Thursday, July 28, 2011

10 Rules of Writing - Elmore Leonard's


1 Never open a book with weather. If it's only to create atmosphere, and not a charac­ter's reaction to the weather, you don't want to go on too long. The reader is apt to leaf ahead look­ing for people. There are exceptions. If you happen to be Barry Lopez, who has more ways than an Eskimo to describe ice and snow in his book Arctic Dreams, you can do all the weather reporting you want.

2 Avoid prologues: they can be ­annoying, especially a prologue ­following an introduction that comes after a foreword. But these are ordinarily found in non-fiction. A prologue in a novel is backstory, and you can drop it in anywhere you want. There is a prologue in John Steinbeck's Sweet Thursday, but it's OK because a character in the book makes the point of what my rules are all about. He says: "I like a lot of talk in a book and I don't like to have nobody tell me what the guy that's talking looks like. I want to figure out what he looks like from the way he talks."

3 Never use a verb other than "said" to carry dialogue. The line of dialogue belongs to the character; the verb is the writer sticking his nose in. But "said" is far less intrusive than "grumbled", "gasped", "cautioned", "lied". I once noticed Mary McCarthy ending a line of dialogue with "she asseverated" and had to stop reading and go to the dictionary.

4 Never use an adverb to modify the verb "said" ... he admonished gravely. To use an adverb this way (or almost any way) is a mortal sin. The writer is now exposing himself in earnest, using a word that distracts and can interrupt the rhythm of the exchange. I have a character in one of my books tell how she used to write historical romances "full of rape and adverbs".

5 Keep your exclamation points ­under control. You are allowed no more than two or three per 100,000 words of prose. If you have the knack of playing with exclaimers the way Tom Wolfe does, you can throw them in by the handful.

6 Never use the words "suddenly" or "all hell broke loose". This rule doesn't require an explanation. I have noticed that writers who use "suddenly" tend to exercise less control in the application of exclamation points.

7 Use regional dialect, patois, sparingly. Once you start spelling words in dialogue phonetically and loading the page with apos­trophes, you won't be able to stop. Notice the way Annie Proulx captures the flavour of Wyoming voices in her book of short stories Close Range.

8 Avoid detailed descriptions of characters, which Steinbeck covered. In Ernest Hemingway's "Hills Like White Elephants", what do the "Ameri­can and the girl with him" look like? "She had taken off her hat and put it on the table." That's the only reference to a physical description in the story.

9 Don't go into great detail describing places and things, unless you're ­Margaret Atwood and can paint scenes with language. You don't want descriptions that bring the action, the flow of the story, to a standstill.

10 Try to leave out the part that readers tend to skip. Think of what you skip reading a novel: thick paragraphs of prose you can see have too many words in them.
My most important rule is one that sums up the 10: if it sounds like writing, I rewrite it.

Frist writers. --Dialogue Don'ts


Mastering fast-paced, plot-forwarding dialogue is a must for writers of romance fiction. However, learning what not to do is a big part of mastering this element. Following is a list of dialogue don'ts:
  • Don't use a lot of dialect. This can be very hard to read. Instead, choose one or two words to give the tone and flavor of the dialect.
  • Don't repeat in dialogue what you've just said in internal thought. Repeated information is boring.
  • Don't let your characters tell something to someone, or explain what they already know. Delete any line of dialogue that starts with "I know you already know this but … "
  • Don't allow your characters to tell the entire story again to another character when the reader already knows it. Opt instead to fade out of the conversation. For example: "I went to work and …." Sarah told Brent the entire story.
  • Don't use high-dollar words or avoid the use of contractions in dialogue unless it is a character trait.
  • Don't repeat names in dialogue. For example: "I want to go home, Cindy. Please, Cindy. Listen to me. Cindy, I'm serious."
  • Don't allow your characters to give a speech in dialogue. If someone has something lengthy to say, break it up with internal thought, other people's dialogue, or action.
  • Don't allow everyone to sound the same. Use speech patterns and word choices to make each character's dialogue unique.
Probably the biggest "don't" when writing dialogue is … Don't be boring. Your readers expect your dialogue to be exciting, invigorating, and provoking. Don't disappoint.

First time writeres -why Dialogue Is So Important

While novels are divided into paragraphs, scenes, and chapters, your words belong to one of two categories: dialogue or narrative. You will probably never hear a reader complain that she would have loved more narrative from an author. While both are needed to build a novel, the narrative is considered the passive component, while the dialogue is the "going places" component.

Conversation is the communication between two or more people. While dialogue is words spoken between your characters, the real communication in dialogue is between the writer and the reader. When you place quotation marks around words, it's as if you are saying to the reader, "Pay attention; this is important."

Readers not only expect dialogue, they demand it. One of the first things a potential reader will do in a bookstore is to open a novel and check for the white space on the beginning pages. A lot of white space generally means a lot of dialogue. Readers are no dummies; they know if written correctly, more dialogue means a faster pace and more conflict. White space is a good thing.

A word of caution for those writing historicals: your dialogue will need to be written to reflect the time period. Readers are very savvy about their favorite time periods, so be aware of the words and speech patterns of the era you have chosen for your novel.

The reader also assumes that if characters are talking, something worth talking about is happening. In real life, you make small talk; you may discuss the weather, and exchange pointless chitchat. Not so in your novels. If readers wanted casual chatter, they would pick up the phone and call their aunt who talks too much about nothing. In fiction, dialogue has a job to do. And if your dialogue can do double duty, that's even better.

Dialogue Shows Character
You've heard the adage, "You are what you eat." When considering dialogue and your characters, you might say, "They are what they speak." The words that come from your characters' mouths will tell the reader who they are. Well-written dialogue can also give the reader information about other characters. Here's an example:

Picking up a five-pound catfish she'd caught from the lake that morning, Thelma Baits slapped it down on the cutting board and grabbed a knife. "People around these parts are known for being friendly, Mr. Nelson, but we don't beat around the bush."

She lopped off the fish's head and tossed it into the sink. "I'm plum grateful that you want to protect us and all, but I ain't impressed that you walk into my home dressed like some big-city doorman and talking with those high-dollar words. My niece has already been hurt by your kind once. You lay a pinky on that girl, and I'll skin your well-dressed ass just like I'm skinning tonight's supper."

Every piece of dialogue spoken by your character is an opportunity for your reader to get to know your character. Dialogue gives the reader information about where your character is from, hints at their education level, and shows what the character cares about.

Dialogue Moves the Plot Forward
Dialogue keeps the story moving. Instead of telling the reader what's going to happen next, let the reader learn it through dialogue. For example:

Ashley stormed up to the desk clerk. "I'm here to see Mr. Logan."
"You must be Ashley." The man reached into the desk, rustled with some papers and then handed her an airline ticket. "Mr. Logan said to tell you that if you wanted to talk to him, you'd be there before morning."

Ashley stared at the ticket, then blinked, her fury brought tears to her eyes.
"That egotistical ba — " She bit off her last word. "He seriously thinks I'll fly to freaking Paris to see him?"

The man half-smiled. "Yeah, and what really chaps my ass is that he's generally right."
Dialogue Sets Up the Conflict
Good dialogue can introduce the conflict and get a story rolling with a bang. What can someone say to your character, or your character say to someone else, that can set the conflict in motion? Here's an example:

Detective Brit Hansen hailed the cab, glanced at his watch, and jumped into the backseat. He friggin' couldn't believe he'd overslept. "Airport." He slapped the seat.
The man looked over his shoulder. "You not listen to the news?" He spoke with a heavy accent.
"Forget the news," Brit said. "A woman I already don't deserve is waiting on me and I'm an hour late. Drive."

The man frowned. "Ah, SeƱor, airport is closed. Men with guns. And police say maybe they have bombs. This country, it get as bad as my own."
Dialogue Helps Create Sexual Tension

Whether it's pillow talk, flirting banter, or whispered promises of seduction, dialogue can up the sensual heat of your romance. For example:
Beth looked up from her menu at her brother's best friend. "Do you see something you want?"

