So today starts the Blogger Book Fair, Yay!
For the next five days there will be interesting articles on this blog from some lovely guest authors, a competition to win a book bundle from Wittegen Press and some rambling from me.
The Book Fair is a chance for authors and bloggers to get together and talk about everything, including their books. It has been organised by the wonderful Kayla Curry and her organisational skills are just amazing.
So on my blog today you will find:
The Wittegen Press Blogger Book Fair eBook Giveaway - the giveaway will be running for all five days of the BBF
Horror Writing - Or Writing About Happy Families In Fiction by Eileen Sharp
The Twin Perils of Writing - Sophie's PoV
I am being hosted on some other wonderful blogs as well and my posts are here:
The Twin Perils of Writing - Tasha's PoV - this is the sister post of Soph's post linked above over on her blog Sophie's Thoughts and Fumbles
The Joys of Freebie Titles over at Drakosden
Also, just because I wish I had been at Comic Con the past weekend, have a pretty picture of Tom Hiddleston cosplaying Loki at the Marvel panel :D.
Monday, 22 July 2013
Blogger Book Fair - The Twin Perils of Writing - Sophie's PoV

Be warned, we gave each other permission to moan!

Sooo, what dirt can I spill on my darling big sister?...hmmm...this may take a while.
Okay, for a second, I'm going to take a step back and explain the situation. Tash (a.k.a Natasha Duncan-Drake and Tasha D Drake) and I are both writers, we run a publishing company together, Wittegen Press, and we each write our own style of books in many different genres, from urban fantasy through to erotica. However, as I've already mentioned, one series, a New Adult, Urban Fantasy Crime series called The Haward Mysteries, we write together. And this poses some challenges, given that, despite being twins, we have completely different writing methods and rituals.
We do have some writing techniques in common - we both write in English! About there, the similarity ends. I'm a planner: for the most part, I like to sit down and work through the major plot points and make some notes about most scenes. Tash will undoubtedly tell you I'm OTT on my note taking, but let me tell you, it pays when working with someone as scatty as my beloved sister. OMG, she's all over the place! One minute we'd be discussing a particular idea about how magic is cast in the contemporary Britain we were creating for a scene near the beginning of the book and the next she'd have made half a dozen leaps of logic off into ten scenes ahead on how we could use that to achieve x, y and z. Luckily, being her twin, I've had years of practice in keeping up and, most of the time, I could follow the strands and untangle them to make some sense.
Plus, of course, guess which muggins got to do the scene breakdown to make sure that little stroke of genius (yes, I will admit, sometimes she does have good ideas) gets remembered when we finally get to fleshing out that scene? I'll mention here that there was a certain amount of drawing from life in developing the long-suffering attitude of Theo, the older of our twin brother protagonists in The Haward Mysteries.
With The Great Butterfly Attention Span in the mix, it was sometimes hard work getting Tash to focus on the present, the bit of the plot we were actually developing (she likes the exciting bits, not so hot on the structure in between), but, eventually we had a general gist of the world we were creating, we'd discussed the twins, Remy and Theo until we had their back story straight, we had a scene breakdown and we'd agreed to write one twin each. We may have also had a wiki containing all that information by the time we'd finished as well. Yes, I know it sounds a bit anal, but I cannot count the number of times that reference had saved us from trawling through thousands of words looking for a name spelling, or a location description.
Okay, I think I've moaned enough - that was rather cathartic!
I'll be serious for a moment, just a moment, I promise - it was actually fun working with Tash, we wouldn't be about to start writing the second in the series if it had been a nightmare. There were moments where we could have cheerfully killed each other and we have some stand up rows about plot points, but, in the end, I think we produced a pretty cohesive universe to play in and an engaging story in Sacrifice of An Angel. I'm looking forward to starting work on number two, which will see Remy and Theo on secondment to The Drug Squad to help stop the dealers of a magical drug that is killing Natural Magic Users by draining them of their power.
~
Sophie Duncan is a UK author of genre fiction with Wittegen Press. She has been writing since she was a child and has been sharing her work with others since she discovered the internet in the 1990's. She has published original works in many genres, from contemporary fantasy, through crime and mystery drama, to erotic romance. All of her published books can be found listed at her author page on the Wittegen Press website.
