Which word means to weaken: enervate or innovate? Would you stay overnight at an inn or an in? Are toddlers acquisitive or inquisitive? Is a treacherous person insidious or invidious? Would you need to insure or ensure your vehicle? innovate, enervate To innovate means to come up with some new creative method, product or idea…
Book Reviews, Fiction Writing, Humor, Mystery, New Words Learned, Suspense/Thrillers, Words
Workman’s Complication (McCall & Company, Book 1) – a Review
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• •Workman’s Complication is a gripping, entertaining mystery that is filled with laughs, thrills, and edge-of-your-seat moments. I was hooked from the first hilarious sentence: It was harder to sing with the vampire teeth than I thought it would be. Kate’s dad dies and leaves her his private detective business. Kate McCall doesn’t want to be…
Fiction Writing, Words, Writing Prompts and Exercises, Yes, There's a Word for That
Yes, There’s a Word for That: Boanthropy & Other Unusual Words
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• •There is a word for every condition under the sun. What word describes the inability to feel pleasure? How much do you love books? Are you a bibliophile, bibliomaniac, or a biblioholic? Do you have bibliomania? Have you ever had the desire to eat grass like an ox? Have you ever gone temporarily insane? Been…
Author Spotlight, Fiction Writing, Guest Posts, Writing
John E. Gabor: The Mons Monkey Trilogy
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• •Two quotes by Hunter S. Thompson sum up my youth and my writing: “Truth is weirder than any fiction I’ve seen” and “It never got weird enough for me.” I was fascinated with people, but I quickly grew bored with ordinary life. I went off exploring other worlds: criminals, gangs, commies, Birchers, hippies, drug dealers,…
Book Reviews, Dark Fiction, Fiction Writing, Horror, New Words Learned, Short Stories/Novellas, Words
Hop-Frog (Eight Chained Ourang-Outangs) – a Review
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• •Being part of the king’s court should be a dream job, right? Unfortunately, it wasn’t so for Hop-Frog and Tripetta. The king’s jester, Hop-Frog, was a dwarf and a cripple. Hop-Frog wasn’t the name with which he was christened; he was called that because of the way he moved around. Along with a female dwarf,…
Fiction Writing, Words, Writing Prompts and Exercises
Mammothrept and Other Words That Describe People
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• •What words do you use to describe your character’s habits or traits? Does your character enjoy good food, drink, and other luxuries? Or maybe your character is a mean, sneaking coward. Even though your character is an adult, does he act like a spoiled brat? A bon viveur is a person who lives high and…
Fiction Writing, Guest Posts, Writing
Vietnam and Iraq – Guest Post by Christopher Meeks
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• •Now that the new Vietnam War documentary by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick is running on PBS, that most difficult time in American history is once again before us. However, when I saw us so easily fall into fighting in Iraq, I couldn’t help but wonder had our politicians forgotten about our quagmire in Southeast…
Fiction Writing, Guest Posts
Why Vampires? – Guest Post by Tony-Paul de Vissage
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• •“Why do you like vampires? What’s so special about them? Why read about them? What’s so appealing?” Thus do the philistines speak. What’s so appealing about literary vampires? Let me count the ways… …by doing a bit of history… The literary vampire didn’t begin to flourish until the mid-1880s. I’ve heard it said that before…
Book Reviews, Fiction Writing, Horror, New Words Learned, Paranormal, Reading, Vampire Fiction, Words
The Night Man Cometh – a Review
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• •Words, Writing, Yes, There's a Word for That
Did You Know There’s a Word for That?
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• •Have you ever burst into laughter and not been able to quit? Have you ever experienced an afterclap or been knocked agroof? Are you acquainted with an alterocentric person? Do you have a cacoëthes? Would a person with cerebropathy need to be put in a mental institution? What is curglaff? Have you ever burst into laughter…