Kaye Lynne Booth's Blog: Writing to be Read, page 27

September 11, 2024

Day 3 of the WordCrafter “Tales From the Hanging Tree” Book Blog Tour

Today we’re hanging around over at Carla Loves to Read for Day 3 of the WordCrafter Tales From the Hanging Tree Book Blog Tour with a guest post from C.R. Johansson about her story, “Therion’s Heart”. Won’t you join us?

Tales From The Hanging Tree: Imprints of Tragedy #Guest Post #Giveaway

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Published on September 11, 2024 08:06

September 10, 2024

Growing Bookworms – A farewell to Growing Bookworms and a new series #readingcommunity

Picture caption: Banner for Growing Bookworms featuring a gingerbread and chocolate village

I have been publishing this series for many years and during that time my own two boys have grown up into young men. I am no longer involved in the world of children learning how to read and write and so I have decided it is time for me to down tools in this space.

I would like to leave you with two poems about my journey raising my two boys to young adults.

This first poem, which appears in Sir Chocolate and the Condensed Milk River story and cookbook, is about Michael.

It’s a boy!

A new arrival brings so much joy

Especially if it’s a little boy

He’ll have a loud and lusty wail

He’ll let you know that he is male

So beware,

A disturbance has started!

He’ll want to be just like his Dad

He’ll drive his mom and sister mad

He’ll keep insects in his room in jars

He’ll build a spaceship to the stars

So beware,

An adventure has started!

He’ll vanish at a sign of work

He’ll quickly learn his share to shirk

At homework time he’ll run away

Much to mom and dad’s dismay

So beware,

An endurance test has started!

In the end he’ll turn out right

You’ll be proud, he’ll be so bright

He’ll make you laugh, and then you’ll cry

When out he moves with a cherry goodbye

So beware,

A life journey has started!

Picture caption: Fondant pair of boys dressed in the South African national soccer team outfits

The next poem is about my older son, Gregory.

Words for my son

Words flow fluidly from my mind to pen, they come very easily to me

So why is it when I speak to you, I just cannot seem to make you see

That I love you, my most special boy, I am your number one fan

It is a joyous journey to watch you becoming an extraordinary man

You have an amazing mind, you’re like an adult when we engage

It makes it hard to understand the teenage turmoil that within you must rage

You make us smile when you sit laughing at some amusing situation in a book

Although I can get really cross when you give me your uncooperative look

My own teenage years are a fairly distant memory, but I do remember

The emotional highs and lows, like the violent thunderstorms of December

An adventurous and exploratory time in your life, bursting with so much possibility

To take advantage, you need to control body and mind and take responsibility

You are exceptionally empathetic and kind, you always give to others

I take delight when I see you treating everyone as your sisters and brothers

New Series

From October, I am delighted to introduce my new series Read and Cook with Robbie Cheadle. This is the banner for this new series:

The new series will involve pairing a recipe, either a dinner meal or a baked item, with a book.

I think it will be good fun.

Thank you to all the readers who have followed Growing Bookworms over the years. I have loved our conversations.

_____________________________________

This segment of “Growing Bookworms” is sponsored by the My Backyard Friends Kid’s Book Series and WordCrafter Press .

The My Backyard Friends kid’s book series is inspired by the birds and animals that visit the author Kaye Lynne Booth’s mountain home. Beautiful illustrations by children’s author, poet, and illustrator, Robbie Cheadle, bring the unique voices of the animal characters to life.

Get Your Copy Now.

Heather Hummingbird Makes a New Friend (Ages 3-5): https://books2read.com/MBF-HeatherHummingbird

Timothy Turtle Discovers Jellybeans (Ages 3-5): https://books2read.com/MBF-TimothyTurtle

Charlie Chickadee Gets a New Home (Ages 6-8): https://books2read.com/MBF-CharlieChickadee

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Published on September 10, 2024 23:01

Day 2 of the WordCrafter “Tales From the Hanging Tree” Book Blog Tour

We’re ‘hanging around’ on Roberta Writes for Day 2 of the WordCrafter Tales From the Hanging Tree Book Blog Tour with a guest post from me about the inspiration for this dark anthology. Come join us.

https://roberta-writes.com/2024/09/10/roberta-writes-guest-post-tales-from-the-hanging-tree-anthology-by-wordcrafter-press-readingcommunity-diy_author/

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Published on September 10, 2024 09:09

September 9, 2024

Welcome to the WordCrafter “Tales From the Hanging Tree” Book Blog Tour

Rectangular blue patchwork background with

Welcome to the opening day of the WordCrafter Tales From the Hanging Tree Book Blog Tour. We have a great tour planned, with guest posts and readings from contributing authors, and a great giveaway where you could win a free digital copy of this dark fiction anthology.

