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Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Family Fiction: The idea for FIRSTBORN
So happy to share the interview about Firstborn that Family Fiction ran through the month of December. The questions were awesome. Here's just one, otherwise follow the link...
HOW DID YOU COME UP WITH THE IDEA?
Firstborn sprang from a news article I read concerning gendercide. I was horrified to learn that over 37 million girls are missing in China alone, due to the One Child Policy enacted in 1980. The work of All Girls Allowed and the Global Gendercide Advocacy and Alliance Group provided further chilling information regarding the killing of females at birth. My anger brought my novel to form. I wanted to write a fiction work to bring light to gendercide while declaring the value of our daughters. The dedication of my book is: To firstborn females, may they all be allowed to live.
Friday, December 27, 2013
Thursday, December 26, 2013
Monday, December 23, 2013
Friday, December 20, 2013
Poetry Friday: Cemented Stones
Cemented stones knob
like knuckle bones beneath skin;
fists beneath my feet.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Monday, December 16, 2013
FIRSTBORN Trailer, released by Hypable
The trailer for FIRSTBORN was just released at Hypable!!! On the front page. And it's looking awesome! Blink did an amazing job, don't you think? I'm so happy!
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
FIRSTBORN E-book: Special PRE-SALE!
Following the fab star review from Kirkus Reviews, Blink is offering a pre-sale of FIRSTBORN right now. Which is pretty cool. Check the different sites if you like. I saw $3.79 at Amazon.
And here's the full review! Yay! Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!
KIRKUS REVIEW
A fantasy that reads like a lost history tome and deftly examines issues of gender.
Tiadone is the first declared male in his R’tan village, though he was born female: Tiadone’s father declared him male to save him from abandonment and certain death on the Scree, as is the fate for all firstborn R’tan females, as dictated by the oppressive rule of the Madronians. Soon, Tiadone, along with his best friend, Ratho, and their “twined” rapions (birds of prey bonded to R’tan companions), travels to the Perimeter. During their mandatory year of service in Perimeter Defense, they will protect their people from invaders, desert cats and sandstorms. Once there, Tiadone chronicles the ways he must cope with the scorn of the other boys, the cruelty of the Madronians in power and his own changing body and blossoming sexuality—all as he struggles with his feelings surrounding being a declared male. Over the course of the year, Tiadone comes to recognize and deconstruct the carefully crafted lies that his life has been founded on and eventually finds a strength, peace and freedom he never dared hope for. Through the beautifully drawn Tiadone—whom readers will come to care for and relate to—Grover questions both gender norms and gender conformity in an honest, light-handed manner.
An engrossing story with welcome depths. (Fantasy. 12 & up)
Friday, November 22, 2013
Poetry Friday: Santorini Sunset (2)
Santorini Sunset (2)
Marbled footfalls and
languages weave a pattern
in nightfall's whisper.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Friday, November 15, 2013
Poetry Friday: Snaking Passage
Snaking Passage
Twisting concrete drags
smooth underbelly below
scaled, cold casement.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Friday, November 8, 2013
Poetry Friday: Santorini Sunset
Santorini Sunset
On this curve, we stop
to watch the sun wink in night,
clapping starlight free.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Friday, October 11, 2013
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Poetry Friday: Nob Falls
Nob Falls
The thrum of the pound
of the falls, beats on my bones
until joy smacks free.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Saturday, September 28, 2013
Friday, September 27, 2013
Poetry Friday: Sea Skip
Sea Skip
Over the curve and
roll of the wave, my joy and
the sky's skip sea foam.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Friday, September 20, 2013
Poetry Friday: Mamma Duck
Mamma Duck
My orange shoes will quack
flip, flap me wherever I
may want to waddle.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Friday, September 13, 2013
Poetry Friday: Grown Children
Grown Children
Fathers contemplate
how the dance ended before
they realized it.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Friday, September 6, 2013
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Poetry Friday: Buoyant Hope
Buoyant Hope
Stretched thin and drifting,
hope is lightly buoyant; we
only need look up.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Friday, August 23, 2013
Poetry Friday: The Reception
The Reception
We negotiate
this dance of joy and loss. We
cut the rug of life!
