Sherry Ellis's Blog, page 7
August 16, 2020
Latin Flavor Blog Hop Sign-Up

When: September 14-18Where: Your Blog
On September 15th, my new book, Bubba and Squirt's Mayan Adventure, will be released. To help get the word out, I'm having a blog hop. It's called, "Latin Flavors."
In the book, Bubba and Squirt try a couple of Latin dishes. I thought it might be fun to share recipes of food from Mexico and Central America.
Here's what participants will do:
1. Share a favorite "Latin Flavor" recipe2. Include information about my book in the post. I will provide all of that and send it to you a week before the blog hop.
If you'd like to participate, please sign up on the Linky List.
Thank you!
And to get you in a festive mood, here are some photos from my trip to Belize in 1998. They inspired several scenes in the story.



August 2, 2020
IWSG and Battling Writer's Block and Depression: Keep Writing with Fey Blog Hop

I hope you all have been well. This summer has been unreal. I for one, am ready to resume business as usual!
Anyway, it's time for the Insecure Writer's Support Group post. This month's question is, "Have you ever unexpectedly written in a genre you hadn't planned on?"
Hmmm. No, not really. Mostly because I'm a planner and not a pantser. I have written in genres I don't usually write in, but that was intentional. I can't say I've ever morphed into something I didn't intend. Honestly, I think I'd scare myself if I did! I do have a writer friend who began writing his story as a regular middle-grade book and has recently decided to switch to make it a graphic novel. Just because it's the trend these days and he thinks it would be fun to do so. What about you? Have you ever started writing in one genre and then found yourself switching to another mid-story?
Keep Writing with Fey Blog Hop
I am also participating in Chrys Fey's blog hop about what to do about writer's burnout, depression, and writer's block.
I'm kind of in that stage now. I've been writing for 15 years. It's a lot of work with very little monetary payback. I've also been writing about my characters, Bubba and Squirt for 12 years. I'm trying not to get sick of them because ideally, I'd like to get three more stories out which would be sort of a trilogy (five altogether, but the last three would not be stand-alones). I'm in the middle of chapter 14 of the 4th book. If I can get through it, I'll have just one more to do. So, I'm like the little engine that could. I keep telling myself, "I think I can, I think I can, I think I can..."
Normally, when I feel this way, I go out for a walk, work on another project, or play music. But I have so much work with all my other jobs, that I'm out of energy. That on top of COVID craziness and the stuff I've gone through in my personal life. I'm just plain tired.
So maybe Chrys' book will help. I have my copy. Now I need time to read it.
What about you? What do you do to help with these things?

Catch the sparks you need to conquer writer’s block, depression, and burnout!
When Chrys Fey shared her story about depression and burnout, it struck a chord with other writers. That put into perspective for her how desperate writers are to hear they aren’t alone. Many creative types experience these challenges, battling to recover. Let Keep Writing with Fey: Sparks to Defeat Writer's Block, Depression, and Burnout guide you through:
∙ Writer's block
∙ Depression
∙ Writer's burnout
∙ What a writer doesn’t need to succeed
∙ Finding creativity boosts
With these sparks, you can begin your journey of rediscovering your creativity and get back to what you love - writing.
BOOK LINKS:

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Chrys Fey is the author of Write with Fey: 10 Sparks to Guide You from Idea to Publication. She is also the author of the Disaster Crimes series. Visit her blog, Write with Fey, for more tips on how to reverse writer’s burnout. https://www.chrysfey.com/
July 7, 2020
Giveaway

I'm giving away 3 copies of Bubba and Squirt's Mayan Adventure, which will be released September 15th. Enter below for a chance to win.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
I'd like to say a word of thanks for your helpful advice on whether or not I should go to Florida. I've decided not to go. My daughter can send me photos or Facetime me during her apartment selection process. I want to be able to go to my dad's wedding and not worry that I'm going to contaminate him.
June 30, 2020
IWSG Post and Should I Go or Should I Stay?

It's time for the Insecure Writer's Support Group post of the month. The question is, "What would you like to see changed in the publishing industry?"
That's a tough one. Ebooks seem to be here to stay. And Amazon seems to be the mega-giant from whom everybody purchases books. I wish the little bookstores with physical books would be able to compete with Amazon and be found in every town. But that probably won't happen.
I guess the other thing I would like to see is an end to "trends." For a while, it was all about vampires. And then it was about books featuring diversity. And then in the middle-grade world, it's been all about relationships and bullying. Which is all good and well. But why do publishers have to go with the trends? Why can't they have a variety? Maybe people want to read something other than what everybody else writes.
Is there anything you'd like to see different in the publishing world?
And here's the other part of the post:
I'm supposed to go to Florida in a few weeks to see the University of Tampa and find an apartment for my daughter, who will be going there in August. The coronavirus numbers there are increasing and are now over 10,000. I'm concerned about getting it again. And I don't want to do that, especially since I have to go see my dad get married at the end of August. He's no spring chicken. I definitely don't want him to get it!
So, do I stay home and leave it to my ex to help her find the apartment and disappoint my daughter by not going, or do I go and risk getting the virus? What do you think?
June 24, 2020
Getting Out and About
Adventure number one: Tubing down the Hooch.

