Wednesday, July 2, 2025

IWSG Wednesday and Did You Know Thursday

 


The first Wednesday of every month is officially IWSG day. IWSG was formed by Ninja Captain Alex Cavanaugh. Members post about their doubts and fears, discuss struggles and triumphs, and offer words of encouragement to others who are struggling.

 

Twitter handle: @TheIWSG  

Hashtag: #IWSG 


Let’s rock the neurotic writing world!


Our Twitter handle is @TheIWSG and hashtag is #IWSG.

 

The awesome co-hosts for the July 2 posting of the IWSG are Rebecca Douglass, Natalie Aguirre, Cathrina Constantine, and Louise Barbour!

 

Every month, we announce a question that members can answer in their IWSG post. These questions may prompt you to share advice, insight, a personal experience or story. Include your answer to the question in your IWSG post or let it inspire your post if you are struggling with something to say. 

Remember, the question is optional!

July 2 question - Is there a genre you haven't tried writing in yet that you really want to try? If so, do you plan on trying it?

Nope.

When I first started writing, I was all over the board. I wrote whatever genre tickled my fancy. Fiction (of various genres). Non-fiction, you name it. A writer friend suggested I find a genre and stick with it. I didn’t pay any attention to that sage advice until  I started writing Westerns and realized I’d found my niche. I do occasionally meander in to time travel and shapeshifting😉 but whatever I write must have a Western theme.  Don’t misunderstand me. My sales aren’t anywhere near where I’d like them to be, but more solid than any other genre I’ve ever written in.  What about you, have you found your niche or is there something new your muse is urgently whispering you try?

 

June/July Reviews in no particular order.

* Disclaimer. If I run into an occasional typo, I ignore them and don't factor them into my review.

 

GRATITUDE AND NO FAIRY TALE by D. L. Finn

This is such a wonderful collection of poetry.  It both concentrates on nature and shares a part of the author’s inner self, the poems written with a delicate, expressive style.

 I loved all her works but my absolute favorite was The Door.

The opening lines:

“You thought you had found it;

Your forever home,

As they carried you through the door.

You ate, you slept, you loved them,

And there’s much, much more in this vein.

I’m a Finn Fan and highly recommend this addition to her collection of poetry.

Available at Amazon 

 

AUNT SOPHIE’S DIAMONDS  by Joan Smith

This is a reread for me and to my way of thinking one of Ms. Smith's best.  I love a good regency when I'm after escapism reading.  To my way of thinking Joan Smith and Marian Devon were the best authors of this genre.  Their style: witty and entertaining, with just the right amount of romance sprinkled in.

Highly recommended. Available at Amazon

 

 

 

 

WILES OF A STRANGER by Joan Smith

Another great Joan Smith read filled with her classic wit and humor, with just the right amount of romance thrown in. Highly recommended. Available at Amazon

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

NIGHTSHADE by Michael Connelly

Another winner.

Some of Connelly’s books, I really enjoy. Others I’m lukewarm on. NIGHTSHADE turned out to be a ‘really enjoy’.  The author has introduced a new character, Detective Stilwell who has been transferred to Catalina Island because of inner office politics.  The rural setting suits Stilwell to a T. Then the country quiet erupts, as murder raises its ugly head. Now its up to Stilwell to bring justice to the deceased.

Connelly has created a character who is a bit more subtle and less in-your-face than Bosch. Though thankfully, he retains Bosch’s refusal to quit until the crime has been solved, regardless of the consequences, attitude. Highly recommended.

Available at Amazon 

 

PIONEER SUN by MK Alexander

Insightful. 

Calvin Hobbes, from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab, visits retired engineer Henry Humes. What he learns there upends his life and sends him questing for answers about a magnetic field in interplanetary space. And modern algorithms may help him find them.

While Calvin’s team is searching for what’s out there, what’s out there is keeping an eye on earth, where political unrest has only gotten stronger and is spreading throughout the world. Now earth must figure out if there are aliens among us and do they mean us harm….and vice versa.

MK Alexander is a master at world building and character development. I found PIONEER SUN to be a very insightful read—especially considering the times we live in—with some unexpected twists. Highly recommended for MK Alexander fans. If you enjoyed his other works, I suggest you add this to your TBR list.

Available at Amazon 

 

AND

 

Did you know,  Washington Irving (author of Rip Van Winkle) first used the term "Gotham City" to describe New York? 

 

150 Interesting Facts About Our Favorite Authors [Infographic] 

 


 

 

 

 

 

16 comments:

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

And now Gotham City is where Batman lives!
We find our niche and it works, we stick with it, right?

Natalie Aguirre said...

It's great that you found your niche. You can be even more certain it's right for you since you also tried other genres.

Crystal Collier said...

Interesting -- about Gotham.

I'm all for finding your happy writing place. It's about finding your love, your audience, and bringing them together, eh?

L. Diane Wolfe said...

There aren't a lot of western writers, so if you enjoy it, stick with it.

Anonymous said...

Thanks my friend.
www.rsrue.blogspot.com

Sandra Cox said...

Hi Alex, Yes and yes:)

Sandra Cox said...

Exactly:)

Sandra Cox said...

For sure, Crystal:)

Sandra Cox said...

Hi Di, Good advice:)

Sandra Cox said...

My pleasure, Regine:)

Rebecca M. Douglass said...

I'm pretty much sticking with the genre that works for me, after doing middle grade fiction early on in my publishing career. I am thinking about a memoir, which is a very different thing, and I love doing short fiction in different genres, mostly SF/Fantasy and very light comic horror. Once in a while I manage to keep from making wisecracks for a 1000-word flash that's meant to be approaching literary.

Jacqui Murray--Writer-Teacher said...

I love your westerns. I haven't read a single one I didn't devour.

D.L. Finn said...

I am a fan of whatever you write, but particularly westerns in all forms! I've tried all the genres I have wanted to, I seem to be stuck in Christmas right now :) thank you for the wonderful review, too. Still doing my forest happy dance here, in the shade of course! I also found some new reads. Xo

Nas said...

Thanks for your reviews. I'm adding some of it to my list as they sound interesting.

Bleubeard and Elizabeth said...

It's nice to know you've found your niche. I think you write your westerns beautifully.

Thanks for the reviews. The Connelly book sounds like one I would enjoy. And NO, I had no idea Washington Irving called NYC "Gotham City."

LOVE your cat mug.

Christine said...

Good question