Sexe : Female
Statut : Célibataire
Age : 102
Zodiaque: Lion
Région : California
Pays: US
Date d’inscription :: 20/04/2006
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lundi, février 08, 2010
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I can't tell you how happy I am that Dear John beat Avatar at the box office this weekend. I have a special place in my heart for Avatar because I know one of the main costume designers who worked on the film. I also know absolutely nothing about Dear John. What I do know is that if Hollywood put out another "chick-flick" that bombed at the box office like Leap Year or Have You Heard About The Morgans
the studio heads would have made a broad pronouncement: Chick-flicks
are dead, bring on the big-budget action flicks. The fact that both Have You Heard About The Morgans and Leap Year were decimated by the critics ( not for
being chick-flicks but for being poorly made movies) won't matter at
all. It won't even be considered a real factor. In their heart of
hearts a lot of the decision makers in Hollywood believe that the
teenage boy demographic is where it's at and that the blockbuster
movies made by/with Sandra Bullock and Meryl Streep are the exception,
not the rule. It takes a success like Dear John to convince
them otherwise and their change of heart will only last as long as the
success of the most recent female driven movie. When you have two or
three box office failures in a row that feature female leads the powers
that be will be looking to see what Robert Downey Jr. and Matt Damon
are up to. While this is a problem for all actresses it's a BIG
problem for minority actresses. Sure, Will Smith, Samuel L. Jackson
and Morgan Freeman are all considered reasonably safe bets for staring
roles but Hollywood isn't sharing the love with their actresses of
color. Beyonce occasionally gets to star in a movie but unlike Will
Smith the movies she's cast in usually have issues of race as some part
of the central theme. She doesn't just get to be an action star or a
female lead who happens to be black. Halle Berry was getting
those roles for a while but for various reasons she is no longer
considered a major box office pull. And really, when's the last time
you saw an Asian actress play the starring lead role in ANY big budget
production? Latinas aren't fairing much better. It doesn't help that
Disney's latest animated film, The Princess And The Frog failed
to impress at the box office. It will and has made money for Disney
due to merchandising opportunities (and really, isn't that what all
Disney films are about?) but I know that the decision makers in
Hollywood are looking at the numbers and concluding that white
audiences won't see movies starring black female characters. Never
mind that this was the 1st non-3D animated movie that Disney has put
out in five years or that children under ten may now simply expect
their movies to come with cool plastic glasses. That's not the lens
Hollywood will see this through. I read a book that excused
the lack of women in lead roles (in front of and behind the camera) as
simply a matter of economics. According to the author it has nothing
to do with prejudices, racism or sexism at all. He "proves" his point
by explaining that Hollywood is very liberal. Hollywood players vote
Democratic and they support causes that fund breast caner research. So
in other words, it is his belief that Democrats who don't like cancer
are incapable of prejudice. I personally think that reasoning is
somewhat flawed. But I also think that prejudice is almost ALWAYS
rooted in economics. Slavery was about economics. Hitler's call to
eliminate the Jews and confiscate their property and wealth took
hold because of the economic conditions in Germany at that time.
Xenophobia is based in economics. Initial resistance to allowing women
in the workplace? Economics. That's why whenever anyone argues that
"It's not about prejudice, it's about economics," I cringe. I
understand Hollywood's wariness when it comes to making movies staring
women or (gasp) minority women and I understand the economics of the
situation. But I hope that they push themselves and the
movie-going-public's perception of what a headliner star can look
like. Will Smith and Bruce Lee have proven that minority men can be,
from an economic standpoint, big time money makers. With the right
movies and gutsy enough studio heads the same could be true for many
women of all colors. Kyra Davis Bestselling author of The Sophie Katz Mystery Series And So Much For My Happy Ending Order LUST, LOATHING AND A LITTLE LIP GLOSS on Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com Indiebound today! Pre-order Vows, Vendettas And A Little Black Dress Today!
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jeudi, février 04, 2010
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Hollywood and the like are always making a big deal about the
birds-and-the-bees talk you're supposed to have with your kids.
Supposedly it's a big, scary and intimidating subject, but is it? You
feed your children little bits of information throughout their
childhood years, you answer their questions, keep the lines of
communication open and when puberty comes along you fill in whatever
blanks you have left. Again, I don't see why it's such a challenge.