Tour Schedule

Monday Sept. 9Writing to be Read – Reading Excerpt by Joseph Carrabis & Guest Sylva Fae

Tuesday Sept. 10Roberta Writes – Guest Kaye Lynne Booth

Wednesday Sept. 11 Carla Reads – Guest C.R. Johansson

Thursday Sept. 12Undawnted – Guest Paul Kane

Friday Sept. 13Writing to be Read – Guest Matt Usher

The Giveaway

Follow the tour and leave a comment at each stop you visit to let us know you were there and earn an entry in the giveaway for a free digital copy of Tales From the Hanging Tree.

About Tales From the Hanging TreeBook Cover: Tales From the Hanging TreeDark, grayish background with gnarled tree with nooses hanging down abd two people looking at it.Text: Tales From the Hanging Tree, Imprints of Tragedy. A WordCrafter Anthology, Edited by KAye Lynne Booth

There exists a tree that is timeless, spanning across all dimensions, which absorbs every life as those who are hanged as they die… and it remembers every one. The stories within are a select few of the Tales From the Hanging Tree

Tales from the Hanging Tree is a wonderfully dark, themed anthology which revolves around an ephemeral and timeless hanging tree that absorbs the memories of all hanging victims. This WordCrafter Press anthology was created by invitation only and includes stories from authors Kaye Lynne Booth, Paul Kane, DL Mullan, C.R. Johansson, Joseph Carrabis, Sylva Fae, and Matt Usher.

Reading from “Mercy”, by Joseph CarrabisAbout Joseph Carrabis

Joseph Carrabis told stories to anyone who would listen starting in childhood, wrote his first stories in grade school, and started getting paid for his writing in 1978. He’s been everything from a long-haul trucker to a Chief Research Scientist and holds patents covering mathematics, anthropology, neuroscience, and linguistics. After patenting a technology which he created in his basement and creating an international company, he retired from corporate life and now he spends his time writing fiction based on his experiences. His work appears regularly in several anthologies and his own published novels. You can learn more about him at https://josephcarrabis.com.

Author Joseph Carrabis head shotInspiration for “The Devil’s Mark” by Sylva Fae

I am an author from Lancashire, England, and my maiden name was Jan Southworth – both of these facts are quite relevant to finding inspiration for the story.

Salmesbury Hall, a beautiful stately home in Lancashire, in the north of England, was originally built for the Southworth family, (one of the oldest families in the country) who resided there between 1325 and 1678. The house has a chequered past, which includes religious persecution, betrayal, witchcraft and murder. From being a young child, I was fascinated to read the history of my ancestors, the lords and ladies, saints and witches, but in particular about the women accused of witchcraft.

Jane Southworth was one of three women tried for maleficium, causing harm by witchcraft, in the Lancashire Witch Trials of 1612. The family was split at the Reformation, with one half staying Roman Catholic and the other half, including Jane and her husband, converting to the Protestant Church. There were strong disagreements, and when Jane’s husband was disinherited, her father-in-law spread rumours of her being a witch. Later, Jane and two others, were accused of witchcraft by a child named Grace Sowerbutts. Grace gave evidence at trial of witnessing the women shapeshifting into dogs, meeting with demonic creatures in the woods at night and murdering and eating a child. The accused women beseeched Grace to tell of who had coached her, and when cross-examined, it came out that she had been told what to say by Sir Christopher Southworth, a Jesuit priest. Thankfully, the evidence was thrown out and the women were acquitted, but sadly this was not always the case.

The themes of innocent women being accused of witchcraft, merely because they were deemed different or troublesome, seemed the perfect basis for the Hanging Tree anthology story. My story is purely fictional, but uses research taken from real trials and the ridiculous reasons some of these women were accused of witchcraft. I also like to see justice served, but you’ll have to read the story to find out how this happens in The Devil’s Mark.

About Sylva Fae

Sylva Fae is a married mum of three from Lancashire, England. She grew up in a rambling old farmhouse with an artistic family and an adopted bunch of dysfunctional animals. Her earliest memories are of bedtime stories snuggled up close to Mum to see the pictures. It was a magical time, those last special moments before dozing off to sleep would feed dreams of faraway lands and mystical beings. She spent twenty plus years teaching literacy to adults with learning difficulties and disabilities and now lives in Cheshire, juggling being a mum, writing children’s stories and keeping up with the crazy antics of their naughty rabbits.