Other places Sophie would love to connect with you are:
- Google+
- Her blog, Sophie's Thoughts & Fumbles
- Sophie also contributes regularly to Fantasy Boys XXX
- Twitter @thwax and @wittegenpress
- Wittegen Press on Facebook
- Tumblr
~
"Harry Potter (with grownups) meets Midsommer Murders with a magical version of C.S.I. thrown in for good measure." - Rob Drake
The body of a beautiful girl dressed in a ceremonial robe is found on a playground roundabout. Her throat has been ripped out and the roundabout has a bad case of perpetual motion. Is it a ritualistic, magical murder or a setup to distract from the real killer?
That is the question that faces twins, Theo and Remy Haward, detectives in the Sorcerous Crimes Task Force (SeCT), when they are called to the scene in the middle of the night. That and who could commit such an act. They must find the answers to these and other questions, all the while ensuring the general public finds out nothing about the magical world that co-exists with their own.
Armed with their experience, their natural magical abilities and their complimentary instincts, Remy and Theo must identify the victim, follow the evidence and find the killer before anyone else dies.
Excerpt
"Spegel," Theo addressed the mirror directly by its name and he felt the magic imbued into it flare: it was not a sentient creature and could not generate its own magic, but, like a battery, it remained charged with the power of its users and Theo sensed Remy all over it.
"What were you doing?" Theo enquired as he greeted the object's magic with his own and Remy's.
"I lost my house keys, I'm sure Satan's Little Helper pinched them and I needed to find them quickly," Remy explained a little defensively.
There were no rules about how trivial a Scry could be, so Theo just let that one pass, along with most other thoughts in his head. The complete darkness of the mirror's surface drew his eyes and his mind as he let it swallow his thoughts and, before he drowned in nothing, Theo focused their magic and intoned, this time in proper Grail, "Spegel, tonen Yannan Trowton."
The sensation of falling always caught Theo by surprise and he gasped as the mirror obeyed his command. Physically, he and Remy remained exactly where they were in the safety of the circle, looking into the blackness of the mirror, but Theo shuddered as, with his request, his mind's eye lit up with the colours of the magical world over Trowton. Just like the computer readouts of the lab, the in-built Expressions in the mirror conjured the reds, blues, greens and yellows of human convention. They appeared at first in a blur and the dark mirror gave them a metallic hue.
When the falling sensation stopped and his stomach caught up with him, Theo took a deep breath and examined the image in his mind. He was looking down, as requested, on Trowton and it was not street lamps that lit it up. Much of the town was dark or misty, unrevealed, but small spots, the odd car, or a roof, were lined by the colour of the magical Elements that someone had left on them. Some were so faint that the touch could have been mere chance, but others shone brilliantly and Theo could see several houses presenting impressive amounts of magic, probably the wards of those who lived there.
Theo did not try to identify the magic he was being shown, not yet, instead, his attention shifted to the wide open park, and more specifically to the little corner of it that still showed the bright spectrum of inhuman magic that the SCSI's had Profiled. The whole place was brilliant against the backdrop of the sleepy town and the nexus of it all was the little roundabout that, although it now stood motionless, had swirls of angry colour still circling it.
As his attention narrowed, so too the mirror followed his lead and the rest of the town fell back into the glass' inky depths, out of his consciousness, leaving Remy and him looking down on the storm of magic from twenty feet above it. Remy whistled at the mess they had only partially sensed two nights previously and observed, "How the hell are the cleanup crew going to handle all this?"
There were many theories about the entities from There, and Theo was reminded of one that suggested some of them used magic like animals in the normal world used colour, to display dominance, mating readiness, warnings and such. Theo had an inkling that the theory was at least partially right, because every instinct he had was screaming at him to back off.
"Like everything else about this case, carefully," Theo replied, his tone caustic as he gritted his teeth and he was glad of the protection that was flowing through them and their magic.
"So what do you want to do now?" Remy prompted, sounding just a little nervous. Theo paused: what he had planned next was both dangerous and difficult and would rely on Remy to boost their presence in the ethereal world of the mirror.
"We need to go into that and get physical," he finally announced.
"Feeling suicidal are we?" Remy's scathing response was not altogether unexpected.
However, Theo was not feeling confident enough to bark back orders, instead, he admitted, "Can you think of anything better? We have to be able to trace it and, to do that, we have to touch it."
