Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Artistry With Words - Guest Post - “Why I Write…”


Artistry With Words
Guest Post
“Why I Write What I Write…”


A week ago, today, it was my privilege to have a Guest Post on the Blog of writing colleague, Bill Holland - his blog is “Artistry With Words.” His motto is: “ Helping writers to spread their wings and fly.” He inspires, encourages, and supports those of us who write, whatever we write, for whatever reason. 

Bill Holland and Friend
Author, Artistry With Words blog


It was an honor, for me, to have my post published on his blog. If you missed it, I wanted to share what I wrote there:

“Why I write what I write…”


Bill Holland is a great inspiration to many of us as well as a fine teacher of writing, for which I offer my personal thanks. He often reminds us that each of us is very different in our interests and our output as well as being very similar in the skills and attitudes needed to write successfully… whatever your gauge for success may be.

Today I want to share with you, new readers and long-time readers as well, “why I write what I write.” I write family saga stories. Since they all happen in the past, they also qualify, at least in a general sense, as historical fiction. Virtually all of my stories are based on my twenty plus years of family history and genealogy research and my life experiences - 75 plus years living all over these United States of America. I do/have written non-fiction, as well, but I most enjoy sharing my stories by way of fiction. I hope and assume those of you who choose to read them will enjoy them.

I began with a story of a family set in a place: “Back to the Homeplace” by William Leverne Smith. I used my full names on my novels, all available at Amazon.com… with a name like mine, it was a challenge, let me tell you. Some of my writing also uses “Dr. Bill” - which is a brand, if you will, that I have promoted a bit, mostly since I retired from university teaching… that is what many of my students called me, and it stuck. 

That first story was based on a ‘video will’ a ‘matriarch’ of the family wrote to entice her children to return home to their roots, her roots, on the Century Farm (actually more than 150 years) on which she and her children and many of their ancestors had lived. How would you have felt with that ‘enticement’ to be part of a will (involving hundreds of acres of good farm land and substantial cash investments)? The reactions of the children, from around the USA, are at heart of the story of that first novel.

As I was finishing that novel for self-publication in my first year of retirement, my mind kept being drawn to that ’150 years and more’ of family history on that farm and why Mildred (the matriarch) was so intent that the land stay in her family and not be broken up and sold off in pieces. This led to my very detailed research of the place and times of the Homeplace farmland I had created (that creation had actually begun in 1987, the year in which “Back to the Homeplace” is actually set). Here when I say ‘research’ of course, it was a combination of actual research and creation of a set of families who lived the lives I was ‘researching.’ The Civil War was also set in the middle of time time period. Towns in this southern Missouri Ozarks valley were right between the Union and the Confederacy forces, and were mostly totally wiped out by guerrilla fighters, both sides, during the war. So, this became part of the series of short stories that I recently published titled: “American Centennial at the Homeplace: The Founding (1833-186).” Three of the Founding short stories had previously been published, in each of three years, in a regional writer’s group Annual Anthology. It is very interesting where writing these stories has taken me, as a writer. Book signings are among the more exciting.

Along the way, I also published “Murder by the Homeplace” (a novella set in 1987, immediately following the first novel), “The Homeplace Revisited” (set in mid-1996 focused on the next generation of the central family), “Christmas at the Homeplace” (set in fall and winter of 1996). “3 Threats to the Homeplace” is set to be published late in 2015 (set in 1999). Collectively, I now promote all of these stories as “The Homeplace Saga” with a home base at my blog: http://thehomeplaceseries.blogspot.com/. My retirement, genealogy and book blogs are listed in the right sidebar of the homeplace blog.

I discovered HubPages, and Bill Holland (billybuc), in late 2013, and began writing (up to 64 hubs, today) in a new series of short stories I call “Weston Wagons West” (http://drbill-wml-smith.hubpages.com/). These are fictional stories that actually share specifics of my personal family history in the USA from the 1600s into the 19th Century using the eyes of a fictional family to tell the stories of my families, as if they were close friends and neighbors. It has been a fun adventure, and I’ve enjoyed the feedback I’ve gotten from readers very much.

At http://homeplaceseries.hubpages.com/ I dabbled a bit with a few stories related to “The Homeplace Saga” stories. As I worked through The Founding stories, I created a new family in Oak Springs, in 1876-77, that has now become a 40-episode (2 volume Ebook) series “The King of Oak Springs” continuing the Homeplace stories through their eyes. When my Squidoo account was merged into HubPages, that created: http://drbillsmithwriter.hubpages.com. There I have added a 24-episode ‘murder mystery’ by an ‘author’ who is a character in “The Homeplace Saga” series.

