Love a Good Story

I Love a Good Story. I know you, too, Love a Good Story. I have two stories for today.

First, an author talk. Six authors will offer an author talk on Facebook. I hope you will take a few minutes of your time and hear us talk about our memoirs and novels and read from them. We’ll have time for questions and answers at the end. I will read a little from The Attractiveness of Wisdom.

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The Attractiveness of Wisdom

Hello, my name is George Maddox. I’m one of the characters in Judy’s new novel, The Attractiveness of Wisdom. I’m Hamilton’s father. When Mary and I married, we moved to Stevensville, Maryland. It was not like it is now. Then, it was a small town of hardworking people who loved to live near water. Now, it’s almost a metropolitan city. At the time, most people in Stevensville, owned boats of some sort, but we owned a vineyard. Soon after I graduated from college, my father gave me money to buy a vineyard. He said I wasn’t smart enough to do much else. I believed that about myself for a long time. It’s funny how we are, people, that is. We believe the untruths about ourselves that sometimes our parents tell us. My father did that to me. I tried hard to be a good father to my sons, Taylor and Hamilton. I wanted them to be better men than I, and I expected more from them than my father expected from me. So, I worked that vineyard. I couldn’t fail at it like my father thought I would. I had a family to support and I needed to prove my father wrong. I put in long hours at the vineyard and as my son, Hamilton, told me, “I had the best wine around.” He was right. My wine won several awards as the best wine on the east coast. Do you know what a vineyard looks like? Here’s one type.

 

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This picture is of Cassio’s vineyard in Stevensville. I retired a few years back and sold my vineyard to a nice young couple. They had it for about five years. Then a builder wanted to put up townhouses and the couple sold the vineyard to them. Even though my vineyard is no longer, I invite you to take a glass of your favorite wine, or whatever you like, and enjoy The Attractiveness of Wisdom, when it comes out.  Read about me as you do.

Until we meet again in the novel, Your Friend,

George Maddox

Something Exciting is Coming!!

Love a Good Story. I Love a Good Story. Don’t you just Love a Good Story? I have a Good Story for you. My next novel, The Attractiveness of Wisdom, will be out soon.

Excitement
This is a beautifully crafted and powerful Literary, Christian based novel about a middle-aged man, Hamilton Maddox, with three children, two college students, who has a controlling personality. He has controlled his wife, HolliAnne, for the twenty-seven years of their marriage, and later his three children. His wife files for divorce. Even though he and HolliAnne, have had marital problems throughout their twenty-seven years, he isn’t sure he wants a divorce. But he sees that he can’t control the divorce procedures and through the power of the court system and the will of HolliAnne, he is a divorced man.
Throughout the story, Hamilton sees what happens to people who are being controlled and understands how his controlling HolliAnne has and does affect her. He wants her to forgive him and he tries to forgive himself. After months of avoiding women, he realizes that he must move on and he steps out into the dating world. As he builds another life for himself, he understands that it must be a life that does not control other people or his circumstances.
This wonderful story has a cast full of well-developed characters, and a plot that enables the reader to see and understand how one may have a need to control him/herself and those around him/her. The story shows us what the other person is like, how they are negatively changed through the control of another. I love The Attractiveness of Wisdom as well as I love That Ever Died So Young and Blessings and Curses. They all teach something. The Attractiveness of Wisdom shows the readers that though we may have had a bad experience in the past, we don’t control our lives. We can’t make what we want to happen actually happen to us. Christians know that only God controls our lives and we must live our lives the way He wants us to. This story will be with you for days after you’ve finished reading it and you will want to read it again!

The Attractiveness of Wisdom also takes the reader to many places such as Hawaii and Stevensville, Maryland. Stevensville, Maryland is where Hamilton grew up. His father had a winery, that grew “the best wines on the East Coast.”
I can’t wait to publish this novel and I hope you can’t wait to read it. But you’ll need your favorite wine, maybe from Stevensville, as you enjoy The Attractiveness of Wisdom.

Stay tuned for facts about Stevensville, seeing and hearing about this wonderful little town.

Love a Good Story —- Radio Hosts are Interested in . . .

I LOVE A GOOD STORY. Don’t you LOVE A GOOD STORY?

I just need to say that my radio shows are turning out very well. I am truly enjoying them, and I see now that what it takes to make a show good depends on the quality of the host. My hosts for each and every show have all been excellent and have all come up with good questions that get at the heart of my novel. Being on the radio has enabled me to see my own novel from the aspect of the reader.  When a writer sits down to create a story, they look at all the elements of story telling and the techniques used to enhance the quality of the story, the mechanical side of writing. We hope that we have written our story so that you will see not just the story but the themes and concepts, as well as the story underneath that are woven throughout the main story. Certainly reviews help us see that, but for Blessings and Curses, each host has made me see that I do have those themes and concepts and they are what I want the readers to see and understand. One thing that each host has been interested in is prison ministry.