"You're assuming it's that close to a Fade then?" Remy checked.
"A Fade is only us taking a shortcut through There, this can't be that different," Theo justified. "This thing is like a heavy-hitting Natural and from that lot down there it's clear it's not much on shielding, so we should be able to track the trail back to the source location just like an innate Fade."
Remy was silent for a moment and Theo waited for his twin's opinion. It was not unexpected when it came.
"We're not going in there, I am."
"No," Theo barked the order this time before his little brother charged in.
"I stand a better chance of defending myself if things get nasty," Remy objected.
"And that's why I want you watching my back," Theo explained himself more clearly. "Our protection is going to have to be storm-force and I want you concentrating on
that."
Remy shut up again, but Theo didn't have to see his twin to sense the disapproval from across the circle. His own magic levels were significantly less than Remy's, but they were considerably more than most Naturals and it could be galling to Theo when his brother underestimated his strength. However, he chose not to have that argument while in the immersion of the mirror, so he just waited until he heard a huffy, "I am not letting go of you. One hint of anything hinky and I'm pulling us both out of here."
"Of course," Theo returned passively.
Remy huffed a second time, but Theo knew he was going to get no more arguments and so he slowly backed off the protection and felt Remy taking his place. The protection gained a hard edge as he relinquished control and it told Theo how concerned Remy actually was. Once completely free to concentrate on the tumult of magic below him, Theo did not give himself time to rethink, instead, he let his attention sink into the residue.
This time, Remy's presence did not move with him and, as the alien magic encased him, Theo could not stifle a tremble back in the real world. Still, he reassured himself with the sense of his brother running through the power that kept him separated from the many varied hues of darkness around him. His instincts were still screaming at him to leave well alone, but finding the primary crime scene could cut the case by days and it was worth the risk. Very carefully, Theo changed his awareness from the visual interpretation he had initially created to one at a much baser level of his being.
For any Natural, magic was a part of their physical make-up as much as heart and lungs, and Theo felt the entity's magic rushing against him, chilling his skin in the warm night air. The touch made his heart beat faster and his stomach tied itself in knots as his human instincts tried to reject the foreign entity completely. He had had some contact with other creatures from There over the years: It had quite probably originated from There, but, with alien hostility all around him, Theo had to stifle a streak of panic that lanced through him.
"You okay?" Remy asked sharply.
The check was enough to ground Theo's involuntary nerves and he took a deep breath before responding, "This isn't pleasant."
"Then make it quick," Remy sounded superficially impatient, but Theo knew his twin's disquiet when he heard it.
"Will do," he promised and cast his attention through the mass of magic, searching for its source.
As his third eye was buffeted by the maelstrom around him, Theo was not surprised the roundabout had been perpetually turning and he wondered at the power of a creature that could waste so much magic. If Remy could be like a bull in a china shop sometimes, this entity was a T-Rex. Still, it made a clear trail and if he could find the point the magic had broken through into their world, he could start the process of tracing it. When Theo found it, he could have kicked himself for not zeroing in earlier: outlined in a distinct silver halo, the bulbous hub of the roundabout could not have been more clearly marked as the Point of Portal.
"Found the way in," Theo told Remy. "I'll give you one guess."
"They'll have to replace that whole roundabout," Remy observed, revealing his guess without bothering to answer directly.
"Hmm," Theo agreed, but was more interested in the way the ball of metal pulsed angrily as he focused on it.
Theo narrowed his attention down to just the point of entry and pushed his awareness at it tentatively. The reaction to his mental enquiry was anything but as reticent and Theo tensed as what his mind's eye had interpreted as a flash of silver turned into something much more violent. Pain sliced through him, ugly and ice cold and Theo's mind reared away from it, but he was still surrounded by the storm of left-over magic. Too late, Theo realised why the residue was so strong: it was still connected to its maker.
The anger in the magic was not old, the portal was not some left-over connection to There, it was deliberately open and Theo felt the rush of something coming rapidly closer as its magic closed in on him like a prison.
"Help!" he gasped as his senses started to spin.
"Theo!" Remy responded, the protection tightening round him as his brother spoke and then everything turned on its head as power pulled him in two directions.
