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Pen-sive moments of a fat pen person!

PensPen-sive moment #1 – When is a pen not a pen?

When it’s going to sign all those autographs at all those book signing events, of course.

That got me thinking (if you haven’t figured out already, I tend to over-think things) what style of pen do I want for my very first book signing event?

What sort of things do I need to consider: Colour? Smudge factor? Comfort? (coz I intend signing lots of autographs!)

So off I went to my local Office National store where I learnt something about myself.

I’m apparently a fat pen person! (Although the lady in the stationery shop changed it to ‘broad-point pen’ person. Perhaps because of the look on my face at the time. Perhaps because the term ‘fat pen’ is politically incorrect these days. (Perhaps all the other pens bully the fat pens.)

I tried several pens: Parker, Pilot (there is a penchant for ‘P’ in the pen biz obviously). I tried fine points, medium points and fountain nibs, but for me the fat pen added flair. My curlies were suddenly curlier, my strike-throughs stronger, my running almost carefree, my loops loopier (as was I at this point). Most importantly, my signature looked suitably serious and influential (not fine and flimsy) and more befitting a serious author!!

Here it is. My pen! My pen!

Okay, seriously, I had no idea there was so much to consider: acid free, felt-tipped, ball point, fountain, old favourite, family heirloom? Clicky style, lidded, pocket clip?

Argh! Pen science needs to be a degree course.

This writing implement impasse lead me to another dilemma …

Pen-sive moment #2 – How does one sign an autograph: Print? Cursive? Calligraphy? What name do I use: First name only? Both names? My bank signature perhaps? Which page do I sign: Cover? Inside front cover? Title page?

Pensive moment #3 – What else (aside from my name) do I write? “All the best”?(sounds ominous), “Happy reading”? (sounds flippant) “I hope you …” (No, I don’t hope anything I KNOW you will enjoy it!)

Hmm, still none the wiser I Googled (then I asked Bronwyn Parry – who is as good or better than Google when it comes to all things writerly!)

Bron’s five top tips:

  1. Avoid RSI (yes, she signs a lot) by having something the same depth as your book to rest your wrist on.
  2. Minimise spelling errors and waiting times for autograph-seekers (wow, she really signs a lot of books!) by having ‘someone’ hand out Post it Notes for people to stick on their book with their name before they get to the front of the queue.
  3. Test your pen choice suits the paper you are writing on (glossy covers, recycled stock) and have a back up pen.
  4. Add a small plastic or paper piece under your wrist to protect the page.
  5. Write it over and over and over before the big day so you look like a pen pro.

Pen-sive moment #4 – Not convinced I had quite enough information regarding type of pen, choice of words, etc, I went to that wonderful wizard of wisdom–Wiki–only to discover I had another problem. Motor skills! Did I still have what it takes to use a pen after years of pounding a keyboard to write everything from manuscripts to shopping lists?

Penmanship apparently requires motor control and motor memory. (Huston, we may have a problem.)

Handwriting requires the motor coordination of multiple joints in the hand, wrist, elbow, and shoulder to form letters and to arrange them on the page. Holding the pen and guiding it across paper depends mostly upon sensory information from skin, joints and muscles of the hand and this adjusts movement to changes in the friction between pen and paper.With practice and familiarity, handwriting becomes highly automated using motor programs stored in motor memory. Compared to other complex motor skills handwriting is far less dependent on a moment-to-moment visual guidance.

Research in individuals with complete peripheral ‘deafferentation’ with and without vision of their writing hand finds increase of number of pen touches, increase in number of inversions in velocity, decrease of mean stroke frequency and longer writing movement duration. The changes show that cutaneous and ‘proprioceptive’ feedback play a critical role in updating the motor memories and internal models that underlie handwriting. In contrast, sight provides a secondary role in adjusting motor commands. (Wiki)

Sight? Oh no, now I have to go and choose reading glasses! Sure hope I’m not a fat glasses person. Wish me luck. (Oh and maybe buy a book and make me send you a signed bookplate!)

