anarchy
  3. Final outline of War of Nytefall: Eulogy
  4. Write blurb for War of Nytefall: Ravenous.  (I really should get in on this since I want to release it in September.)
  5. Watch ‘Umbrella Academy’.
  6. Hopefully find out more about grad school.
  7. Schedule more November posts.
  8. Figure out some topics for December.
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Questions 3: Tasty Treats

Most people enjoy treats.  They’re guilty pleasures and sinful indulgences.  Some of us hide it from the world.  Others revel in it.  Some have an easier time than others trying to pinpoint what their favorites are.  For example, I really can’t decide on what my favorite candy would be.  I’m leaning towards Snickers, but I love Milky Way.  Reese’s is up there too, but I can’t have that as much.  You’ve got ice cream, cakes, pies, and every manner of treat.  So:

  1. What are some of your favorite treats?
  2. Is there a treat you had as a child, but can never find it as an adult?
  3. What is one treat that you’ve never been a fan of?
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Immortal Wars: The Summoning Part 29 #fiction #throwback

(Previously on Immortal Wars.)

(Again, we shall revel in my teenage originality.  Everyone groan in unison.)

Disclaimer: Immortal Wars was the book I came up with and wrote in high school.  I hadn’t even hit college by the time I wrote the first two books.  That means I hadn’t developed my style yet, wasn’t good at self-editing, and the story was fairly basic. So, you’ve been warned that this is the ultimate author throwback segment for my blog and will show my author origins.  FYI-  I put the first book (The Summoning) through a Print-on-Demand publisher and the second one (Light, Blood, & Tears) never saw the light of day.  Enjoy!

The weary Mars guardian has slept for four sweet, silent hours.  The intense workouts he has been putting himself through for the past week have made him extremely tired.  Before he went to sleep he was surprised that he made it back to his room without collapsing in the dark hallway.  As soon as his head hit the soft pillows, Fate fell into a deep sleep.  He would have gladly stayed in his personal dreamland if not for a very persistent, uninvited guest.

“Come on, Eddie.  Rise and try to shine.  Open up your eyes and start moving.  Well, at least prove that you’re still alive by doing something,” whispers Miracle while she repeatedly pokes him in his shoulder.  When her boyfriend doesn’t react to her constant poking, she resorts to other, more drastic, means.  She picks up a nearby pitcher of freezing cold water and dumps it on Fate’s head.

“Hey!” exclaims a soaking wet Mars guardian as he jumps out of bed.  Miracle starts giggling and creates a big towel for Fate.  The towel feels very soft and is blue instead of a simple, dull pink like her first illusions.  Miracle’s solid illusions have become much more realistic and it is getting harder to tell them apart from the real thing.  If Fate hadn’t watched her create it, he would have thought the towel was real.

“Sorry about the rude awakening,” laughs Miracle.  She gets a dry uniform for Fate from the floating uniform capsule and tosses it to him.  Fate takes the fresh clothes and walks into the small bathroom.

“I’ll just bet you are,” mumbles Fate while drying his hair.

“It’s not my fault you sleep like a corpse. I wouldn’t have been forced to drench you if you had woken up when I first called your name.”

“I don’t usually sleep like that, but I was up late training again.  Now, what is so damn important that it couldn’t wait three more hours?”  After he leaves the bathroom, the towel disappears when he crumples it into a ball and drops it on the floor.

“I did some massive file checking and found some very interesting information on our previously mysterious enemies.  We should look over the files before today’s training exercises begin.  The whole know thy enemy thing.”  Miracle walks over to Fate and puts his headband on her head.  She looks at herself in a full-length mirror while Fate pulls his red boots on.  He watches as Miracle does her best imitation of Hydrana in order to get a smile out of him.

“Do you want to keep it?  I really don’t like the way it looks on me.”

“No thanks.  It clashes with the rest of my outfit.  Maybe if it was pure white instead of light blue.”