The Hooch, aka Chattahoochee River, in Georgia. Looks pretty, doesn't it?
This adventure involved hanging out with a bunch of teenagers who thought it would be a good idea to tube the Hooch. All was well until my tube got stuck on some rocks. Then I had to get out of the tube, into the river, to free myself. It wouldn't have been bad, except the part where I got stuck ended up being much deeper than anticipated. The freezing cold water came all the way up to my neck! So, not only did I have to get my tube over the rocks of a small waterfall, I had to climb over those rocks myself while freezing my little tush off! Mama was not pleased! Getting out at the end of the trip was a good trick, too. The current was moving a bit fast, and the exit point was on the opposite bank. I actually had to get out again and swim against the current, dragging my tube. Probably not very safe, but I managed to do it. Needless to say, by the end of the two-hour tubing expedition, I was extremely cold and tired! But hey, it was better than sitting in my apartment!
Adventure number two: Beach trip to Lake Lanier

Another trip with a bunch of teenagers. Same bunch, by the way. This time, I decided to stay on dry land and observe. These kids thought it would be fun to swim all the way out past the "safe swim zone" to the "kayak zone" buoys. I shook my head and watched as they swam, praying I would not have to call a rescue squad to save them. They made it to the buoy and hung out there, clinging to it for about 20 minutes. They must've been freezing! Finally, they decided to swim back, and almost all of them ended up floating on their backs, probably because they were so exhausted! So much for being invincible! The good news is, they all made it back safely.
So, that's what I did last week. What about you? Same old same old in quarantine?
Before I go, I'd like to let you know that I will be doing an online book tour in September to celebrate the release of Bubba and Squirt's Mayan Adventure. If you'd like to sign up to be a part of it, go here. Thanks to those of you who have already signed up! I'm looking forward to being a guest on your blog!

June 7, 2020
Book Release: Bad Fairy by Elaine Kaye
Today, I have a new book to tell you about: Bad Fairy by Chrys Feye's mom, Elaine Kaye. Read on to learn some new fairy words!

Title: Bad FairySeries: A Bad Fairy Adventure (Book One)Author: Elaine KayePublisher: The Wild Rose PressGenre: Fantasy Middle GradeLength: 66 pagesAge Range: 8-12
BLURB: Thistle Greenbud is not a bad fairy. She simply doesn't like rules, and it's just her luck that her homework is to create a new rule for the fairy handbook. But first, she has more important things to do. Like figure out how to get back at Dusty and Moss for playing tricks on her.
Before she can carry out her plan, though, disaster strikes and she finds herself working alongside the very fairies she wanted revenge on. Can they work together and trust each other, or will things go from bad to worse?
BUY LINKS:
Barnes and Noble, Amazon
When you write for children, you get to make things up and let your imagination run wild. For fairies, I didn’t want to use the same sort of terminology and popular phrases that kids use these days, because fairies wouldn’t know them! So, I decided to create fairy alternatives. I had fun coming up with phrases like okum sokum and boogles, two of the most commonly used words by Thistle and her friends.
To get hip with fairy language, check out these words and their definitions.
FAIRY SLANG:
Batty Eye - a facial expression of disgust or distrust.
Boogles - darn it, dang it.
Flea Fit - an outburst of anger.
Flutters - what the girl members of the Flutter Club call themselves.
Fuddlebug - similar to “boogles,” it means “shoot” or “crude.”
Moon’s Day - the Greek name for Monday.
Okum Sokum - pronounced oh-com so-com, it is the Flutter’s rallying cheer and means “YESSSSSSS!!!!”
Saturn’s Day - the Greek name for Saturday.
Speckles - amber pieces of fossilized tree sap used as money.
Spoogling - when a bad fairy throws rocks at another fairy while they’re flying.
Sun’s Day - the Greek name for Sunday.
Twisty - a tornado
EXCERPT:
“Now on to the subject of my tardiness. Dusty and Moss have struck again.”
The Flutters jump up. “Now what?” Those words echo in the clubhouse.
All of us have one thing in common—our dislike for Dusty and Moss. We are almost convinced they are related to trolls. As I tell them what happened, they sit on the edge of their chairs.
“They spoogled me!”
“Isn’t that dangerous?” Lilly asks.
“You bet. A pebble could’ve torn my wings. Then Moss grabbed my wing and flung me into a fern bush. See the tear in my shirt?” They get up to look. “Right now, I could be lying in the fern bush or on a hard leaf at Fairyview Hospital.”
Lilly stands up, facing the other Flutters. “We have to get even!” She raises a clenched fist.“I agree,” I say.
“Well, it can’t be today,” Clover interrupts. “I need to get home before my mom throws a flea fit.”
“I told my mom I wouldn’t be gone long, too,” Rose says. “She has a punishment all planned out if I’m late. I’ll have to pull thorny weeds from the flower beds.”
“Ouch,” we say in sympathy.
“As President, I end our meeting. I can’t get a Flutter in trouble. We will meet tomorrow morning. Now let’s go home.”
We start to zoom off in different directions.
“And watch for Dusty and Moss!” I warn.
“Okum sokum!” they holler back.
GIVEAWAY:
3 Signed Paperback Picture Books –Pea Soup Disaster, Doctor Mom, The Missing Alphabet

