#AtoZChallenge – L is for Love

For all that I’ve been happily married and deeply in love for more than 15 years, now, this was the first I considered what, specifically, it means to love and be loved. My father decided to divorce my mother after 42 years, despite her objection. It’s been a challenge to understand why, and even more #AtoZChallenge – L is for Love

#AtoZChallenge – J is for Juniper

Last year I had a problem with this letter, and stretched to make JAM fit. This year, Anne’s adventures took her into the Himalayan mountains. One of the first ways she tries to identify where she is is by taking a deep breath, whereupon she remarks at the scent of juniper. Once again, I’d let #AtoZChallenge – J is for Juniper

#AtoZChallenge – H is for Himmapan

As I mentioned in yesterday’s post, I had faced writing book 2 of the Red Slaves series with some trepidation–after all, I’d only had peripheral contact with China, and had expected to have my characters spend some time there. As the story developed further, it became apparent that rather than a real location, Anne and #AtoZChallenge – H is for Himmapan

#AtoZChallenge – G is for Ghilen

Although I had lived in Taiwan for almost a year and a half and spent some time learning at least a beginning level of Mandarin Chinese I was intimidated by the thought of setting some piece of the second book of the Red Slaves series in China. As it turned out, that location wasn’t so #AtoZChallenge – G is for Ghilen

#AtoZChallenge – E is for Eggs

It being the week after Easter, and the general spring obsession with new life, it seems appropriate to blog about the strangeness of creating dragon biology. I grew up reading about Anne McCaffrey-style dragons. Their biology developed on a different planet, around a different star, and then was bioengineered to become what they were. My #AtoZChallenge – E is for Eggs