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Monday, June 30, 2014

Welcome guest blogger Jennifer McAndrews!

Jennifer McAndrews
Looking at my Pinterest boards is like looking at a graphic representation of an incomplete sentence. I start a board with one picture, and sometimes the category I’ve assigned stays the same, sometimes the images I collect require an entirely new moniker.

I have a board now called “writing supplies”. It started life as “writing spaces” because the image that inspired me to begin the board was a picture of Jane Austen’s writing table (http://www.theguardian.com/books/2008/jul/12/saturdayreviewsfeatres.guardianreview2) - a tiny twelve-sided table that looks barely large enough to hold a potted plant, never mind the entirety of Pride and Prejudice.

For my part, though I have a room in my home designated - upon taking up residence - as my “home office”, I don’t write there. It turned out to be too hot in summer and too cold in winter and too perfect a place to hide gifts and store books - lots and lots of books. That, coupled with the day job, the pets, the kids, meant I learned to write wherever I was , with whatever I could grab. If I wanted to keep working on a story - keep unspooling a tale of friendship, love, murder, adventure - I had to train myself to write in whatever moments and whatever places presented themselves.

Ill-Gotten Panes, the first in a new series featuring stained-glass hobbyist Georgia Kelly and some other fine folk from the little town of Wenwood, NY, was written in such diverse writer’s spaces as: train, plane, hotel room, day-job lunchroom (where, coincidentally, this blog is being written), local library, Panera, and  my living room couch. A lot on the living room couch - lap dog on either side of me and cat waiting for a chance to curl up on the toasty-warm keyboard, with either a Harry Potter movie on the television as the perfect background noise, or headphones firmly in place to drown out anything not Harry Potter (I have no idea why having those movies in the background helps me to work steadily. Magic?)

I think that collection of locations illustrates why I was so taken by the image of the little table Jane Austen wrote at. Not that I would imagine myself equal to her or even worthy of preparing her tea. But the idea that someone of her caliber created such wonderful stories at a tiny table near a doorway - no perfect view, no evocative music, not even a little potpourri - encourages me. Knowing that it is truly possible to create characters, stories, worlds, with nothing more than imagination and the means of capturing it on the page makes me feel like I’m a part of some special writers club.

Of course, I do have to admit that I have frequent bouts of envy when writer pals of mine

share photos of their writer spaces - beautiful desk, copies of their books on their shelves,framed prints of their book covers on the walls. One lucky author I know even keeps fresh flowers on her desk. Another has framed New York Times best seller lists on which her book appears. 

Meanwhile, it’s all I can do to keep the cat from chewing on the laptop power cord or the blind dog from walking across the keyboard while I’m writing. And that’s okay, really. I’ve come to value and love my ability to write anywhere, any time, especially if it means I get to continue exploring the world of cozy mysteries and the gang from Ill-Gotten Panes. And maybe someday I’ll invest in a table the exact dimensions of Jane Austen’s and create masterpieces at it. What? It could happen. That little table would totally fit in my living room.


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Berkley Prime Crime has generously offered a copy of Ill-Gotten Panes to one of my readers. Please comment below before midnight on July 14, 2014. Entries from the US only, please.

Please don't forget to include an email address where I can contact you if you win.




14 comments:

  1. What a great post. I am looking forward to reading this book! shelleyreadsandreviews40@yahoo.com

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  2. Terrific post - thanks for sharing!

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    1. Thanks for dropping by, Julie, but I can't enter you in the drawing without an email address.

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    2. Oops! It's julieoconnell@msn.com Thanks so much!

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  3. Hi Jen, I've tried to comment a couple of times...hopefully changing from Chrome to IE means it will work :) Wishing you the best. Can't wait to read "Ill Gotten Panes" as soon as it arrives. :)

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    1. Thanks for reading Stuff and Nonsense, Jean!

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  4. I've been looking forward to this one! Now even more so! lisaksbookreview@aol.com

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    1. Thanks for reading Stuff and Nonsense, Lisa!

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  5. This sounds like a series I would like to try. Thank you for a chance to win a copy of Ill-Gotten Panes.

    twbooks (at) cox (dot) net

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  6. This series sounds right up my alley - I love cozies and have always been drawn to stained glass art. Can't wait to read it! jan_healthandhealing@yahoo.com

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  7. I find it so cool to hear about where writers sit to do their writing. Very good post indeed.

    Angie Young
    angiey1974@hotmail.com
    http://thelittlereadingcabin.blogspot.com

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  8. Ah.. The line about the cat chewing your cord and the dog walking across your keyboard... It sounds so much like my house! Only mine would be a rabbit instead of a cat and I would be reading because I can't write! I would love to read your book. I'm adding it to my goodreads now. :)

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  9. No pets except dust-bunnies............ I have fond memories of a stained glass window on the staircase landing at my grandparents.

    kpbarnett1941[at]aol.com

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