The body of a beautiful girl dressed in a ceremonial robe is found on a playground roundabout. Her throat has been ripped out and the roundabout has a bad case of perpetual motion. Is it a ritualistic, magical murder or a setup to distract from the real killer?
That is the question that faces twins, Theo and Remy Haward, detectives in the Sorcerous Crimes Task Force (SeCT), when they are called to the scene in the middle of the night. That and who could commit such an act. They must find the answers to these and other questions, all the while ensuring the general public finds out nothing about the magical world that co-exists with their own.
Armed with their experience, their natural magical abilities and their complimentary instincts, Remy and Theo must identify the victim, follow the evidence and find the killer before anyone else dies.
Excerpt
"Spegel," Theo addressed the mirror directly by its name and he felt the magic imbued into it flare: it was not a sentient creature and could not generate its own magic, but, like a battery, it remained charged with the power of its users and Theo sensed Remy all over it.
"What were you doing?" Theo enquired as he greeted the object's magic with his own and Remy's.
"I lost my house keys, I'm sure Satan's Little Helper pinched them and I needed to find them quickly," Remy explained a little defensively.
There were no rules about how trivial a Scry could be, so Theo just let that one pass, along with most other thoughts in his head. The complete darkness of the mirror's surface drew his eyes and his mind as he let it swallow his thoughts and, before he drowned in nothing, Theo focused their magic and intoned, this time in proper Grail, "Spegel, tonen Yannan Trowton."
The sensation of falling always caught Theo by surprise and he gasped as the mirror obeyed his command. Physically, he and Remy remained exactly where they were in the safety of the circle, looking into the blackness of the mirror, but Theo shuddered as, with his request, his mind's eye lit up with the colours of the magical world over Trowton. Just like the computer readouts of the lab, the in-built Expressions in the mirror conjured the reds, blues, greens and yellows of human convention. They appeared at first in a blur and the dark mirror gave them a metallic hue.
When the falling sensation stopped and his stomach caught up with him, Theo took a deep breath and examined the image in his mind. He was looking down, as requested, on Trowton and it was not street lamps that lit it up. Much of the town was dark or misty, unrevealed, but small spots, the odd car, or a roof, were lined by the colour of the magical Elements that someone had left on them. Some were so faint that the touch could have been mere chance, but others shone brilliantly and Theo could see several houses presenting impressive amounts of magic, probably the wards of those who lived there.
Theo did not try to identify the magic he was being shown, not yet, instead, his attention shifted to the wide open park, and more specifically to the little corner of it that still showed the bright spectrum of inhuman magic that the SCSI's had Profiled. The whole place was brilliant against the backdrop of the sleepy town and the nexus of it all was the little roundabout that, although it now stood motionless, had swirls of angry colour still circling it.
As his attention narrowed, so too the mirror followed his lead and the rest of the town fell back into the glass' inky depths, out of his consciousness, leaving Remy and him looking down on the storm of magic from twenty feet above it. Remy whistled at the mess they had only partially sensed two nights previously and observed, "How the hell are the cleanup crew going to handle all this?"
There were many theories about the entities from There, and Theo was reminded of one that suggested some of them used magic like animals in the normal world used colour, to display dominance, mating readiness, warnings and such. Theo had an inkling that the theory was at least partially right, because every instinct he had was screaming at him to back off.
"Like everything else about this case, carefully," Theo replied, his tone caustic as he gritted his teeth and he was glad of the protection that was flowing through them and their magic.
"So what do you want to do now?" Remy prompted, sounding just a little nervous. Theo paused: what he had planned next was both dangerous and difficult and would rely on Remy to boost their presence in the ethereal world of the mirror.
"We need to go into that and get physical," he finally announced.
"Feeling suicidal are we?" Remy's scathing response was not altogether unexpected.
However, Theo was not feeling confident enough to bark back orders, instead, he admitted, "Can you think of anything better? We have to be able to trace it and, to do that, we have to touch it."
"You're assuming it's that close to a Fade then?" Remy checked.
"A Fade is only us taking a shortcut through There, this can't be that different," Theo justified. "This thing is like a heavy-hitting Natural and from that lot down there it's clear it's not much on shielding, so we should be able to track the trail back to the source location just like an innate Fade."
Remy was silent for a moment and Theo waited for his twin's opinion. It was not unexpected when it came.
