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Writer in the Garret

~ A writer living one word at a time

Writer in the Garret

Category Archives: Uncategorized

You turn around twice and…

07 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Avoiding writing, Life, Random Thoughts, Uncategorized

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dachshunds, napping, summertime

…almost a month has passed!  This is not how one takes over the world through blogging.  But it’s summer, and time has taken on the illusory consistency of syrup, flowing slowly, allowing moments for nurturing flowers (along with the weeding!).  And visits from relatives (along with catching up on chores so no one finds out how slovenly my life is!).  Ambition stumbles over notions of lying in a lawn chair.  The brain begins to hum golden oldies and eyelids lock at half-mast.  Even reading slows as really pondering the written word requires unlocking those lids to escape from the sun’s rays.

Huh?  Where was I?  Oh, yeah, so I’m still totally going to take over the world through blogging, but we had some bodacious thunder storms last night and the sky’s getting cloudy.  Maybe I ought to turn off the computer in case of lightning and find a comfy, safe spot with the dachshunds until we know for sure about possible weather events.  We could think about the importance of such things, and maybe catch a few zzzzzs.

Yeah, that sounds good.

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Circumvention, like circumcision, means shortcuts–ewww!

23 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Avoiding writing, Random Thoughts, Uncategorized, Writing

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angst, imagination, writing process

Never look a gift analogy in the mouth. (Seriously. Too gross.)

After the last post, so filled with angst and obscure Word issues, I hit “Return” a few times, typed in “Chapter Twenty-Five,” and kept going. There’s more than one way to skin a Header command. (Geez, that sounds even worse than the post title.)

The new Last Chapter continues wending through the moors of invention, and, after consulting the runes, I’m back to scaring myself because the only way I can wrap up the book is to pull ghosties and ghoulies out of the closet–as in storage, not sexuality. Today, whilst receiving a wonderful massage–thanks again, Karen–and gently pushing out of my mind the guilt from not posting here often enough, I realized I’ve passed up many possible blog posts about my writing process.  I’ve been hiding it in the closet, too, along with discarded characters, weak descriptions, and failed plot elements.  It’s so dark in there, I have a hell of a time even finding the damned process.

I’ve thought it better to occasionally sound as though I know what I’m doing than to let people see the disorganization and interruptions, the endless flailing for a decent sentence, the bizarre rituals to crank up what passes for my imagination.  Writing has always been for me a hodgepodge of hard work, wishful thinking, and some small talent. Regardless of what happens in the book business itself, the effort to put words on the page remains the same. Every time I get in a tizzy about self-publishing vs. pursuing agents, or how I need to format my two mysteries into e-book mode, my word-count slows and I feel bad.

The blog is a quick way to short-circuit angst and redouble my efforts to bring Wisdom Court to life. Every writer I know ultimately gives as advice the old, true saw: Plant your ass on the chair and your hands on the keyboard.  Write. We can’t sell what we haven’t finished.

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Holy football, Batman

09 Monday Jan 2012

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized

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Did you watch the Broncos playoff game yesterday?  That’s what I call heart-attack football, my favorite kind.  Whatever your feelings about quarterback Tim Tebow, when he’s hot, the game’s a lot more fun to watch.  And here in the Mile High City we have a new drinking game: you get to chug every time someone exclaims, “Unbelievable!”  It’s blotto time.

Now for the upcoming week of wondering: can the Broncos beat the New England Patriots?  Dunno, but you can bet the farm that the city will be watching to find out.

Congrats, Broncos.  Thanks for the excitement.

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Hush

19 Monday Dec 2011

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized

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promise of snow

All day gray skies have been heavy with the promise of snow.  Now I look out the window and see a breeze blowing flakes horizontally across my little landscape.  It’s six days ’til Christmas, and the world is curling round and round before settling upon its cushion for a nap.

I intend to bake fruitcake, since I love it, unlike most of earth’s inhabitants.  Once upon a time my children’s godmother, Arie Taylor, made the most wonderful fruitcakes and would give us (me!) one every year, but since she died I’ve bought little ones to see me through the holidays.  Now I must bake my own gluten-free fruitcake.  I have what I need, but I’m watching the falling snow, and remembering other winters.

I think of snow in Boulder, one year so high and clumpy that my brother Mike and I built first a fort, finally adding a roof to make it an igloo.  My fingers tingle with remembered cold, and I can recall the cramped quarters of that tiny structure.  His cheeks were bright red, as I’m sure my own were, and we took turns peeking out the door at phantom attackers.  No snowballs were ever rounder or had better heft. We fought glorious battles until our ears were numb and our fingers and toes ached.  Finally going in the house felt like a defeat, but Mom made us cocoa and we changed into dry clothes and huddled beside the furnace vents until we were warm again.