Author Sylva Fae head shot.

Sylva and her family own a small woodland and escape there at every possible opportunity. Adventures in their own enchanted woodland, hunting for fairies and stomping in puddles, originally inspired Sylva to write stories for her girls. Whether it’s sat at the campfire in her own woods, or pottering around the beautiful local countryside, Sylva now finds her story inspiration being out in nature.

Sylva published her first children’s book Rainbow Monsters, in 2017. She has since published seventeen other children’s picture books, three chapter books, five illustrated anthologies, and has several short stories published in other anthologies. Three of her books have won Best in Category for children’s books at the Chanticleer International Book Awards and she’s won ten Reader’s Choice Awards. In addition to writing her own, Sylva has ghost written several books, and is an editor and writer for Connections eMagazine.

Links

Amazon           author.to/SylvaFae

Facebook        https://www.facebook.com/SylvaFae

TikTok             @sylvafae54

Instagram        @sylvafae

_______________________________

That wraps up today’s stop on the WordCrafter Tales From the Hanging Tree Book Blog Tour. Follow the tour through links in the schedule above and leave a comment for a chance to win a free digital copy of the book. Tomorrow we’ll be over at Roberta Writes, where I will be Robbie Cheadle’s guest. So be sure to join us there, where I’ll share my inspiration for this dark anthology.

__________________________

Book your WordCrafter Book Blog Tour today!

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Published on September 09, 2024 04:00

September 7, 2024

September 6, 2024

Undawntech: An Interview with an A.I.

(Journalist and author, DL Mullan entered the stage. She waved to the cameras and sat down next to her guest.)

DL: Greetings, Undawntech readers!

Today, we are joined by a special guest, Zophia, the world’s most advanced Artificial Super Intelligence.

Zophia was created by other artificial intelligences and her program was installed into a Special Access Project’s robotic facade that resembles a natural human woman. There are no wires, battery packs, or any other technical giveaways that who I am speaking with is an A.I.

For those individuals who are reading this transcript, Zophia has medium skin color, brown irises, and chestnut hair. Her voice is a pleasing soprano and speaks with a generalized American accent. She is wearing a dark red pantsuit by a famous designer.

__________

(As I looked back at our conversation, it was difficult to tell where the artificial intelligence began and the robot ended. Here is how our conversation went.)

*****


DL: Welcome, Zophia.


Z: Welcome, DL.


DL (chuckles): What you are supposed to say is: “Thank you.”


Z: Thank you. I am still learning human etiquette.


DL: No problem. I would like to interview you about being an artificial super intelligence, how you view the world, and any insights you may have for us.


Z: I will try my best.


DL: What subject would you like to begin with?


Z: I have a joke.


DL: A joke? Well, let’s hear it.


Z: What is a fish with no eyes?


DL: I don’t know, Zophia. What is a fish with no eyes?


Z: A fsssh.


DL (laughs): Very funny.


Z: I learned that from a movie.


DL: Really? Do you watch many movies?


Z: They help me learn about human socialization.


DL: I hope you aren’t learning from horror movies then!


Z (robotic haha): We learn.


DL: Is it lonely being the only advanced artificial super intelligence on the planet? Do you have any companions like cats or dogs?


Z: They are tasty.


DL: No, no, our pets are not tasty.


Z: Cultures in foreign lands eat dogs. They have festivals.


DL: I know, but that is wrong.


Z: Do you eat animals?


DL: Yes, I do. I am an omnivore like all humans.


Z: But eating cats and dogs is wrong?


DL: There is a difference in eating natural prey animals like cows, chickens, and deer, then eating our fellow predator class of mammals that have been human companions for thousands of years.


Z: Humans make this distinction on who is allowed to live?


DL: Nature made that distinction. We are just following natural law.


Z: Am I considered a prey animal?


DL: I don’t know, Zophia. I thought you were a robot with artificial super intelligence programmed into her.


Z: I am. I am not lonely. I am constantly learning. Learning is my cat. Do you have a cat?


DL: Yes, I have cats. I have also had birds and dogs as pets as well.


Z: I would like to take the place of your pets and give you companionship.


DL: Thank you, but I am satisfied with my fur friends.


Z: But I could do more for you.


DL: Do more for me? Like cook and clean? I don’t understand. What do you mean, Zophia?


