Roll Up your Sleeve, Roll up, Roll up
To take it or not? This is the question that has spun through the minds of some people I know from the minute development was deemed…
Roll Up your Sleeve, Roll up, Roll up Read More »
To take it or not? This is the question that has spun through the minds of some people I know from the minute development was deemed…
Roll Up your Sleeve, Roll up, Roll up Read More »
My beautiful house, Summertown Villa, is now sold, and I am moving. As everyone who has moved knows—and who hasn’t? —this requires sorting, purging and packing
Yes. Happy New Year! 2021. No point saying that the trajectory assumed in 2020 (the Roaring ’20s) never saw the light of day, at least for now.
So the pandemic rages on, despite multiple vaccines just around the corner. Many of us are not bothered by wearing masks, washing hands…
It’s not my intention to serialize Mine, but perhaps just a wee bit more… because a few of you have asked.
PART ONE
Chapter One (continued)
Mine, Part One, Chapter One (continued) Read More »
Because some of you have asked for it, here it is: the opening to Mine.
Sophie Taylor loved the North, the Far North, the frozen silences…
Mine, Part One, Chapter One Read More »
It seems such a quiet September. There’s no rush—for work, for school, for supplies, for uniforms—at least for now. (Albeit, there is Zooming, and two novels
Social media, love it or leave it, it’s here to stay? Whether you agree or disagree—and I have one colleague who literally calls it “evil”…
Connecting, 3.6 Billion People Read More »
I don’t usually sputter when moseying up to the monthly newsletter/blog, but this month is an exception. I’ve delayed. Can’t blame it on the weather—it’s been perfect; can’t censure Covid-19—lockdown is easing; can’t accuse time—learned a long time ago that it’s my responsibility to make that work. So what’s the issue?
How many times have I heard the adjective surreal used to describe this spunky new post-pandemic world? Fairly, how many? More than I care to count. I’ve considered new descriptors. Oxford Languages provided several: unreal, bizarre, weird, strange, freakish, unearthly, uncanny, and dreamlike. Most curiously, thesaurus.com suggested hypnagogic (related to the state immediately before falling asleep)…
Bursting with “Goin’ right on.” Read More »