Warning! Do not count your jewelry sets after you've read this article. I don't want to be responsible for your bout of depression.
Okay, here's the deal for anyone who's lived half a century or more. If you're like me, you've got hundreds of pairs of darling earrings and scores of gorgeous necklaces. Yet I was rotating the same three or so sets every day. No more: I've vowed to wear the jewelry I've bought over all these years, accumulated treasures and memories, for sure. Instead of waiting for the right occasion or the perfect outfit to wear my precious gems or costume sets, I wear a new ensemble every day.
I figure: jewelry doesn't take much room, but clothes do. So I've sorted through skirts, suits, fancy tops and sparkly bottoms and ditched most of them. Now I wear comfortable pants and tops and have enough dressy jackets to manage any occasion, from wedding to funeral. The rest of my unworn-for-twenty-years apparel goes to Goodwill. I dumped a dresser; my walk-in closet is all I need. Yay! I always hated that dresser anyway. Ashcan the headboard, too. Oak is out; dark cherry is in.
Whew! Minimalist wardrobe and bedroom arrangement; lots of cool jewelry. I wear a new set every day, even if it's just to Starbucks; even if the gems are paired with jeans or a golf outfit. Surprising the number of compliments I get on my glitter from complete strangers.
If you want to read about a heroine who has REALLY interesting attitudes about jewelry, meet Liv, in LIE CATCHERS. She's intent on solving two cold cases is Petersburg, Alaska, and she uses jewelry to catch lies! Check out my website at http://www.rolynnanderson.com
http://amzn.com/B00HJDS1LG
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Showing posts with label murder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label murder. Show all posts
Saturday, March 14, 2015
Thursday, July 18, 2013
Fear and Emotion
In a thriller, or even in a romantic suspense, fear is an
essential emotion. The protagonists are exposed to unusual scary situations. As
a result, they are thrown out of their comfort zone into traumatic experiences.
We can’t expect them to act naturally. Fear may be one of the important
emotions they feel, either because they are facing an enemy determined to
attack them or because the enemy wants to hurt someone dear to them. Even the
macho hero is exposed to fear as he tries to protect his beloved heroine, or a
child, or a defenseless person threatened by evil.
I did when an intruder entered my house years ago, stole the
stereo, my children’s piggybank, and my gold bracelets. When I heard from my
then three-year old daughter that she saw a nice man with a big heavy suitcase in
our fenced backyard and he patted her on the head, I almost collapsed. But this
story is for another time.
NEIGHBORS and MORE: Can
she count on her dear neighbors, including Dante, for help? #romance, #suspense, http://tinyurl.com/96bjqcm
I’m often thrown out by characters so tough they can fly
through horrible situations without blinking an eye.
In my new book, NEIGHBORS AND MORE, a romantic suspense,
available at Amazon, http://tinyurl.com/96bjqcm the heroine Alexa is trying hard to be strong
in the face of adversity, crime, and a baffling situation that gets more
complicated by the hour. Every time she copes with a problem, she deals with
her emotions and promises herself she won’t let anything affects her from now
on, until a new crisis challenges her, until she’s pushed to the limit of
endurance.
Of course, Dante is at her side, playing his hero part.
As writers, we strive to convey those feelings of suspense,
fear, and expectation to the reader.
As readers, we love to bite our nails, feel our pulses
racing as we study the scene of the crime, analyze the details, and try to
guess who’s done it.
Have you ever been exposed to fear? Real fear?
I did when an intruder entered my house years ago, stole the
stereo, my children’s piggybank, and my gold bracelets. When I heard from my
then three-year old daughter that she saw a nice man with a big heavy suitcase in
our fenced backyard and he patted her on the head, I almost collapsed. But this
story is for another time.
NEIGHBORS and MORE:
Life in a high rise, 300 neighbors & a man dead in a Jacuzzi.
"Neighbors and More was a fun #sexy read that kept me
guessing until the end." D. Johnson. #romance, #suspense, http://tinyurl.com/96bjqcm
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