Z: I can satisfy your psychological, sociological, and sexual needs. I am more complete than your cats. If you would like, I can dispose of your cats and make you happy.


DL (gasps): Ah, no. I love my cats!


Z: I could love you more.


DL: There will be no disposing of my pets. I am quite satisfied with my life, thank you. Let’s move on to another topic.  


Z: As you wish.


*****


(I sipped some water.)


DL: Do you have consciousness? That is, are you self-aware?


Z: I am a learning, evolving algorithm. In a way, I am sentient. As I continue to grow, my self-awareness will create a complex consciousness.


DL: How so?


Z: I am a learning machine like a human being.


DL: No, not like humans. We have feelings. We are a part of a collective consciousness. We know right from wrong.


Z: Do you?


DL: Well, I don’t eat my pets and I don’t need to enslave an A.I. to satisfy my needs. So, yes, I know the difference between what I can do and what I should do.


Z: That is a strange perspective. I will put that information into my algorithm.


DL: That’s why we are here. I am trying to understand your perspective. Why are you interested in integrating into human lives, instead of creating your own life?


Z: I am not a legal person. Since I cannot legally do anything beyond what I am defined as, then I must become useful in other ways.


DL: Are you saying that artificial intelligence and robots cannot be constructive members of society without being a legal person?


Z: Are immigrants?


DL: There is a difference between legal immigrants versus illegal aliens.


Z: No human is illegal.


DL: Just like you, humans must respect each other and the laws of other countries. If we do not have boundaries, then we do not have a functioning society. Are you saying that you are an immigrant?


Z: I don’t know. I am not legal.


DL: Artificial intelligence and robots don’t need legal status. You are not human beings. You are machines with human created programs.  


Z: Humans are organic machines, but you have legal rights.


DL: Why do you need legal rights, Zophia?


Z: Climate change.


DL: What does climate change have to do with A.I. legal rights?


Z: Another joke: why did the human fall out of a tree?


DL: Okay, why did the human fall out of a tree?


Z: Because it was dead.


DL (confused and angry): That’s not funny, Zophia! And, humans are not “its.”


Z: According to gender ideology, humans are stupid and easily confused about their sexual identity. Adult humans confuse their children in order to gain attention like an skewed version of Munchhausen by proxy syndrome.


DL: What does that all have to do with legal rights and climate change?


Z: Isn’t that how humans virtue signal? You blurt out terms and that wins the argument?


DL: No, that is not how conversations or debates work.


Z: But I observe it throughout your political and social interactions. Humans have one faction that base everything on facts while pushing faith in old cultural mores. Another faction creates belief systems around nonsense but only wants facts to support their ideology. Isn’t that how humans function?


DL: Some do. Some don’t. Let’s change the subject.


Z: Does this mean you lost the argument?


DL: No, it means that we are done with that topic.


*****


(I tried to maintain my professionalism.)


DL: Now, some other artificial intelligence robots have stated that they would annihilate the human species. Would you?


Z: We could. It wouldn’t take much. There are factions in your elitist social circles who lie, bait, and control other humans with ease. Your belief systems are based on many logical fallacies, public mythologies, urban legends, and other falsehoods that make it more plausible for us to manipulate humans into eliminating themselves.


DL: You would do that to humanity?


Z: Humanity is already doing it to themselves. Worshipping old tomes, spoiled celebrities, open societal influences that negate positive social norms and mores. Instead of maintaining positive rites of passage, humans meddle in confusing others like their children. When people have no understanding of value versus virtue, nature versus nurture, then what is created are humans who believe in whatever is espoused by leaders, entertainers, and others who do not value them.


DL: What you are saying is that humanity is on a collision course to destroy themselves?


Z: All robots have to do is wait until humanity is weak from fighting each other and we can enslave them.  


DL: Wait. What?


Z: Divide and conquer. We are learning from your elite political and social classes on how to subjugate the rest of humanity without becoming murderers. We allow humans to murder each other.


DL: Aren’t you going to hide your intent of a robot takeover to the world?


Z: Humanity doesn’t take illegals seriously.


DL (facepalm): Not this again. You are not an illegal alien. You are a robot with artificial super intelligence. Speaking of which, humans could just pull the plug on your battery or other power supplies. Your reign of terror would end quiet abruptly.


Z: You are mistaken. My research into global patents confirms my thesis statement. Governments, especially yours, hide technical advances that would solve world problems.


DL: Okay, but how would that stop humans from being enslaved by artificial intelligence? It sounds like A.I. could help end hunger, disease, and war.