Tom's bedroom eyes crinkled around the corners with his smile. "I do. But what am I going to have to do to talk you into it?"

The heat in his gaze felt like summer sun on her skin. She leaned in so only he could hear her words. "I'm not going to bed with you."
He leaned in closer, his lips a breath away from hers. "So I guess the double-decker banana split is out, too?"

Don't be afraid to have fun with your dialogue. And do let the tone of your book be reflected in your characters' speech. If you're writing a romantic comedy, use the dialogue to make your readers laugh.
If you're writing a drama, use the character's words to bring a tear to your reader's eyes.
Dialogue Creates Suspense

Good dialogue always creates questions in your reader's mind. When a reader is wondering what will happen next, it's called suspense. Every book, be it a romantic suspense or a romantic comedy, needs suspense. The reader's urge to turn every page is fueled by suspense — she has to know what will happen next. Dialogue can create suspense in different ways.
  • By stating a question that the reader should be wondering. For example: "If Harry didn't try to kill her, then who did?"
  • By having a character say something so surprising that the reader must read on to see how the others characters will react. For example: "I did something terrible today." Mary dropped on her sister's sofa. "I … I had a big fight with my boss and I left work and broke into his house and then I … "
    "You what?" her sister asked.
    "I kidnapped his goldfish."
  • Dialogue can create suspense by showing a character's unwillingness to talk about something. The reader will start to wonder what it is that this character does not want to talk about. For example: His mom walked into the room. "Melissa called twice today. Do you know what she wanted?"
    "Yeah." David stood and walked over to the bar.
    "So what was it?" his mom queried.
    He could feel her watching him. "What was what?" David feigned ignorance and opened the bar cabinet.
    "What was it that Melissa wanted?"
    "Did you hear about the accident that happened down the block?"
Avoid the everyday pleasantries in your stories. Routine exchanges as in: "How are you?" "Fine, thank you" are boring. Common greetings, introductions, chitchat, may be needed in life, but not in fiction. Dialogue is supposed to sound real, but not be real.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Bat Fun Facts

Many bat species cannot walk because of their thin legs. However, vampire bats can walk and jump. .

Bats echolocate: they use high pitched sounds to find their way in the dark. If the sound hits an object and echoes back, the bat knows the object is there.

Bats make up about 25% of all mammal species. There are over 1,000 bat species.
Some bats can fly 50 mph.

Vampire Bats

Only three species of bats eat blood—these species are also known as vampire bats.

Vampire bats do not suck blood; they use their teeth to cut the victim and then they lick the blood.

Also the bat uses its saliva to keep the blood from clotting. Most victims are other animals, rarely humans.

A vampire bat uses its nose to sense heat on the body of its victim. A warmer spot is where the blood is close to the surface.

Vampire bats normally do not cause any hurt or major injury to the animals they feed on (generally cattle, horses, and birds). Only if the bat has rabies, it might pass the rabies on to the other animal.

Vampire bats only need blood to survive. If they could not find blood within 2-3 days, they will die. A normal daily blood diet for a bat is about ½ its body weight.

Statistics - Patience waiting for customer support.

Patience

85% of consumers waiting for customer support on the phone have yelled and sworn (USA Today).

Statistics How fast is the world's population growing?

World Population

How fast is the world's population growing?
The world population reached 1 billion around 1800 (that's about 6 to 10 thousand years of human history).

The world population reached 2 billion around 1930 (that's 130 years after the 1 billion mark).

The world population reached 6 billion in 1999 (that's 4 billion increase in less than 70 years).

The US Census Bureau estimates that the world population will reach 7 billion in 2012 (that's a 1 billion increase in 13 years).

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Bizarre Incidents Lost Parakeet

Lost Parakeet

In Morioka City, Japan, a lost parakeet was able to speak its address and be reunited with its 84-year-old owner.

Bizarre Incidents A Blind Man Protested His Gun-Permit Denial

Not for the blind!
Carcey McWilliams, a 33-year old blind man, was refused a gun permit in Clay County, Minnesota. Sheriff Bill Bergquist defended his decision to reject McWilliams's application by saying, "I had to sign something saying that he could 'safely' whatever." McWilliams already has permits from North Dakota and Utah. He claims to aim based on "sound, gravity, body position" rather than sight.

Bizarre Incidents He'll Be Back in 200 Years

He'll Be Back in 200 Years

David Pizer, a resort owner in Arizona, left himself about 10 million dollars, hoping that scientists in a century or two might be able to bring his dead cryogenically frozen body back to life (The Wall Street Journal).

Bizarre Incidents "I Am Not Dead"


Josephine Miskowitz was informed at the social security office that she was dead. She stopped receiving her social security checks. She had to fill out a form to convince the social security administration that she was still alive.

Bizarre Incidents A High School Teacher Who Could NOT Read

 

"I'm a university graduate with a bachelor's degree in education and business administration and over 90 additional graduate units. I attended school for 35 years, half of them as a professional educator. In acquiring these experiences, I could not read a textbook or write the answer to an essay question. This is the first public acknowledgment that I have ever made, that I have been a functional illiterate for almost 50 years."

John Corcoran, October 1987
Yes, indeed, John Corcoran with a second grade reading level finished high school and attended the University of Texas at El Paso. Surprisingly, in 1961, while still illiterate he received a bachelor's degree in education and business administration—thanks to his cheating talent.

However, his illiterate deception did not stop with a college degree; he taught high school for 17 years, without being able to read. In the 1980s, he finally learned how to read. Today, John Corcoran is an author and a literacy advocate. The following are his two books: The Bridge to Literacy: No Child—or Adult—Left Behind , and The Teacher Who Couldn't Read: One Man's Triumph Over Illiteracy.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

What if in 5-minutes You Could Transform Your Life Forever?


Hi Everyone. I thought i would share this with you.
Enjoy.
Cheers. Thomas.

Hi Thomas,
What if in 5-minutes You Could Transform Your Life Forever?
What if Oprah, Einstein, Deepak Chopra, Dr. Oz, Michael Beckwith,
& countless other's were right?
What if You Could Gain Access to an Endless Supply of Energy &
Fulfillment in Your Life Effortlessly?

Here's a gem I hope you find...
Have you heard of Kristin and David Morelli yet? They've brought
together leading experts with some of the most powerful techniques
on the planet for changing your life fast and forever.
Kristin retired as a self-made multi-milli*onaire at the age of 30
(using the practices you'll learn here for F.R.E.E.)


David went from being an emotionally constipated engineer to
transforming every area of his own life using tools you'll discover.
They've gathered the most teachers & the most powerful tools to
dramatically change your life in minutes... and it's F.R.E.E!

See for yourself
It's a chance unlike any other to get at the roots of your finan*cial,
relationship, career, or health issues... and to have fun while you do
it!

Einstein said, "Everything is energy and that's all there is to it... It can
be no other way. This is not philosophy. This is physics."
What's at the root of all of your issues? ENERGY.
The question is, "How can I work with 'energy' to create dramatic
changes in my life?"

The answer is this *F.R.E.E.* event... best teachers, best tools,
changes happen right here.
I hope you use this gem to make your life shine brighter.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

[cool video] The Aquarium Induction


Hi everyone.  A friend of mine sent me this breathtaking Aquarium  video you have to see it.
Cheers. Thomas.
Thomas, if you take 4:33 and
watch the video I posted to my blog,
you'll relax and feel better...

I call it the Aquarium Induction because
it was so effective at helping me go into trance.
have a great day,
Jim

Friday, July 22, 2011

Downton Abbey to return for second series

Hit ITV costume drama starring Dame Maggie Smith and Hugh Bonneville to return next year
The Sunday-night drama was written and created by the Oscar-winning Julian Fellowes, and stars Dame Maggie Smith and Hugh Bonneville. It averaged more than 8 million viewers across the opening three episodes of its initial seven-part run.

The Carnival Films production will return for an eight-part series next year.
Downton Abbey's debut on 26 September had an overnight rating of 7.7 million viewers and a consolidated audience of 9.2 million, according to ITV, making it the channel's most successful new drama since Whitechapel in February last year.
The drama also broke the record for a single episode viewing on itv.com's catchup service, the ITV Player.

