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Represented by Andrea Brown Literary Agency

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Anne Allen's Blog
Shooting Stars Magazine
Naughty Book Kitties
Teen Book Scene
Teens Read Too
Compulsive reader
Reading Junky
The Page Flipper
Young Adult Books Central
Enchanting YA
What Women Write
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And Another Book Read
She Reads Novels
My Half of the Sky
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It's Just Life As I Know It
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Chick Lit Reviews
A Good Addiction
Lost For Words
Read Sam, Read!
DeRaps Reads
Steph the Bookworm
There's a Book
The Library Lurker
Once Upon a Review
Reclusive Bibliophile
The Hiding Spot
A Reader's Adventure
The Book Butterfly
Up the Tower of Books
Catherine, Caffeinated
The Worm Hole
Notes of Life
Debs Riccio
Becky's Book Reviews
Queer YA: Fiction for LGBTQ Teens
A Patchwork of Books
Sarah's Book Reviews
Book Chic Club
Amy Reads
Claire King
A Writer in a Wheelchair
Ex Libris
Echoes of a Wayward Mind
Book Pleasures
Teach Mentor Texts
YA Book Shelf
Chew & Digest Books
Elisa Rolle's Journal
Reading Before Bed
Good Books and Good Wine
Dreaming in Books
The Broke and the Bookish
Frazzled Book Nommer
Read. Write. Suffer.
A Patchwork of Books
Harmony Book Reviews
This Little Life of Mine
Melody M. Nunez
Word Harlot
Points West
Bookish Blather
Helen's Book Blog
Roof Beam Reader
Cari's Book Blog
Bookalicious
Emily's Reading Room
The Book Phantom
Maestra Amanda's Bookshelf
Christa's Hooked on Books
Books: A Pathway to New Worlds
Reader's Edyn
Sarah's Book Reviews
Chica Reader
Me, My Shelf and I
Taming the Bookshelf
My Reading Room
My{Reads}Da
Good Choice Reading
Books Complete Me
The Introverted Reader
Random Things Through My Letterbox
The Littlereader Library
Blog It All (Katy Pye)
Chick Lit Plus
Samantha March
Tea and Scribbles Book Reviews
The Book Bag
Storm Goddess Book Reviews
Mrs. Mommy Booknerd's
Jessa Russo Writes
The Bookish Mama
Jersey Girl Book Reviews
The East Village
The Geekery Book Review
Read Along with Sue

 

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My Blog

Entries in Pets, Mine & My Readers' (26)

Thursday
Mar282013

Better Than Blurbs: An Altered Existence by Melody M. Nuñez

Because I no longer write blurbs, but still very much want to help other authors, I'm launching a blog series called Better Than Blurbs. The authors and I will have in-depth discussions about their books, which I hope will help readers identify whether they'd enjoy reading them. This is the second post of the series. The author is Melody M. Nuñez and the book is An Altered Existence.

Let's Get started. 

Me: Melody, please tell us, in your own words, as much as you care to about An Altered Existence.

Melody: An Altered Existence is a collection of 14 illustrated short stories.  Each story is illustrated with a vintage photo that I "altered", and each photo is directly linked to the story somehow.  Some stories are set in the present - some in the past.  And though the stories are all quite different, they're connected: through the vintage photo illustrations and through the universal feelings and experiences of the characters.  

A few story highlights from the book’s back cover:

  • A photo of a bearded man with haunted eyes is paired with a silver key, and a story of a family with hoarding tendencies emerges.
  • A wedding portrait of a young couple, combined with a gold wedding band and the words “false” and “true”, yields a tale about a gentle schoolteacher who sets her small town’s rumor mill on fire when she poses for a photo with a local scoundrel, though they’re not engaged, or married.
  • A young girl’s portrait, when paired with vintage buttons, births a story that many can relate to: loss, and the subsequent struggle to feel whole again.

Love, loss, birth, death, personal growth, salvation, and self-acceptance are just a few of the things the characters experience.

To give you a little bit of the back story, An Altered Existence is a combination of two things I'm passionate about: writing and art.  I've been an avid reader since I was a child, have always love to write, and started working as a visual artist in college.  I find myself drawn to vintage photos and objects, and started collecting vintage photos in earnest approximately eight years ago.  Their untold stories fascinated me.  Who were the people in these photos?  How had their photos ended up for sale in flea markets and antique stores?  