"We're not going in there, I am."
"No," Theo barked the order this time before his little brother charged in.
"I stand a better chance of defending myself if things get nasty," Remy objected.
"And that's why I want you watching my back," Theo explained himself more clearly. "Our protection is going to have to be storm-force and I want you concentrating on
that."
Remy shut up again, but Theo didn't have to see his twin to sense the disapproval from across the circle. His own magic levels were significantly less than Remy's, but they were considerably more than most Naturals and it could be galling to Theo when his brother underestimated his strength. However, he chose not to have that argument while in the immersion of the mirror, so he just waited until he heard a huffy, "I am not letting go of you. One hint of anything hinky and I'm pulling us both out of here."
"Of course," Theo returned passively.
Remy huffed a second time, but Theo knew he was going to get no more arguments and so he slowly backed off the protection and felt Remy taking his place. The protection gained a hard edge as he relinquished control and it told Theo how concerned Remy actually was. Once completely free to concentrate on the tumult of magic below him, Theo did not give himself time to rethink, instead, he let his attention sink into the residue.
This time, Remy's presence did not move with him and, as the alien magic encased him, Theo could not stifle a tremble back in the real world. Still, he reassured himself with the sense of his brother running through the power that kept him separated from the many varied hues of darkness around him. His instincts were still screaming at him to leave well alone, but finding the primary crime scene could cut the case by days and it was worth the risk. Very carefully, Theo changed his awareness from the visual interpretation he had initially created to one at a much baser level of his being.
For any Natural, magic was a part of their physical make-up as much as heart and lungs, and Theo felt the entity's magic rushing against him, chilling his skin in the warm night air. The touch made his heart beat faster and his stomach tied itself in knots as his human instincts tried to reject the foreign entity completely. He had had some contact with other creatures from There over the years: It had quite probably originated from There, but, with alien hostility all around him, Theo had to stifle a streak of panic that lanced through him.
"You okay?" Remy asked sharply.
The check was enough to ground Theo's involuntary nerves and he took a deep breath before responding, "This isn't pleasant."
"Then make it quick," Remy sounded superficially impatient, but Theo knew his twin's disquiet when he heard it.
"Will do," he promised and cast his attention through the mass of magic, searching for its source.
As his third eye was buffeted by the maelstrom around him, Theo was not surprised the roundabout had been perpetually turning and he wondered at the power of a creature that could waste so much magic. If Remy could be like a bull in a china shop sometimes, this entity was a T-Rex. Still, it made a clear trail and if he could find the point the magic had broken through into their world, he could start the process of tracing it. When Theo found it, he could have kicked himself for not zeroing in earlier: outlined in a distinct silver halo, the bulbous hub of the roundabout could not have been more clearly marked as the Point of Portal.
"Found the way in," Theo told Remy. "I'll give you one guess."
"They'll have to replace that whole roundabout," Remy observed, revealing his guess without bothering to answer directly.
"Hmm," Theo agreed, but was more interested in the way the ball of metal pulsed angrily as he focused on it.
Theo narrowed his attention down to just the point of entry and pushed his awareness at it tentatively. The reaction to his mental enquiry was anything but as reticent and Theo tensed as what his mind's eye had interpreted as a flash of silver turned into something much more violent. Pain sliced through him, ugly and ice cold and Theo's mind reared away from it, but he was still surrounded by the storm of left-over magic. Too late, Theo realised why the residue was so strong: it was still connected to its maker.
The anger in the magic was not old, the portal was not some left-over connection to There, it was deliberately open and Theo felt the rush of something coming rapidly closer as its magic closed in on him like a prison.
"Help!" he gasped as his senses started to spin.
"Theo!" Remy responded, the protection tightening round him as his brother spoke and then everything turned on its head as power pulled him in two directions.
Blogger Book Fair: Eileen Sharp - Horror Writing – Or Writing About Happy Families in Fiction
Today I'd like to welcome Eileen Sharp to my blog as part of the Blogger Book Fair. Once you've read her ideas about writing families, don't forget to check out her books and her blog, all linked at the bottom of the post. |
Horror Writing – Or Writing About Happy Families in Fiction
You’ve seen it a hundred times. It’s a fantasy about an extraordinary protagonist who is an orphan and has no siblings, cousins or family--a lonely figure that makes his or her way alone in the world.
