Writing & Stuff
Thoughts on writing and writings about things I’m thinking about.
From Yasujirō Ozu films to a 1964 Fodor's guide found on eBay, here's how I'm bringing 1966 Japan to life in the final Maddie & Nate novel. Historical accuracy matters, even in fiction exploring quantum possibilities!
Amazon boycotts are well-intentioned but create challenges for indie authors who depend on the platform. In my latest article, I explore this tension and share specific ways readers can support creators directly.
Watching young fans in Summerside, PEI watching the Canada-US Women’s Hockey Rivalry Series , I couldn't help but think about how far we've come. Today's girls don't just dream about playing hockey – they dream about Olympic gold. They don't just hope to work in STEM – they plan on running the lab or the company. That’s the power of role models. When girls see women succeeding in previously restricted spaces, whether on the ice or in the boardroom, it transforms their sense of what's possible.
The Identity Alchemy of Becoming a Writer - The process of building fictional identities has unexpectedly illuminated the way my life choices have shaped my own sense of self.
Traditional romance readers often draw a hard line when it comes to infidelity in their fiction. It's understandable – we read romance for the promise of love conquering all, not for the messy reality of hearts being broken along the way. But some love stories demand to be told precisely because they challenge our comfortable assumptions about right and wrong. These stories live in the gray spaces between conventional romance and contemporary women's fiction, where real life's complications refuse to be neatly packaged with a bow.
I wanted to share some thoughts on the themes behind my latest novel "Next Time" and why I chose to explore the complex territory of love's timing in our lives.
Ultimately, the beauty of storytelling- whether as a reader or writer - is that it doesn’t have to be confined to a single genre, just as the multiverse suggests our lives aren’t confined to a single outcome. We exist in a world of possibilities, and so do the stories we create and consume. As a reader, I still chase after stories that move me, regardless of their genre. As a writer, I strive to craft stories that do the same - drawing from multiple genres to create narratives that resonate deeply.
Creating my characters' lives has made me think about the differences and similarities between Maddie’s era and my Gen X perspective. When considering the ongoing battle for workplace equality, the fight to maintain women’s reproductive rights and societal expectations surrounding marriage and motherhood, it’s sometimes disheartening to think that as much as things have changed… we haven’t come far enough in the last four decades.
The Maddie and Nate Series explores the concept of superposition by exploring multiple versions of their lives.
Is it possible to write an entire novel without having a clue what you’re doing?
It is and I did.
Food & Recipes
What to eat, where to eat and how it’s made…according to me.
There’s a lot of food in your book is a comment I received from one of the early readers of my manuscript. There’s really no surprise how that happened.
I remember hearing my Nonna grumble at my mother when she was making polenta.
“Why can’t we eat something better? Are we poor?”
Places & Events
Where I’ve been, where you’ll find me and where I want to go.
Yesterday was my birthday, and there's something about blowing out candles that makes you reflect on the path that brought you to this exact moment.
As someone fascinated by quantum physics, I think about parallel universes—where different versions of me are celebrating this same birthday with completely different lives. There's the me who took that PhD position in Switzerland and became a full-time scientist. The me who never picked up those black notebooks and started writing.
But in this reality, here's the chain that led to celebrating as a published author: an MBA pivot to medical marketing, a move to Arizona, meeting Mike who asked "what would you write about?"—and everything changed.
Sometimes the smallest choices create the biggest ripple effects.
Stepping into Pompeii is like walking through a portal to the past, where the whispers of ancient life echo through remarkably preserved streets and buildings. My recent trip sparked my imagination as our guide, Barbara, unveiled a glimpse into a sophisticated society tragically frozen in time by Vesuvius' catastrophic eruption.
Out of Time was the book of the month for August for the Once Upon a Time Book Club.
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Why Bar Harbor?
Lobster and location.
“Is the hollandaise is as good as Brandon's?" My husband asked, referring to a character from my novel as if he were a real person. I thought it was just spousal bias until I read a review praising my "unique talent of letting readers unabashedly peek into the lives of characters." That's when I realized: writing in first person POV means I don't create characters—I live inside their heads. When I'm writing as Maddie, I'm literally thinking her thoughts. When I switch to Nate's chapters, I become him. It's like method acting for writers. Maybe that's why readers feel like they're "peeking into lives" rather than being told a story.