Lori Ann Stephens's Blog, page 13
August 31, 2011
Road Trip WednesdayRoad Trip Wednesday is a 'Blog Carniva...

This Week's Topic:What's the best book you've read in August?
I know, I know. I'm sooo late to this game (pun intended), but I finished The Hunger Games early in August. I'm a relatively new YA reader. A newbie. A preemie. I only started reading YA with a lusty appetite in May, but I think I've read some great ones.
But everyone knows that The Huger Games is the cat's pajamas, so I'll offer one more that made me feel very uncomfortable in a good way: Please Ignore Vera Deitz. This novel is about an almost 18-year-old whose best friend's ghost is haunting her, begging her to clear his name. She also happens to be in love with him. She also happens to keep a stash of liquor under the driver's seat while she delivers pizza to deal with her crappy life. I was shocked, I laughed, and then I was horrified again. It's a YA book on the edge, like so many are now, and it works. It stays with you.
BONUS: I'm pitching in my own Road Trip Song of the Week because Jessica Love introduced me to this greatness. It will stick to your brain. Enjoy!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8UVNT4wvIGY&feature=player_embedded
Published on August 31, 2011 05:21
August 30, 2011
Good Enough to Eat
Summer vacation is officially over and my teaching cap is getting more wear than my writer's beret. But, I still have time to post some goodies.
First, I've been honored to receive the Liebster Blog Award, bestowed upon me by Jillian from Writing on a Limb. Thanks, Jillian!
Liebster means dear or favorite or apparently a bazillion other positive things in German (thank you Google), and the official rules are as follows:Thank the giver and link back to the blogger who gave it to you.Reveal your top 5 picks [blogs with fewer than 200 followers] and let them know by leaving a comment on their blog.Copy and paste the award on your blog.Have faith that your followers will spread the love to other bloggers.And most of all - have bloggity-blog fun!Here are my picks:
1. I love reading Stars Like Rain, a blog by a YA writer who is repped by Michelle Andelman of Regal Literary.
She. Is. Cool.
2. It Ain't Over Til the Fat Guy is Skinny is another fav blog written by my friend in New Jersey. He's had a long history as a director, a playwright, an actor, and now, a novelist. His blog has personal and professional reflections on life, and is a little breath of fresh air for me.
3. Jessica Love Writes, because she is a high school teacher (to whom the rest of civilization should bow and pay respect), and because she "kills her darlings," too.
4. Sarah Enni's blog, again, because her blog on YA writing rocks. Very entertaining.
and
5. Awkward Girl, who I met via YA Highway's Road Trip Wednesday, and whose writing is not awkward at all!
Congrats, bloggers! Share the love, and may your blog grow plentiful and ever more exciting this year.
Second, the recipe for the mouthwatering, fantasmagoric orange cake that was baked especially in honor of the orange tree in Song of the Orange Moons and served at the reading club in my previous post. Thanks, Dixie!
FRESH ORANGE CAKE
1 cup sugar
1 cup butter
2 eggs
2 1/2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 cup sour cream
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup chopped pecans
2 orange rinds, grated
SYRUP:
Juice of 2 oranges
1 cup sugar
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Cream SUGAR and BUTTER, add EGGS. Combine FLOUR, BAKING POWDER, BAKING SODA, and SALT, and add alternately withSOUR CREAM. Add VANILLA, NUTS, and ORANGE RIND.
Bake in greased, floured tube pan for 1 hour, or until toothpick comes outclean.
Combine ingredients for the "SYRUP" and boil 5 minutes. Pour syrupover hot cake and let cool in the pan. When cake is cool, turn out of panonto cake plate.
****For and impressive touch: Slice Fresh Orange Cake horizontally into 3layers. Fill and top with 2 cups WHIPPING CREAM, whipped with 1/4 cupCONFECTIONER'S SUGAR and 3 Tablespoons of ORANGE LIQUEUR. Add 1 pint ofsliced fresh STRAWBERRIES between the layers, saving some gorgeous ones for thetop.
First, I've been honored to receive the Liebster Blog Award, bestowed upon me by Jillian from Writing on a Limb. Thanks, Jillian!