My main character, Olivia Douglass, in Blessings and Curses was asked by her parish priest to pray with an inmate on death row. After having gone through three years of seminary, she does not want to continue and become a priest. The radio hosts all wanted to know more about prison ministry. The question brought to my mind the times when I worked in high schools and not only did I teach, but I also did educational testing for school systems with some students. A few times I was asked to go to a detention center to test a student. The question from the hosts on the radio made me think back over those times. I remember the very first time I went to test a student, I was so frightened. Even though I was there in an official capacity, I was scared to death. Directions were given to me in one word sentences that seemed thrown at me. It made me feel inhuman, and I wanted to remind the officer on duty that I was a visitor. But I was too frightened to say anything. I was put in a room where there were two doors, one on each end of the room. The door was locked after I entered, and I was left there alone. I ran back to the door. It was locked. I ran to the other door it was also locked. I was in a panic and wanted to leave. I felt alone, insignificant, and helpless. It was only a few minutes, according to my watch, but It seemed to me like the next day when another guard came to take me to the room where the student waited. I used my experience from those times to get the reader to feel what Olivia felt when she entered the prison for the first time.

Several people have commented on the relationship created between Olivia and the inmate and the hosts on the radio shows have asked me the same thing. How did I do that? In my research, prison ministry is about treating the inmate with dignity and respect so that the inmate can respect himself. Olivia treated the inmate with dignity and respect and eventually she received respect back. Olivia also saw that this prisoner sitting at the table opposite her, chained to the table, was a frightened man, who had committed serious violence (he was on death row), but who was also frightened and worried about where he would go after his death. She knew that the fact that he refused to pray, even after he requested it, that he needed someone to visit him, that he didn’t want to be alone. Olivia saw that in him as he tried to remain tough to the very end. She stayed with him and talked with him on his journey to his next station. https://youtu.be/aPjvEaE6VXs

First Radio Interview

I Love a Good Story. Don’t you just Love a Good Story? I have a Good story to tell you. This morning, I had my first radio show interview with Bruce Van Dyke on WEOL the AM Morning Drive.

 

I was live on the air!! I don’t know how many times I’ve listened to other people come on the radio talking about their programs, products, and/or their involvement in organizations such as feeding and caring for children, those with cancer, sheltering women from abusive spouses, and listening to artists and musicians talk about how they got started with their songs or paintings and other art forms. These discussions are not only interesting, but I also find them very inspiring.

Today, I was one of those being interviewed on the radio. At first, I was nervous; that almost immediately changed to excitement with the fact that I was “Live, on the Air.” When I began to speak, a seriousness came over me, a sense of responsibility that I felt and I knew that I was not only representing myself, but I was representing my publishing company, Black Rose Writing, my critique group, Rockville Writers, my Spiritual Leader and Advisor, and the hard work of writing, rewriting, editing and research that I put into the book. I hope I did what I have been hearing from others who have come on the radio and shared their information about their programs and organizations. I hope I communicated the heart and soul of my novel, Blessings and Curses, in the same way I have heard others communicate their projects. I hope that those persons who tuned in and who were driving to work heard the heart-felt message about Blessings and Curses on WEOL AM. I hope I did justice to this novel.

Follow me as I go around the country talking about Blessings and Curses.

Tomorrow (June 13) I will be live on the:

KJAG Jiggy Jaguar radio show at 12:00

Later, The syndicated Al Cole show at 2:00

Friday June 14

Mark and Matt KWAY at 9:40

Monday, June 17

GoodMornings! WFIN with Chris Oaks at 10:00

Tuesday, June 18

WGRT AM with Cathie Martin at 9:00

June 19

Larry Whitler, AM Ocala, WOCA Morning Drive and “The Source” beginning at 10:05

June 20

WISER with Dave Malarkey 9:30

June 21

KOPN – AM with Jill Sheets

June 24

WMST AM The Mid-Morning on Main with Dan Manley at 9:00

June 25

KMA Radio The Dean and Don Show with Dean Atkins at 9:20

June 27

WXGM AM with Neal Steele at 7:45

If you miss a show, remember that you can always buy Blessings and Curses, through:

www.Amazon.com Blessings and Curses, Judy Kelly

www.blackrosewriting.com

 

 

 

 

Love a Good Story:Good-bye Dear Antioch

athird downtown antioch

Main Street in downtown Yellow Springs, Ohio

I just Love a Good Story. Don’t you just Love a Good Story?

I have another Good Story, but also a rather sad story. I just heard through Facebook that the Antioch Writers’ Workshop has closed down.  Antioch was like a parent to me.

Many years ago, I received a brochure from a writing conference telling me all the wonderful things about their conference and why I should attend. I read it through, and  decided that I wasn’t going and threw the brochure in the trash. Then, I pulled it out of the trash looked at it and decided that if I’m going to be an author, I would have to start taking writing a bit more seriously. I threw it in the trash and promised myself that I would attend the next workshop or conference that came in the mail. Two days later, the brochure for Antioch Writers’ Workshop appeared in the mail. I threw it in the trash, too. But for this one, there was an unrest inside me and I knew it was about the promise I had made to myself, the promise that I needed to take writing more seriously. So I got it out of the trash. I asked myself who would send me this anyway? How did this place get my name and address? Remembering my promise, I put the unnecessary questions away, completed the application and sent it in.