“Just put it back in the cylinder and tell me what you found out,” says Fate, whose patience is wearing thin.  Miracle swiftly takes off the headband and tosses it back into the uniform cylinder.  She gives Fate a playful kiss on his nose as she walks past him.  Fate can’t help but smile at Miracle’s affectionate and innocent actions.

“I’ll tell you about the bad guys on the way to breakfast,” whispers Miracle.  Before Fate can say anything else, she grabs him by the arm and yanks him out the door.

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Interludes 2 – A New Book from Harmony Kent

I am so pleased to have Harmony Kent visit Fiction Favorites. I have known Harmony for a number of years and it gives me great pleasure to see her …

Interludes 2 – A New Book from Harmony Kent
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7 Tips to Putting Ice Cream in Fiction?

Baskin Robbins

It’s on the list of post ideas . . . I have no real idea why.  You can guess that I made it at night when I was hungry.  The more I think about it, the more I realize that you don’t see much ice cream in fantasy.  I won’t say it never turns up because I’m sure there’s at least one around with it.  Pretty clear why it wouldn’t be common since they don’t have refrigeration to keep it viable.  Still, there’s no reason you can’t add it and I have no idea what else to do here.  Guess this week is favorite foods or something.

  1. Come up with a way to explain how it keeps cold.  I feel that this is the perfect time to introduce minor spells that can get the job done.  All you really need is something to keep the ice cream cold.  Perhaps it stays that way as long as it is in a container and begins to warm up once it’s out.  Doesn’t sound nearly as complicated as other real world foods.
  2. Since this isn’t in our world, you can go wild with the idea.  We’ll get to flavors later, but consider that it might not be a dessert.  What if ice cream was created as a main course in a desert region?  It could be a breakfast since people make it out of milk.  If you go this route then a lot of opportunities appear.  For example, ice cream scoops surrounding a roasted chicken.  I didn’t say they would be good opportunities.
  3. Then again . . . why stick with the basic flavors?  A person could use ice cream as a sauce or topping instead of a dessert.  Maybe gravy or vodka sauce or anything that you make with milk.  Again, we might find it disgusting because that isn’t how we do ice cream on Earth.  In a fantasy world, the evolution and acceptance of this food changes the way it is created and used.  Just try not to make yourself throw up depending on how far off the norm you go.
  4. Consider how common ice cream will be in your world.  While we have it everywhere on Earth, it could be a rare or local delicacy in a fantasy world.  This can create some humor because characters will be amazed by it or even disgusted.  Imagine being a stranger and told that you’re being served the frozen milk of a cow that has been whipped with sugar.  It can be weird because you’d wonder who in the world came up with that idea.  Seriously, you have to wonder how most of the foods we eat ever came into being.
  5. Ice cream headache or brain freeze.  Whatever you call it, the gag never gets old.
  6. How will your world serve the ice cream?  Dishes and cones are what we do here, but that doesn’t have to be the end of it.  Maybe ice cream lollipops or a place that serves it by catapult.  You have to catch it in your mouth or something.  A bag of ice cream is another possibility, which can or cannot include magic.  It’s really all up to your imagination here.
  7. Try really hard NOT to write a blog post about how to put ice cream into fantasy stories.  It’s a weird topic that can reveal one of two things or both.  First, you were really hungry and overheated when thinking up ideas.  Second, you’re really coming to the bottom of the blog post barrel.  Seriously, I have no idea what I was thinking here and just praying it works.
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Teaser Tuesday: The Approaching Threat #fantasy #vampires

Cover Art by Alison Hunt

I always forget how hard it is to find teasers for War of Nytefall: Eradication.  If it isn’t a lot of talking then it’s a fight scene with spoilers.  Then again, the book has been out for a while, so I don’t think a few juicy reveals are going to hurt it.  This one is fairly mild and it’s a great set up for a later story.  Here you go.

Continue reading

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