Laura Mackie, the ITV director of drama commissioning, said: "We're delighted with the audience response to Downton Abbey and the positive critical reaction. We're extremely proud to have commissioned a series which has clearly captivated ITV1 viewers.
"Consequently, we're thrilled to be announcing the recommission of a new series for 2011, which will allow us to spend more time with the Crawley family and their servants."

• To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Insight in to Julian Fellowes writer of Downton Abbey.


Before it was acceptable for Gary Barlow to join David Cameron on the campaign trail, or for Tracey Emin to cosy up to George Osborne, being a Tory in the arts world meant being thoroughly discreet about it, or being Phil Collins.

So, for some time, Julian Fellowes was made to plough a lonely furrow in a field full of posturing lefties.

"I experienced real prejudice because of my politics," the actor and writer, 61, has complained. Early in his career, he was fired from a television show because the Labour-supporting lead actor disapproved of his Conservatism. "I couldn't get an audition for the RSC or get into the National," he said, "even when a director asked for me."

Nowadays, Fellowes could probably have a young actor quietly removed from the set of Downton Abbey if their socialist leanings happened to irk him. His latest creation is ITV's most successful drama of the year, with a second series already commissioned, and nine million viewers hooked on Mr

Bates the valet, and the scandal of Lady Mary and the dead young Turk in her bed. The above-and-below-stairs story of a stately home in the years before the Great War has been described in some quarters as "the best thing since Brideshead Revisited".

Yet Downton also has its detractors: those who suggest that double yellow lines and TV aerials really ought not to feature in a programme set in 1912; and those who believe they've spotted plotlines plagiarised from Little Women and Mrs Miniver. True to form, Fellowes has blamed the dissent on politics. "All we get is this permanent negative nitpicking from the left," he said last week. "You just want to say, 'relax'! It's a show that might not appeal to the left."

As more than one left-leaning newspaper pointed out, the accusations of plagiarism had, in fact, appeared in the letters pages of a right-leaning one. To this, Fellowes replied, "The real problem is with people who are insecure socially. They think to show how smart they are by picking holes in the programme to promote their own poshness and to show that their knowledge is greater."

Fellowes has transformed himself from a mildly recognisable television actor into an Oscar-winning screenwriter by a not dissimilar process: he became the go-to guy for film-makers wishing to illuminate the workings of the traditional English class system, a ladder with which he is intimately acquainted.

His own backstory reads much like that of one of his characters. Fellowes's illustrious ancestors include Rear Admiral Sir Thomas Fellowes, who served with Nelson. Born the youngest of four sons in August 1949 to Peregrine and Olwen Fellowes, Julian was brought up in South Kensington, East Sussex and Nigeria – where his father, a former diplomat, was posted by Shell.

Practising Catholics, the Felloweses sent their son to Ampleforth, where he planned to become a stockbroker. He might have become a Thatcherite yuppie were it not for the Cambridge Footlights, which he joined while studying English at Magdalene College. After leaving Cambridge, he went to the Webber Douglas drama school in London, from which he emerged, in 1973, into the £18-a-week existence of a jobbing young actor. At the same time, he was leading a double life as a London socialite courtesy of Peter Townend, Tatler's social editor. Fellowes had been singled out by Townend as a clubbable young man who'd fit in at upper-crust drinks parties. "I would be doing rep, sleeping in digs with leaking walls, then I would go off to a huge stately home and have them do my laundry at the weekend," Fellowes later explained.

The two halves of his life, however, were not complementary. During the 1970s, the British film and theatre world was filled with class warriors for whom a posh accent, a private school background, let alone a friendship group that frequently featured in Tatler, were unacceptable traits. Frustrated by his inability to secure work, Fellowes fled to America, but ended his brief sojourn in Hollywood when he caught himself waiting by the phone, on tenterhooks, to learn whether he'd been cast in a cameo on Fantasy Island.

He returned to the UK determined to forge a respectable career as a character actor.
In 1989, Fellowes was approaching 40 and in the throes of an affair with a married woman when, at a party, he met Emma Kitchener, the great-great-niece of "Kitchener of Khartoum" and a lady-in-waiting to Princess Michael of Kent. Within 20 minutes, he claims, he'd informed her that they ought to be married. She, a six-foot brunette, wrote in her diary, "A funny little man asked me to marry him." Undeterred by rejection, Fellowes tracked Emma down at her mother's address and within 18 months they were wed. He even became Julian Kitchener-Fellowes, to preserve the family name when his wife's 91-year-old uncle, the third Earl Kitchener, dies.

Less than a year after their wedding, their son Peregrine was born. As godmother, the couple chose Princess Michael, who told Tatler she thought Fellowes "the quickest, sharpest yet kindest wit in London, a cultivated, cultural snob".

Fellowes's most prominent screen part was as Earl Kilwillie in the BBC series Monarch of the Glen, and his subsequent acting roles rarely allowed him to stray too far from a posh and/or snobbish stereotype. Having subsisted for some time in the 1970s as a romantic fiction author under an assumed name, he returned to writing, and in the mid-1990s produced a pair of well-received children's scripts for the BBC, Little Lord Fauntleroy and The Prince and the Pauper.

A hindrance for much of his career, Fellowes's upper-class background became a boon when, in 2000, Robert Altman required a screenplay about the social workings of the interwar British aristocracy. Fellowes knew the territory, was offered the job and spent six months writing the first draft of Gosford Park. His first produced feature film script, it won him the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay in 2002.
Writing offers flooded in after Gosford Park. Fellowes was hired for a film adaptation of Vanity Fair, and to write the book for a stage musical of Mary Poppins. In 2005, he made his directorial debut with the drama Separate Lies and, in 2009, wrote the script for The Young Victoria. It was produced by another grand Hollywood patron, Martin Scorsese.

He was drafted in to write zingers for Iain Duncan Smith's speeches, coining the notorious line about the "quiet man ... turning up the volume". And in 2004, Fellowes also became a bestselling author with Snobs, a comic novel about an arriviste clambering into the upper class. His wife, with her bluer blood, advised him on the finer points of ladies' fashion at Ascot.

Today, the couple divide their time between the 40-acre grounds of their Dorset manor house and a Chelsea pied-Ć -terre. Their weekend parties in Dorset are said to boast guest lists of high-born Europeans and Hollywood royalty. Fellowes remains a stickler: one is not permitted to wear jeans to lunch, and the couple once admitted to disdaining fellow diners with the temerity to tip their soup bowl towards them. Those who cross their host may suffer his temper: he barked at a theatregoer who coughed during a performance of Posh at the Royal Court.

As a decent Tory of the Big Society, Fellowes is active in his capacity as Lord of the Manor of Tattershall in Lincolnshire, a title he inherited from his father. He doesn't live there, but is supporting a local campaign to halt plans to build a large Tesco in the village. He's also a defender of Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt's decision to axe the Film Council. Fellowes remains a conservative with both a large and a small "C". These days, he can be proud of it in public.

A life in brief
Born: 17 August 1949, Cairo, Egypt.
Family: The youngest of four sons, born to Peregrine Fellowes, a diplomat, and Olwen. Married Emma Joy Kitchener, lady-in-waiting to Princess Michael of Kent, in 1990. They live in Dorset with their son, Peregrine.
Education: Wetherby School and Ampleforth College in Yorkshire. Graduated in English from Cambridge before attending the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in London.
Career: A member of the Cambridge Footlights, he worked as an actor, finally getting his break in Monarch of the Glen. Won the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay for Gosford Park in 2001, and wrote screenplays for Vanity Fair and The Young Victoria. In 2004 he wrote a novel, Snobs, and made his directorial debut with the film Separate Lies in 2005.
He says: "I remember watching Loose Women and one of them saying, 'I hate posh people.' And I thought, you can't hate posh people; it's like saying you hate blondes."
They say: "He's the most humane of writers, I think. Lesser authors judge their characters. Julian doesn't." Hugh Bonneville, star of Downton Abbey

Hi if you want another classic read get a copy of BUTTERFLY IN A GLASS BOTTLE.
cheers. Thomas.