Yet ask any average person who has influenced them the most and you’re most likely to get the answer that it’s someone in their family. The truth is that at our core we deeply identify with the people we grew up with and in most cases, share DNA. It’s an elemental bond.
So why do authors choose to leave that goldmine of complexity and emotion to make orphans?
There are several. The first is that it immediately gives the reader a reason to sympathize with the character. If we all already have the common denominator of being connected with our families, then we instinctively know that being without them would have a certain emptiness, a suffering that is easy to understand.
Another reason is that it makes it easier for the writer to move along with the plot if they don’t have to deal with a parent who says “No, you cannot go out at midnight to meet your vampire boyfriend.” Parents create all kinds of sticky plot problems.
So it’s just easier. Healthy families also have the potential for the worst sin of all: being boring.
They are all good reasons and many a fine yarn has been spun because of them.
However, that being said, I relish the challenge of digging into that goldmine. I’m not talking perfect families--those are about as real as unicorns. Real families do have drama, because love inherently makes you care and therefore raises the stakes.
So here’s to the trick of writing about parents who are alive, siblings that actually care about each other and families that stick together, in fiction and life. It's a challenge either way, and well worth it.
About the Author:
Eileen is a YA writer from Pennsylvania and she is dedicated to writing positive fantasy. She enjoys giving her readers a good vibe when they read her books and is always writing in many genres.
Eileen's Blog
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Ren can see the future through ghosts that speak to him. He's okay knowing more than anyone else, until he meets the girl he's supposed to fall in love with. As he's drawn into her life, he is forced to keep a tragic event from her. Desperate to help, he wonders if the future is something he can share. | ![]() |
From the author of Certainty comes a fantasy set against the ticking clock of magic's end. The Unspeller and the Book of Days is an extraordinary fantasy about a powerful family and an ungifted child. Aesa Jereward finds himself the center of suspicion and fear, a possible sign of the foretold End of magic. Being part of a rich bloodline with deep magic only increases his misery. With the help of his extraordinary siblings and a dragon of mysterious origins, Aesa must find his own path in the destiny of magic. |
Certainty by Eileen Sharp |
The Unspeller and the Book of Days by Eileen Sharp |
The Wittegen Press Blogger Book Fair eBook Giveaway
In honour of the
are giving away a
Fantastic
eBook
Bundle!
For up to 6 chances to win this great prize, just check out the giveaway details below!
In the eBook Bundle, we'll be giving away:
- Sacrifice of An Angel (The Haward Mysteries #1) by Tasha and Sophie Duncan
- The End of The Journey (The Hidden War #1) by Sophie Duncan
- Death In The Family (Heritage is Deadly #1) by Sophie Duncan
- Book of Darkness: The Horror Stories From The Wittegen Press Giveaway Games
- Beyond Our Horizon: The Science Fiction and Fantasy Stories From The Wittegen Press Giveaway Games
- Supernature: Paranormal Stories From The Wittegen Press Giveaway Games
- Bright Young Things: The Young Adult Speculative Fiction Stories From The Wittegen Press Giveaway Games
- Cat's Call (The Chronicles of Charlie Waterman #1) by Natasha Duncan-Drake
- Cat's Creation (The Chronicles of Charlie Waterman #2) by Natasha Duncan-Drake
- Advent (Vampires: The New Age #1) by Natasha Duncan-Drake
- The Beginning (Vampires: The New Age #0.1) by Natasha Duncan-Drake
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Saturday, 20 July 2013
It's not Loki's Sceptre it's mine ;)
So I made something the other week (with some help from my husband who is very handy with a spray can and an extra set of hands).
I used this youtube vid tutorial as a basis, but did things a little differently in places.
The gem is an emergency light and whistle covered in string, spray painted and then shoved up the backside of two clear halves of an alien egg toy (they were a quid in Range), glued together (I used seriously strong super glue and left to dry for 24hrs rather than hot glue for this), coloured in with a blue sharpie and then Dremeled off at the end.
The rod is a broomstick handle (£2.49 in Range), cut to length and then covered in construction foam (£1 a sheet from Range - only needed one large one) and masking tape just like the video says. I couldn't get 1/4inch construction foam, so I used a bedding roll mat (£3.49 again from Range). I didn't hand paint though like it says in the vid, I used craft spray paint (the most expensive part of the build at £5 a can).
