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Monthly Archives: November 2012

Romancing the Holidays with Liv Rancourt and “The Santa Drag”

25 Sunday Nov 2012

Posted by Elizabeth Fais in Romance

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Liv Rancourt, Romance, The Santa Drag

Today I have Liv Rancourt, the audaciously talented paranormal romance author,  as my guest. She’s here to talk about romance, and in particular why she writes fiction woven with romantic themes. Personally, I can’t think of a better topic to compliment the holiday season. Because everything is more magical when love is in the air. 

Take it away Liv…

Why Romance?

So, why romance? Yesterday I had a couple hours of downtime and spent it in the company of Aidan, Krys, Mirren, Lucy & their friends while reading the novel Redemption by Susannah Sandlin. Okay, there were vampires involved, but the love story rocked and I thoroughly enjoyed myself.

That just about sums it up. Write a love story that’s grounded in reality (or some paranormal version thereof), involving well-drawn characters and genuine conflict, and you will have me eating out of the palm of your hand…though that’s probably not an image we want to dwell on. Instead, know that I read to have fun, and good romances are almost always fun.

If I want real-world conflict (read: sadness & pain), I’ll go to work. Sometimes I don’t even have to go that far; conflict comes to me, invading my personal space. That’s how life is. When I read, I want the assurance that the characters are going to end up happy, which is one of the hallmarks of the romance novel.

And then there’s the whole falling-in-love thing. Like most people of the human persuasion, I love to fall in love. However, after seventeen years of marriage, pretty much the only falling I get to do these days is in the pages of a book. My husband is an awesome guy, but our infatuation days were a LOOOONNGGG time ago. With a romance novel, I can experience a little vicarious infatuation stretched out over two or three days, and almost always get dinner to the table on time.

It gets even better when I write my own. I have a whole thumb-drive full of crushes. My ideal romantic heroes are often tough guys with hard fists and soft hearts. Well, except for Joe, from my short story The Santa Drag. He’s an actor, and the heroine Mackenzie describes him as the Robert Downey Jr. type: good-looking, charming and just a little bit naughty. He’s turned up in a couple of my short stories now, flashing his “yep, I’m handsome” grin and driving Mack crazy.

In the end, I bet even you YA types are picking up what I’m laying down here. I mean, where would Twilight be without the romance, right? My own personal young adult period may have faded into the mists of time, but I remember being pretty focused on issues of the heart. Even…a bit obsessed at times.  It makes sense that romance should play a part in stories aimed at the YA crowd.

And it’s fun, which is as good a reason as any I can think of. So to keep the fun going, check out the following excerpt from The Santa Drag…

Things aren’t always what they seem, and this shopping mall Santa has secrets only her true love can reveal.

Peace,

Liv


Sneak Peak of… “The Santa Drag”

On a particularly busy Saturday, I was tired and thinking more about a double shot of espresso than I was about the pile of kids who wanted to sit in my lap. The weak winter sun was making its circle over the atrium where the Christmas Village was set up, and my roommate Shauna was buzzing by every so often to giggle at me from the sidelines. She was trying to get all of her Christmas shopping done in one day, which was a good trick for someone with as many fertile brothers and sisters as she had.

“Come sit on Santa’s lap.” Maya, the photographer and kid-wrangler, invited the next kid in line approach my golden throne. Well, it was fake gold, but the kids didn’t know that.

“No,” said a little girl with a stubborn crease between her brows. She was dressed in Seattle’s version of Christmas formal, a stiff, red velvet dress, likely made from organic fabric dyed with beets and rose hips. On her feet were two-toned leather MaryJanes that probably cost sixty-five dollars. At least the green corkscrew ribbons tied around her blond pigtails looked like they belonged on a child. I made myself as approachable as possible, getting down to her level and producing a big smile.

“Come on, Thula,” her mother said, tapping one French manicured nail on her cell phone. “Go sit up there with Santa so we can take your picture.” She sounded as if this was just one more thing to knock off the list.

“It’s okay, sweetie.” Maya put on her encouraging smile. Maya was a tiny thing, barely bigger than most of the kids we saw, with long dark hair, a tiny gold hoop pierced through one nostril, and bugged-out eyes that looked like they’d been molded out of chocolate. She was non-threatening as an adult could possibly be. The kid stared at her and bit down on her bottom lip. At least she wasn’t crying. Yet.

“You want to come tell Santa what to bring you for Christmas?” I kept my voice pitched down somewhere under my sternum. It helped that I had one of those raspy lady voices that earned me a permanent spot in the tenor section whenever I sang in choir.

“No.”

Sometimes less is more when you’re dealing with preschoolers. We went back and forth for several minutes until  the kid went from biting her bottom lip to letting it pooch out and tremble. Never a good sign. Finally, after a ton of coaxing, she was more-or-less close to me,  squatting down on the other side of one of the big pretend presents that ringed my throne. That was good enough for her mom, and Maya snapped a picture.

When she was done, the little girl glared at me from behind the big, glossy red ribbon that topped the present. “Bring me a baby brother,” she bellowed and took off running..

Mom’s glare was meaner than the kid’s had been. Hey, it’s not like I made any promises.