It seems to me that there are other life lessons that are MUCH more
difficult to tell your child about. My son was four-years old when he
first asked me (seemingly out of the blue) what a slave ship was. THAT
was a hard conversation to have. Man's inhumanity to man will always
be more difficult to explain than how babies get born or how to keep
yourself both baby & STD free. Yesterday my son was flipping
through the channels, paused for about thirty seconds on MSNBC and then
asked me what a pedophile was. Again, not something I really relished
explaining.
Sometimes the questions aren't quite so dark in nature but still prove
to be a stumbling block. While looking for a current-events news
article for his history class he asked me what a deficit was. When I
told him he asked who it was that the US was borrowing money from.
Reluctantly I confessed that lately we've been borrowing the lion's
share from China. He looked at me like I was insane. "We borrow it
from China?" he repeated. "The place where we get all the
lead-tainted toys from? The country that doesn't allow its people free
speech? How can that be a good idea?"
I actually don't have an answer to that one at all let alone an answer that a ten-year-old could understand.
As the years go on I know there are going to be more questions. On a
whole I prepared for the ones that are about sexuality and drugs. But
there are some questions that no amount of preparation are going to
make less challenging. "How could anyone do something like that?" "How
can we as a nation justify that?" "Why didn't anyone help him/her?"
Those are the words I know I'll hear with increased frequency as my boy
becomes more in tune with the world that exists outside our carefully
maintained bubble. Those are the big, scary subjects. We'll
tackle them as we always have but they make the
why-do-I-feel-funny-when-I-see-girls-in-bikinis questions seem pretty
easy. Kyra Davis Bestselling author of The Sophie Katz Mystery Series And So Much For My Happy Ending Order LUST, LOATHING AND A LITTLE LIP GLOSS on Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com Indiebound today! Pre-order Vows, Vendettas And A Little Black Dress Today!
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samedi, janvier 30, 2010
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As I mentioned in my last blog, last week was a difficult one
for me. I found myself questioning
myself and many of the decisions I’ve made over the last several years. My self-confidence took a
nosedive. My friends tried to
boost my spirits with compliments and by pointing out my accomplishments but it
wasn’t really working. I didn’t
believe the compliments anymore and as for my accomplishments, like having
published several books…well, that didn’t seem like such a big deal in the
grand scheme of things. I wasn’t
able to use those achievements as a source of comfort or assurance. And then last night while suffering
from yet another night of insomnia I started going through my reader
emails. I get emails from readers
all the time and I love each and every one of your notes but some of you have
left a particularly strong impression on me. I’ve edited out names along with anything that would allow
you to recognize someone’s identity but the following are a sampling of some of
the notes & emails to which I’m referring:
(Of your books) I have only read So Much For My Happy
Ending. In August I left my husband who assaulted me while I was just barely
pregnant (I am no longer pregnant). I went away to stay with family for a while
and when I came back a very good friend of mine told me to read this book. It
was SO hard for me to read because I went through EVERY single one of those
things...my ex did try to commit suicide and threatened it all the time. He
went and bought me a $50K car without asking...I went through all of it. Anyways....I
got through the book and cried at the last page. That very last page is hanging
on my mirror so I remember how I felt when I read it and what it meant to me to
start my life over....I have bought all your other books but have started back
to school and so have been busy with that but they sit on my night stand and I
hope to take them with me to Thailand this summer and read them while I am in
the process of fulfilling a life long dream of teaching in another country...I
do not know how you were able to write that with the detail you did but if
anyone ever wants to understand what their friend is going through who is being
abused, it is a good book to read. That book was life changing for me and I am
so grateful to you for writing it.
And here’s another:
My Aunt was diagnosed with terminal cancer, my partner’s
brother who is HIV+, was diagnosed with colon cancer. After getting this news
my life was going downhill, that's when one day I found your book Sex, Murder,
and a Double Latte, I bought it instantly, (myself being a Starbucks Barista).
As soon as I read page one this book lifted my spirits, and parted the clouds
that had been closing in. I owe you so much, I feel Thank You falls a little
short. But I want you to know from the bottom of my heart that I am so grateful
to have discovered you.
And another:
A friend bought me Sex Murder and a Double Latte when my
daughter was born severely premature and had to remain in the hospital. It was
her way of helping me take my mind off things - and that it did. I was so
caught up in the novel I think I finished it in about 2 days. I even read it
out loud to my daughter as she slept in her incubator. Anyways I just wanted to
say thank you for writing such addictive novels. God bless you.