Since I'd never have the true answers to my questions, I invented my own answers.  Sometimes the photo alone sparked my imagination and prompted the story, and sometimes it was the combination of the photo with an object – like an old buttonhook or a pocketknife – that drew the story out.  The photos I used are known as cabinet cards, and they were popular in the late 1800s and very early 1900s.   

Me: How long ago did you find that your imagination was going to work on these old photos? Was there a time when you wondered about these people, even daydreamed little stories about them, but hadn’t yet considered that a work of fiction might result?

Melody: I first purchased vintage photos at an antique store back in my third year of college - way before I had any inkling of what to do with them.  They just got to me and drew me in.  I think my first official foray into combining vintage photos with some sort of story was in 2006 when I created a “Fictitious Family Album” project that was published by a paper arts magazine.  I combined vintage snapshots with captions, and added decorative elements.  An Altered Existence is the same basic concept, but on a grander scale.  The idea that I should create a collection of stories based on this concept didn’t materialize until 2007 – it was a pleasant surprise.

http://melodynunez.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/Fictitious-Family.pdf

Me: I know from your blog that you are a very creative person, and very…it will sound strange to say “creatively creative” but your imagination regarding the different ways to utilize creativity is always a pleasant surprise. Is this the first time you’ve combined two different types of creative processes, or have their been other such projects?

Melody: “Creatively creative” has a nice ring to it.  Thank you!  My blog post topics include art, crafts, recipes, photography, travel, and ethnic market write ups, so I tend to think of my blog as the ultimate place to mix and match creative processes.  Not only am I writing and taking virtually all the photos on the site, often times I’m actually creating a project or some other “deliverable” to feature, whether it’s a batch of muffins, greeting cards made from beautiful paper scraps, or a haiku illustrated with a photo I’ve taken. In addition, much of my visual art incorporates text.  For example, my collages often feature text.  I’m also an art journaler.  Art journaling, or visual journaling, combines visual art with the written word, and it’s the perfect medium for me.

 

Me: What was your background in writing, if any, before you began An Altered Existence?

Melody: I started writing when I was a young girl.  I always excelled in English in school and was torn when it came to selecting a major in college.  I was drawn to both creative writing and to art, but ended up getting my major in art.  Most of my publishing credits thus far have been in art and crafting publications, where I’ve had several articles published.  An Altered Existence is my first significant piece of fiction.

 

Me: Talk a little bit about your path to publication, and your decision to bring this out independently.

Melody: It’s been a long road to publication, that’s for sure!  I wrote the stories in late 2007, put them aside for a few years, and then started working on them again in 2010.  I cleaned them up, had some folks read them, and then started querying agents.  

By the time 2010 came to a close I’d been rejected by approximately 20 agents, including one I met with in person that really loved the project.  The problem?  Publishers don’t buy short story collections from unknowns.  You either have to be a famous author and/or a celebrity, and I’m neither.  (Me: Note, publishers usually don't buy story collections from "knowns." I'm bringing two out independently after years of waiting.) 

Because self-publishing was still viewed as being a bit “sketchy” in 2010 I put the project aside again.  It wasn’t until November of last year that I decided to self-publish this collection as a present to myself for my 40th birthday (coming up in May).  So the decision was really made for me in this case, but I’m pleased with how things are working out.

 

Me: Will you tell my readers more about your blog and your projects? Maybe specifically (but not limited to) your projects involving getting art supplies to students?

Melody: Ooh, I’d love to talk about my ongoing passion project: the Bits & Pieces Art Program!  I bring art journaling instruction and supplies to at-risk public school children, to help nurture their creativity and to help them cope with life’s challenges in a positive way.

 

I gather donations and art supplies, and determine how many classrooms I can teach.  I provide each student with a blank journal and a packet of art supplies when I first visit their class.  I teach in the early part of their school year, and then return to the class during the last month of school for an art journal show – to see what they’ve created and to celebrate their artistic accomplishments!  This year I gathered enough supplies for three classrooms of students.

My mission is to provide as many children as I can with art journaling instruction and supplies.  Not only does this program nurture their creativity and provide art instruction that would otherwise be missing because of curriculum and budget constraints, art journaling also helps get the children excited about their overall educational experience.

And, perhaps most importantly, art journaling gives the children a constructive way to express themselves and process the world around them.  This is particularly important for these at-risk students, who are sometimes facing the effects of poverty, abuse, neglect, exposure to gangs and drugs, and absent parents.  I know that art and writing have the power to strengthen, nourish, and heal, and hope to plant a love for art journaling and creative self-expression in the lives of as many children as I can.  

