Writing Time—What’s That?
Thank you so
much to A Chick Who Reads for letting me guest blog today. My new novel, The Flower Bowl Spell, is about Memphis
Zhang, a San Francisco Wiccan who is trying to take control of her life by
banishing magick from it, but finds that the magickal world doesn’t always
cooperate. I’m finding that the mundane world doesn’t either.
Today, for example—I’m mom to two young
children, both in summer camp, and I mixed up the times for pick-up. My poor
son was the last one at his camp, and his counselor was not too happy with me.
In a way, this is a perfect illustration for the question I’ve been getting
asked a lot lately: “When do you have time to write?” The answer, given with a
slightly hysterical laugh: “I don’t.”
Not anymore.
Not with a 4- and 7-year-old. Not with shuttling the kids to and from camp or
school, gymnastics, ballet, swimming, singing, piano (remember, there’s two of
‘em). Not with work (I’m a freelance writer). Not with PTA. Not with being Room
Parent. Not with promoting this novel. I am the personal assistant and
chauffeur to three people, including me (my husband—well, I’m his personal
clothes shopper, but that’s, like, twice a year, tops). Lots of balls in the
air, people. Lots of balls in the air. Sometimes, they get dropped. Like not
double-checking on camp pick-up times. Or making time for writing.
To be honest,
the last time I wrote anything novel-length, my oldest was in utero. That’s
right—it’s been over eight years since I drafted an original book-length
anything! Since then, I’ve been editing and rewriting, or turning other
projects, like a screenplay I wrote ages ago, into books, or writing short
stories. Actually, after all these years of penning them, I have enough stories
for a book-length collection, but somehow, I feel weird counting it.
Here’s the
truth: I write with not a lot of regularity. I fit it
into the nooks and crannies of my day-to-day, when I’m not compelled to do
laundry, unload the dishwasher, or replenish our food stocks. I have many
projects started, including a sequel to The
Flower Bowl Spell, as well as a young adult prequel. There’s also a
99-percent completed first draft of an upmarket women’s novel about two sisters
who own a San Francisco tearoom and their romantic (mis)adventures. What I need
is focus, to concentrate on one of these projects and get it done.
What do you
think, readers? Which project of mine would you like to read next?
THE FLOWER BOWL SPELL
by Olivia Boler
Blurb:
Journalist Memphis Zhang isn’t ashamed of her
Wiccan upbringing—in fact, she’s proud to be one of a few Chinese American
witches in San Francisco, and maybe the world. Unlike the well-meaning but
basically powerless Wiccans in her disbanded coven, Memphis can see fairies,
read auras, and cast spells that actually work—even though she concocts them
with ingredients like Nutella and antiperspirant. Yet after a friend she tries
to protect is brutally killed, Memphis, full of guilt, abandons magick to lead
a “normal” life.
The appearance, however, of her dead friend’s
attractive rock star brother—as well as a fairy in a subway tunnel—suggest that
magick is not done with her. Reluctantly, Memphis finds herself dragged back
into the world of urban magick, trying to stop a power-hungry witch from using
the dangerous Flower Bowl Spell and killing the people Memphis loves—and maybe
even Memphis herself.
Praise for THE FLOWER BOWL SPELL:
"Olivia Boler's The Flower Bowl Spell is a genre-bending ride with sexy rock
stars, Californian witches, children with potentially otherworldly gifts, and
the occasional fairy. But it is also a story of identity, of the sometimes
warring facets that make and shape a human being. Beautifully written, witty,
and brimming with both ordinary and fantastical life, The Flower Bowl Spell will charm readers everywhere."
-- Siobhan Fallon, author of You
Know When the Men Are Gone
Book Trailer http://youtu.be/tq2bMQNyLeY
THE FLOWER BOWL
SPELL—Excerpt One
I wake from a
light doze, no more than ten minutes. Outside, the sun has barely shifted.
Cooper lies by my side watching me, a smile on his lips, his eyes a little
confused with love.
“Time for the
sunset now?” I yawn.
“Yes, by all
means. The sunset.”
He rolls to the
edge of our bed and I watch him walk out the door to the bathroom. I hear him
turn on the shower and start to mumble-sing “Toréador” from Carmen, his favorite shower song.
Cooper knows about
my Wiccan upbringing and refers to me and Auntie Tess as the Asian Pagan
Invasion. I’ve even shared tales of some of the more far-out stuff, like the
green glow that would suddenly emanate from candles when our former coven would
chant around a pentacle circle. But we don’t talk about fairies. Or inanimate
objects coming to life. I tried to once, and he told me I had a very active
imagination as a child, a sure sign of greatness of mind. Who am I to argue?