Harry Potter - Literature Fun Fact- first edition how many copies printed?

Harry Potter sold about 400 million copies worldwide and has been translated into over 65 languages.

Though before the book's popularity, Joanne Rowling had some difficulty finding a publisher that believed her book could amount to anything. Finally Bloomsburry Press agreed to publish the first edition of Harry Potter, but only printed 500 copies for the first edition for fear of them not selling. Also the publisher requested that the author would not use her first name (Joanne) but rather her initials to make it less obvious that the author is a woman assuming that the book's main audience young boys would not want to read a wizard book written by a woman. Since Joanne Rowling did not have a middle name, she chose K for Kathleen.

Harry Potter, First Edition

Those who bought a first edition of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stonecould could make a fortune today! Harry Potter's first edition copies are worth thousands.

  • A hardback first edition copy was sold for £10,575 at a Sotheby's auction in 2002.
  • Another soft cover first edition copy was sold at the Dallas Auction House for $19,120.
  • In August 2005, AbeBooks.com sold a first edition for £20,000.
  • Another anonymous bidder paid $40,326 for a first edition at Christie's auction house in London.
 Hi there. If you want a read full of the psychic adult level you have to read BUTTERFLY IN A GLASS BOTTLE.
 
Cheers Thomas.

Sir Isaac Newton - Literature Fun Facts - When did he predicted the end of the world?

The World Will End in 2060!

Sir Isaac Newton wrote a letter in 1704 in which he predicted that the end of the world would be in 2060. The father of modern science had an interest in biblical prophecy as well. Newton came up with this prediction after a detailed study of various biblical texts.

Hi. If you want a book full of predictions you must read BUTTERFLY IN A GLASS BOTTLE. You will be thrilled with the psychic love element.

Cheers. Thomas.

Literature Fun Facts - Christopher Marlowe Assassination or Murder


The story behind Marlowe's death at age 29 is controversial. According to traditional history, Marlowe died in a brawl at a local tavern, stabbed to death by another man. However, the fact that Marlowe was somewhat involved with some mysterious issue with Queen Elizabeth makes the reason for his death to be a possible political assassination.

Therefore, his temper revealed in his last brawl that caused his death might be just a cover up of an unknown bigger reason for his death. For more information on this topic, check out The World of Christopher Marlowe, by the scholar David Riggs.

Where Would Shakespeare Be without Marlowe?

Marlowe, a Shakespeare contemporary, rose to fame in his twenties, before Shakespeare had accomplished any notable work. Marlowe was a pioneer in composing blank verse (unrhymed poetry) and using iambic pentameter for his two famous plays (Tamberlaine and Dr. Faustus). Shakespeare, who rose to fame soon after Marlowe, copied Marlowe's style in all of his thirty-seven plays.
I hope you found that interesting. If you are in to a good read try BUTTERFLY IN A GLASS BOTTLE, a cracking fun read for all.
Cheers. Thomas.

How does a stoned hippy earn $93k in 33 days.

Dear Thomas,

A quick one for the start of the week...this
was totally amazing...

If you haven't seen it yet, you should!

http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=FSW8A&m=JoEQsfcc9J1ZCD&b=wt4BeEAds6aujnbuoact6A

How does a Stoned hippy earn $93k
in 33 days...

You gotta see this it's crazy...

http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=FSW8A&m=JoEQsfcc9J1ZCD&b=wt4BeEAds6aujnbuoact6A

Yours Truly,
Greg Frost

Monday, July 18, 2011

John Milton

Literature Fun Facts - I hope you enjoy this morsel of information. Cheers. Thomas.

John Milton composed the greatest epic in the English language Paradise Lost after he was blind (between 1658 and 1664). He claimed that he received nightly divine inspiration, and during the day he composed his epic. Paradise Lost is packed with biblical and mythological allusions—attesting to Milton's vast knowledge and incredible memory.

John Keats.

Literature Fun Facts- I hope you enjoy. Cheers. Thomas.

John Keats was only about 5 feet tall—nevertheless, by the time he died at age 24, he was a literary giant, surpassing any other 24-year old English writer.

We can only wonder if Keats were to live to be an old man if his popularity today would exceed that of Shakespeare.

Height of other British Romantic Authors:
    William Blake: 5 feet William Wordsworth: 5 feet, 9 inches Percy Shelley: 5 feet, 11 inches

Charles Dickens

Literature Fun Facts- I hope you enjoy. Cheers. Thomas.

His most famous story, A Christmas Carol, became more popular than his other classics, such as Oliver Twist, though it received less attention from literary critics than some of the other Dickens's novels.

Dickens, at age 31, wrote the short novel in 6 weeks and rushed it to be published before Christmas. The book was out December 19, 1843—the same year that the first Christmas card on record was sent (go to Christmas, scroll down to "Christmas Cards"). A Christmas Carol was Dickens's first unserialized work.

Most of the characters were based on people he knew personally, including Ebenezer Scrooge—based on Ebenezer Scroggie, a counselor at Edinburgh. Within its first year of publication, A Christmas Carol sold 15,000 copies and inspired the production of about 10 stage dramas.

Geoffrey Chaucer


Literature Fun Facts - I hope you enjoy cheers Thomas.

The pilgrim Chaucer on his way to Canterbury

Most Expensive Book

The news of an original copy of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales made it to the Guinness Book of World Records in 1998. The original copies of Canterbury Tales were printed in 1477 by William Caxton, the first printer to introduce the printing press in England. Only one of these first copies is still in private hands and was sold in an auction on July 8, 1998, for £4,621,500, making it the most expensive book ever sold.

Fat Monks and the Sin of Gluttony

Chaucer's Monk in the Canterbury Tales was described in the Prologue as "a lord ful fat and in good point" (line 200). A new study finds that Chaucer's description of the Monk as a person who loves to eat and is overweight is accurate. A 2004 study by archaeologists at University College London found that monks during medieval days were actually gluttons. Archaeologists studied one hundred monk skeletons at 3 abbeys dating from the medieval period. The bones were thick; joint problems from obesity were evident; and there were signs of arthritis—all of these proved that monks were actually overweight, as portrayed in paintings and literature of medieval times. Another study estimates that some monks consumed about 6,000 calories a day. Eating was a physical pleasure monks could enjoy!

Poets' Corner

Chaucer was the first poet to be buried in Westminster Abbey—initiating the Poets' Corner. Today there are 29 poets buried and 55 poets commemorated in the Poets' Corner.

Jane Austen

 

Literature Fun Facts - Enjoy from Thomas a huge Austen fan.

Jealousy

July 1814, when Sir Walter Scott's first novel Waverly was published, Jane Austen was a bit jealous. She wrote the following in a letter to her niece:
"Walter Scott has no business to write novels, especially good ones.—It is not fair.—He has fame and profit enough as a poet, and should not be taking the bread out of other people's mouths.—I do not like him, and do not mean to like Waverly if I can help it—but fear I must."
Ironically, today Jane Austen is a much more popular author than her contemporary Sir Walter Scott.

What brought about the format of J.K Rowling name?

Even though women have more rights today then we once had, there are still modern authors who chose to use pen names for the same reasons or foremothers did. In fact when J.K. Rowling first began publishing the Harry Potter series, her publishers advised her to use her initials or other pen name because they didn't think little boys would read her series.

Pen Names Used by Women Writers


Women have come a long way in the field of literature and writing. We have our female ancestors to thank for taking a stand over the generations of literary greats and letting men of the literary world know that our words are just as important to the world as theirs. There was a time when being a female writer was looked down upon and to their works published or even read by a large number of people, women writers had to use what is called a pen name or pseudonyms to disguise their identity. I was aware of some pen names of some famous women authors but some surprised me. Here is a list of pen names and their true identities:

• "A Lady" - Jane Austen – Originally Austen wrote all of her works anonymously. All of her title pages in her novels listed this pen name.

• H.D. Imagiste, - Hilda Doolittle – The last name spurned from her type of poetry called imagism. Poets who wrote this style were called Imagist.