The blade is mostly done the same way as the tutorial using foam board and hot glue, but again I spray painted it. Hence I didn't attach the blade until after everything was painted, rather than painting it in one.
The masking tape you can see on the blade is because I could only get A3 foam board at a reasonable price (on offer from Amazon) so I had to join two pieces together. I did this with cocktail stick stubs, hot glue and a bit of tape to make sure it couldn't come apart.
It was a lot of fun, but two pairs of hands make it a lot easier some times and it takes a very steady hand for trimming the blade so the edges look sharp, so having someone else to help is really useful.
Please excuse me while I go take over the world ;).
Monday, 15 July 2013
Blogger Book Fair - coming soon
From the 22nd-26th of July I will be taking part in the Blogger Book Fair, which is a group of authors and bloggers getting together and sharing their work.
It's going to be a huge heap of fun, so please check back during those days when I will be hosting these wonderful authors and they will be hosting posts from me too:
Drako - fantasy/paranormal and romance author.
Allyson Lindt - romance and erotica author.
Eileen Sharp - family friendly fantasy author.
Eva Lefoy - romance and erotica author.
It's going to be a huge heap of fun, so please check back during those days when I will be hosting these wonderful authors and they will be hosting posts from me too:
Drako - fantasy/paranormal and romance author.
Allyson Lindt - romance and erotica author.
Eileen Sharp - family friendly fantasy author.
Eva Lefoy - romance and erotica author.
Wednesday, 10 July 2013
Recipe: Creamy Chicken Curry (low cal)
This recipe comes from the 5:2 Diet Recipe book by Jacqueline Whitehart. So far I have cooked three recipes from the book and this is the only one I really liked, one of the others was nice, but not worth the effort it took and the other just wasn't my thing. This one, however, is fabulous.
Prep time 10min, cooking time about 55min, but you can go away and leave it in that time because it's simmering.
This makes a lovely creamy, sweet curry with a tomato and onion base. My husband didn't even realise it was an onion base, however, because it cooks down to something like a soft chunky soup. You could use potatoes or Quorn or even lentils instead of chicken if you wanted to go with a vegetarian version. The chicken is literally a texture to take the sauce rather than offering much flavour so anything would work.
If you like more bite use hot chilli powder :).
Creamy Chicken Curry (245 kCal per serving, serves 4)
Instructions
Prep time 10min, cooking time about 55min, but you can go away and leave it in that time because it's simmering.
This makes a lovely creamy, sweet curry with a tomato and onion base. My husband didn't even realise it was an onion base, however, because it cooks down to something like a soft chunky soup. You could use potatoes or Quorn or even lentils instead of chicken if you wanted to go with a vegetarian version. The chicken is literally a texture to take the sauce rather than offering much flavour so anything would work.
If you like more bite use hot chilli powder :).
Creamy Chicken Curry (245 kCal per serving, serves 4)
- 1tbsp vegetable oil (I used a couple of squirts of 1Cal spray oil and it worked fine which will take the cal count down even lower)
- 1tsp cumin seeds
- 1/4 tsp black mustard seeds (I didn't have these so I used 1/8th tsp white mustard seeds and 1/8th tsp black onion seeds which tasted nice :))
- 2 onions, finely chopped
- 3 chicken breasts, cut into chunks (no skin)
- 2 tsp turmeric
- 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1/2 tsp ground ginger
- 1/2 tsp mild chilli powder
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 can tomatoes (400g tin)
- 125ml water
- 100g baby spinach
- 2 tbsp mango chutney
- 4 tbsp (60ml) light crème fraiche (I used the 3% be good to yourself version from Morrisons)
Instructions
- Heat the oil on medium either in a casserole or lidded saucepan (you will need the lid while simmering later).
- Add the cumin and the mustard seeds (or substitute) and fry for 1min or until they sizzle.
- Turn the heat right down (I removed the pan from the heat for a while because it was too hot) and add the onions. Sweat down with the lid on until they are soft and translucent. Usually takes 5mins or so.
- Add the rest of the spices and stir thoroughly.
- Add the chicken and stir to coat, but do not brown it.
- Add the tomatoes and water and bring to the boil.
