Kim Fielding's Blog, page 28
May 18, 2016
30-Day Writing Challenge: Day 18
18. Your favorite color and why
I guess cobalt blue is my favorite color. I own a lot of cobalt glass, and I like the way light shines through it. I find it relaxing but not boring. I wear some blue, too, because it complements my eyes (*bats eyelashes*). But when it comes to clothing, I actually gravitate more to black and dark red. Don’t know why. My punk streak, maybe.



May 17, 2016
30-Day Writing Challenge: Day 17
17. A quote you try to live by
Does “Do your fucking job?” count?
Okay, then. Here’s one I take to heart:
Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one’s lifetime.
–Mark Twain
If you know me at all, you know I love to travel. I could list about a million reasons why, but one big guiding force is a desire to see a different viewpoint. Travel helps us not only to see new things, but to see old ones through fresh eyes. We gain new perspective. We see that our way isn’t the only way and isn’t necessarily the best way. We meet those people over there, and they become not a stereotype, but rather living, breathing human beings with whom we share many more commonalities than differences. Even when there are differences, we can appreciate them. I love how Italians dress nicely for even basic shopping and sound like they’re arguing even when they’re not. How Croatians abhor lines and rarely smile at strangers, but will treat you like long-last family as soon as you get to know them a little. How Scots flock outdoors at the slightest hint of sunshine. How New Yorkers are convinced the live in the center of the universe and Midwesterners can’t imagine why people would live anywhere else.
Travel also erases out prejudices about ourselves. We learn what we can tolerate, what we’re truly capable of.
And travel delights us with surprises large and small.
Release Day! Stasis
First, the important facts: the second edition of Stasis is available now from DSP Publications! You can also get it from Amazon and all other major booksellers, in print and ebook versions.
Now for some details.
This was the first novel I wrote. I wrote it for NaNoWriMo–National Novel Writing Month.
It’s also the first in a trilogy. The second and third books will come out later this year.
Although a relationship between the main characters–Ennek and Miner–is important, I wouldn’t characterize this as a romance. It’s really a dark fantasy.
The setting is Praesidium, a city-state in an alternate universe where magic exists.
That gorgeous cover is by Reese Dante.
There’s a map inside. I love books with maps.
We haven’t made huge changes from the first edition. There are some small things, but the major difference is that several rounds of editing have smoothed and polished the writing.
I’m still donating all my royalties to Doctors Without Borders.
Now here’s the blurb:
Praesidium is the most prosperous city-state in the world, due not only to its location at the mouth of a great bay but also to its strict laws, stringently enforced. Ordinary criminals become bond-slaves, but the worst punishment—to be suspended in a dreamless frozen state known as Stasis—is doled out by the wizard and reserved for only the most serious of traitors.
Ennek is the youngest son of Praesidium’s strict Chief. Though now a successful portmaster, Ennek grew up without much of a purpose, unable to fulfill his true desires and always skating on the edge of the law. But he is also haunted by the plight of one man, Miner, a prisoner for whom Stasis appears to be a truly horrible fate. If Ennek is to save Miner, he must explore Praesidium’s deepest secrets as well as his own.
Want to know what Ennek and Miner look like? Catherine Dair made some lovely drawings.



May 16, 2016
30-Day Writing Challenge: Day 16
16. Bullet your entire day.
My days vary depending on the day of the week and time of year. I don’t teach on Mondays, so here’s my schedule for today.
Wake up.
Think of plot ideas while showering.
Go downstairs. Have espresso and a banana while reading email, etc.
Go to work.
Deal with 10,000 problems.
Have meeting with someone I’d rather not.
Deal with more problems.
Go home for late lunch.
Email and social media.
Greet kids when they get home. Point them toward homework.
Listen to audiobook (Spook Squad!) while I do my daily walk.
Tell students I won’t round 78.3% up to a B.
Grade stray term papers.
Watch husband make dinner. Eat with family.
Convince husband or kid to go for evening walk.
More email and social media, plus various small work tasks.
Write (sequel to Love Can’t Conquer)
Eat dessert (this is important)
Go to bed
Think of 30 things I absolutely must do in the morning. Write them down (I keep a notepad by the bed).
Sleep.
You’ll notice there’s not a lot of housework going on in that list, plus I don’t watch TV.



