Sunday, 30 December 2012

Review of Shopping Carts of Nanaimo



I'm not giving this book a rating because Michael is my husband and I've been involved with his efforts for the past year. My bias for this project is total as I've watched him fall in love with photography all over again as he embraced this project with ever growing passion.

The hardest part was choosing the photographs to be used, going from thousands down to about a hundred and forty. I spot shopping carts everywhere I go now not only out of habit but also out of a strange fondness for the wheeled things I'd never thought that much about.

The pictures are beautiful and are a great representation of our home city and the sites I've grown up in and around. As he notes in the introduction shopping carts are our modern day donkeys, used for everything from moving to shopping and even work for many who keep our streets clean of cans and bottles to earn a simple income. Each picture tells a story amazingly framed in the 'natural' surroundings of an abandoned or working shopping cart. Covering four seasons, the book has an industrial feel, cityscapes, streets and bus stops. Shopping malls, optimism and neglect and in places humour.

A portion of the proceeds will be donated to the local foodbank. It is currently available on Amazon.


Thursday, 13 December 2012


Hello.
As you may know I live in Beautiful British Columbia.
It's one of the last amazing places on Earth.
I think it's worth saving. I think if the pipeline goes through we may lose something very special on this planet.
I hope you take the time to read this and let the Canadian Government know that this project needs to be halted until we have time to think about it more.
A 10 year pause in the history of the Earth is a blink of an eye for time.

Media Release | Dec. 11, 2012

Single spill could wipe out economic gains from Northern Gateway

UBC researchers estimate losses of $300-million, cleanup costs of up to $9.6-billion
A major tanker spill off the coast of northern British Columbia could wipe out any potential economic gains from the proposed Northern Gateway Pipeline project, according to new research from the University of British Columbia.
The study, sponsored by WWF-Canada and conducted independently by UBC fisheries economists Ngaio Hotte and Rashid Sumaila, estimates that losses of $300-million in economic activity along with spill cleanup costs of up to $9.6-billion could nullify potential economic gains proposed by Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipelines LLP.
“We compared the economic benefits of the project to potential losses of spills of varying scales and found that a large-scale spill could cost local fishermen, the Port of Prince Rupert, BC Ferries and marine tourism operators roughly $300-million, 4,000 full-time jobs and $200-million in contribution to GDP over 50 years,” says Hotte.
Using previously published estimates of per-barrel cleanup and litigation costs, the researchers further estimated the ensuing cost of spill response and cleanup to be as high as $9.6-billion – costs that would far outweigh total benefits of the project.
Hotte and Sumaila based their research on figures provided by Enbridge and current economic activity in the B.C. north coast region. They estimated that over its lifespan, the project could create up to 8,500 full-time jobs and generate more than $600-million in economic benefits.
“There is a lot of rhetoric around the ‘potential’ economic gains of this proposed project, but the hard numbers are showing the risks can outweigh the gains,” says Prof. Sumaila, director of the UBC Fisheries Centre and its Fisheries Economics Research Unit.
BACKGROUND | PIPELINE RISKY FOR ECONOMY
The proposed Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline project would transport 525,000 barrels per day of conventional light and heavy oil, synthetic oil and blended bitumen from Bruderheim, Alberta to Kitimat, B.C., for export via tankers.
The economic benefits were calculated based on figures provided by Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipelines LLP. Economic impact of spills was calculated under three potential spill scenarios: no impact (no spill), medium impact (a 63,000-barrel spill) and high impact (a 257,000-barrel spill). Spill response, clean up and litigation costs were calculated based on previous estimates of the cost per barrel published by Wright Mansell Research Ltd., a firm hired by Enbridge to analyze the socio-economic impacts of the project.
The scope of the UBC study was limited to market values of four ocean-based industries: commercial fishing, port activities, ferry transportation and marine tourism. Estimated losses are conservative and do not include the harder-to-estimate social, cultural and ecological values that would be lost in the case of a major spill.
In the event of a medium impact spill, the regional economy could suffer total losses of up to $189-million in output, 1,314 full-time jobs and $98-million in GDP over 50 years. If a high impact spill occurs, the region could suffer losses of up to $308-million in output, 4,379 full-time jobs and $205-million in GDP.
Each year, ocean-based industries on the North Coast of B.C. generate about $1.2-billion, provide employment for more than 9,000 people and contribute approximately $700-million to GDP.
The study was sponsored by WWF-Canada, one of the world’s largest and most respected independent conservation organizations, with more than 5 million supporters and a global network active in over 100 countries.
A copy of the report is available at: www.fisheries.ubc.ca/publications/fcrrs

Monday, 19 November 2012

Deadly Redemptions giveaway!