Liebster means dear or favorite or apparently a bazillion other positive things in German (thank you Google), and the official rules are as follows:Thank the giver and link back to the blogger who gave it to you.Reveal your top 5 picks [blogs with fewer than 200 followers] and let them know by leaving a comment on their blog.Copy and paste the award on your blog.Have faith that your followers will spread the love to other bloggers.And most of all - have bloggity-blog fun!Here are my picks:
1. I love reading Stars Like Rain, a blog by a YA writer who is repped by Michelle Andelman of Regal Literary.
She. Is. Cool.
2. It Ain't Over Til the Fat Guy is Skinny is another fav blog written by my friend in New Jersey. He's had a long history as a director, a playwright, an actor, and now, a novelist. His blog has personal and professional reflections on life, and is a little breath of fresh air for me.
3. Jessica Love Writes, because she is a high school teacher (to whom the rest of civilization should bow and pay respect), and because she "kills her darlings," too.
4. Sarah Enni's blog, again, because her blog on YA writing rocks. Very entertaining.
and
5. Awkward Girl, who I met via YA Highway's Road Trip Wednesday, and whose writing is not awkward at all!
Congrats, bloggers! Share the love, and may your blog grow plentiful and ever more exciting this year.
Second, the recipe for the mouthwatering, fantasmagoric orange cake that was baked especially in honor of the orange tree in Song of the Orange Moons and served at the reading club in my previous post. Thanks, Dixie!

1 cup sugar
1 cup butter
2 eggs
2 1/2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 cup sour cream
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup chopped pecans
2 orange rinds, grated
SYRUP:
Juice of 2 oranges
1 cup sugar
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Cream SUGAR and BUTTER, add EGGS. Combine FLOUR, BAKING POWDER, BAKING SODA, and SALT, and add alternately withSOUR CREAM. Add VANILLA, NUTS, and ORANGE RIND.
Bake in greased, floured tube pan for 1 hour, or until toothpick comes outclean.
Combine ingredients for the "SYRUP" and boil 5 minutes. Pour syrupover hot cake and let cool in the pan. When cake is cool, turn out of panonto cake plate.
****For and impressive touch: Slice Fresh Orange Cake horizontally into 3layers. Fill and top with 2 cups WHIPPING CREAM, whipped with 1/4 cupCONFECTIONER'S SUGAR and 3 Tablespoons of ORANGE LIQUEUR. Add 1 pint ofsliced fresh STRAWBERRIES between the layers, saving some gorgeous ones for thetop.
Published on August 30, 2011 11:34
August 27, 2011
I woke up this morning to an unexpected and delightful cr...
I woke up this morning to an unexpected and delightful creative writing contest on Janet Reid's website.
Here are the directions:
"Sounds like PANIC to me" Writing Contest!
There are two kinds of people in NYC today: those who are panicking about the incoming storm, and those of us annoyed by the hysteria. To give everyone something else to think about for a couple days, let's have a writing contest! The prize is a good one: THE CUT by George Pelecanos. (It's f/ing AMAZING!!) Rules for the contest are a little different this time.
Write a story using 150 words or fewer (note the word count change from the usual 100). Use at least three sets of homonyms (words that sound the same) from the list below...
Out of respect for Mother Nature and Irene, as she approaches, I wrote this micro-story:
from here
She stood on the pier and faced thesea that whipped its fury against her cheeks. She would not budge, whetherhurricane or whale lunge for her, or the indignant weather leave its waleacross her flesh. She wailed. Thrust her fist in the air and cried "Whore!"to the sea that had devoured him.
Her fisher, who three days ago had leftthis pier and his hook in her heart, and was swallowed by his bride-sea.
A fissure in her heart widened, butshe reined the two halves together. The sea would not reign her, would not strikean oar across her shaking calves and send her tumbling into the violent, black-oredepths.
"You have his flesh," she shouted intothe deafening rain. "But I have his soul. It was me he gazed at when you pulledhim down to your cold bed. Behind his eyelids, it was me."
150 words exactly. That was a fun and challenging exercise. Visit Janet's blog to read more of the entries in the comment boxes and to add your own. Contest ends tomorrow (Sunday)!
Leave a comment here for me if you enter the contest so I can go read your story, too!
Here are the directions:
"Sounds like PANIC to me" Writing Contest!
There are two kinds of people in NYC today: those who are panicking about the incoming storm, and those of us annoyed by the hysteria. To give everyone something else to think about for a couple days, let's have a writing contest! The prize is a good one: THE CUT by George Pelecanos. (It's f/ing AMAZING!!) Rules for the contest are a little different this time.
Write a story using 150 words or fewer (note the word count change from the usual 100). Use at least three sets of homonyms (words that sound the same) from the list below...
Out of respect for Mother Nature and Irene, as she approaches, I wrote this micro-story:

She stood on the pier and faced thesea that whipped its fury against her cheeks. She would not budge, whetherhurricane or whale lunge for her, or the indignant weather leave its waleacross her flesh. She wailed. Thrust her fist in the air and cried "Whore!"to the sea that had devoured him.
Her fisher, who three days ago had leftthis pier and his hook in her heart, and was swallowed by his bride-sea.
A fissure in her heart widened, butshe reined the two halves together. The sea would not reign her, would not strikean oar across her shaking calves and send her tumbling into the violent, black-oredepths.
"You have his flesh," she shouted intothe deafening rain. "But I have his soul. It was me he gazed at when you pulledhim down to your cold bed. Behind his eyelids, it was me."
150 words exactly. That was a fun and challenging exercise. Visit Janet's blog to read more of the entries in the comment boxes and to add your own. Contest ends tomorrow (Sunday)!
Leave a comment here for me if you enter the contest so I can go read your story, too!
Published on August 27, 2011 08:54
August 24, 2011
Block? What block?

(Road Trip Wednesday is a 'Blog Carnival,' where YA Highway's contributors post a weekly writing- or reading-related question and answer it on our own blogs. You can hop from destination to destination and get everybody's unique take on the topic.)
This week's topic is How do you beat writer's block?
I've been told by writing teachers of yore that writer's block doesn't exist. That's right. It's a figment of my imagination, this four-sided, five-letter word that is the worst four-letter word a writer can imagine. But I don't really buy it.
Not to fear. I've found the answer to my imaginary foe.
It's not the local Starbucks for me. I get sidetracked by all the wonderful commotion and the real estate agents trying to close a deal at the tables to my right and left.
It's not the perfect desk sitting all alone in the middle of an empty room. Stephen King tried it and warned me it wouldn't work, but I didn't listen and had to try for myself. I've got a cute little black desk in the middle of my office, but am I sitting at it? Nope.
To get my writing juices flowing, I sit in the dining room on cushioned chairs or on the armchair next to the dining room table. Comfy, but just formal enough to keep me from falling asleep. Then I email my friend and say, "Hey, I'm going to send you an entire chapter sometime tonight."
Then I go get this:

Then this:

Then I open my laptop, close my internet browser, and write.
So, optimistic promises + chocolate + wine + familiar chair to place my butt = a few darn good pages.
Oh, and before 4 PM, I have coffee instead of wine. That's one cure for the malady of writers, and I endorse this message.
Published on August 24, 2011 10:02
August 10, 2011
Maiden Voyage on Road Trip Wednesday
"Road Trip Wednesday is a 'Blog Carnival,' where YA Highway'scontributors post a weekly writing- or reading-related question and answer iton our own blogs. You can hop from destination to destination and geteverybody's unique take on the topic."
Today I'm answering for my first RTW topic, and it is a perfect maiden voyage topic for me, folks.
This week's topic is: What time do you prefer to do your writing? Early Worm? Night Owl ? Any five seconds you can grab?I used to be:
from hereOnly I wasn't this blue and cool and lovely.No. My eyes were redder and droopier because I'd already played a few Wii games with my young son or helped him with his homework or made him something to eat, and I was on my third glass of Malbec.Sometimes fourth...but they're tiny bistro glasses. And still, I could churn out several pages before falling asleep on my keyboard with a little chocolatey drool easing its way out of the corner of my mouth.Chocolate drool because that's what I eat when I write. Note to writers: Eating bowlfuls of dark chocolate with red wine is not a sound diet. After ten pounds inexplicably found their way to my waist, I am now...
from here Is 7:30 considered early? If not, maybe I'm just a "worm" and not an "early worm," inching my way though my manuscript.It happened on vacation, of all places. My family was visiting a good friend in Michigan, and we were staying in a cabin on his little spread of land. We took literally a few steps out the cabin, and there was our private lake with our devoted loons and baby frogs hopping on wee legs. Before the kids woke up (10:30? 11?), I sat with my laptop in front of the lake view window and wrote for at least two hours every morning. I traded wine for coffee and chocolate for almonds, and somehow wrote more than half a YA novel manuscript in just a few weeks. Note to writers: I (highly) do not recommend abandoning wine for extended periods of time. Now that the school semester is almost upon me, I've traded early morning sessions for evening again, and I have to admit that I was much more productive writing in the morning. It takes me a solid hour of deleting and pulling my hair before my muse kicks in at night. Coffee seems to kick-start the muse faster. It's a conundrum when you write best when you're supposed to be teaching writing elsewhere.I wonder how many other writers need wine and/or coffee to settle down and focus on the first few productive paragraphs.
Today I'm answering for my first RTW topic, and it is a perfect maiden voyage topic for me, folks.
This week's topic is: What time do you prefer to do your writing? Early Worm? Night Owl ? Any five seconds you can grab?I used to be:


Published on August 10, 2011 12:45
August 8, 2011
Seven Wonders
Updates!
So many fun things to share this week, I hope to cram them all in here.
1. I finally got the nerve to officially Follow YA Highway, a Young Adult Fiction Writers blog. It's going to be fun haunting this amazing site as a regular visitor. My writer-friend, Samantha Mabry, introduced me to it. If you love YA books (openly or as a closeted 30-something reader), you might love this site, too.
2. Some advice for other writers who have novels recently released or forthcoming. (I love that word "forthcoming"--it's so full of possibilities and optimism.)
3. Pics from The Hunger Games film are out. Squeee! Very happy about this, having recently read it.
4. Almost finished (yep, you read that right) with my summer YA novel manuscript. I heart my Beta Reader, who keeps me energized. I'll have to think of a special thank you for her.
5. I discovered a great little site called Inkubate that provides a platform for established agents and publishers to contact writers with manuscripts. It sounds very forward-thinking and exciting.
6. If you LOVE to read (and I know some of you do), consider joining the September Read-A-Thon. You know you want to. Brag a little. Serve a microwave dinner to the fam and enjoy an extra chapter or two.
7. Finally, here are some pics of a cozy reader's group, who read my novel last month. Note the beautiful orange juice cake, in honor of the book. The sweet host, Dixie, served three different dishes that reflect the three main characters' cultural backgrounds. That seriously rocks, people. I felt special, indeed.
So many fun things to share this week, I hope to cram them all in here.
1. I finally got the nerve to officially Follow YA Highway, a Young Adult Fiction Writers blog. It's going to be fun haunting this amazing site as a regular visitor. My writer-friend, Samantha Mabry, introduced me to it. If you love YA books (openly or as a closeted 30-something reader), you might love this site, too.
2. Some advice for other writers who have novels recently released or forthcoming. (I love that word "forthcoming"--it's so full of possibilities and optimism.)
3. Pics from The Hunger Games film are out. Squeee! Very happy about this, having recently read it.
4. Almost finished (yep, you read that right) with my summer YA novel manuscript. I heart my Beta Reader, who keeps me energized. I'll have to think of a special thank you for her.
5. I discovered a great little site called Inkubate that provides a platform for established agents and publishers to contact writers with manuscripts. It sounds very forward-thinking and exciting.
6. If you LOVE to read (and I know some of you do), consider joining the September Read-A-Thon. You know you want to. Brag a little. Serve a microwave dinner to the fam and enjoy an extra chapter or two.

7. Finally, here are some pics of a cozy reader's group, who read my novel last month. Note the beautiful orange juice cake, in honor of the book. The sweet host, Dixie, served three different dishes that reflect the three main characters' cultural backgrounds. That seriously rocks, people. I felt special, indeed.



Published on August 08, 2011 16:20
August 1, 2011
I have a "beta reader" for my YA manuscript in progress.&...

I have a "beta reader" for my YA manuscript in progress. It forces me to write a chapter a day so I can email it to her and keep my writing mojo strong. I just finished Chapter 15.
I woke up this morning to find this email from my beta reader:
"Oh my goodness! This book is great!! A page-turner, read in one day kinda great!!!! Can't wait to read what happens next :)!!"
This is not a fifteen-year-old girl. This is a woman with three children. That fact alone makes this email perfect. But let's not neglect the other reason why it made its way into my blog: I love the gratuitous exclamation points (probably because I've been trained not to use them in writing fiction), the fine use of the aptly placed fragment, and the cheerful if not redundant smiley face, just in case she thought she might have understated her enthusiasm.
I. Love. This. Email.
Thank you, Beta Reader. I'm sending you Chapter 15 today.
Published on August 01, 2011 07:15
July 29, 2011
Song has been Kindlefied