• George Sand - Aurore Dudevant – Dudevant actually went out in public as her alter ego: dressing the part of a man and going to the opera.

• Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell - Charlotte, Emily and Anne Bronte – Originally the works of the Bronte sisters were published under their male names. The publishers were deceived; they had no idea these 3 were actually women. They also had to hide their new found profession from their father who was an Anglican preacher.

• A.M. Barnard - Louisa May Alcott – She also wrote under the names of Aunt Weedy, Flora Fairfield, Oranthy Bluggage and Minerva Moody. Her now famous works of Little Women and Little Men didn't sell as well and she needed more money. She wrote more sensual and provocative stories under her other names while preserving her "good image" associated with the other stories she wrote.

• Francoise - Robertine Barry – It is believe Barry changed her name because she wrote for a Canadian magazine that published her stories about abused rural woman.

• George Eliot - Mary Ann Evans – Author of Silas Marner. She was a famous literary critic and was also having an affair with a married man that was well known. She changed her name when publishing her books in order to get away from these and also to get her books out to a wider audience.

Even though women have more rights today then we once had, there are still modern authors who chose to use pen names for the same reasons or foremothers did. In fact when J.K. Rowling first began publishing the Harry Potter series, her publishers advised her to use her initials or other pen name because they didn't think little boys would read her series.



Lady Gaga rocks nude to favourite Australian band, Airbourne



LADY Gaga made a shocking admission during her Sydney sojourn - she loves our very own Airbourne.

"I am really into metal. I listen to Airbourne all the time," she said in an interview with Nova FM.
"They sound so much like AC/DC, it freaks me out. Me and my friends get naked and smoke cigarettes, put lipstick on and dance around in our heels to their music."

Airbourne, known for their hits Runnin' Wild and Too Much, Too Young, Too Fast, were flattered by Gaga's tales of nude rocking.

"It's good to know that the peak of the pop world still love rock'n'roll. Goes to show that rock'n'roll will never die," Joel O'Keeffe said.

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Read about the South Australian fashion designer behind Lady Gaga's outfits


HE spent his teenage years skating in the Hindley St ice rink and hitting books at Adelaide High School - now Perry Meek is creating singer Lady Gaga's most eye-popping costumes.
Based in Los Angeles, Meek, 46, has been with Gaga's costume design team, the Haus of Gaga, for two years.

In that time he has designed some of the pop star's most outrageous outfits, including several looks in the singer's new Judas video and two costumes for Gaga's recent appearance on The Graham Norton Show, seen on the ABC.

The stunning looks in leather and latex are a world away from where the former ice skater began, designing costumes for his performances at the now-demolished Hindley St ice rink in the late 1970s.
Sister Donna Barratt, 53, of Glengowrie, said fashion design had always been in Meek's blood.

"He's really been designing since he was young, making his own costumes and then costumes for other people," she said.
Soon after he got his first big break - costume designing for Cher.
He went on to create outfits for Janet Jackson, Mariah Carey and Tina Turner and made the costumes for the Spice Girls' 2008 world tour before being snapped up by Lady Gaga for her personal design team.

Now Meek is never far from the singer's side, touring the world with her to create outfits at a moment's notice.

Meek designed several costumes for Gaga's Monster Hall concert in Sydney on Wednesday, including a last-minute request by the star that ended up making headlines. "The fishtail dress that Gaga was wearing while she was in the wheelchair was decided on that morning," Mrs Barratt said.

"So Perry and some friends in Sydney got that made in about five hours."
Meek, who also performs as drag queen Heaven Lee, also hosted Gaga's two "secret" shows at Sydney nightclubs Arq and Nevermind on Tuesday.

Mrs Barratt got a glimpse into her brother's VIP lifestyle this week when he flew her to Sydney to meet Lady Gaga.

"She's very nice," she said. "It was the end of a very long day - it was about half past 11 at night - but she still made lots of time for her fans and when I met her she was lovely and down-to-earth.
"He really enjoys working with her. She's very creative and very talented - you only have to see her shows to realise that."

Why your brain makes you eat too much...


Hi every one. My friend Bill Harris sent me this information  thought i would share it with you all.

Dear Tom,

You've really got to hear this amazing
conversation I had with world-renowned
brain doctor Daniel Amen.
I sent you an email about it a few days ago,
but between the high volume and an "ify"
server, most people couldn't access the
link.
But all that is fixed now, so please listen to
it because you'll really get a lot out of it--I
PROMISE!
Just click here now:
http://www.theamensolution.com/jv1.aspx

You MUST hear this incredible conversation. In it,
Dr. Amen describes how your brain determines a
long list of quality-of-life issues that may be troubling
you, but which...
...you can do something about!
These common--but preventable and treatable--brain-
based problems include:


  • Overeating (there are 5 different preventable
    brain-based problems that lead to overeating)...

  • Relationship success or failure (amazingly, when
    you change your brain, you also change the quality
    of your relationships)...
  • ADD (certain simple brain-based solutions
    could change your life)
    ...
  • Your ability to focus and pay attention (you don't
    need to live in a fog)...
  • Your energy level (change your brain and you
    change your level of vitality and aliveness)...

  • Your mood (what if you could feel MUCH better
    most of the time?)...
  • Your anxiety level (anxiety has a specific brain
    signature that YOU CAN CHANGE)...

  • Your susceptibility to depression (this could save your life)...
  • And, a lot more.
Just click here to listen to this important information about how by changing your brain you can change your life: http://www.theamensolution.com/jv1.aspx Dr. Amen is a bestselling author, psychiatrist, and world authority on brain imaging. You may have seen him on one of his many highly acclaimed PBS specials.
In analyzing over 60,000 brain scans, Dr. Amen has discovered that many everyday problems are a sign of brain dysfunction and has developed many simple and effective solutions...
...you can use--without paying for an expensive brain scan.
This is one of the most interesting and important conversations I've ever recorded. Please click here to listen to it:
http://www.theamensolution.com/jv1.aspx Be well.
Bill

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Working on line

Have You Ever Considered Working Online?

Melissa Johnson from Melbourne never thought that she would, until curiosity got the best of her and she filled out a simple online form. Before she knew it, she discovered her secret to beating the recession, and being able to provide for her family while at home with her three children.

I read Melissa's blog last month and decided to feature her story in our local job report. In our phone interview she told me her amazing story. "I basically make about $7,000-$8,000 a month online. It's enough to comfortably replace my old jobs income, especially considering I only work about 10-13 hours a week from home.

We interviewed Home Income Cash Systems to find out more about why more and more people are joining there system:
'We are so confident that people will make money using this system within the first few days, that we are letting people use our system without paying a penny! We currently get around 800 people joining us every day, mostly with very little computer experience.'

'People are fed up of the scams out there and now is the time people can take advantage of making money from home, or anywhere in the world'
Working online has been a financial windfall for Melissa, who struggled for months to find a decent job but kept hitting dead ends. "I lost my job shortly after the recession hit, I needed reliable income, I was not interested in the "get rich quick" scams you see all over the internet. Those are all pyramid scams or stuff where you have to sell to your friends and family. I just needed a legitimate way to earn a living for me and my family. The best part of working online is that I am always home with the kids, I save a lot of money."

Home Income Cash System
"I basically make $7,000-$8,000 a month online."- Melissa Johnson
I asked her about how she started her remarkable journey. "It was pretty easy, I filled out a short form and applied for a work at home kit. There is a small shipping and handling fee, its not really free but it was under $30. I got the Kit and within a month I was making over $5,000 a month. Its really simple, I am not a computer whiz, but I can use the internet. I fill forms and post links, I don't even have to sell anything and nobody has to buy anything."
Quickly, Melissa Johnson was able to use the simple Home Income Cash System kit to make it out of the recession.

