GO WEST YOUNG WOMAN
This story is atypical of many groups who headed west in the earliest migrations. Getting a late start, a small group of wagons left Sapling Grove, Missouri on May 12, 1841. In the group were 35 men, 5 women and 10 children. about 20 miles west or Independence, MO., and not one of them had any notion of what lay ahead.
Of the women in the group three were married, one was a widow and one was a girl of marriageable age traveling with kin. Totally…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on March 5, 2013 at 12:43pm — No Comments
In researching for Western Historical Novels, I've run across some strange historical facts. I thought I'd share a few of them here, and illustrate how some showed up in my romance novels.
Frank James quoted Shakespeare, and he and brother Jesse liked to have their pictures made. In Images In Scarlet, they kidnap Allie Caine to take those photos.
If you think the Civil War actually ended when Lee surrendered, then it’s back to the books. The final battle took place out west at…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on February 26, 2013 at 2:39pm — 1 Comment
Here are my Western Historicals
Many times I'm asked where I get ideas for my western historical romances. It's simple, really. In fact I have enough stuff scribbled down to write these books for another…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on February 13, 2013 at 3:08pm — No Comments
Have you ever wondered where a writer obtains historical information or interviews? I began writing regional history long before the advent of the Internet as a feature writer for a weekly newspaper. Searching for the same facts today is much easier if we’re computer literate. Yet nothing beats contact with the people who have stories to share.
During the nine years I wrote for the newspaper, I must have interviewed hundreds of people. My main interest soon became the history…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on January 28, 2013 at 3:13pm — 1 Comment
Many times I'm asked where I get ideas for my western historical romances. It's simple, really. In fact I have enough stuff scribbled down to write these books for another twenty years or so. I prefer to write about the 1860s through the 1880s, though that's not a set rule. Each time I go on a trip through that era in my research the most fascinating thing happens. Characters begin to appear and talk to me. Tell me what it's like to live in the time and place I've stepped into. They speak…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on January 8, 2013 at 12:44pm — No Comments
Added by Velda Brotherton on November 26, 2012 at 2:43pm — No Comments
We who believe in ghosts need to consider the various ways they might appear. I've thought that ghosts of those who've passed from this world to another couldn't show up in their clothed bodies. It's more a spiritual thing. Rather they would hover as a disruption in time and space. Perhaps make a quivery mass. On the other hand, perhaps it is the brain of the viewer that creates a form for what they perceive as the ghost of a loved one. We would expect them to be in their worldly bodies, so…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on October 30, 2012 at 12:22pm — No Comments
We who believe in ghosts need to consider the various ways they might appear. I've thought that ghosts of those who've passed from this world to another couldn't show up in their clothed bodies. It's more a spiritual thing. Rather they would hover as a disruption in time and space. Perhaps make a quivery mass. On the other hand, perhaps it is the brain of the viewer that creates a form for what they perceive as the ghost of a loved one. We would expect them to be in their worldly bodies, so…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on October 30, 2012 at 12:21pm — No Comments
I've been thinking a lot about all the advice we're given for optimizing ourselves on Facebook, our blog, and all those other sites: Pinterest, Muttonline, Twitter, well, you get the idea. I'm supposed to define my mission, which I'm told is not to market my books, but rather to intrigue, inform, inspire and entertain without ever saying to the reader: Have I got a book for you. I know you'll like it cause I've been on your website and/or your blog and see what you are interested in. This is…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on October 5, 2012 at 2:09pm — 5 Comments
This week has been hectic and I got to thinking about how many tasks fall to us writers that don't involve our writing and research. Here's an example of a week's time:
First and second edits on my latest book have arrived and need immediate attention.
Stacks of entries for a contest that I'm chairing were lugged up the hill from our mail box until hubby threatened to charge me by the pound. They await filed in bank boxes ready to number and mail out to the judges.
Up…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on September 14, 2012 at 2:16pm — No Comments
This week has been hectic and I got to thinking about how many tasks fall to us writers that don't involve our writing and research. Here's an example of a week's time:
First and second edits on my latest book have arrived and need immediate attention.
Stacks of entries for a contest that I'm chairing were lugged up the hill from our mail box until hubby threatened to charge me by the pound. They await filed in bank boxes ready to number and mail out to the judges.
Up…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on September 14, 2012 at 2:15pm — No Comments
GRAY WOLVES GO UNDER THE GUN
A few years ago, when I first began to research the U.S. Fish & Wildlife restoration of the gray wolf population in Wyoming and Montana for my book, Wolf Song, there were very few of these spiritual and beautiful animals living in the United States anywhere. From the turn of the century, hunters killed them to extinction. Ranchers classed them as vermin, predators that would destroy their entire herds of cattle if…
Added by Velda Brotherton on September 7, 2012 at 12:28pm — No Comments
When was the last time you cried or laughed aloud while reading a book? Do you remember why the story affected you so? Let's discuss what it takes as a writer to create fiction that will make our readers laugh or cry.
Is it the story? The answer to that is yes and no, for a story alone has no power to make the reader's emotions erupt. Yet a bad story can ruin everything. Most importantly, for emotions to come to the surface, the reader has to have people to care about. Real…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on August 7, 2012 at 12:50pm — 2 Comments
WOMEN CONQUER AND RULE
Besides being a writer, I’m a woman, a wife, mother, grandmother and a great grandmother. And I’m a human being, an American, a daughter of pioneers.
Over the past 28 years that I’ve written and been published, I’ve seen the role of women in novels and stories evolve from the meek to the mighty. Some could say this has happened much too slowly, some could add that the female role has become a bit ridiculous in some…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on July 30, 2012 at 11:54am — No Comments
On a lovely day almost forty years ago I drove south from my new home in Winslow, Arkansas, intent on revisiting my childhood past. Though Highway 71 had changed a lot, I had no trouble at all recognizing Old Creek Road. Back in the early days it was rutted and narrow and meandered through the remote hollow where more than a dozen families lived. I turned off with some reluctance. This would be hard, for what I had always known was gone. Deep down in the valley where the sun only shines a…
ContinueAdded by Velda Brotherton on July 24, 2012 at 11:44am — No Comments
Kate Powell added a discussion to the group Artists Who Write
Jody Gore posted a blog post© 2013 Created by Kamy Wicoff.