One Christmas Eve years later my husband and I planned to take the kids up to Boulder to see the family, but by the time we were to set out, two feet of snow had fallen in Denver.  We weren’t going anywhere, except by foot.  A trip the the grocery store two blocks away allowed us to get a certain amount of festival food, and we all settled into the house to watch the white stuff continuing to fall.  By the time the storm was over, we had over three feet, and my children were out the next day, building a fort that later became an igloo.  I watched them jump and throw snowballs, their cheeks bright red, and then went to the kitchen to make cocoa for them.

The snow is coming down harder and the grandchildren are at Yellowstone Park looking at snow near Old Faithful.  It’s time for me to get serious about baking fruitcake or writing a few cards–something.  I’m grateful for the warmth coming from the furnace vents.  Maybe I’ll go make some cocoa for myself and lift a cup to memories of other snowstorms, other times.

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Moments and Mockingbirds

06 Thursday Oct 2011

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To Kill a Mockingbird is my all-time favorite novel, so I had mixed feelings about seeing the play based on it.  But a friend gave me tickets to take my granddaughter to a performance.  Miss B. is ten, and has neither read the book nor seen the film adaptation.  I asked my daughter’s advice about how to field questions that might be evoked by the darker aspects of the story, and, bolstered by her good sense, we set forth.

“This is awesome!” Miss B. announced when she caught sight of the stage scenery, and by the time the lights dimmed, she was bubbling with excitement.  My own enthusiasm was kindled by hers, and we shared smiles as the play began.  The familiar words from the first pages of the book brought Maycomb, Alabama to life once more.  Soon we were caught up in the lives of Scout and Jem and Atticus Finch.  Dill showed up, and the painful demise of Tom Robinson was sketched in several scenes.

The minimalist stage setting smoothly transformed from Scout’s house to the jail to the courtroom.  The actor who played Atticus Finch was physically similar to Gregory Peck, and I wondered how successful a short, portly actor could ever be in the role.  The children were good in their parts.  The main difference in the dramatic version was the personification of the book narrator.  The young woman who played the grown-up Scout provided the transitions between scenes and, as she stayed on stage throughout the play, took on emotional power along with the adult perspective she provided.

The most electric moment came at the end, when the two Scouts, child and adult, turned to each other in grief.  In that instant, my sense of nostalgia about the book and the movie burst into fresh sorrow at this most American of stories. While enthusiastic applause rang out, I fought against the tears in my throat.  As Miss B. and I made our way out of the theater, she asked me, “Why were you crying at the end, Nama?”  And I told her the truth.  “I always cry at the end of that story.”

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Pardon My Dust

29 Thursday Sep 2011

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized

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For the second or even third time in two months, I am switching venues for this blog.  Please be patient.  Thanks to the technical skills of my consultant, things should smooth out in the next couple of days.  In the meantime, check out Wisdom Courtyard for a lovely post from Betsy Cox.  Welcome to Writer in the Garret.

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Life as Metaphor

29 Thursday Sep 2011

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Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Life as Metaphor

Last week was spent cleaning the basement. Sounds straightforward enough, right? Not so much. The curse of the writer is to spin life events into metaphors. When you’re ankle deep in dust and memories, it helps pass the time.
We’ve spent well over thirty years in this big old house, and in consequence have been able to store things: old furniture; boxes from many times; tools and lampshades and such. Problem is, when it’s time to clear some space for a furnace estimator, it’s a bigger job than just shifting stuff around. Room must be made, access must be found. Things must be organized, sorted through, disposed of.
Once we get past the “just one more cup of coffee” stage that first day, we plod down the stairs to begin. We run through the tool room with efficiency. Lumber can be stacked against this wall, and tools are sorted into various containers. Much sweeping ensues. Not too bad. Then we walk into the storeroom, filled not only with our belongings, but with things that belong to our children, now grown & without much storage space of their own. We open boxes to check content: forgotten toys, old college books, bits & pieces of enthusiasms now relegated to the past.
Memories waft out like old potpourri, and what was just a spatial, muscular exercise becomes a mental slide show of our kids at different stages. Along with sneezes from the dust come lumps in the throat and yet deeper recognition of how much time has passed. Cross-country skis evoke recollections of sliding across mountain snow, listening to our kids alternate between laughing and complaining of the cold, then drinking hot chocolate at a little diner in Nederland.
I find a box of doll clothes, some sewn by my grandmother. She had a treadle sewing machine, and she taught me to sew on it when I was nine or ten. I pick up a small flowered dress with ties for a bow in the back & remember the doll who wore it. Her name was Joanne.
We move old doors–heavy ones!–in the furnace room itself, clearing space, finding two old floor lamps. My husband attaches a ceiling light and now we can see how much fine dust has to be swept & vacuumed. Leaves have sneaked in through the ventilation window & I rake them up, cast suddenly into autumn even as the sun shines through the cracked glass. Christmas decorations are moved to the tool room until the fate of the furnace is known.
We finish on Labor Day and celebrate with hot showers & glasses of wine. Our magic alley (the things we set out disappear!) is lined with boxes, an old television, red shutters that were in our daughter’s room when she was a child. By the next day, much of what we’ve left is gone.
I’m still finding places to tuck things, like the afterthoughts of a first draft. I have a bittersweet feeling of accomplishment: we’ve reduced our pile of belongings, we’ve organized what we still have. The lingering sense of melancholy is the same emotion I feel at museums, when I view what was once important to those who lived before my time. Sigh.
Posted by Yvonne Montgomery at 1:05 PM 2 comments Labels: life, metaphors, passage of time