When I arrived  in Yellow Springs, Ohio, I was surprised. It was a cute little town that seemed stuck in an earlier time period. I loved it right away. It had an aura of calm, and comfort that seemed to change my attitude. I was anxious to start the conference.

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The Tavern where many of us ate

I found my way to the home of my host. One on the nicest features of Antioch was that an attendee could stay for the week-long conference (Saturday to Saturday) in the home of a resident. How nice was that? I signed up for that. The next morning,  I realized that I was sharing a home with two other presenters.  A Newbie, and already I was placed with an award winning poet, and an awarding winning author. I took this as a good sign. The home owners were beautiful people. During the week we shared and talked, and I got to know not only the presenters, but the town and some of the wonderful people in it.

My first year, our speaker was Robert Inman who spoke about character and ways to develop character in stories. His talk was so good  I went and bought all of his books.  All the conferences after that were always filled with award-winning authors who talked about craft. I learned how to create good strong characters, meaningful dialogue, the need for an outline, and the need for a strong plot. I also bought many books and asked these brilliant authors to sign them. Each year there was so much information imparted that I found it impossible to take in so much material in one five-day session, so I returned the next year to learn more. I had become an “Antiocher.” It was clear that the goal of the conference was to help us to develop good writing skills in order for us to become good writers and become published authors. I loved the idea that the emphasis was on craft, teaching us how to shape and mold a story into something excellent.

                                                                                                                     The library                                                                                      thelibraryatantioch                                                             antiochcollege    Antioch College

Another good feature of the conference was lunch with the keynotes and authors. Sitting next to someone who wrote a novel, is very encouraging. Speaking with them and asking questions about how they got started, clarifying something in the talk earlier, or just generally talking enable me to see that I could do that, too. They were people just like me. Our ideas came from the same place – the heart. I needed to understand that.  One year, I was the only one lunching with Silas House. That session became dear and important to me and I will always cherish the fact that he made a choice to continue with one person. He taught me that no matter how many or how few people show up, give it everything, honor them the way you would a larger group. And he did. Today, every time I do a book signing, give a talk, or teach a writing class, I think about that day and I find I don’t worry. I’m going to honor whoever shows up.

Antioch Writers’ Workshop made me into not only a writer, but an award-winning author of two novels so far, That Ever Died So Young, a finalist in the Somerset Literary and Contemporary Fiction Award, 2014, and Blessings and Curses, ranking in the top ten Most Popular novels in the Frankfurt, Shahjar, and Guadalajara International Book Fairs, 2018. Antioch Writers’ Workshop helped me bring my skill to light, and Antioch Writers’ Workshop helped me refine my skill.

The auditorium where I began as an “Antiocher” was torn down and something else in its place. Antioch College closed down and the conference moved to Glen Helen Nature Preserve. Years later, when Antioch University opened, the conference moved to the edge of the city into the university. The bookstore where many read their work in the evening went out of business and the readings moved to a café. After some years, the host program was discontinued. I am forever grateful to all those keynotes and intensive leaders and intensive participants who through their talks and critiques enabled me to see my value. Antioch, like parents, will pass on, but Antioch grew me, and as one of its many children, I will continue to grow from the many craft sessions, lunches, and critiques that I received from my parent.

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A nice restaurant good for lunch/dinner

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Antioch has done so much for many of us that it shouldn’t just go out quietly. It should go out with a big band. Why not have a “Going Out Party.”  I think Sharon Short should send out invitations to everyone who ever attended and have a big party. We will be able to see how many of us have benefited from their workshops over the years. I would delight in that.

Love a Good Story: Are You Taking Advantage of this Weather?

I just Love a Good Story. I hope you Love a Good Story also. Along those lines, take advantage of this cold weather we’re having. We’ve been asked to stay home, so lets just do that – stay home. Make a big bowl of popcorn, and allow its alluring aroma to penetrate your nostrils. Don’t forget to sprinkle it with cheese and salt. Pour yourself a nice glass of wine, or a cup of coffee, or tea. Start a nice warm fire in your fireplace; watch its glow and settle in as you listen to the crackling sounds. Wrap yourself in a nice blanket or throw, and cuddle up with your sweetheart. Then, reach for your book, Blessings and Curses, and start this wonderful page turning story.

The E-Book Blessings and Curses is on sale now on Amazon for $2.99. Why not get it and enjoy an evening by the fire with your sweetheart, popcorn and wine? Hurry, because the special is over February 3rd, and hopefully, this cold weather won’t last too much longer. But, if you enjoy your evening you may want it to last a little longer.

Blessings and Curses E-Book on sale on Amazon for $2.99. Now, who could resist that? Isn’t that A Good Story? Enjoy A Really Good Story.