I accept donations year-round. If folks would like to help the children receive art supplies they can contact me via my personal website or via the program website.

http://melodynunez.com

http://bitsandpiecesart.org

Me: Okay, I have to do this. I can’t resist. Please tell my readers about the bunnies. (Some long-time readers of this blog may remember they had their own More Bunny post.)

Melody: Gladly!  Cypress, our female rabbit, is the white one.  Pinto, our male rabbit, is the spotted one. We adopted from the local animal shelter.  They arrived at the shelter separately, and were bonded at the shelter.  We adopted them on March 20, 2010, and just celebrated our three-year "bunny-versary" with Cypress and Pinto.

 

I'd never had a pet rabbit before, but had wanted one since I was a teen.  So, when hubby saw an ad in the local community magazine saying that rabbits make good apartment pets we ended up checking it out.  I had no idea that rabbits could be litter box trained, but they can - hurray!  So here we are, with two little bun buns in our apartment.  They bring us joy, laughter, occasional exasperation, whisker kisses, and lots of love.   We're not sure of their exact ages, but think they're around 4 or 5-years old.

They have distinct personalities. Cypress, also known as "The Brute Squad" (from The Princess Bride), is pretty feisty, and can be a bit of a bulldozer - especially at mealtime.  Hubby was semi-reluctant to adopt a white rabbit with pink eyes, because of the killer rabbit in Monty Python's Holy Grail, but so far she hasn't gone for the jugular.  ;)  Some of her other nicknames include Plumpie (from "Love Actually"), Plumpita, and Plump-a-doodle-doo.

Pinto is very easy-going, but has his feisty moments too - he's our sprinter.  We think he's half dwarf, half English Spot.  They both love banana, but banana is truly like "Bunny Crack" for Pinto - he goes nuts when it's near.  He actually twitches from excitement - well, his back/coat does.  :)  His spots slay me, especially the bit of black on the end of his tail.  Pinto, named after the bean, is also known as Pinto Bean and Pinto Monster.  

We love them so!

 

Me: Anything else you want to say about the book (or anything else)?  

Melody: Yes.  I’d like to thank you for interviewing me and for sharing An Altered Existence with your readers!  It’s always a pleasure to connect with you, and I appreciate your support.  

 

Please give Ella and Jordan scratches for me!

Me: Will do, and thanks for visiting the blog.  

 

Sunday
Jan132013

More Kitty: Jordan

Remember the More Kitty and More Puppy memes, in which I spotlighted my own pets (one current, some former) and those of my readers? I guess I'm briefly bringing that back.

If you follow me on social networks, you undoubtedly know there's someone new in the house. His name is Jordan, and much to the chagrin of my dog Ella, he is a cat.

I'm not going to go into great detail about their introduction, because I'm guessing most of you follow me on Facebook, or could easily enough (if I'm wrong about this, let me know in the comment section below). And I have gone into quite a bit of detail each day. I've left reports almost every day to chronicle the process of the cat and dog getting to know each other with no bloodshed, and with a minimum of chasing, clawing, hiding and hurt feelings. My Twitter friends also probably noticed shorter updates. (Hey, it's Twitter. Short is built in.)

I'd have thought people would quickly grow sick to death of hearing about the minor ups and downs of a dog and a cat learning to get along. I would have been wrong. If anybody is not enjoying it, they've kept it to themselves. And I can't tell you how many people have told me they enjoy "watching" the progress. I guess it's more encouraging than watching the process of peace in the Middle East, the gun debate, or Congress. 

As you can see, it's going well. (Jordan and Ella, not peace in the Middle East, the gun debate, or Congress.) 

 

 

 

 

 

 

So far as I know, I haven't said much, if anything, on social media regarding why I adopted a cat. So I'll do that here. I'll start with why I didn't get a cat a long time ago:

1) I love cats. I grew up with a beautiful Siamese named Ming. I had other cats in (young) adulthood. Then I adopted a parrot named Ziggy. I got help finger-training him from a young man who clipped his wing feathers for the purpose of training. They never grew back in properly. So he never flew dependably well. So I didn't get a cat while he was alive. He lived to be 27.

2) My goal just before I adopted Ella was to adopt a dog and a cat more or less together. That way, I figured, they'd be more likely to accept each other. But on the same week I got Ella from the Humane Society, I began seeing someone who was allergic to cats. So I just adopted the dog. A couple of years later, Ella seemed quite jumpy and chase-y (sure, that's a word) when we saw a cat on the street. So I figured it was too late, I had missed my moment.