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Where it began

24 Wednesday Aug 2011

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized

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Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Today I celebrated my August birthday with my BFF, and we made a pact. We are both women of a certain age & our paths are getting twistier as we proceed on our journeys. The pact was that each of us would write a page and post it to a new blog. So here is Writer in the Garret, and with it Wisdom Courtyard, which is based on an idea.

I am a novelist with three published books to my credit, and for the last umpteen years I’ve been working on a trilogy about Wisdom Court. This is a place where women are invited to live for a year with total financial support. Anything these women want to do, be it research, artistic creation, writing the great American novel–anything can be done. The only requirement is that the recipient has to live most of that year at Wisdom Court, which is located in Boulder, Colorado.

The first novel of the trilogy has to do with Andrea Bellamy, a forensic artist from Oregon who wants to develop her talents as a fine artist. The founder of Wisdom Court, Caldicott Wytham, bought one of Andrea’s paintings some years ago, and she has invited Andrea to spend a year at the renowned women’s institute. When Andrea arrives in Boulder, she finds that what has appeared to be the chance of a lifetime is more complicated than she thought it would be, and more dangerous.

So much for the tease, at least for tonight. The notion of Wisdom Court arose from the collision of two ideas: Virginia Woolf said that every woman needs a room of her own. At Wisdom Court, each woman gains a year of her own to do what she wants. The very possibility is irresistible. Combine with that a faint memory of the old TV show, The Millionaire. As a child I watched each week as the show’s characters received one million tax-free dollars from John Beresford Tipton, an eccentric millionaire (surely he must have been a billionaire to fund so many people!). The stories lay in the reactions of the characters to sudden wealth, and the repercussions of disaster, unintended consequences, and, occasionally, sweet justice, were wonderful fodder for my burgeoning imagination. I loved watching these people as they dealt with something that was not only unexpected, but was also anonymously given. Without knowing how the choices were made, the recipients were left to decide their own worthiness to receive such a gift, and frequently the moral issues really messed with their minds. Heh-heh. I was fascinated, and the seed of Wisdom Court was planted with those episodes, which, if I were to watch them today, would probably disappoint me. I hope not.

One of the reasons my BFF and I made the pact tonight was that we’re both standing at personal crossroads. Decisions must be made, actions must be taken–you get the drift. I’m about to finish the latest revision of the first Wisdom Court novel, Edge of the Shadow, whereupon I will begin again to compose scintillating letters to literary agents in an attempt to peddle the book to editors. I really do want my baby to be read by all of you out there. What has made the whole endeavor more interesting than just composing those letters is that while I’ve been writing the book(s)–with a number of Byzantine detours as life has gotten in the way–the entire publishing industry has transformed. The traditional publishing route, which I took three times, has become a much different proposition. And blogs and websites and other such entities have become members of the publishing community(ies), and I’m trying gamely to keep up with the changes.

So, as I look at what I’ve typed, I see that I’m opening a conversation that is–so far–with myself alone. What I intend to do with this blog is periodically reflect what happens during the next year as I try once more to complete the circuit between writer and readers. I’ve missed having my words read and responded to. I’m ready to prep myself for the battle by sending out missives from behind the lines. I look forward to hearing from any and all of you who might read this. I’ll answer your responses as I can, and will be as respectful of them as you are of mine.

More later,

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery at 2:41 PM 3 comments

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Writing by Yvonne Montgomery is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 

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Wisdom Court Series

ghost, ghosts, ghost story, thriller, metaphysics, supernatural, women, dreams, accomplishments, opportunities, romance, friendship, dachshund, Boulder, Colorado, Victorian, shadows, creepy, shivers, book, good read,
ghost, ghosts, ghost story, thriller, metaphysics, supernatural, women, dreams, accomplishments, opportunities, romance, friendship, dachshund, Boulder, Colorado, Victorian, shadows, creepy, shivers,

Finny Mysteries

Mystery, women, murder, detective, amateur detective, romance, sexy cop, Denver, capitol hill, thrills, strong women, clues,
Mystery, women, murder, detective, amateur detective, romance, sexy cop, Denver, capitol hill, thrills, strong women, clues,

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