The kid ran full tilt past the pseudo-Tyrolean houses that made the Village, and out through the crowds of shoppers. She stopped in the middle of an open space and cut loose, her sobs echoing around the smoky glass dome that covered us. We could hear her carrying on until she and her mom got swallowed up by the Ross store at the end of the north hallway. The whole place fell into a bit of a hush when she was gone, as  everyone exhaled in relief. This close to Christmas, none of us needed a crying child to ratchet up the stress level.

A young mother was next in line. She came into the Christmas Village and positioned a slightly damp baby on my lap, moving as if something hurt. The baby was so young that Mom still looked a little pregnant under her loose denim-blue shirt. Or maybe she was already pregnant with number two. I’m not so good with the principles of baby production. Well, I understand the basic concepts, but haven’t had that many opportunities to put them into practice.

The brief quiet was interrupted by a yodeling squeal that I recognized. I stared into the crowd until I caught Maya looking at me funny. I stuck on a smile as close to my normal, jolly-Santa shtick as I could get, and she settled back down behind her camera. The reason for my roommate Shauna’s squeal had me completely rattled. In the two or three beats I’d looked out from behind my wire-rimmed glasses as Mack-the-girl, I’d seen Shauna giving someone a big hug. A really handsome someone. Joe McBride. Joseph Timothy McBride. The actor. The real-life, got a soap opera gig and several commercials and you saw him in Scream 2 actor. The only guy I ever really loved.

Ooh, now she’s got a problem! Will Mack turn all Creepy-Kringle? Will Joe recognize her? What’s a Santa to do?  😉

The Santa Drag is available from Still Moments Publishing, Smashwords, and Amazon.

About Liv

Liv Rancourt writes paranormal and romance, often at the same time. She lives with her husband, two teenagers, two cats and one wayward puppy. She likes to create stories that have happy endings, and finds it is a good way to balance her other job in the neonatal intensive care unit. Liv can be found on-line at her website & blog (www.livrancourt.com), on Facebook (www.facebook.com/liv.rancourt), or on Twitter (www.twitter.com/LivRancourt).


Got Questions for Liv? Here’s Your Chance…ask away!


Thanksgiving Irreverence … Muppet Style

22 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by Elizabeth Fais in Holiday Irreverence, Muppets, Music

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Alabama Bound, Muppets, Penguin Pilgrims, Start-Your-Own-Country Day, Thanksgiving

Penguin Pilgrims Alabama Bound…

Discover Plymouth Rock…

…Ford Rock and Chevrolet Rock too!

Don’t believe me? See for yourself…


Happy Start-Your-Own-Country Day!


Let’s Talk Turkey: Fun Gobbler Facts

16 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by Elizabeth Fais in Animals, Fun Facts

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Disneyland, Elizabeth Fais, Fun Facts, Thanksgiving, Turkeys

Thanksgiving can be stressful, especially when you’re forced into making small talk with Aunt Beulah and Uncle Ogden who you haven’t seen in decades and don’t have a flea bit in common with besides a few random genes.

Never fear! This post will save your sanity, while it dazzles Beulah and Ogden with a wealth of tantalizing facts. You’ll see!

15 Things You May Not Know About Turkeys

  1. Benjamin Franklin wanted the Turkey to be the national bird of the United States instead of the Bald Eagle.
  2. It is NOT TRUE that domestic turkeys are so dumb that they will look up at falling rain until they drown.
  3. Turkeys lived almost ten million years ago.
  4. The wild turkey is native to Northern Mexico and the Eastern United States. [image: wild turkey, Wikipedia]
  5. The turkey was domesticated in Mexico and brought to Europe in the 16th century.
  6. Baby turkeys are called “poults” and are tan and brown.
  7. Wild turkeys can fly for short distances up to 55 miles per hour, and run up to 20 miles per hour. Domestic turkeys have been bred so they cannot fly.
  8. Turkeys can see color and detect movement at almost a hundred yards away.
  9. The ballroom dance the “turkey trot” was named for the short, jerky steps that turkeys take.
  10. Wild turkeys spend the night in trees. They especially like oak trees.
  11. When fully mature, turkeys have 3,500 feathers.
  12. The phrase “talk turkey” means “to get down to business”, and originally came from an anecdote from the early 1800s.
  13. There are three cities in the United States named after this holiday bird: Turkey, Texas (population 492), Turkey Creek, Louisiana (population 357), and Turkey, North Carolina (population 269).
  14. Live Thanksgiving turkeys have been presented to presidents since the Lincoln administration. However, it wasn’t until the first Thanksgiving of President George H.W. Bush, in 1989, that a turkey was officially pardoned.
  15. Starting in 2005, Presidentially pardoned turkeys were flown to Disneyland, where they served as grand marshals of the theme park’s annual Thanksgiving Day parade and live out the rest of their lives at Big Thunder Ranch in Frontierland.

NOTE: For all you animal enthusiasts, I spoke at length with the animal care Cast Members at Big Thunder Ranch when I was at Disneyland. They assured me  that any animal at Big Thunder Ranch is only available to the public for minimal periods of time. Then they rotate the animals back into their private areas and bring out new animals, so they don’t get stressed from over exposure to the public.


