Author Archives: Barbara DeMarco-Barrett

Are you more cat or dog?

Light Sunday fare….

I’m a sucker for these sorts of silly quizzes. You can click on the link below to take the test. Here are my results:

You Are: 40% Dog, 60% Cat

You and cats have a lot in common.
You’re both smart and in charge – with a good amount of attitude.
However, you do have a very playful side that occasionally comes out!
Are You More Cat or Dog?

Report back with your results.

Harry Potter Harry Potter Harry Potter


At an Angels game last night, as we took our seats, I turned around and saw yet another person reading the latest Harry Potter.

Am I the only person I know who has not finished an entire Harry Potter novel? It’s great that J.K. Rowling gets kids reading, and entrances adults as well, but I just cannot get into these books. I don’t tend to not go for fantasy or science fiction (though I loved Dune and Stranger in a Strange Land) and never have. Not that I haven’t always had a ton of things in my life from which I’d like to escape.

When I read fiction, which is most always, I’d rather spend my time with realism (however far-fetched): a literary/main stream novel or suspense. (I just read Diana Abu-Jaber’s Origin, which fits both of those categories. She was just on the show. I loved the book.)

I have a good friend that adores Harry Potter. She is bright, funny and well-read. We talk about how reading inclinations evolve.

You Harry Potter fans out there–is this your favorite type of writing? Has it always been? Or was there a transforming moment where one minute you were, say, a lover of D.H. Lawrence or Lawrence Block, and the next moment it was Harry Potter? Seriously….! Inquiring minds want to know. This mind, anyhoo.

A few writerly web sites

If you are in need of prompts, here’s a great site. Check it out.

Also, are you familiar with GoodReads.com? Writers and readers talking about books. I quite like it. Click here.

And paperbackswap.com (thanks to Judy) is a great place to request books and swap them for books you want. Read more here.

At the site for the American Society of Journalists and Authors, you can read the public section of The ASJA Monthly, which I edit. Click here and scan down the left side for The ASJA Monthly.

I know I missed a ton. I will post more in the coming days. And if you know of one you like, or even your own, please post it here.

Subscriptions survey

The other day as I was going through old Utne magazines, it occurred to me, once again, how much I love this magazine. I always seem to find articles that are priceless, and because Utne reprints articles found in other articles, I discover new journals–new to me, anyway. Brick is one such journal. In this particular Utne, I was reading about what Annie Proulx would be if she wasn’t a writer. Cabinet maker was one. The article pointed to the issue of Brick that it was originally published in, so I went to the web site (Brick‘s) and ordered the 2003 journal. love Utne.

Then I began thinking of the magazines and papers that find their way into this house:

Utne
Los Angeles Times
Wall Street Journal
Poets & Writers
The Writer
Writer’s Digest
Westways
Country Living
Interweave Knits
Yankee
(a gift subscription from Noreen)
Boy’s Life (Travis’ magazine)

I used to subscribe to the New Yorker, but they arrived too quickly. I still have a pile I’m trying to get through. I also recently subscribed to The Atlantic Monthy, Food & Wine, Conde Nast Traveler, Travel + Leisure but let them lapse.

What do you subscribe to, and what do you love most?

Fantasy writers wanted

I can’t remember where I saw it–it was on one of the publishing reports, yesterday, I think–but I read that agents and publishers are looking for the next Harry Potter/J.K. Rowling. If you’re a fantasy writer for adults and children, this may be your time.

I was thinking of my former student Lacy, who now lives in Colorado. Lacy….Lacy….you out there? How’s that novel coming, the one that we loved so much?

Did anyone else see that write up? Where was it?

Back to Starletta’s Kitchen

In Mosley’s book, This Year Your Write Your Novel, which I mentioned in the last post, he talks about why it’s important to work every day. I’ve also talked about his essay on writing in which he says you must visit with your work daily, and if you let three days go by, the dream of the work evaporates. (Google “Walter Mosley New York Times Writers on Writing” and you will find the essay I’m talking about.)

Starletta’s Kitchen sat untouched for three weeks or more while I worked on the proposal and so when I picked it up this morning, it took a while to realize where I was at. I saw the blue pages of the new draft (Ron Carlson said he types different drafts on different colored paper so he knows what draft to grab for readings) and realized I had already gone through the entire mss., crossing things out, deleting, making notes for places to add, and had already begun typing out a new draft. Duh.

And so was reminded of Walter Mosley’s advice to visit your work daily, else lose the drift, lose your place, and lose motivation.

…..

Travis and I were watching the Food Network last night and Bobby Flay (and if you watch the Food Network, you know who he is) said, “If you’re not nervous about your passion, you’re not passionate about it.” I ran and wrote this down to share with you. So true. Often we misinterpret nervousness or anxiety and stop doing what it is that makes us anxious rather than throwing ourselves into it.