Hello :-)

There is a Deadly Redemptions book giveaway that you should enter if you haven't already done so.
Draw date is Dec. 31, 2012.

http://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/show/37358-deadly-redemptions


Can't write a lot at the moment. 
Making a lot of headway on Wingspan.
I've really developed a love for my new people and have already worked out a second book in the series for them and have tinkered with dropping this couple into another book I have on the backburner.

But that's all I can say.
I'm on target for Wingspan release December, 2012.

Thanks for reading this.
Hope you win!!








Tuesday, 30 October 2012

contests! contests! and sneak peak

Hello.

A sneak peak at what the paperback of Wingspan will look like, in theory :)








Also I will be working with the Book Vixen for an upcoming book giveaway.

This is her current giveaway.
It should be in December.








Also I am currently working with Goodreads on a giveaway of Deadly Deceptions!



Don't forget to enter!
I just LOVE this book cover and reading this book.




AND





My Facebook page giveaway!
A signed copy of the trilogy!









For the Facebook Draw we will make a video of the draw and post it online (in theory!)

We'll put all the names in a bowl, stir it, then pick one.

Hopefully that sounds fair.

Thank you.


Friday, 26 October 2012

Tuesday, 9 October 2012

Thank you!

I'm rehashing old thoughts here as I take a break from my new project.  It's really taking wings and I'm very excited to be taking a momentary break from the Chronicles of Anna.  However, Anna is always in the back of my mind.  I am 40,000 words into book 4, Deadly Obsessions but I wanted to make sure book 4 is a complete departure from the main characters.  Anna, Paul and Jack may come back or they may not.

No, it was better to let them be for awhile.  I needed to close the book on them and let the dust settle for a bit before moving forward with Camille.  I hope that the family diagram for the book has been helpful.  It is not an easy book to follow I think for some, especially those looking for a quick fix.  I suppose it does that too but there is a bit of the Godfather in the Chronicles of Anna, the family.


Hopefully this has been a help to everyone.
We will soon have it up on the website but I didn't want to put it up somewhere too obvious and make those beginning the journey with Anna and Paul in Deadly Expectations figure out some of the ending and some of the beginning of book two and three.

I wanted to take a second and thank Sony, Amazon, Kobo and iBooks for their amazing creations that allow new authors, unproven authors, authors with unique ideas let their words take flight by placing them in their virtual stores.  What an amazing world we are about to invent here.  So many books, like songs, have a required rhythm or expected journey that traditional publishers have felt safe with.  A formula.  I feel that writing is going to enjoy a new beginning.  That we are entering a period of time very much like music was entering in the 1960s.  So many different ideas and characters and plot lines and wonderful imaginative flights are taking to the skies.

I hope that I can continue to allow the creative process to flow through me and into my keyboard as a way to express myself and please the characters I have created.  I wish for nothing else.  Except for you to join me on these future journeys.

My newest creation has just sprung to life.  What an amazing time this is.  Exhaustion from the last book and yet this new one demands my time.  Already the plot lines and character lines have taken shape.  I am surprised at how quickly this has formed.  Now I, like you, will sit back and see where they venture and who they become.

Tuesday, 2 October 2012

Oh, one more thing today

Sorry I haven't blogged since June.

In my defense, I was writing a book or two :)

FREE BOOKS !! Hard covers, autographed!

As part of the completion of Anna's lives in the trilogy of the Chronicles of Anna Blue Swell Books is giving away a signed copy of each of the three books to one lucky person selected at random who LIKES my Facebook page Deadly Expectations.

Simply go to http://www.facebook.com/pages/Deadly-Expectations/239273106122736

Push LIKE

And you're entered to win!!

Draw is December 15th, 2012.

Thank you for participating (hopefully).

:-)

Flying High in the UK

Two short stories that I wrote last year are selling very well, especially in the United Kingdom. From time to time, when I get a few minutes between writing my new novel, I take a second to think about why books sell and where.

The Landing is a short story that I left out of my full-length novel -- Deadly Expectations -- The Chronicles of Anna, Part I. Deadly Expectations was a six month book edit.  There were a lot of reasons for such a lengthy gestation. Nerves, experience, and direction for both the editor and myself.  One of the things we decided on was that this particular dream sequence didn't fit.  The editor loved the scene and felt strongly that it added to the novel. I felt we were way, way over sized and I had to cut cut cut. I think at the time the novel was 213,000+ words. Although it hurt to cut this scene out, we did, and the book quite frankly was better off for it. Cut, cut, cut anything that doesn't lead directly to plot development.