I find that I cannot “not write.” I have stories to tell. I must share them. I have the good fortune (I think that is what it is… don’t burst my bubble, please) to not need to write for money. I write for the sheer love of writing and sharing what I love. These are ‘real people’ to me, and I want you to get to know them as well. That is why ‘I write what I write.’

Dr. Bill ;-)


Friday, February 6, 2015

3 Threats - 6 POV characters - Jennifer is our fourth…


“3 Threats to the Homeplace” preview
6 POV characters
Jennifer is our fourth…

   

Jennifer Bevins also came of age in “The Homeplace Saga” stories of the 1990s…. she came back home to the Oak Creek valley as a practicing veterinarian in the summer 1996. To learn a little more about her, if you are new to the series, or as a reminder if you are a regular, following is a piece I recently published specifically regarding her role in the upcoming “3 Threats” novel:




Jennifer set up her Veterinary Clinic near the Bevins Stable and Trail Rides operations in the Summer of 1996 in “The Homeplace Revisited.” Late that summer, she developed a strong interest in her family history, along with her aunt Karen. She also met Brian Kirk, the young attorney whose mother had died too young, who also had developed a similar interest. We continued their story into the next novel, “Christmas at the Homeplace,” where they helped found the Oak Springs Historical and Genealogical Society in their community. This activity will develop an important role in “3 Threats.”

As with the other major characters in “The Homeplace Saga” series of family saga, historical fiction stories, you can use the developmental wiki as a reminder. Here are links to Jennifer, and the other characters:


There are currently 7, about to be 8, references under Labels (right sidebar, scroll down):


…where you get more information about Jennifer, including more about her relationship with her cousin, Heather, and the horses.


******

“May each of us have a Homeplace to hold onto, if only in our minds.”  Dr. Bill ;-)

Friday, January 30, 2015

3 Threats - 6 POV characters - Christopher is our third…


“3 Threats to the Homeplace” preview 6 POV characters  Christopher is our third…


Christopher Ogden would probably now be considered the central figure in “The Homeplace Saga” stories of the 1990s…. when you read the stories. To learn a little more about him, if you are new to the series, or as a reminder if you are a regular, following is a piece I recently published specifically regarding his role in the upcoming “3 Threats” novel:




In the summer of 1996 we introduced you to the mare Christopher purchased, Shadow, and his new dog, Chase, pictured (above) on the front of “The Homeplace Revisited.” In that novel, of course, he met and proposed to his future wife. This novel has been referred to as a “double romance” novel, as well as moving forward with the rest of the family storylines.

As with the other major characters in “The Homeplace Saga” series of family saga, historical fiction stories, you can use the developmental wiki as a reminder. Here are links to Christopher, and the other characters:


There are currently 8, about to be 9, references under Labels (right sidebar, scroll down):


…where you get more information about Christopher. The first one has a story about his marriage to Nicole… at the Methodist Church.

Character number 4 will be introduced next Friday, in this space.

******

“May each of us have a Homeplace to hold onto, if only in our minds.”  Dr. Bill ;-)

Friday, January 23, 2015

3 Threats - 6 POV characters - Bart Bevins next…


“3 Threats to the Homeplace” preview 
6 POV characters  
Bart Bevins next…



Bart Bevins was the third of the Bevins siblings and has appeared in each novel in "The Homeplace Saga"as well as the novella, “Murder by the Homeplace.” I have written about him a number of times, of course, in this space. However, most recently, I published the following, specifically regarding his role in the upcoming “3 Threats” novel:


It has been said (see below), that Bart Bevins reminds them of Missouri native, actor John Goodman.


John Goodman on the red carpet at the Emmys in 1994 - Wikimedia Commons


Of course, he has his own Character File in the Developmental Wiki: “The Homeplace Saga: Beyond the Books,” for those of you new to my writings, or who may have forgotten:


Bart, and his wife, Diane, will continue to play key roles in “The Homeplace Saga” stories, as we move forward, into 1999 and beyond, of course.

If you scroll down to Bart in the Labels, right sidebar, you find ten entries where he is mentioned, in the context of the stories.  Specifically, I wrote “Meet Bart Bevins” that includes some of the other references.


Here is an interview with Bart by local reporter, Penny Nixon:



Here is the Profile I wrote of Bart as one of the major characters in “Back to the Homeplace.”


Over the coming weeks, I do want you to get to know these characters, so that when “3 Threats” does come out, you’ll want to learn even more about them.


