cj Sez: Today, March 17, is the start of a week of celebrations: St. Patrick's Day—a day when everyone can claim to be Irish. Wishing you a safe and happy St.
Patrick’s Day.
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The next celebration on
the calendar is the arrival of Spring. It may or may not feel like it where you
are right now, but I’m here to inform you that Spring arrives on March 19. Well then, my question
is, can mosquitos be far behind? If you live where I do, they’re already here.
Now for the science behind the changing of the season:
The vernal equinox
is not a “solstice". The winter solstice is the shortest
day of the year, and the summer solstice is the longest day of the year.
An equinox occurs two
times every year—March and September—when the Earth’s axis is tilted
neither toward nor away from the sun. It’s that instant of time when the plane
of Earth’s equator passes through the center of the sun. That’s when the sun
shines directly on the equator and the lengths of day and night are nearly
equal.
Seasons are reversed
on either side of the Equator. The equinox in September in the Northern
Hemisphere is called the autumnal (Fall) equinox, but it’s the vernal (Spring)
equinox in the Southern hemisphere.
(Source Attribution: Various Google sites)
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I'm thinking there must be a
story in there somewhere. Here’s the story prompt: What if the instant the equinox occurred could trigger some kind of awful device that put all of
earth in jeopardy? What if the world powers have hired the protagonist to find
the person(s) holding the earth ransom, but he has only a few short days to
prevent Armageddon? The characters can be in any country in the world.
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Mobile and near-Mobile readers and writers: Save the Date
to celebrate:
The Mobile Literary
Festival at the Ben May Main Library is the place to be on Saturday, March 23,
2024. Come on down to see what’s going on at this FREE event.
Here’s a copy of the
schedule so you can pre-plan your day.
Check out the names of the prestigious
presenters on the schedule—everyone from a NYT best-selling author to a
Harper Lee Award winner to a State of Alabama former Poet
Laureate.
And it’s an open-house kind of event, so come and go as
you please.
P.S. The Haunted
Book Shop will have a pop-up sales store (including some of my stories), and
some local authors will be in attendance to sign your purchase.
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Writers, published and unpublished, take note:
On Jane Friedman’s
blog, the latest post by author Amy L. Bernstein makes “The Case for Pursuing a
Traditional Publishing Deal Without an Agent.”
“But, dear authors, securing an agent is not the only path
to getting happily published (outside of self-publishing).”
Read more here:
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You-all guys keep on
keeping on, and I’ll try to do the same. Raising prayers for a happy and safe
you and yours.
cj
Now some words from my sponsors:
For your to-be-read
stack: My novels, THE DAWGSTAR and DEATH ON THE YAMPA are fast-paced,
thriller/suspense stories with sassy banter and a touch of romance. The books
are available on Amazon or through your favorite eTailer and bookstore. Got a
library card? You can read the ebooks free from Hoopla.
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