And…
When I read Passion, Betrayal And Killer Highlights I was
very upset because I had to basically break my best friend's heart. I was so
miserable that if I stopped for a moment to think about myself and my pain I
probably would have cried a flood. It seems extreme to say so, but the thing
that got me through the first hours of that was reading your book. As long as my head was buried in the
book, everything was okay. It was an honestly engrossing book and I needed that
to get through my own troubled time. I just wanted you to know your book helped
when I was definitely at a low point.
There are so many other emails I could print. There’s the woman who found laughter
through Sophie despite the intense fear she felt for her husband who is serving
in Afghanistan, another woman who found a way to forgive herself for leaving
her mentally ill but physically abusive husband after reading So Much For My
Happy Ending... but if I printed them all I’d have a 10-page blog post. The point is that when I re-read these
messages my perspective on things changed. If I accomplish nothing else the fact that I was able touch
so many of your lives in such a meaningful way DOES matter in the grand scheme
of things. Because of you I can
consider myself to be truly successful, not just as an author but also as a
human being. So for those of you
who shared these stories with me and stories like these, thank you. Please know that you have helped me
every bit as much as I have helped you.
Kyra Davis Bestselling author of The Sophie Katz Mystery Series And So Much For My Happy Ending Order LUST, LOATHING AND A LITTLE LIP GLOSS on Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com Indiebound today! Pre-order Vows, Vendettas And A Little Black Dress Today!
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vendredi, janvier 29, 2010
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For reasons I can't go into now it has been a challenging few weeks and
many of those closest to me will tell you that for the last few days
I've been hanging on by a thread. But as usual when things go wrong
for me I find that the following holds true: 1) when the chips are down you find out who your best friends are 2) desperation breeds creativity (BTW, desperation also creates
great outfits...I always find fabulous new ways to put items/accessories together when I
have "nothing to wear" but I digress). 3) my borderline breakdowns are both rare and almost always short lived 4) it is impossible to be really depressed while seriously rocking out to old Guns N' Roses singles 5) I am, and always will be, a survivor. In
regards to the second item on my list I honestly feel that within the
last two days I may have done some of the best writing in my life and I
did it during a time when I wasn't even sure I was capable of pulling
together a coherent thought. That in and of itself makes me feel
pretty good about myself. As for the first item...well the truth
is I have some amazing friends. People all over this state who have
gone seriously out of their way to be there for me. From offering to
take care of my child at the last minute, to buying me truly decadent
handmade truffles to those who have done research on certain things for
me and sent me helpful articles, to those who know me well enough and
long enough to know exactly what to say to help me focus...I could just
go on and on. And there is one person who is actually working against
his own interests in order to be of help to me while asking for quite
literally nothing in return. That kind of friendship and selflessness
is kind of breathtaking. So thanks to rule one, rule two and
a lot of Guns N' Roses I can honestly say that I think my breakdown is
over (see rule 3) and I will survive and possibly...make that probably
thrive (see rule 5). Currently I'm feeling very hopeful about the
future. For those of you who have been so supportive and helpful to me
during this time I really need to thank you and for those of
you who I'm close to who have NO idea what I'm talking about I promise
to catch you up and please know that I didn't purposely exclude you
from my personal drama (because I just KNOW you're anxious to be part
of all my personal dramas, right?  ). But I'm not going to be able to
catch you up tonight...tonight I have to channel my dwindling
desperation and write a kick-ass chapter for what I think will (with a lot of work) end up being a kick-ass book. Kyra Davis Bestselling author of The Sophie Katz Mystery Series And So Much For My Happy Ending Order LUST, LOATHING AND A LITTLE LIP GLOSS on Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com Indiebound today!