- Turn down the heat, add the lid and simmer for 40 mins.
- Stir in the spinach and cook for 1-2 mins until it is completely wilted.
- Add the mango chutney and crème fraiche and stir, returning to the heat to make sure it is hot before serving.
I think it's the mango chutney that really makes this, but I'm sure the cinnamon helps. Very tasty.
The original recipe says it can be frozen. I just made it for two using half the amounts shown :).
Wednesday, 26 June 2013
Drabble Cascade week #16: Dark (R with warning for abuse trigger)
The Drabble Cascade happens every Tuesday and runs all week. We have a prompt word, this week's is 'hidden' and we invite anyone who would like to, to submit drabbles (100 word stories) or flashfic (up to 500 words). To play you simply write, post and add your link to the list at the bottom of this post. Anyone can join in and we accept original fic, fanfic or even meta as long as it is inspired by the word of the week.
This is a flashfic for this week's word.
Please be aware I am placing it behind a cut because it has possible triggering subject matter, although there is no actual adult content, simply adult concepts. If reports of child abuse are an issue for you, please do not click into this flash fic. This week I was rather darkly inspired.
This is a flashfic for this week's word.
Please be aware I am placing it behind a cut because it has possible triggering subject matter, although there is no actual adult content, simply adult concepts. If reports of child abuse are an issue for you, please do not click into this flash fic. This week I was rather darkly inspired.
Guest Blogging at the A to Z
Hello to one and all, I hope you are all well on this lovely sunny Wednesday.
Today I am lucky enough to have a guest blog up at the wonderful Blogging from A to Z Challenge site.
Today I am lucky enough to have a guest blog up at the wonderful Blogging from A to Z Challenge site.
For those who don't know the A to Z challenge happens yearly in April and all the bloggers who sign up post daily (except for Sundays), utilising each letter of the alphabet in turn. If you would like to see mine just my reflections post with links to all my A to Z posts is here. It's a great way to meet new people.
So, back to my guest post. I have chosen to blog about fanfiction because it is a subject close to my heart and seems to be a very hot topic at the moment. You can find my guest post at the following link.
Sunday, 23 June 2013
Fanfic: The Loco of Loki (Avengers 2012, Iron Man, Thor) (Tony/Pepper/Loki) NC17/18
Title: The Loco of Loki
Author: Beren (that's me, Tasha, in my fanfic guise :))
Fandom: Avengers 2012, Iron Man, Thor
Pairing: Tony/Pepper/Loki
Rating: NC17/18
Disclaimer: This story is based on characters and situations created and owned by Marvel et al. No money is being made and no copyright or trademark infringement is intended.
Warnings: SPOILERS for Iron Man 3, vampires
Summary: Tony gets an unexpected visit from Loki when the demi-god is supposed to be safely locked up in Asgard. The thing is he's pretty sure Loki didn't have fangs last time they met.
Author's Notes: I know Marvel has canonical vampires, but I don't read the comics and there haven't been any in the movie-verse so I'm just running with whatever I fancy :). Also, I started writing this before the teaser trailer for Thor 2 came out, so it mostly doesn't gel with that. Thanks to Soph for the beta.
Links to parts: (no login required at any of the sites)
LiveJournal : Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4
or
DreamWidth : Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4
or
at AO3 (Archive of Our Own)
Author: Beren (that's me, Tasha, in my fanfic guise :))
Fandom: Avengers 2012, Iron Man, Thor
Pairing: Tony/Pepper/Loki
Rating: NC17/18
Disclaimer: This story is based on characters and situations created and owned by Marvel et al. No money is being made and no copyright or trademark infringement is intended.
Warnings: SPOILERS for Iron Man 3, vampires
Summary: Tony gets an unexpected visit from Loki when the demi-god is supposed to be safely locked up in Asgard. The thing is he's pretty sure Loki didn't have fangs last time they met.
Author's Notes: I know Marvel has canonical vampires, but I don't read the comics and there haven't been any in the movie-verse so I'm just running with whatever I fancy :). Also, I started writing this before the teaser trailer for Thor 2 came out, so it mostly doesn't gel with that. Thanks to Soph for the beta.
Links to parts: (no login required at any of the sites)
LiveJournal : Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4
or
DreamWidth : Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4
or
at AO3 (Archive of Our Own)
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