Besides, I knew
he’d say something like that. Cooper is supportive and easy to read. It’s why I
chose him. But he’s not able to handle the fact that my imagination only gets
me so far. For reasons I don’t even
understand, I can see and do things other witches can’t, things you read about
in fairy tales. Only two others know about me. One is Auntie Tess, yet we never
talk about it. Something stops me from sharing too much, and something stops
her from asking. The other person—well, we haven’t spoken in a long, long time.
I study the
ceiling, my old friend. There’s a crack that’s been there forever, before I
moved into this place. I’ve never liked the ceiling light fixture and pretty
much ignore it, even though each time I pass a lamp store I study the
possibilities. Cooper tells me to wait until we buy a place of our own. But I
doubt we’ll ever leave this apartment. Still, that lamp with its 1950s design
of starbursts and boomerang angles just does not fit with the Edwardian crown
molding and—
Something behind
it moves.
My breath catches.
I blink. What could it be? A mouse? A giant spider? Something small. Something
that darts. With wings.
A face peeks over
the rim of the lamp. As I sit up it ducks away, disappearing from my view. I
feel something, almost like a raindrop, hit my belly, and I jump low into a
crouch. Slowly I stand up on the bed, trying to balance on the lumpy old
mattress. I reach for the lamp. I’m too short.
“Did you just spit on me?” I holler. “What do you want?”
And where, I wonder, have you been?
Footfalls pound
down the hall. Cooper stands in the doorway of our room, dripping wet and
naked. He looks me up and down. The shower is still running.
“Why are you
yelling? What’s wrong?” he asks.
“Nothing. There’s
something there.”
“Where?”
I point. “The
light. The lamp.”
For a second, I
don’t think he’s heard me. He continues to stare at me like maybe this is the
moment where he sees the truth about me and it all ends between us. It’s only a
fraction of a second and then he steps onto the bed—he’s a good foot taller
than I—and unscrews the knob that holds the shade in place. Carefully, he
removes it before peering inside. He raises his eyes to me.
“You’re right.
There’s something here.”
I open my mouth
but don’t say what I’m thinking: Are you
magickal after all? He pauses, making sure I’m ready. I nod. He holds the
shade toward me like—I can’t help thinking with a wee shiver—it’s a sacrifice.
Inside are bits of
asbestos. Dead flies. Lots and lots of dust.
“Oh,” I say. “Oh.”
“Confess.” He
wipes the dripping water from his wet hair out of his eyes. “You just wanted me
to pull the ugly lampshade down. Am I right?”
I look up at the
glaringly bright lightbulbs in their sockets. There’s a hole next to them—a
swallow could fit through it, or something of that ilk.
“Yeah, big C,” I
say. “You caught me.”
“You are a piece
of work, Memphis Zhang.”
“You mean a
control freak.”
“Comme tu veux.”
Cooper goes back
to the bathroom. He turns off the shower and I hear him toweling off. I stretch
out on the bed and study my bod. The spot where I felt something drip on my
skin is dry, clean as a whistle. Cooper comes back into our room and starts to
dress.
“What did you
think was there, anyway?” he asks.
I raise my hands
in a helpless shrug. “A squirrel?”
He snorts. “A
squirrel.”
“Yeah, you’re
right. That’s crazy talk. It was probably a fairy.”
“Or the ghost of
Columbus.”
“Ha ha.”
Yet, I know it was
a fairy because he smiled at me.
Author Bio
Olivia Boler is the author of two novels, YEAR
OF THE SMOKE GIRL and THE FLOWER BOWL SPELL. Poet Gary Snyder described SMOKE
GIRL as a "dense weave in the cross-cultural multi-racial world of
complex, educated hip contemporary coast-to-coast America...It is a fine first
novel, rich in paradox and detail."
A freelance writer who received her master's
degree in creative writing from UC Davis, Boler has published short stories in
the Asian American Women Artists Association (AAWAA) anthology Cheers to Muses, the literary
journal MARY, and The Lyon Review, among others.
She lives in San Francisco with her family. To find out about her latest work,
visit http://oliviaboler.com
Twitter http://twitter.com/oliviaboler
2 comments:
Thank you so much for featuring The Flower Bowl Spell today! Love the design of your website.
Best,
Olivia
I love your blogs banner and I enjoyed this review. I am following. Take a peek at
http://thethingsyoucanread.blogspot.com/ Feel free to leave a comment while you are visiting the site...possibly consider following.
Thanks!
Happy Reading and Blogging
Cynthia
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