 

 

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Author Harvest ‘bales up’ Nene Davies

Author HarvestToday I welcome Nene Davies, author of the novel Distance, available May 2013. (If you love that title like I do, wait until you read the blurb.) But first things first, as always here on Author Harvest. Let’s talk food …

What delight have you whipped up for me today, Nene? A Nene-ish tart perhaps? (ROFL at my own joke!)

Even if I say so myself, I’ve been known to whip up a pretty good Victoria Sponge. Our local annual Farmers Club Show in Wales offers a tremendous opportunity to enter cakes and other culinary delights in The Big Tent section. I’m proud to announce that over the years, my Victoria Sponge Cakes have been awarded – not once, but twice – The Very Highly Commended Rosette! Actually…. perhaps it was Highly Condemned..? Let me cut you a slice and you can judge for yourself!

(Wow! You are the first to offer award-winning munchies. Take note, Harvestees!)

Nene DaviesAt home …

My mum says garden gnomes make a house a home! Are you loud and proud in your love of garden gnomes at home, a closet gnomer or with a strict ‘no gnomes’ policy at your place?

I’m sorry Jenn – I really am. But this is a no-gnome-home. In fact, there are no little mates in the garden at all…just grass, flowers, jasmine hedges (yes! hedges – they’re fab!) and palm trees.Hedge trimming

(You are welcome to come home to the country and trim my  giant-and-not-so-fab hedges whenever you like!)

What vegetable (or fruit) have you always wanted to grow at home?

Ooh well, that’s easy. Lemons. Let’s face it – what’s not to love? They smell amazing, transform your baked salmon, are a handy means of removing garlic smells from your chopping board….and are an absolute MUST HAVE for a half-decent gin and tonic!

If I came to your home and looked in the refrigerator, what would I find?

Champagne! Oh OK then, not actual Champagne, just anything sparkly. It’s important to always have a couple of bottles of fizz chilling in the fridge, because you never know when you’ll have something to celebrate! There are always lots of veggies and beautiful tropical fruits in our fridge too. And cheese. And olives. Oh and milk. And yoghurt.

(I may just stay for dinner now!)

If you sorted your wardrobe by colour, what colour would stand out? (Ahh, do you sort your wardrobe by colour?!)

Wardrobe-sorting is definitely not my forte, but if it were, then white would be the stand-out. I live in Queensland so there’s not a lot of black clothing in my cupboard!

What are you wearing now? (Be honest!)

It’s the summertime so I’m wearing a white (of course!) cotton sundress and no shoes.

Country curiosities …

We love a sunburnt country (slip, slop, slap and all that). What’s your ideal hat? Or are you a boots person?

Boots are great and when we lived in Wales, they were a winter staple. But now I’m all about the hat. White (sorry!) cotton, big brimmed and floppy.

If you were a tree (or animal) what kind of tree (animal) would you be?

I might be a gum tree so that koalas could snuggle in my branches and kookaburras would laugh amongst my leaves. And I’d smell of eucalypt!

(What a charming answer. I may have to start an ‘Author Harvest Top Answers’ list. That one would be on it!)

About you …

Your turning point: when was that point in your life that you realized that being an author was no longer going to be just a dream but a reality and a career?

I’ve done a fair few jobs in my time. And being a full-time mum was absolutely my most favourite role of all. Our children are now all grown up, and together with my lovely husband,  have encouraged me to really go for my writing dreams. I am so blessed to have the time and space to write full time now. A couple of years ago, we spent twelve months in Melbourne and that’s when I really knuckled down to the serious business of getting my novel down on paper – and I haven’t stopped since!

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

Editing! Bluegh!

If someone was to write your biography, what do you think the title should be?

I drew a blank with this question, so I asked my Mum-in-Law what she thought. She didn’t hesitate in replying ‘The One and Only.’ We both started giggling at that point and I’m still not sure if that’s a flattering title… or not…!

(LOL! You were brave asking your M-I-L! I’d go with flattering.)

Fun stuff …

What does your protagonist think about you? Would he or she want to hang out with you, the author, his/her creator.