Melissa had never shared her story before, and with her permission, we are putting it public.
Step 1
Go to this link, fill out a basic online form and hit submit at Home Income Cash System
Step 2
Follow the instructions at Home Income Cash System and set up your account. Then they will give you the website links to post. Start posting those links. Everything gets tracked.
Step 3

You should receive your first cheque within a week or so. Or you can start to have them wire directly into your bank account. (Your first cheques will be about $1000 to $2,500 a week. Then it goes up from there. Depends on how many links you posted online.)
Free Trial Promotion Ends Tomorrow: Friday, July 15, 2010
Associated Links:
-Home Income Cash System

Lady Gaga in a wheelchair!


POP shocker Lady Gaga has courted controversy in Sydney after performing in a wheelchair as part of her live show.

Dressed in a funeral black shroud, the singer wheeled herself on stage midway through the concert at Sydney's Town Hall tonight.

Made up to look frumpy and decrepit, the scene was reminiscent of Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain's famous entrance to the UK's Reading Festival in 1992.

Gaga's latest stunt follows her entrance to the Grammy Awards in a giant egg and her arrival in a coffin at a UK festival earlier this year.

It was just one of several costume changes the Bad Romance singer pulled off during the highly anticipated hour-long set, which was attended exclusively by competition winners and invited guests.
Initially emerging in a gold glitter catsuit style by Donatella Versace, the singer wasted no time in tearing through her biggest hits Born This Way, Just Dance, Poker Face and Telephone.

For most of the show the singer was on her feet, moving sharply with her backing dancers and connecting with the fans she calls her "little monsters".

At one point she pulled a denim jacket from the front row attached to an Australian flag and adorned with her name.

Hundreds turned out in fancy dress costumes inspired by the fashion quirks of their idol, everything from crowns of thorns and giant paws to coke can curls and face masks.
Fans from every corner of Australia had queued since midday for the only scheduled concert of Gaga's five-day visit.

They were rewarded with the live spectacular they were promised, the star's performance featuring a full band unlike the surprise club shows she threw on Monday night.
"You believed in me," Gaga told her audience early on.
"I broke here in Australia before anywhere else so let's celebrate."

The set design resembled an apocalyptic village - think the film Avatar - with a horseshoe stage joined by a bridge that Gaga "fell" from during her penultimate number The Edge Of Glory.
Before closing on the religiously dubious Judas she hinted to fans at her imminent return next year.

"You are all looking very very brand f*****g new and I promise, I promise I won't ever be away so long again," she said.

The announcement of national dates next year as part of a Lady Gaga world tour is expected to be made in the coming weeks.

She couldn't have warmed fans up in a better way.

Lady Gaga played the following songs:
Born This Way
Just Dance
Poker Face
Telephone
Alejandro
You And I
Hair
Bad Romance
Edge Of Glory
Judas

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Lady Gaga's Gillard gaffe in Tracy Grimshaw interview


LADY Gaga was almost engulfed in a political storm during her interview with Tracy Grimshaw last night.

In a case of mistaken sexuality, the pop diva assumed Prime Minister Julia Gillard was a lesbian after an ambiguous question from the ACA veteran.

During their chat for A Gaga Affair, Grimshaw asked the pro-gay-marriage singer if she thought Gillard was hypocritical living with her partner in The Lodge but also banning homosexual unions.
Shocked Gaga offered a forceful response.

But the question was clearly playing on the Born this Way star's mind, and she double-checked with Grimshaw once the cameras were off if the PM was in fact gay.
Grimshaw chuckled at the mix-up and the question was re-shot, with Gaga giving a much more diplomatic answer.
And in true Gaga style, her glass of water for the interview was replaced with a gold tea cup and saucer midway through the chat.

Gaga later performed a medley of her songs in a two-metre high perspex cube.
Among the audience for A Gaga Affair were Kerri-Anne Kennerley and Lisa Wilkinson.
Gaga's only official Australian concert is at Sydney Town Hall tomorrow night.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Pearls before bedtime for Lady Gaga!


A report from the Adelaide Advertiser News paper 11/7/2011

IT was pearls before bedtime for Lady Gaga as the world's most famous pop star revealed she suffered a pang of loneliness on her first night in Sydney.

While dozens of adoring Little Monsters - as her fans have been dubbed - kept a wintry vigil outside her Sydney hotel, the self-confessed hopeless romantic cuddled up with a string of pearls.
"I'm a hopeless romantic. There's no hope for me. I find romance in these gloves or in the belt I sewed on to my shirt today," she said.

"I find romance in the pearls that I slept with in my hands last night because I felt lonely."
There was little alone time yesterday as she spent the day promoting her Gaga Live extravaganza at the Sydney Town Hall - renamed Monster Hall - on Wednesday night.

She hints she has more plans to shake up the industry after being inspired by Amazon's actions to offer Born This Way for 99c in the US to promote a new cloud music service.
The cut-price initiative for digital copies of the album helped her sell 1.1 million copies in just a week.

"Advertising as a way to sell records is going to be what changes the business," she said.
"It is very strange to me the way people place the value on a physical CD to be equal to a digital copy of an album. You are not actually getting the same value.

"Now I'm not going to tell you my exact idea but I have been thinking so much about how we can bridge these two worlds."
Gaga said she felt at home in Australia because music enthusiasts here shared her love of pop music.

"You love pop music and I love pop music. It's a fight forward for the pop kids here because so many people think pop music isn't cool and I think pop music is the coolest," she said.

Creativity is your Birthright By Laurence G Boldt.



Every child is born a genius
~Albert Einstein



Birds fly, fish swim, and humans create. Our species is not defined by the size of our brains, our ability to walk upright, or even our ability to make tools. Anatomically modern humans go back at least 100,000 years. Were we to see these people dressed in modern clothing, walking down a street, they would be, to all outer appearances, indistinguishable from the rest of us.

Yet anthropologists identify truly modern humans with the period beginning about 40,000 years ago. It is in this period that we see the first flowering of the creative imagination, the first signs that a vivid inner life was shaping and enriching the human experience. Our primogenitor, the first truly modern human, was born when some unknown spark ignited a creative fire in the human imagination.
And human beings have gone on creating ever since.

We can only marvel at the human capacity to survive and thrive in the most extreme climates and geographical settings—from the Inuits, or Eskimos, of the Arctic North to the Bedouins of the Arabian Desert. Human beings not only survived in these extremes but produced a rich cultural life and made beautiful artifacts. For example, the Paiute Indians lived in the Great Basin of the American West, a barren environment where little more than wild grasses grow.

Yet they took these grasses and created truly spectacular basketry. It is not only highly functional—woven so tightly, it holds water without mortar—but also widely recognized as some of the most beautiful the world has ever seen. This is the essence of what it is to be human: to respond creatively to the environments in which we find ourselves and to shape these into a life of beauty and meaning.

Creativity: What It Is and Isn't

Creativity is one of those words we use all of the time without ever stopping to consider what it means. But what is it? Creativity is simply the ability to make things or to make things happen. It has nothing to do with image—you don't have to dress like a bohemian or act like an eccentric to be creative. Being creative has nothing to do with your occupation. You don't have to be a writer, dancer, painter, or musician to express your creativity.

You can be what you naturally are. In fact, the more you embrace your own natural talents and gifts, the truer you are to your own values and sense of purpose, the more creative you are likely to be. The expression of creativity is not limited to your career or work life. You can be creative in the way you approach your relationships, your lifestyle, your personal growth, your finances, or any other aspect of your life.

Creativity is more than just coming up with great ideas. It's the ability to take an idea and give it life, to bring into being something that either did not exist before at all—or that did not exist before for you. If we think about it in this way, we can see that this is something we have all done at different times in our lives. So we all have not only the innate capacity to be creative but real experience in being so.

What Keeps Us from Creating the Results We Want?
Yet, for all too many, that experience remains limited and/or unconscious. By "unconscious," I mean that we often don't recognize that our successes (and, interestingly, even our failures) reflect the application of basic laws of manifestation, or principles of the creative process. We may attribute our success to luck, hard work, or a variety of other factors, and miss the role that universal principles of manifestation play in our achievements.

I wrote my new book How to Be, Do, or Have Anything to help people recognize these principles of creative manifestation and apply them in very practical ways to consistently achieve the results they desire. Over the course of many years working in the career development field, I have been reminded again and again that many people don't know how to create the results they want in life. And it's just not people in the middle or at the bottom end of the economic scale.

