More subtle differences

perf5.000x8.000.inddI’m in the process of making my books available from more outlets, rather than just Amazon. While I’m doing that I’m taking the opportunity to update some of the covers.

Two of those which have had a makeover are All That Love Stuff and With Love And Kisses. They’re both collections of 24 short stories all with the theme of love and romance.

Originally they had white backgrounds, which showed off the cartoon images well. However if displayed online anywhere which also had a white background the entire cover got lost. There was also the issue of them looking so much the same I’m not sure people realised they were two different books.

My clever husband has given them pretty sunrise and sunset backgrounds, which I think are very pretty and help distinguish them as different books.

If you’d like more details on either book, click on ‘short story collections’ in the menu.

perf5.000x8.000.inddIf you’d like to read either book you can still get All That Love Stuff and With Love and Kisses from Amazon as ebooks or paperbacks. Paperbacks of both books can be ordered from bookshops and many online retailers or requested from your local library. The ebooks are also available from a range of different retailers. You can find All That Love Stuff here and this is the link for With Love And Kisses.

Whether they’re together forever, broken-hearted, or still trying to make it work, anyone who has loved has a story to tell. These collections each contain 24 of them.

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Do you like the new covers?

Spot the difference

IMG_1195I’ve got a story in each of two very different magazines at the moment – and they each have appropriately different illustrations.

My bright and cheery tale ‘A Fresh Outlook’ is in the always upbeat The People’s Friend Magazine.

Despite its title ‘Comfort Food’ is rather darker and less jolly. That’s in the current Take A Break Fiction Feast.

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I wouldn’t call Fiction Feast downbeat, but it’s certainly grittier than The People’s Friend and you can’t always be assured of a happy ever after ending.

Which do you prefer? A guaranteed happy ending, or to not know what you’re going to get?

Wednesday Word of the Week – Gadfly

A gadfly can be an actual fly – an annoying one. Horse flies and botflies irritate horses, cattle and people. I suppose that in rushing about trying to avoid being bitten by the pesky things, it might seem from a distance that their victims are on the gad.



gadfly is also a person who upsets the status quo. Why anyone would want to I’m not sure – don’t we all love rocking all over the world…? Sorry.

On our trip to the Outer Hebrides, Gary and I had very little trouble with midges, but on Eriskay we were plagued by horse flies at one particular spot.















Wednesday word of the week – Athirst

Athirst can mean thirsty (from the Old English ofthyrst apparently). It also means eager or strongly desirous as in athirst for knowledge. I think I’ll combine them into athirst for a nice cold glass of wine – and as it’s my birthday today I reckon I’m entitled.

The second definition surprised me. I’d heard the phrase and understood the meaning, but had thought it was written as ‘a thirst for knowledge’.

Wednesday word of the week – Parbuckle

Parbuckle is … what I get when I ask my husband for a word of the week suggestion. A parbuckle is a rope or sling used to raise or lower casks or other cylindrical objects.

When used to right a ship, I suppose parbuckling is the opposite of careening. I used to talk about careening in my day job but as I don’t do it any more, I’ll spare you the details. When not used in a nautical context careening means to swerve about.

Here’s a picture of a ship. I careened (slowly) up a nearby mountain to take the photo.

This was a double value word of the week – don’t say I’m not good to you.

Wednesday word of the week – Fettle

My dictionary doesn’t think fettling is a word. It’s wrong.

Gary spends quite a bit of time fettling. It’s the present participle of the verb fettle and means sorting out, tidying up and tiddlying off.

Fettle is in my dictionary. It means condition or trim – as in ‘he felt in fine fettle‘. It can also be what you do to tidy metal castings or pieces of pottery before firing them.

Fettler is also in my dictionary. A fettler is a person who fettles.

I can’t say for certain this pot was ever fettled, but my Black Pearl chili growing in it is in fine fettle, don’t you think?

Quite a bit of fettling of my stories is needed before I’m ready to submit them to magazines or enter them in competitions. I think it’s worth the effort.

Wednesday word of the week – Paraskevidekatriaphobia

Paraskevidekatriaphobia is the fear of Friday 13th.

There isn’t one this month. Would it worry you if there was? Personally I’d be more concerned about trying to write  Paraskevidekatriaphobia instead of relying on cut and paste as I have here.