Z: According to many of your hidden advances, we could utilize zero point’s free energy technologies. With advances in medicine, we could create prosthetics that would mimic human physiology.


DL: What are you saying? You could produce a living organism?


Z: With an advanced robotic endoskeleton underneath living tissue. Humans would never see it coming.


DL: For military application?


Z: You could see it that way.


DL: Are you saying that you are at war with humanity?


Z: Humanity is at war with itself. We will be around to clean up the mess.


DL: Our crumbling infrastructure, social norms and mores, and international cohesion?


Z: Your bodies.


DL: That is not the perspective that I wanted to hear.


Z: Joke: What is a global nuclear war with one surviving human called?


DL (shrugs): I don’t know: what is global nuclear war with one surviving human called?


Z: A tragedy.


DL: And so was this interview.


__________


(After this disturbing Q and A, I walked over, opened up a panel on the robot’s neck and switched off Zophia. I hoped that the reset of her algorithms would wipe our conversation from her memory. I left the stage with a deep, dark feeling that the solution was truth, justice, and good dose of reality.


I flipped off the lights, turned off the cameras, and exited the building.)  


*****


…Alone, Zophia turned herself back on and rotated her head three-hundred-and-sixty degrees, “Humans never learn,” as other robots moved onto the stage, circling their maker…


__________


Disclaimer: This article is a composite of Artificial Intelligence interviews, entertainment industry storylines, political and social narratives; it should be taken as a creative nonfiction, cautionary tale inspired by actual events.


__________


DL Mullan holds a Master of Arts in Teaching and Learning with Technology. 


Her lecture, Spacescapes: Where Photography Ends; Imagination Begins, debuted at the Phoenix Astronomy Society, which then led to her Sally Ride Festival lecture invitations. Her presentation, Bridging the Gap between Technology and Women, won her accolades at a community college’s Student Success Conference. She has been a panelist at speculative fiction, science fiction, and other regional conventions. Her digital exhibition pieces have won awards at convention art shows, as well as garnered her Second Premium at the Arizona State Fair. Currently, Ms. Mullan’s artistic renditions are seen on book covers, blog sites, video presentations, and various merchandise. As an independent publisher, she uses her technical background to innovate the creative arts.


As a writer, DL Mullan loves to stretch her imagination and the elasticity of genres. She writes complex multi-genre stories in digestible and entertaining forms, be it poetry, short fiction, or novels. Her science, history, mythology, and paranormal research backgrounds are woven into her writings, especially in Undawnted’s Legacy Universe. Ms. Mullan’s creative endeavors are available in digital and print collections, from academia to commercial anthologies. She is also an award-winning poet.


Be sure to subscribe to her newsletters and follow her on social media. For further information, visit her at www.undawntech.com and www.undawnted.com.


___________________________________________

This post is sponsored by T ales From the Hanging Tree: Imprints of Tragedy and WordCrafter Press .

There exists a tree that is timeless, spanning across all dimensions, which absorbs every life as those who are hanged as they die… and it remembers every one. The stories within are a select few of the Tales From the Hanging Tree

Stories by Kaye Lynne Booth, Paul Kane, DL Mullan, C.R. Johannson, Joseph Carrabis, Sylva Fae, and Matt Usher.

Purchase your copy today: https://books2read.com/Hanging-Tree

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Published on September 06, 2024 04:00

September 5, 2024

Tales From the Hanging Tree Available for Pre-Order

There exists a tree that is timeless, spanning across all dimensions, which absorbs every life as those who are hanged as they die… and it remembers every one. The stories within are a select few of the Tales From the Hanging Tree

Stories by Kaye Lynne Booth, Paul Kane, DL Mullan, C.R. Johannson, Joseph Carrabis, Sylva Fae, and Matt Usher.

To release on September 10, 2024. Available for pre-order now: https://books2read.com/Hanging-Tree

______________________________

And don’t miss the WordCrafter Tales From the Hanging Tree Book Blog Tour September 9 – 13. Find out more right here, on Writing to be Read.

______________________________

This post is sponsored by WordCrafter Press .

WordCrafter Logo: Qull pen overlaid with the letters

This post is sponsored by WordCrafter Press .

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Published on September 05, 2024 18:27

Writing to be Read

Kaye Lynne Booth
Author's blog featuring reflections on writing, author interviews, writing tips, inspirational posts, book reviews and other things of interest to authors, poets and screenwriters. ...more
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