By mid-life, many who are financially well-off have discovered that knowing how to move up the corporate ladder, or even how to make shrewd and lucrative investments, is not the same as knowing how to create what they truly want in life. People from all walks of life and across the socio-economic spectrum fail to recognize and consistently express their innate creative abilities.

But if we are all naturally creative, if creativity is, in fact, built into the very fiber of our beings, why do we so often believe, feel, and act as though it isn't? It takes years of conscious development for our innate creative capacities to reach their fullest expression. Even the most basic level of development can be stunted by a variety of unfavorable factors.

Chief among these is the belief that we are not creative. Studies designed to find variables that correlate with creativity have examined a range of factors including: IQ, socio-economic status, education, ethnicity, and gender. It turns out that none of these variables correlate with creativity. In fact, the only reliable predictor of how creative a person actually is, is the individual's belief in his or her creativity.

The more creative you believe you are, the more creative you are likely to be. Though it surprised the researchers conducting these studies, this outcome is really a matter of common sense. If you don't believe that you have the ability to create what you want, you're not going to try, to experiment, to risk following your dreams, or, if you do try, you're likely to give up at the first sign of trouble. In either case, you're not going to gain the knowledge and practical experience that comes with applying the creative process over and over again. What we believe shapes what we do, and what we do determines the outcomes in our lives.

Unfortunately, most people weren't brought up to believe that they could create what they want in life. Most didn't see their parents modeling a creative way of life. Even if their parents paid lip service to creative development, their actions often indicated that following one's dreams was not a high priority in life. If people didn't get encouragement to believe in and express their creativity at home, they most certainly didn't get it at school.

In seminars I've conducted over the years, I've often asked people if they felt as though they had been encouraged to develop their creativity in school. In these admittedly unscientific surveys, I found that fewer than 5 percent believed their creativity had been nurtured at school. On the contrary, the sit-in-rows-, learn-by-rote-, and find-THE-right-answer approach to education discourages original thinking, experimentation, and risk-taking—all of which are necessary for creative development.

When they leave school and enter the work world, most people do not find their creativity encouraged there either. Indeed, powerful structural impediments to the development of creativity have been built into the way much of work is organized today. While these impediments can be overcome, consistently expressing our creativity at work requires greater conscious effort today than it did in times past.

Prior to the Industrial Revolution, most people had daily experience with the creative process. They made their own homes, clothing, tools, furniture, bedding, soap, candles, and a host of other items. They worked on things from start to finish, infusing their love, intelligence, and care at every step along the way, as they moved from idea to result. Yet with increasing mechanization and specialization, the experience of working on things from start to finish became confined to fewer and fewer people.

Today, few own their work. They have little control over its ultimate purpose or the process by which it is produced. The effect of this on individual creativity was something that the economist Adam Smith foresaw centuries ago. While Smith thought that specialization would be good for the "wealth of nations," what we would today call the "GDP," he warned that from the standpoint of the individual, it would have a stifling effect on creativity and a dulling effect on the human imagination. As Smith predicted, many have lost "the habit exertion" that comes with being creatively challenged at work.

In our entertainments as well, we have grown increasingly passive. Instead of making up our own stories, songs, and dances, as our ancestors did for untold centuries, we watch television. Even reading a book requires a more active use of the imagination than watching a movie or a television program—but reading too is on the decline. So today, whether at work or at home, many aren't using their creative imaginations—and just as muscles grow flabby from lack of exercise, so our imaginations grow flabby from lack of use.

We can see then that there are a variety of reasons why people fail to recognize and develop their innate creative capacities. Some of these are social and cultural, some strictly individual. For many people, skepticism about their creative abilities can be linked to more pervasive self-esteem issues, reflecting fundamental doubts about their worth and deservingness. For others, it may be related to specific experiences in the past. For example, after being criticized by a teacher in an art or writing class, a young person may have decided not just that he isn't cut out for art or writing—but that he isn't the "creative type." We have seen, then, how our natural creative abilities can be denied, inhibited, and blocked. Yet we should never forget that—regardless of a person's age or past experience—these abilities can be reclaimed, cultivated, and expressed.

Cultivating Creativity: A Great Leap Forward
All right, so how do we develop our creative abilities? The short answer is: the same way we develop any skill—with knowledge and practical application. When we are thinking about developing creativity, it's important to keep in mind three principles discussed earlier:
1. Creativity is the ability to make things or to make things happen, to shape our outer environments in the image of our inner life.
2. Creativity is natural to human beings; under favorable conditions, it spontaneously manifests itself.
3. Creativity can be cultivated, which is to say that with conscious intention and direction, we can enhance our creative capacities above and beyond naturally occurring levels.
We discussed some of the unfavorable elements that can interfere with the natural development and expression of our innate creative potentials. In the end, what they have in common is the sense of breaking the individual's spirit, of destroying the confidence we had in ourselves and the trust we had in life when we were the "genius" children to which Einstein referred.

A confident, cheerful, and loving attitude toward life is the sunlight that the soil of imagination needs to germinate and grow creative ideas into viable living entities. Anything that makes us doubt ourselves or our possibilities in life blocks that sunlight. By the same token, anything that gives us confidence in ourselves, and the power we have to shape our lives in the image of our dreams, dispels the clouds and allows the light to come streaming in.

Nothing gives us confidence like a thorough understanding of the creative process, the means by which ideas become living realities.
Agriculture, the cultivation of living plants, provides an excellent analogy for how a naturally occurring phenomenon (like human creativity) can be taken to new and higher levels. Humanity made a great leap forward when it discovered agriculture.

Our entire civilization owes its existence to those ancient pioneers who took a naturally occurring phenomenon—the interaction of sun, soil, and seed that gives birth to food-producing plants—and began to cultivate this process to make it yield far greater results. Today, we can take another, even greater, leap forward by cultivating that seemingly random process through which the interaction of consciousness and environment—of idea, emotion, and action—gives birth to a new thing, event, or experience of reality.

By understanding and cultivating that process by which seeds of thought germinate within the fertile soil of the human imagination and begin growing into living realities, we can empower ourselves as individuals and revolutionize our collective experience.

Cultivation means moving from haphazard and limited results to predictable and bountiful ones. If you were to toss some seeds out your back door, a few might take root; perhaps one or two might even mature and bear fruit. Yet if you are counting on a rich harvest, you will want to prepare, plant, and care for a garden. In the same way, you can from time to time haphazardly create the results you want in life without understanding the creative process. Yet if you want to get consistent results, year in and year out, in a wide variety of areas, you will want to understand and apply all the steps in the creative process.

And it is a process. When you plant a garden, you don't go out the next day and dig up the seeds to see if it is working—to see if things are really growing. You recognize that growth is an evolving process—and you trust it. You also understand that at different stages of this process, different things need to be done. There is a time to prepare the soil, to plant the seeds, to water, fertilize, weed, harvest, and so on. In the same way, there is a process in the act of creating. Impatience can spoil your manifestations.

There is as well a sequence to these events, and it is important that they be done in order. Understanding and exerting conscious control over the creative process allows us to get better and more consistent results, in the same way that planting a garden helps us to grow more food.
While the act of creation always retains an unconscious component, there are things we can do to trigger this unconscious element as well.

Again the analogy holds: we can't make things grow—nature does this in a mysterious way—but we can create conditions which are conducive to growth. When it comes to creating results, some people recognize this process—these conditions of growth—intuitively. Yet many do not. It has long struck me as a great failing of our education system that we do not teach people the practical mechanics of creating the results they want in their lives. It was the desire to address this issue that led me to write my latest book.

How to Be, Do, or Have Anything reveals the eight essential steps of "the manifestation formula," the key to understanding the creative process. The manifestation formula articulates the creative process in a simple, step-by-step way that helps you understand all of its components, how they all fit together, and in what order. This makes it easier to replicate success, by understanding how and why you are getting good results when you do. It gives you confidence to apply this universal process to other areas of your life that perhaps aren't working as well. It also helps you examine your "failures" and understand exactly why success eluded you.