May 15, 2016
30 Day Writing Challenge: Day 15
15. Three pet peeves
Only three? Well, okay.
Number three: Signs with misspellings or grammatical errors. I know, this is petty of me. But it annoys me. During a recent trip to Vegas, I saw an entire line of parking spots with signs reserving them for service vehichles. Not just one misspelling here, but an entire row of them. And when I went to the opera the other day–as one does–the subtitles twice read it’s when they should have read its. Shudder.
Number two: Travelers who complain when everything’s not exactly like it is back home. I was once stuck with one of these people for a week while I was in Hungary and the Czech Republic. The rest of us came close to throwing him off a moving train. If you love everything at home so much, great. Stay there. The rest of us are delighted to explore the world’s diversity, even when it means we encounter things that are less than perfect.
Number one–drumroll please: People who don’t do their fucking job. I don’t care what that job is. College student. Fast food worker (yes, I was once one of those). Member of Congress. Whatever it is you have responsibility for doing, do it. Preferably, do it well. Don’t leave the rest of the world to pick up your mess.



May 14, 2016
30 Day Writing Challenge: Day 14
14. Your life in 7 years
This one is easy. Within 7 years, I want to be retired (early!) from my day job. I plan to spend my time traveling and writing full time. My husband plans to retire by then too. If we’re lucky, the older kid will have graduated college (she’s a high school junior now) and the younger, currently in 7th grade, will be halfway through.
I’d like to move by then, too. After far too many years of living in small towns and suburbs, I want to live somewhere I don’t have to get in my car to do things. I want shops, restaurants, and coffee houses within easy walking distance. I also want to live a lot closer to a major airport. Portland, Oregon is my first choice of where to move to. My family’s there, plus it’s a great city.
I’m fairly prolific and peripatetic now. Imagine what I could accomplish without an Evil Day Job!



May 13, 2016
30 Day Writing Challenge: Day 13
13. Your commute to and from work/school/etc.
I have an extremely short commute: 2 miles, door to door. I could easily walk it, except I’m often carrying papers, books, etc. Plus it gets hot here and I’d rather not arrive at work all sweaty. So I do my walk after I drive home.
Sometimes I wish my commute was a little longer, because that’s when I listen to NPR. For the past 10 years–until just about a month ago–my homeward commute was actually longer because I had to pick the kids up from their schools. Their schools are over 2 miles from home and we have no bus service here. By the time I got to the schools, endured the awful traffic from other parents, waited, and drove home, over an hour would elapse. Ugh. Nowadays, though, the older kid is driving. She picks the younger one up on her way home. I’m gifted with an extra hour per day!



May 12, 2016
30 Day Writing Challenge: Day 12
12. Two words/phrases that make you laugh
Speed humps. These go a by a variety of names. I grew up calling them “speed bumps.” Around here, though, the signs all say “speed hump,” which always makes me laugh. Because, apparently, I am 12.
“Thank you for your patience.” This one happens when you’ve been on hold for a while–often because you’re trying to get the party on the other end of the phone to fix something they’ve messed up. And of course I never actually am patient, and probably neither is anyone else who hears that.



May 11, 2016
30 Day Writing Challenge: Day 11
11. Your current relationship; if single, discuss that too
I’m afraid my response to this is really boring.
I met my husband in high school. I was 15 and he was about to turn 17. I’d asked another boy to the Sadie Hawkins dance but he’d already said yes to someone else. But my cousin knew this guy and suggested him.
We moved in together during my sophomore year in college and got married about a week after I graduated. He supported me through college and grad school. When I got a professor job, I supported him through college.
We were married 11 years before we had our first kid. Then we had another.
Our 28th anniversary is next month.
See? Boring.



May 10, 2016
30 Day Writing Challenge: Day 10
10. A fruit you dislike and why
I’m going to cheat a little because I can’t think of any fruit I dislike. Sure, I favor some–cherries, blueberries, pineapple–but don’t hate any. Well, I don’t like plain raw mango. But I do love mango in anything, so that doesn’t count.
Let’s talk tomatoes instead. A my 13-year-old likes to point out, they are technically fruits rather than vegetables. And I really, really dislike raw tomatoes. Unless they’re in fresh salsa. I like them cooked or dried. I like them in things as long as they’re not raw. I love tomato soup (but not tomato juice). When I was really little, I was allergic to tomatoes. I outgrew that, but maybe it’s the root of my aversion. Don’t know. Just don’t make me eat ’em raw.