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mercredi, janvier 27, 2010
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About a month ago I took my son to the airport so he could fly off to see his grandparents in the Bay Area. As it so happens there were other parents there putting their unaccompanied minors on the same plane My son struck up a conversation with one of those parents, a man with kind eyes and a child around my son’s age and once our children had boarded that man stepped over to me and remarked on how smart my son was. “Yes, smarter than me,” I laughed. “He’s always correcting my pronunciation of the various dinosaur names.” The man nodded. “Those names are all Latin based, right?” “Latin and Greek,” I confirmed. “Personally I like Astronomy. When astronomers discover a
big black hole in the universe they name it a Black Hole. When they see
a cluster of stars they call it Cluster of Stars. Nothing hard to
pronounce and all very straight forward.” “Well,” the man said solemnly, “perhaps the reason the terms in paleontology are more difficult is because our Creator doesn’t want us to fully understand some things.” Now
I strongly believe that everyone is entitled to their own religious
beliefs regardless of whether or not they agree with mine but what he
was saying went WAY beyond creationism and because I’m….well, because I’m me and have a hard time keeping my mouth shut I went ahead and called him on it. “So
what you’re suggesting,” I said slowly, “is that God divinely inspired
paleontologists to give the prehistoric animals they discovered Greek
and Latin based names so that nonscientists would have a hard time
pronouncing them? And the purpose of that would be that if you can’t
pronounce something you’re less likely to read about it?” I
fully expected him to accuse me of twisting his words or his meaning or
whatnot but instead he owned up to it. “There are no coincidences in
this world,” he said. “For instance, numerology tells us that all numbers mean something. The first number of our children’s plane flight is 3 which stands for communication, interaction and neutrality. That’s a good number for a plane flight.” At this point I’m thinking this guy is a little crazy. And yet I bet it’s a lot easier to be him
than it is to be me. He can look at the numbers on a plane flight and
decide whether or not that’s the flight to take. He looks for what he
feels are mystical but definitive signs and they give him direction. There may be uncertainty in his life but he is blissfully unaware of it. But I don’t see the world that way. I don’t believe that EVERYTHING has a deeper meaning. Sometimes a 3 is just a 3, sometimes
scientists like to give things weird names and while I do believe in
God I have never believed in divine intervention. That means that
while I can pray to give thanks for the world we live in I personally
can’t ask God to fix things for me. I can make major life decisions based on the logical and solid information available to me and personal preferences but no number or deity or special sign can assure me that my decision is truly the right one. So maybe this man isn’t so crazy. Maybe he’s just found a belief system that has made it easier for him to stay sane. Kyra Davis Bestselling author of The Sophie Katz Mystery Series And So Much For My Happy Ending Order LUST, LOATHING AND A LITTLE LIP GLOSS on Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com Indiebound today!
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mardi, janvier 19, 2010
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Okay, you know it is VERY rare
that I simply reprint something I've read in this blog but this email
(forwarded to me by my friend Kim) is just WAY to amusing not to share.
And the best part is that DrinkedIn
is a real site. So for all you functioning alcoholics out there, we
finally have a social networking site designed to fit your needs!
Enjoy: You can't help but feel like social networking sites just aren't doing any good. Sure, there are Facebook pages raising money for Haiti, Iranian protests on Twitter and some hilarious cat videos on MySpace. But we're talking about really doing some good. Like helping you find a new favorite cocktail. Welcome to DrinkedIn, a new site devoted to drinking and only drinking, online now.
Now, first things first: despite the name, this doesn't work a damned
thing like LinkedIn. But that's okay—you're not here to get a job
promotion, post a résumé or poke anyone. No, this is about
drinking—where to do it, what to have and who to have it with. (Think
of it as a one-stop resource for all the things you'll forget the
morning after.) And all with a puzzling user interface that suggests
its designers might have been drinking when they designed it.
So you'll start by creating a profile declaring your favorite cocktail,
and then you can begin reviewing pubs, rating drinks and arranging
meetups with vodka-loving cheerleaders. And you'll also find a carefully curated collection of videos about boozing—like this vintage clip of a pre-sweater Bill Cosby riffing on the nature of a good booze binge. All without a single mention of Jell-O pudding. Hope this put a smile on your face! Cheers!Kyra Davis Bestselling author of The Sophie Katz Mystery Series And So Much For My Happy Ending Order LUST, LOATHING AND A LITTLE LIP GLOSS on Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com Indiebound today!