However, during this editing process, we needed to try some publishing things out and required a guinea pig.  The thought came up about the few thousand words of the dream sequence being a great story on it's on.  Why not tweak it and put it up for sale?

So we did, and I did, and there it is.  And it's a strong seller, especially in the past few months, which really surprises me because it was almost an afterthought. 

If you liked this short story and haven't read Deadly Expectations and joined the Anna Chronicles I strongly suggest you begin the journey.

The other strong seller for me, especially in the UK, is my short story, The Yellow Dress.  It is in fact an alternate universe.  It is a naval world, one similar to our own.  However, it is based on what I would call a feudal system, but with women in full participation.

I wrote The Yellow Dress to venture a bit into the romance world but also as part of a literary contest.  Unfortunately I did not win, however, I won with the tremendous experience this short gave me both writing it, editing it, and publishing it.  I wanted to show the difficulty for this particular woman in her deciding between love and her career; one that would satisfy herself and the other her family and her father.  

I'm glad people are enjoying her voyage and her ultimate decision.

www.elizabethmunro.ca

Sunday, 3 June 2012

When you can't review, reflect.

I'm currently reading David Brin's Earth which I first read years ago.  I've been giving some thought to how I might review it since I'm not even a third of the way through and already have so much to say but then I wonder where I'm going to get the cans to do a review any justice at all.  Goodreads.com has over 2100 reviews of Earth already.  The fact that this book still speaks to me although very differently after twenty some years is enough for feelings of inadequacy when it comes to giving Earth any sort of rating.  It's going to get five stars, I know that already but not for any reason I can readily put my finger on.

I follow David Brin on twitter and have read many science articles he posts.  I imagine him to be the kind of person who'd sit on my back deck and turn the barbeque down when it needed it and be comfortable enough to wander around my house to find the bathroom.  And I'd feel comfortable enough to let him.  I may be delusional but let me have my fantasy.

Brin's works have been so much a part of my reading history I can honestly say they have influenced my vision of the future.

Earth was first published more than twenty years ago and I read it then after adoring his Uplift novels.  I especially enjoyed the (what seemed at the time) futurist statements about global warming and the results of the careless habits of billions of humans.  I compared the images of thick sunblock and covering up with the cavalier attitude we had toward the sun in the seventies and early eighties when a kid with a sunburn was even more rare than one who shaved off her eyebrows thinking they'd grow back before her parents returned from a weekend away.

Now however I enjoy another cool and rainy (and some say global warming induced) June in my yard.  Socks and shoes instead of sandals and a blanket over my shoulders when the laptop doesn't provide enough heat.  The windows are closed and sometimes the furnace still comes on.  When the sun does show I cake the sunblock on the kids every hour.  When I was their age there wasn't sunblock and a kid with freckles had no more than a dozen.  As a teen we used baby oil to enhance tanning and you couldn't buy more than spf 8.  That was for wusses.

So much of Earth was fantasy to me then.  It's fact now: desertification, polar caps melting, extinctions.  Science struggles to find ways to preserve our cheetahs, elephants and polar bears as human encroachment and habitat changes make their way of life untenable.  Unfortunately science seems to be able to do nothing more than document their decline with stoic resignation.

I've taken to reading Earth as if it were a series of short stories.  No more than a chapter a day.  I need the time to incorporate the imagery properly.  When I first read it I recall licking the words from the pages in only a few sittings.  I remember loving it although today I'm not sure why.  Those memories are lost with the passage of the past two decades.  There's suspense, intrigue and action of course; more than enough to hold the interest of a much younger Elizabeth.  I took the futurist science as complete fiction.  Very well done fiction, but fiction none the less.  Now however so much is entirely believable.  If we just push a little harder we can get there and therein lies the drama for me today.

If you've read Earth in the past I highly recommend doing so again.  For me, little memory of the plot remains having been so long ago so it is like reading it for the first time.  How often can we do that?  But I'm alarmed by the differences between the childhoods I'm guiding and the one I remember.  Other things have changed too.  I remember my kids' amazement at the sight of a typewriter.  Or mothballs, anyone remember those?  I don't remember the last time I encountered someone bearing that distinctive smell.  Not that mothballs or typewriters would effect much global change today.  Most of those typewriters sit in landfills like the local one we visited yesterday.  It's a true mountain.  I remember when it was a hole and we called it a dump.

I've read my chapter for today and put my Kobo in the drawer.  I wonder about that piece of plastic and silicon with its touch screen and its wifi.  Is it any greener than the paperbacks it replaces?  I suppose it is although I'll likely have to pay a fee at the recycling centre one day as a penalty for leaving a tree alone in favour of a toxic battery.

It's time to move on to other things.  The sun is out.  I'm not going to waste it.