It's finally up and available. Hip Hip! Go on, download it and share it with a friend!
I know a few of you are waiting for the iPad version, which should be available in a few more days. Or the Nook version. Or the Sony Reader version. They're a'coming!
That's the publishing news of the day. I do have some different publishing news, which basically fills people in on my strange and tense journey through publishing this book (as a hard back) with a very small publishing house. You'll notice that Amazon only has one more copy available for sale? But that's for another blog entry. It will be a difficult one to write, but I think will be very instructive to authors who are looking for a traditional publisher.
As for writing: I'm deeper than ever into my YA novel, and now I'm at that delicate stage called "I've Just Read a Fantastic Book and How Can I Ever Compete with That Piece of Brilliance?" Also called, "Don't Read The Hunger Games and Think You Can Keep Your Writer's Ego Intact." Wonderful read, my friends. And it will scare the heck out of you if you're in the middle of your manuscript and thinking about how well your plot pacing holds up.
Still, I'm have a helluva fun time writing this manuscript, and I sense the end drawing near.
It had better! I only have one week left until I have to take off my author cap and put on my scholar cap. The fall semester is soon upon us.
Published on July 29, 2011 20:52
July 14, 2011
This. Is. Hot.

Really like a bun. Baking. In. An. Oven. Ugh, it's so hot. Our pool is like a giant cup of tepid tea. The only way to enjoy it is to sit on the steps with the water hose turned on, perched right over my head.
Have I whined enough? Because now I'm going to gloat: I'm ditching this hot popstand and heading to Michigan tomorrow. Whoop!
This morning, I realized I hadn't written any posts for a while, and felt I really needed to post before I hit the road, Jack, and don't come back until I'm good and ready. But I have been a good girl. I have been writing.
Actually, when it occurs to me that I haven't posted in my blog for a while, that's a good sign that I'm being productive in the fiction world. I'm in the middle of my next novel manuscript, a Young Adult novel, and I'm SO EXCITED. I get all jittery inside when I'm sitting in front of the computer. It does take a while to crank out the pages (they don't write themselves, you know), but a lot of the scenes are flowing pretty easily, and my Beta Reader keeps me up to speed: I send her a chapter every evening, and she is also SO EXCITED. (Can you hear my voice getting all thrill-y and eager?)
Thanks to the wonderful folks at Back of the Book Reviews, who held a Read-a-Thon over the Independence weekend and a contest tied to my manuscript, I now have several characters named after real people. The names are perfect. Perfecto. Couldn't have imagined better names!
Is it bad luck to get so excited about a manuscript? I don't care! I feel like I'm nesting on this fantastic mysterious egg, and I can't wait to see it crack open.
I hope you all find a way to escape the heat that has descended on the U.S. I'd invite you to our little cabin by the lake if I could. Cheers!
Published on July 14, 2011 14:22
June 27, 2011
Celebrate Books!
Dearest Bibliophiles:
Take a skip over to Back of the Book Reviews and join the Independence Read-a-Thon. Fun fun fun!
Then look here, to find out what more fun awaits! Yes, I am on the hunt for some good character names for this summer's project, YA novel manuscript called INVISIBLE. You know you want in on the fun. Or maybe you want your daughter's or friend's or frienemy's name to bless the pages of this exciting novel? Read the instructions are Back of the Book Reviews, and have fun reading.
Not long ago, I was invited to a book club dinner that blew my socks off. Actually, I wasn't wearing socks, but no matter: This. Dinner. Was. Phenomenal. The food was divine, and carefully selected and prepared to represent each character's cultural background in Song of the Orange Moons. But the ladies were the true gems. I was humbled to be in the presence of these women who truly enjoy books. To Dixie Baum, I salute you, and thank you. I'm still waiting for those pictures!
Tomorrow, I have the good fortune of meeting with an old high school friend who selected Song of the Orange Moons for her book club. I'm looking forward to a good evening at the bistro with more book lovers.
Take a skip over to Back of the Book Reviews and join the Independence Read-a-Thon. Fun fun fun!
Then look here, to find out what more fun awaits! Yes, I am on the hunt for some good character names for this summer's project, YA novel manuscript called INVISIBLE. You know you want in on the fun. Or maybe you want your daughter's or friend's or frienemy's name to bless the pages of this exciting novel? Read the instructions are Back of the Book Reviews, and have fun reading.
Not long ago, I was invited to a book club dinner that blew my socks off. Actually, I wasn't wearing socks, but no matter: This. Dinner. Was. Phenomenal. The food was divine, and carefully selected and prepared to represent each character's cultural background in Song of the Orange Moons. But the ladies were the true gems. I was humbled to be in the presence of these women who truly enjoy books. To Dixie Baum, I salute you, and thank you. I'm still waiting for those pictures!
Tomorrow, I have the good fortune of meeting with an old high school friend who selected Song of the Orange Moons for her book club. I'm looking forward to a good evening at the bistro with more book lovers.
Published on June 27, 2011 18:23