Do you have any fun Thanksgiving facts to share?

Some of us need all the help we can get on these festive occasions!


Animated Storytelling: The Character of a Walk

10 Saturday Nov 2012

Posted by Elizabeth Fais in Animation, Character, Story, Writing

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Animated Storytelling, Disney's Nine Old Men, Elizabeth Fais, Frank and Ollie, Frank Thomas, Ichabod Crane, Legend of Sleepy Hollow, Ollie Johnston, Pinocchio, Stacy Stokes, Walt Disney

Good animation is based on good storytelling, conveying thoughts, feelings, and emotions by showing rather than telling. One of the principle ways of defining character in animation is “the walk”.

It’s All About the Walk

In animation, “the walk” of a character is everything. That’s because a simple walk isn’t … well … simple. Visually, it is one of the most defining parts of a character. A walk reveals personality and telegraphs mood. You can tell how someone feels by the way they carry themselves, move their arms, and by the quickness or slowness of their step.

Ichabod Crane, in Walt Disney’s “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”

Walking With Emotion

In short, a walk conveys character and emotion without saying a word, for example:

  • Depressed, discouraged: Head down, shoulders slumped, hands in pockets, slow steps, dragging their feet
  • Happy, elated: Head high, shoulders back, arms swinging, bouncy steps
  • Angry, determined: Leaning forward, chin jutting out, brisk pace
  • In love: Ambling stroll, relaxed, distracted gaze, blissful smile

An extensive resource for conveying emotion through action is The Emotion Thesaurus: A Writer’s Guide to Character Expression. Keep a copy by your side while you are writing and revising. You won’t regret it!

Walk in Your Character’s Shoes … Literally

A great way to internalize a character’s mood is to imitate their walk. The old saying “walk a mile in someone else’s shoes” is too true. Which is why mimicking character movements is a common practice for animators. They physically act out scenes as their character, to study action and emotion.

Savvy writers do this too. Stacy Stokes,  took an improv class to study character first-hand. You can read about her experience in Walking Game (Things I Learned in Improv Class, Volume 4: Getting Into Character).

Tips From a Pro

Ollie Johnston, one of Walt Disney’s “Nine Old Men“, shared the following insights for enhancing character through motion:

  • Show ideas or thoughts, with the attitudes and actions.
  • Let the body attitude echo the facial expression.
  • Show what your character is thinking.
  • The thought and circumstances behind the action are what make the action interesting.  Here’s an example: A man walks up to a mailbox, drops in his letter and walks away. … OR … A man desperately in love with a girl far away rushes to the mailbox, then carefully drops the letter, into which he has poured his heart out, into the mailbox with a sigh.

For more tips on showing emotion through movement, visit the Frank and Ollie web site.

Contrasting Characters and Their Walks

Theory is all well and good, but I’m one of those people who need examples in order to learn. The following two clips show the walks of two opposite-poles characters, Ichabod Crane and Pinocchio. See how much of their characters you can discern just from studying how they walk.

  • Ichabod Crane in Walt Disney’s “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”…  Ichabod has a walk like no other. It’s one of the most distinctive walks in Disney animation, thanks to legendary animator Frank Thomas. I’d apologize for the “White and Nerdy” song this is set to, if it weren’t so fitting for the character!


  • Then there’s Walt Disney’s “Pinocchio”… You couldn’t find a more different character from ol’ Ichabod, and it’s immediately apparent from Pinocchio’s walk. There’s no music, but something “Short and Bouncy” would have been fun.



What do you notice most about the way someone walks?


The NaNoRevMo Charge!

03 Saturday Nov 2012

Posted by Elizabeth Fais in NaNoRevMo, Writing

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Elana Johnson, Elizabeth Fais, NaNoRevMo, NaNoWriMo, National Novel Revising Month, National Novel Writing Month, Revising

Some of you may know that I’ve been slugging my way through the (hopefully) final revision of my Work In Progress (WIP). I’m hip deep in ripping-and-revising, but progress has been slow going (for lots of reasons).  I knew if I stopped to dash off a new project for NaNoWriMo, I might never complete this WIP, and I wasn’t willing to take that risk. So, what to do? I needed a dose of serious inspiration. Then I realized…

When revising gets tough, the tough do NaNoRevMo!

I learned about the National Novel REVISING Month cavalcade from Young Adult Author, Elana Johnson’s recent blog post. My immediate reaction was, “Sign me up!”

I’m late to the NaNo starting gate so I’ll have to charge ahead to catch up. Especially considering how much work still needs to be done on this revision. It’s borderline insanity. But that’s ever stopped me before.

So, here it goes. From this day through the end of this month, my goal is to revise the following until they shine:

  • Young Adult supernatural mystery WIP
  • The query letter for this project

The Charge of the Write Brigade!

As I embark upon the Charge of the Write Brigade, my blog posts may be less frequent. But with so many folks participating in NaNoWriMo, I know everyone will understand. My motto for the rest of this month is going to be:

Sleep when you’re dead!


Is Anyone else focusing on revising this month?

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