******

“May each of us have a Homeplace to hold onto, if only in our minds.”  Dr. Bill ;-)

Friday, January 16, 2015

3 Threats - 6 POV characters - Lori Winslow first…


"3 Threats to the Homeplace" preview
6 POV characters
Lori Winslow first…


Over the next six Fridays, I will share with you some background (and questions to be answered) on the 6 characters that will “tell the story” in my next novel in “The Homeplace Saga” series of family saga, historical fiction stories: “3 Threats to the Homeplace,” set in early 1999.

Earlier, stories on each of the 6 “point of view” (POV) characters were shared on my HubPages (short story) writing platform, in more detail. I encourage you to read this, if you have not already. Or, you may want to re-read it, again, to be current in the stories. Here is the link: http://homeplaceseries.hubpages.com/hub/3-Threats-Character-Development-CD1-Meet-Lori-Winslow

Storm clouds on the horizon

Source: Freeimages.com user smithwil


You may recall that Lori Winslow is the oldest daughter of Karen and Jason Winslow. Jason died in 1993. Karen was one of the four Bevins siblings who came “Back to the Homeplace” in response to their mother’s unusual will, in that first novel in this series.

In “Christmas at the Homeplace,” Lori moved back to the Oak Springs valley from Los Angeles to help her mother, Karen, run the Homeplace Country Inn on part of the original family farm land, two miles east of town. It looked across the farm toward the Mill on Oak Creek. 

Lori has been looking into developing some of the land, in between, into a residential “Homeplace Estates,” to continue the family legacy in a new direction for the next generation. There are now several couples of that generation who would like to build their “forever” homes on this land, as well. Lori wants to facilitate their vision. Will the older family members support that vision?


Here is a reminder of the “Back of the Book” tentative description of the next novel:

“In February 1999, social and economic times were booming for The Bevins Agricultural Corporation and the McDonald Conservancy with additional farm lands purchased and additional lands donated to the Conservancy. The Conservancy just received an $800,000 State of Missouri Conservation Grant to implement their major operating plan. Then it happened. 

Bad things come in “threes:” 
  1. Bevins sister, Beverly, moved back to Oak Springs “permanently.” Remember what happened the last time she did that? 
  2. A mature man appears in Oak Springs claiming half of the Bevins-McDonald property at the time Mildred (McDonald) Bevins died in the fall of 1986. He says he is very serious, and his claim will be upheld in court.
  3. An F-3 Tornado strikes in the Oak Creek valley, with devastating results.”


“May we each have a Homeplace, if only in our minds.”


Dr. Bill ;-)

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Plan to attend Book Signing, 4 weeks from today


Plan to attend Book Signing, 4 weeks from today


Speakers include Janice Martin and Roy Rogers, Jr.; Authors include Dr. William Leverne Smith and Carl Sparks at the Kimberling Area Library, Feb 7, from 9:30 to 2:00 p.m. - See details, including a complete list of speakers (10) and local authors (40), at:


Dr. Smith will feature his recent Short Story Collection:


Hope to see you there! ;-)

Friday, January 9, 2015

Excerpt from "The Kings of Oak Springs" stories


Excerpt from The Kings of Oak Springs stories




The following excerpt from the current series of short story posts in “The Kings of Oak Springs” series has received a number of positive comments from readers. I wanted to share it with a broader audience. Liam and David had served together in the Civil War. They were the first two to return, together, to their home valley following the war in 1865… this episode is in early 1877…

See what you think…

An excerpt from Episode 30, of “The Kings of Oak Springs” series of stories at:

[Episode 40 will be published shortly, the last of the 20 episodes in Volume Two (forthcoming) of the ebook, of the same name]


Karl decided to talk to Owen directly about how Liam was doing by now. He knew that Liam had been personally devastated by the premature death of his very close friend, David Baldridge. He didn't want to pry, but really wanted to understand the situation a little better. Karl wanted to be supportive without interfering. He'd even been reluctant to talk to Owen about any business until he knew the situation better. Karl was pleasantly surprised when Owen seemed ready to talk about it when the subject came up. Owen began, "You do know they were much more to each other than just real close friends?"

Responding carefully, Karl replied, "Yes, it seemed that might be the case."


Owen then proceeded to share with Karl the approach they had taken to help get Liam out of his deep depression. They had encouraged him to take his time, but, when he was ready, to get back to his creative metal work by dedicating what he did to David's memory. It was slow going, but it appeared that Liam was slowly finding his way back. In the past couple of weeks, Owen, added, Liam had even offered to help Owen on a couple of his projects. Karl thanked Owen for sharing this information with him, and wished the whole family well. Soon, he said he needed to let Owen get back to his work, and took his leave.”


May you always have a Homeplace, if only in your heart!

Dr. Bill ;-)