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samedi, janvier 16, 2010
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Ever since I was a kid I've had this occasional but reoccurring
nightmare. In it I'm living in 1930s Germany and...well, I probably
don't have to explain why that would be a very bad thing. Now that I
have a child I still have the dream a few times a year but now it's
much worse. In my dream I know that my tall, blond fair skinned son
has the physical characteristics to pass for Aryan if I were able to
find a family to pretend that he is theirs. But I also know that
emotionally he is incapable of successfully carrying off the deception
and that by giving him to a Christian family I could easily be
condemning both him and is intended rescuers to death. Of course I
know that he isn't the only one in danger. I know that I will most
likely die and that there's a good chance it won't be painless but
that's not even a concern. I can handle anything except the knowledge
that I am unable to protect my child. I realize that in the end I
won't even know if he's all right or not and that's the part that wakes
me up in a cold sweat. Of
course that's just a dream. I live in America in the 21st century and
I CAN protect my son. I always know if he's all right or not. But
the American and European adoptive parents of all those Haitian children at Haitian
orphanages right now are living my nightmare. Unlike in many countries,
in Haiti families are matched with children early in the international
adoption process so although an adoption almost always take upwards of
18 months the adoptive parents and the child have a relationship
throughout that time. The parents are allowed to visit the children
and communicate with them frequently and the children come to identify
these people as their parents and call them mommy and daddy. For the
adoptive parents these ARE their children and some of them were
expecting their children to be allowed to come to the States to their
home as early as this weekend. But now the buildings that held all the
paperwork for these kids have been destroyed. To use the words of one
woman who runs a Haitian orphanage, "These children no longer exist."
They have no papers, no passports, no identification, no tangible proof
that the Haitian government has approved their adoption. And
some of the orphanages have already run out of food and water. Parents
in the US are being told that their children have survived but are in
danger...and there's nothing they can do about it. And then of course there are the Haitian parents and their children.
Last night I watched a report on CNN: and 11-year-old girl was trapped
under some rubble, her leg was crushed and she couldn't move. The
newscaster held her hand and talked to her as the rescue workers
struggled to free her. Eventually they did free her and got her to a
hospital...where there were not enough supplies and no doctors
qualified to do an amputation. According to her uncle her last words
before losing consciousness were: "Mama, s'il te plaît ne me laisse pas
mourir." (mama, please don't let me die). But her mother couldn't
help her...her mother wasn't even able to find her in time to sit by her side
during her final moments of life. My heart
goes out to those families and I urge you, if you haven't donated yet
text or send your donation today (you can give $10 by texting the word
HAITI to 90999 and your donation will be added to your cell phone
bill). You can also click here
for a list of legitimate agencies that you can donate to who are
helping. Even a $5 donation is incredibly helpful. The money will
assist in the bringing of aid to Haiti, including those orphanages. It
will help bring some semblance of order to the country and that will
not
only save the lives of many of the Haitian residents but will help
expedite the process of getting these adoptions back on track. Kyra Davis Bestselling author of The Sophie Katz Mystery Series And So Much For My Happy Ending Order LUST, LOATHING AND A LITTLE LIP GLOSS on Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com Indiebound today!
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vendredi, janvier 15, 2010
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Humeur actuelle :  plein d’espoir
For those of you who haven't heard, Vows, Vendettas And A Little Black Dress is now available to pre-order on Amazon, Amazon.uk and Amazon.ca
(Canada). As usual I'm excited, anxious and eager to see how this next
Sophie story is received by readers. Judging from the overwhelming
number of emails, tweets and Facebook
messages I've been receiving asking for news of a book tour it would
seem that you are also excited to talk to me (in person) about the
upcoming novel.
But here's the horrible truth about book
tours...they have fallen out of fashion with the publishing industry.
Once upon a time if you were given any kind of publicity budget from
your publisher there was a strong chance that some kind of tour or
public appearance would be part of the plan. Now, in the face of a
very tough economy and an ever-changing retail environment publishers
are taking a good hard look at the numbers. They feel (perhaps
understandably) that the people who go to an author's book signing
would have bought that author's book no matter what. They also realize
that most people who attend book signing events/reading buy the book
WELL before the event so the sell through of books on the actual day of
the event will be around half of the turnout. A strong turnout is
about fifty people (with a sell-through of 25). An average turnout
would be somewhere between ten and 15 (no joke) with a sell through of
5 to 7 books. It makes the individual book store happy and it
frequently makes the author happy but it comes at the cost of airfare
and a hotel room for the author along with a media escort to get her
from her hotel to her signing event on time without getting lost,
signage for the bookstore and hours spent by the publicity department
setting up and coordinating the whole thing. As a result the people
who are usually sent out on book tours these days are people who are
celebrities in their own right. Hollywood and Washington types and a
few A+-list authors. If you've seen an author speak recently who
doesn't fit into one of those categories he probably funded the tour
himself.