My novel ‘Distance’ is loosely based on our family’s own experiences and written from the mum’s point of view, so I suppose that she and I are half-sisters already. To be honest, there are times when my protagonist is positively dislikeable and an absolute pain! I’m MUCH nicer than she is! (Ah bless, don’t hate her – she has a lot to contend with!)

(You need to touch base with Allison Rushby. I think she did the reverse – Australia To England. She has a travel memior blog wth the best title – http://keepcalmandcarryvegemite.com/) The book Keep Calm and Carry Vegemite will be released with Momentum on 1 March, 2013. Ooh, March 1. What a great date!)

If you could trade places with any other person for a week, famous or not famous, living or dead, real or fictional, with whom would it be?

At the risk of sounding absolutely cheese-tastic, I would have to say that I wouldn’t want to trade places with anyone. Unless of course, they were an award-winning novelist with a squillion dollars in the bank and the face of a twenty year old. But then again, would I really want to swap lives with that person? Nah.

If I said to you, “Just entertain me for five minutes, I’m not going to talk,” what would you do?

I’d read my novel to you!

(I’d enjoy that very much!)

What food would you be?

Hopefully something sweet, but not sugary. Sharp, but not brittle. Warm but wouldn’t burn you. Definitely not something bland. Oh to heck with it, I’d be a lovely big glass of red wine!

(I’ll drink to that!)

What was the best thing before sliced bread?

Unsliced bread I guess!

Name 5 uses for a stapler that has not staple pins.

  1. Door wedge.
  2. Window prop.
  3. Offensive weapon.
  4. Conversation starter.
  5. Funky paperweight.

Thanks for being a good sport, Nene. Now, about you and your novel …

DISTANCE by Nene Davies

Take a passionate couple, a rock-solid family and an idyllic life on the West Wales coast. Throw in an outrageous dream, a life-changing situation and a difficult grandmother. Add a teaspoon of luck and a bucketload of love, mix in a dollop of emotion, a river of conflict – and stir!

Distance will be published by Australian digital publishers Really Blue Books in May 2013. (Although not the cover, this image remains an inspiration to Nene.)

Connect with Nene Davies on Facebook and Twitter: @nene_davies

In addition to writing contemporary women’s fiction, Nene writes short stories and poetry. Her story ‘Miss Understood’ has been published, both online and in hard copy by Narrator Australia as part of their anthology and is currently sitting at no. 5 in the Narrator Australia stats.

Nene’s short story ‘Day One’ has been published in hard copy by Writers Abroad in the ‘Foreign Encounters’ anthology and this will also be available as an e-book from 14th February 2013, and ‘Santa’s Helper Helps Herself’ is a short piece written for the ABC Open website and which appeared online late last year.

Just a couple of weeks ago, Nene heard that her poem ‘So Young’, written when her middle child was on deployment overseas with the Australian Army, has been selected for inclusion in a forthcoming exhibition. The 100 Years From Gallipoli Poetry Exhibition. Dates for the exhibition are yet to be announced.

 

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A most magical day.

My most magical day started with this … a most unusual Tawny Frogmouth. Tawny basking

He was right there, basking in the sun; right beside the car space we drove into on our way to meet with writing friends — some damn special ones at that — at Bellingen’s Old Butter Factory.

The occasion turned into a pre-launch celebration for House for all Seasons and I thank Bronwyn Parry, Annie Seaton, Elle Fynllay, Shannon Garner and Jeannette for adding to the magic.

Speaking of magic … check out this gorgeous gift from Bronwyn Parry — one of her handmade pieces that I will treasure along with the matching earrings I received a year ago. And I have the perfect occasion to wear it coming up next week. (Even the gift wrapping was a perfect match for my bookmarks.)

We had water dragon drop by during lunch, and a constant stream of ‘wishes’, carried by a gentle breeze, floated right past our table. We laughed.

The magic continued when I arrived home to discover it was the day I’d been waiting for … D Day.

D stands for … Delivery Day.

The day a certain box of books arrives.

Here they come!

And here they are… (with bookmarks, ready to rock and roll those bookshops!)

My booksThe feel of them, all embossed … so shiny.

The smell … so sweet.

The extra treats inside … so spoilt.

Thank you Simon & Schuster.