Why I changed my mind now:

Ella's friend Tony1) Ella has a new doggy friend. His name is Tony. He comes over sometimes when his people go away for a long day. And Ella is welcome over there any time. But they have a cat, Edward. And I wasn't sure how that would work out. But Ella met Edward, and she was FINE.

2) Most of you know my mom passed away in March of 2012. It's been a little too quiet around here. For both Ella and me. Part of me worried Ella would be sorry I adopted the cat, jealous, or maybe constantly on guard. Another part of me felt it's almost always better to step outside one's comfort zone. I'd rather have a life that's richer and broader than one that's comfortably unchallenged. And I decided I wanted the same for my dog. Our "pack" had shrunk from three to two, and that felt too small. Less like a family and more like a person and a dog. 

3) I kept seeing these Facebook ads during the holidays asking if my home and my heart weren't big enough to take in one more homeless pet. (Hint: turns out they were.)

So I'm formally introducing my blog readers to Jordan, who is from H.A.R.T. (Homeless Animal Rescue Team) in Cambria.

I'm still open to feature other people's pets, if you want to send photos and stories. And if you want to go back and see the ones I've featured in the past, you can click on the blog index category Pets, Mine & My Readers.

I have a new blog meme coming up this year to help newer authors by spotlighting their newly-released books with in-depth discussions. And I have no fewer than four new book releases of my own for 2013, possibly more. So, as always, please do stay tuned.

Wednesday
Jun202012

Blogger Wednesday: Melanie of Reclusive Bibliophile

Melanie is another example of a book blogger I’ve known since my first blog tour, which was for Jumpstart the World. She hosted a guest post by me, then did a lovely review. We kept in touch on Twitter, which has a surprising way of making you feel like people have been hanging around your house or bumping elbows with you on a daily basis.

Later we actually met in person, because we were both in New York, Melanie for BEA and me for the Lambda Literary Awards. So we sat down and had a cup of tea. Well, I had tea. I think. Not sure what Melanie had. Talk about digressing.

I think one of the reasons Melanie and I get along so well is that we both maintain a big space in our lives for our dogs. And, in case you don’t know this, Melanie, I am also reclusive. (You probably knew.)

Now here goes with the interview stuff.

Me: Melanie, first things first. Tell my readers, please, about Wiki the Weimaraner, the dog who holds as big a place in your heart as Ella does in mine. Anything goes. Funny stories, bragging, overall expressions of love. I wave The Flag of No Shame over your head. Go.

 Melanie: Oh my goodness. You should never give a dog person permission to go on and on about their dog. I grew up in a zoo. I mean, not literally, but my house was always packed with animals. My parents had an aviary in the backyard, bred dogs, and kept a rotating cast of cats, snakes, geckos, chameleons, fish, frogs, hamsters, etc. I developed a love for all creatures great and small

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
May092012

Blogger Wednesday: Pam of Bookalicious

Photo by Marco van Hylckama VliegAmazing how much I think of Pam—creator of the popular Bookalicious blog—as a friend, considering we’ve never met face to face. But we’re only three hours apart by car, so I expect this will happen eventually. Meanwhile, when I needed more exposure for my books, and Pam put together a scavenger hunt giveaway on four popular books blogs, that sure was being a good friend. (By the way, the link was just so you can see how cool it was. Sorry, the contest is over.) This to me is a great example of how helpful bloggers can be to authors, and why authors are wise to hold them in high regard and treat them with respect.

Hell, with a following like Pam’s, even a retweet on Twitter can be a great boon. Which is not to suggest that I only love bloggers for their retweets. More that I like the fact that those of us in the book business really can be a community and help each other out.

So. Pam. A few questions to help my readers get to know you better.

Me: Will you start by briefly explaining the difference between Bookalicio.us and Bookalicious.org?

 

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Sep112011

More...Unusual Pets

Those who follow this blog know I've been doing an occasional More Puppy or More Kitty feature. Highlighting first my own dog (and my dearl departed late dog), then the dogs and cats of my reader-friends. I even did a More Bunny blog post as a foray into slightly more unusual pets.

In the past, I've had some rather unusual pets myself. I stumbled across their photos while looking for something different, and decided to do an "Unusual Pets" post.

Click to read more ...

Saturday
Sep032011

More Puppy: Toby

A couple of months ago, back when I was doing my More Puppy meme pretty regularly, my friend and faithful reader Lucy Llewellyn Byard from Sri Lanka sent me this photo of her "100-pound baby," Toby.

When I asked for more information about him, she was nice enough to send me the following text and photos. The photos were taken

Click to read more ...