As someone with both a business degree and business
experience I understand the reasoning of the publishers and I can't
really tell them they're wrong. Economically book tours aren't good
investments.
And yet I LIKE book tours. Book signings are my
only opportunity to meet my readers face-to-face and I think that's
important. After all, you are in a very real sense my boss. My
publisher is more like a partner. They give me very helpful
suggestions and they package and distribute my work for me but YOU pay
my salary. Plus the publisher will only want me as a partner as long
as YOU want to keep me on payroll (which you do when you buy my
books).
I honestly wish I could come and see all of you but
realistically I'm going to have to be rather selective about this. In
the past my most successful events have been planned and hosted by
readers rather than booksellers or my publishing house (although those
two entities have been extremely helpful in the execution of some of
the details of those events). So if you are one of the readers who has
recently contacted me with the hopes of hosting a book event for Vows, Vendettas And A Little Black Dress
or if that sounds like something you would like to do, email me with
plans. I'll pick a total of three events based on projected attendance
(again, the idea is to meet as many readers as possible) and the
creativity of the event itself (if Deb from Virginia is reading this I
want to give you props again for the ghostly theme of your Lust, Loathing And A Little Lip Gloss
event). The event doesn't necessarily need to be held in your home; in
fact if you can assure them a turnout of over thirty people most larger
bookstores will be happy to offer you their space and assistance (and I
can help put you in touch with the right people if it comes down to
that).
For those of you who can't put together a large event,
or if your event isn't chosen I will be happy to attend your party via
webcam. Maybe we can have a bunch of Little Black Dress parties across
the country and with the help of the internet attend each others events
and enjoy cocktails together.
Again, I wish I could make a
personal appearance in the hometown of every one of my readers. I will
do everything I can to continue to connect and correspond with you. I
am eternally grateful for your support and your friendship whether it's
expressed in person or via Twitter/Facebook/email, it means a lot to me.
Kyra Davis Bestselling author of The Sophie Katz Mystery Series And So Much For My Happy Ending Order LUST, LOATHING AND A LITTLE LIP GLOSS on Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com Indiebound today!
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mercredi, janvier 06, 2010
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Humeur actuelle :  démoniaque
When I first moved to LA I assumed that the majority of the guys that I
happened to be meeting were gay. Now I realize that I was wrong, it's
just that many (although not all) of the straight men here do things
that only gay guys do in other parts of the country. They make
appointments for their bimonthly manzillians,
they don't smile for pictures because it makes their wrinkles show and
they carry around hand lotion so they can keep their skin baby soft.
And then they do other things that my gay friends would never do...not
because it's too butch but because it's too girly.
They read their horoscope every day. They go to psychics and talk
about the male and female energy of the sun. They read self-help books
and quote pithy affirmations that they probably got from some calendar
that has kittens on it. I honestly don't get it. It's like they
took the most difficult parts of being a woman and claimed it as their
own. And why? Surely not for the women of this city. I've lost count
of how many of my female-LA friends have wistfully told me that what
they really need is a man. Not a metrosexual,
not some yoga addict with a "vision board" and a weekly appointment at
a tanning salon. No, they want a MAN. That's not to say women want men
to let themselves go. By all means get a decent hair cut, wear clothes
that flatter you, workout, eat healthy and if you've got a hairy back
wax that stuff off but that woman you overheard complaining about hairy
men? She honestly wasn't talking about your pubes and unless your name
is Michael Phelps keep the razor on your face and off your legs. And
enough with all the talk about being a spiritual being and the power of
positive thinking. We get it. You're not a negative person, you
appreciate nature and the world that you live in above all else. All
of that would come across as a lot more genuine if instead of telling
us what your life philosophy is you showed us through your actions.
When you're spending hours every day looking in the mirror, tweezing
out that one errant chest hair, finding the fine line in need of
collagen, the whole I-am-a-spiritual-being thing sort of takes on an
ironic twist that I don't think you're aware of. But aside from that
it also sounds like you're quoting a Hallmark greeting card that was
specifically designed for the New Age Vegan set. Women generally
aren't into that. Again, no one's saying that you need to sound like
John Wayne from a 1950s western. A lot of women (including myself)
like intellectuals. But quoting The Secret or the "wise" cheery words
emailed to you from greatday.com isn't intellectual. It's just kinda annoying. So guys, if this post describes you the good news is you don't have to wax your balls anymore. Yay! The bad news is that you might have to grow a pair. Kyra Davis Bestselling author of The Sophie Katz Mystery Series And So Much For My Happy Ending Order LUST, LOATHING AND A LITTLE LIP GLOSS on Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com Indiebound today!