Armed with this knowledge, you will be much less likely to give up on yourself or your dreams. You'll have a blueprint that lets you know exactly where you are in the creative process at any given time and how to best marshal your energy and resources to advance your goals at each and every stage along the way.

How to Be, Do, or Have Anything invites you to begin taking immediate action to fulfill the deepest desires of your heart. As you move through the interactive worksheets and exercises, your dreams begin to crystallize, to take on form and substance. The book can even help you tap into new visions for your life, visions which have been with you all the while but have remained hidden from your awareness. The key to it all is application of the "manifestation formula."

I like to think of the eight steps of the manifestation formula as the essential amino acids of the creative process. Just as our bodies can spontaneously produce the rest of the amino acids from the essential ones, so, by mastering and applying the eight essentials of the manifestation formula, we can spontaneously generate the particulars that we require to flesh out our unique manifestations. I have seen firsthand how applying this formula has helped people to regain confidence in their creative capacities and transform their lives. I invite you to embrace the creative process that is your life on earth and begin shaping it in the image of your dreams.





Copyright © Laurence G. Boldt, 2001 All rights reserved.

Who is Laurence G Boldt?


About Laurence G. Boldt

For nearly twenty years, Laurence Boldt has been helping people to live their dreams, through his work as a writer, speaker, and career consultant. He is the author of five books, including the best-selling career classic Zen and the Art of Marking a Living. This groundbreaking work has been credited by many with revolutionizing the career field, offering a new a vision of work and a new technology of vocational guidance. Boldt's other books include the best-selling How to Find the Work

You Love, Zen Soup, The Tao of Abundance, and How to Be, Do, or Have Anything.
Today three of Boldt's books are used as graduate-level course texts at leading public and private universities across the country. His books have won praise in articles and reviews from such diverse publications as Newsweek Magazine, Mademoiselle, Selling, Business Ethics, African Business, Sales and Marketing Management, Publisher's Weekly, New Age Journal, Common Boundary, and The Simple Living Journal.

Laurence Boldt is a leading interpreter of Eastern philosophy to the modern West. His book The Tao of Abundance was recognized as one of the top ten books on Eastern philosophy in 1999 by the editors of Amazon.com. Laurence Boldt has appeared on hundreds of radio shows and scores of television programs throughout the nation. An in-demand speaker, Boldt has given workshops and lectures across the country for leading business, nonprofit, and university organizations. He has designed curricula for high school and college courses and corporate training programs.

In addition to being the author of five books, Laurence has written many poems and a screenplay. He enjoys spending time back-packing and hiking in the great outdoors and has hiked the length of the John Muir Trail. He is a practitioner of several types of meditation and, as a young man, completed a forty-day fast. He lives in southern California.

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Wednesday, July 6, 2011

The perfect environment to write your first novel - Princess Cruises




Hi everyone. Thought i would run this blog again. I got an incredible response from it. It is one of my passions cruising. I will be off again with my beautiful wife Christine in September 2011 to South East Asia. I hope you enjoy the blog and it gives you ideas where to  write your first book or your next one. There is cruising and then there is Princess Cruises.
Cheers. Thomas.
So, what does it take to write a novel? While I may not be an expert I can at least share the experience from the perspective of someone who has done it before. I can't promise these tips will work for you, but they might.
Since a young boy I have always wanted to write but as we all know things during your life seem to get put in your way. In a large majority of cases the biggest need in life is to make a living to support a lifestyle that usually entails marriage, mortgage then children, not necessarily in that order. In my life, so far, there has never seemed to be the right moment to realise my dream, this may be the case for you too. Spare time outside our working hours is greedily taken up by what we generally call maintenance of our family and home which usually entails; taking our kids to their sporting actives on the weekend, helping our partner with the house cleaning and shopping plus the garden is always crying out for more attention. This maintenance often appears to be a bottomless pit!
It wasn't until I decided to take a cruise sailing out of Fremantle on Princess Cruises Sun Princess with my beautiful wife Christine, some 3 years ago, that it became obvious, after the first day onboard, that this would be the perfect place to start my writing.
Why is a Princes Cruise the right environment, you may ask?
Once you step onboard a Princess Cruise voyage, to coin the phrase used in Princess Cruises promotional material, you escape completely. It is a promise they don't fail to deliver. You have a well appointed Stateroom with first class service from your friendly and knowable steward who keeps your cabin in tip top shape. You are free from all the day to day demands of life. On board your Princess cruise life is made so very easy for you. The Horizon Court buffet will welcome you 24 hours of the day and is a haven for all tastes. There are four set meal times for you - breakfast, lunch, afternoon tea and of course dinner. Even the fussiest eater will find a wide range of food to their taste. When it comes to washing clothes, not a problem – just give them to your cabin steward and the next day you will have them back sparkling clean and pressed. No meals to think about or prepare no washing to do – what to do with this spare time, indulge in your passion and start writing!
There are many places onboard to start your writing. You can sit out on your balcony, head off to the library, a public room, or onto the Promenade deck and grab a deck chair. There are many places onboard where you can find a quiet corner to sit and contemplate where to start the process of writing your first novel. Here are a few tips.
Plotting – What better place to begin than incorporating your story line around the cruise you are on. Some writers plot out every twist and turn beforehand and some people just write. Although I've always been a 'write first and think later' kind of author, I'm slowly coming to appreciate having a detailed outline to work from. One reason is because I now write to deadlines. Writing to a plot keeps me on track.

Characters – Again cruising is a great place to just sit and 'people watch'. Building your story through the use of many interesting characters you see from the crew and of course the passenger list can be the beginnings of a good read. I have 'good' and 'evil' characters in my novels. The conflict this generates is more than enough to escalate things to a satisfactory climax and conclusion. I don't spend too much time developing bit players, unless they become more important during the writing. If someone's only going to appear in your book for one paragraph, treat them like a piece of furniture. Also, try and limit the number of characters.

Scenes - Are the story units, and there are one or more of these per chapter. Again what is happing around you every day will help you. Take the many interesting ports of call. In my case South East Asia. Your Scenes can be built around your characters activities in these exotic ports.
Bangkok. Temples with gold leaf spires harbor priceless Buddha's. Riverboat trips down a maze of canals.
Ho Chi Minh City. Clouded in history. Over three decades have passed since the fall of Saigon. Now it is a bustling metropolis on the Mekong River. The air is filled with the cries of street hawkers and honking horns.
Kuala Lumpur. Is a melting pot of Malays, Chinese, Arabs, Hindus, Eurasians and Europeans. A place where steel and glass towers stand side by side with graceful stone colonial buildings and mosques adorned with slender minarets.
Sihanoukville, Cambodia. Pristine beaches and crystalline waters with some of the finest big game fishing in the world.
Singapore. The very name summons visions of the mysterious East. Buddhist temples and Arab bazaars await you with some of the finest duty free shopping in the world.
I can go on and on. These ports will make a wonderful backdrop for your story as you will experience them yourself first hand. You also have the facility of the internet on board to do any further research for your book.
Revisions - Don't bother…finish writing the book. You will have plenty of time for improvements later, and it's easy to kill a book by being too critical during the writing process. You're not trying to produce finished work at this stage - remember, by the time a major publisher releases a book it's been through several drafts and has also had input from a professional editor and a proof reader. Think of your first draft as a block of raw material, from which you will chip your finished work. Throw everything into it! Don't worry about inconsistencies and dead ends they can be trimmed out afterwards.
A Princess cruise has everything in place for you to write your first novel whether you use the cruise as a backdrop or not. If you look around you onboard you will see nearly everyone has a book in their hands and during the daylight hours are buried in it.
What a thrill I got on our last cruise when Christine, who had been watching the city skyline of Singapore pass by, caught a passenger more interested in reading their book. On closer inspection she found it was my novel Butterfly in a Glass Bottle being read!
Why not book a cruise and follow in my footsteps and start writing. I am onto my second book and yes I am using all the characters and experiences I gathered from my previous cruises.


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