Eligibility: International
Number of Winners: One
Giveaway Ends: July 1, 2020 12:00am Eastern Standard Time
LINK: http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/disp...?
a Rafflecopter giveaway

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Elaine Kaye is the author of A Gregory Green Adventure series. She first created Gregory Green after her son, who loved her homemade pea soup, thus inspiring the story Pea Soup Disaster. Bad Fairy is her middle grade debut and the first of A Bad Fairy Adventure series.
Kaye has worked as a library assistant and teacher’s assistant in elementary schools in the Sunshine State. She currently lives in Florida, but she has called Michigan; Honolulu, Hawaii; and Okinawa, Japan home. She is a grandmother of three boys.
Amazon / Goodreads / BookBub / Instagram / Facebook Twitter / LinkedIn / Blog
June 3, 2020
IWSG Post

I realized just now that it's time for the IWSG post. I didn't write down the question as I normally do. So, I had to visit Alex's blog to see what the question was. Here's what it said: Writers have secrets. What are one or two of yours that people would never guess from your writing?
Maybe I blocked that question from my brain for a reason. My secrets are dark. I won't go into all the details, but I'm sure, based on my writing here and the types of books I write, you all think my family life is like the Brady Bunch. Fun, wholesome, and just wonderful. Well, it's not. I have dealt with mental illness, substance abuse and addictions, family members who have committed suicide, violence, gangs, and a whole lot of other not so great things.
Right now, life is rolling smoothly. I can say it's been okay for the last 2 months. And I'm extremely grateful for that! But for the last six years, which is more than half of my time blogging here, it's been rough!
While I'm telling you this, I am going to add that I absolutely positively do not support the legalization of marijuana! It's a horrible drug that alters one's mind and makes it so easy to transition to the so-called worse drugs like heroin and LSD. Those drugs lead to death! I almost lost my own son to a heroin overdose. And it started with marijuana.
So there you go. Bet you didn't see that coming!
May 29, 2020
Graduation: COVID Style

My daughter has graduated! And as fate would have it, she graduated during the COVID pandemic.
All things considered, I think it was a very nice graduation ceremony. The first part involved a parade. Seniors decorated their cars with balloons, posters, and paint and drove down the street to the school.

Onlookers cheered with noisemakers, posters, and more balloons. After stopping at Point A to check-in, the Seniors pulled around to the front of the school to receive their diploma. And of course, due to COVID safety regulations, the volunteers who distributed the diplomas all wore masks.

I was concerned there'd be some fender-benders. Put together a bunch of crazy high school Seniors and make them drive on the left side of the road -what could go wrong? But somehow it all seemed to work out.

The following day there was an online graduation ceremony. We sat there in the comfort of our home as the principal, Valedictorian, Salutatorian, and district supervisors gave their speeches. And then we watched as each student in the graduating class was announced and the pictures of about 400 Seniors went across the screen. The whole thing took about an hour.
It was kind of nice not having to go to downtown Atlanta, fight the traffic, and deal with the crowds. They should do it like this every year!
Have any of you had graduating kids in your family? If so, what was the ceremony like?
May 15, 2020
Guest Author, Stephanie Faris and The Popularity Code