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lundi, janvier 04, 2010
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Humeur actuelle :  béni
It occurred to me on New Year's Eve that I wasn't just seeing out the
end of a year but an end of a decade. That really put a different spin
on things. Sure, I didn't accomplish everything that I had hoped to in
2009 but what I've been through and what I've achieved in the last ten
years is actually kind of extraordinary. That probably sounds
conceited and God knows I'm perfectly aware of all my shortcomings but
still, in this case extraordinary pretty much sums it up. My
son was six months old when this decade started, I had just finally
gotten my bachelor's degree (it took me a while since I transferred
schools so many flippin' times) and my father, my father-in-law and my
grandmother (who I was VERY close to) were still alive. There were so
many cities that I was dreaming of living in. I knew San Francisco
would always be my home in some ways but nearby towns like Sausalito
and far away cities like New York continued to beckon to me. Los
Angeles was NO WHERE on my list of desirable living areas. Nothing
about THAT city appealed to me at all. I had also recently quit my job
at Nordstrom in order to stay home with my son and was perfectly
content to let my then-husband support us for a while until my boy was
old enough for preschool. The fissures in my marriage were showing but
things weren't horrible and divorce was literally unthinkable. Oh, and
my in-laws had already asked if I might be interested in homeschooling
what was then their one and only grandchild and I told them that I'd
rather walk through the fires of hell. I wasn't even considering
the prospect of writing a novel. I hadn't so much as written a short
story since my freshman year in high school. Now, ten years
later I'm living in LA and to my total shock I actually really like
it. But my father is gone. So is my father-in-law and my grandmother
who I still occasionally dream about. Instead of supporting me my
husband came close to financially ruining me and my marriage has
long-since been over. My little baby has grown into a ten year old kid
and his paternal grandmother now has eight grandchildren instead of
one. And guess what? I've been homeschooling my child for almost two
years (although you could argue that I did have to go through hell
before actually resigning myself to it). By the time June comes
around I will have written and published six novels. In 2006 my Italian
publisher put me up in Milan so I could do an Italian book tour and
press conference. There's a Kyra Davis Fans page on Facebook with over 200 members! How
could all of that have happened in ten years? It's like I'm living an
entirely different life now, one that I could NEVER have predicted. I
lost everything that I thought I wanted and it was replaced with what I
never even dreamed was possible. Ten years later and I still can't
wrap my head around it. I can't exactly say I have any
regrets. Of course I wish my father-in-law had beaten cancer. I loved
him and although my marriage was doomed to failure I think that if my
father-in-law had been alive he would have intervened when things got
ugly during the divorce and the transition process and healing would
have been easier for everyone, including my ex-husband. Maybe I'm
wrong but I don't think so. I wish my grandmother had lived long
enough to see me publish my first book. She sooo wanted to have a
writer in the family and she died before I had even picked up a pen to
write the first sentence of my novel. I wish my father had lived to
see the first black man elected president. That would have meant so
much to him. But those aren't exactly regrets, just fate doing its
thing and although my father-in-law and father both died young I think
they would both agree that they had lived full lives and they were
surrounded by loved ones at the end. As for my grandmother, she didn't
really want to be here after my grandfather died in 1997 anyway and I
like to think that wherever she is she knows that there finally is a
writer in the family. As for my career itself, well I don't
even know what to say about that. Granted, I'm not J.K Rowling or
anything close to an A-lister in the literary world but still, to go
from never writing stories to publishing six books in less than ten
years? Even to me that doesn't seem possible and I'm the one who did
it! So in the end it was a pretty good decade and I'm excited
to see what the next decade will bring. But I won't make any
predictions. If there's one thing the last ten years have taught me is
that I can only expect the unexpected. Kyra Davis Bestselling author of The Sophie Katz Mystery Series And So Much For My Happy Ending Order LUST, LOATHING AND A LITTLE LIP GLOSS on Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com Indiebound today!
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