Hi, Stephanie! Welcome to my pad!
Tell us about your latest book, The Popularity Code.
The Popularity Code focuses on an app called SlamBook, which allows students to anonymously post comments about each other online. Many of the comments are mean, which puts the main character, Faith, in a tough position. She figures out how to hack into the app and see who’s posting what, but she doesn’t know what to do with the information.
Online bullying is such a relevant topic for toady’s middle-grade kids. What do you hope they’ll take away after reading your book?
We seem to think that bad-mouthing others is a way to bond with others and win over friends. But those words have consequences. I would hope that readers would see that even when they’re posting anonymously, there’s someone at the other end of those messages, and words have consequences.
Without giving away too much of the story, tell us who your favorite character in the book is and your least favorite and why.
My favorite is always my main character. In this case, I really admire Faith’s determination to become a successful computer programmer. My least favorite is Janelle, the popular best friend. I started out rooting for her, but in the end, she’s half the person Faith is.
What challenges, if any, did you encounter when writing The Popularity Code?
That’s easy! The biggest challenge was writing a story where most of the action happens online. I had no idea how challenging that would be. I had to find ways to describe what was happening through the characters’ reactions, rather than just showing what was on the screen.
Do you have any advice for authors who write middle-grade stories?
So much of a person’s life at that age is tied into friendships. The way we all navigate those relationships at that age sets the stage for how we’ll handle relationships later in life, I think. Most of the best middle-grade books have friendship at their core.
Are you working on anything else?
I have three books in various stages of development right now: a spooky chapter book series and two middle-grade books. Fingers crossed on all three!
Blurb:Mean Girls meets The Clique in this relatable M!X novel that tackles the effects of online bullying.Faith Taylor is popular by association, thanks to her BFFs, Adria and Janelle. When a new website called SlamBook targets her school’s popular kids, Faith gets sucked in. And when she discovers her own page on the site, she finds herself obsessing over the comments people are posting about her. Some are good, some are…not so good. Faith becomes determined to match the negative comments to the people and begins to retaliate by posting negative comments of her own.Soon, Faith finds that people are talking about the comments she’s leaving. Even though she does feel guilty, it’s just so easy to be mean behind the anonymity of her laptop. But when her comments go too far, she realizes she must figure out a way to make things right before it’s too late.
My Review:When a new website called Slambook starts up at Faith Taylor's school, kids become obsessed about seeing what others write about them on their pages. Under anonymity, they can write things about other students too. What starts off as a place to share sweet comments about each other, soon turns to ugly bullying. So ugly that it sends one person into a serious state of depression. Faith needs to use her coding skills to figure out who is behind all the nasty comments and change things for the better.
The Popularity Code addresses a real problem middle-school kids face: Cyber-bullying. This book sheds light on the problem and shows how harmful hurtful comments can be. Perhaps those reading it will think twice before "slamming" someone when they realize how serious the consequences can be.
This is a well-written book with a topic that's very relevant to middle-school kids. 5 Stars.
Bio:

Buy Links:IndieBoundAmazonB&N
Social Links:FacebookTwitter
May 4, 2020
Voyagers The Third Ghost Book Release and IWSG Post

An Insecure Writer’s Support Group Anthology
Journey into the past…
Ten authors explore the past, sending their young protagonists on harrowing adventures. Featuring the talents of Yvonne Ventresca, Katharina Gerlach, Roland Clarke, Sherry Ellis, Rebecca M. Douglass, Bish Denham, Charles Kowalski, Louise MacBeath Barbour, Beth Anderson Schuck, and L.T. Ward.
Hand-picked by a panel of agents, authors, and editors, these ten tales will take readers on a voyage of wonder into history. Get ready for an exciting ride!
Release date – May 5, 2020
$13.95, 6x9 trade paperback, 168 pages
Print ISBN 9781939844729 / EBook ISBN 9781939844736
Juvenile fiction – historical/action & adventure/fantasy & magic
Founded by author Alex J. Cavanaugh, the Insecure Writer’s Support Group offers support for writers and authors alike. It provides an online database; articles; monthly blog posting; Facebook, Twitter, & Instagram groups; #IWSGPit, and a newsletter. A Writer’s Digest 101 Best Website for Writers and The Write Life’s Best 100 Website for Writershttps://www.insecurewriterssupportgroup.com/
Links:Amazon - https://www.amazon.com/dp/193984472X/
Barnes & Noble - https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/voyagers-yvonne-ventresca/1135912991?ean=2940163430857
ITunes - https://books.apple.com/ca/book/voyagers-the-third-ghost/id1493413956
Kobo - https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/voyagers-the-third-ghost
Goodreads - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/50364415-voyagers
And since it's time for the IWSG post of the month, let me do that.

The question is, what do you do to get in the "zone" for writing?
I grab my notebook, pencil, and all of my notes and park myself on the floor with my legs stretched out. I never sit at my desk when I write. I'm stuck there with my computer all the time for my other jobs. Getting away from my desk gets me into the writing zone. Sometimes I'll take my notebook outside. My favorite place is to write is at the beach. What about you? What do you do to get in the writing zone?