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Friday, August 16, 2013
Poetry Friday: Sister of the Bride
Sister of the Bride
Years of dress-up from
the costume box, swish and swirl
in her wedding dress.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Friday, August 9, 2013
Poetry Friday: Parents of the Bride
Parents of the Bride
Joy curves around the
hollowed empty space of her
leaving us behind.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Friday, August 2, 2013
Poetry Friday: Mother of the Bride
Mother of the Bride
Seated behind her,
rising from the chair to dance
into her future.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
My lupus flared the night before the wedding. Arriving in a wheelchair, I was blessed to stand and walk down the aisle for the ceremony and then to dance at the reception. Joy!
Friday, July 26, 2013
Poetry Friday: Father of the Bride
Father of the Bride
Caught in the rearview
is your childhood, fluttering
in my gasping heart.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Happily Ever After, George and Elle Fricks!
It's so good to be back! I've been a bit busy with my daughter's wedding. Here's a peek from our dear friend, Pam Villanueva. And here's to living happily ever after, George and Elle Fricks! Congratulations!
Friday, June 21, 2013
Poetry Friday: Lit Passage
Lit Passage
Like molten glass, light
spills, pours, gleams in the corners.
Steps illuminate.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Friday, June 14, 2013
Poetry Friday: Whispered Through Steam
Whispered Through Steam
How many stories
were whispered through steam as cups
clinked women's secrets?
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Friday, June 7, 2013
Poetry Friday: Blue Branches
Blue Branches
Like arthritic bones,
blue branches twist and stretch,
clicking to the sky.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
This grove of trees stands in downtown Seattle. I've only ever seen them from the car in passing.
Friday, May 31, 2013
Poetry Friday: Daily Catch
Daily Catch
tumble and rattle
gold fish swim through memories
chubby fisted smiles
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Friday, May 24, 2013
Poetry Friday: Wedding White
Wedding White
White light glances in
and illuminates love in
women's precision.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
We are busy with preparations for the upcoming wedding!
Friday, May 17, 2013
Poetry Friday: A Glimpse of My Crinoline
A Glimpse of My Crinoline
Turquoise, aqua tulle,
a sea foam dance swishing and
swirling in my wake.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Monday, May 13, 2013
Friday, May 10, 2013
Poetry Friday: Lupus Laughter
Lupus Laughter
It's a sunglasses-
party-hat kind of cheer to
laugh away lupus.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Friday, May 3, 2013
Poetry Friday: Triangle Dresses
Women stand on strong
legs, on the warm earth, in their
triangle dresses.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
I ran across this adorable image marking the women's bathroom in Mexico.
Monday, April 29, 2013
Living with Lupus: After One Hundred Days
Logo from this blog.
One hundred days for this lupus flare came and went, and I decided not to count any longer. This is my new normal.
The second round of prednisone wasn't effective, but I escaped through the withdrawals and compromised immune system without losing any teeth this time! Yay!
A few weeks back, my husband loaded me into the car at dusk and drove me through the neighborhood to see spring had sprung. It was glorious!
With more research, I discovered I need sunscreen at all times, UV clothing doesn't hurt, and to not trust shade as rays bounce. Here's what I've learned regarding the sun triggering lupus:
UV causes skin cells to express proteins, which attract antibodies, which attract white blood cells, which attack skin cells, which leads to inflammation in skin and internal organs.
That's the gist. I read that often lupus patients flare from October to April. That seems pretty close to what I experienced with a little head start in September.
I am happy to say the symptoms are still continuing to lessen at a snail's pace. A week or so ago I tried an outing alone and ended up crying in Home Improvement on a couch because I was too sick to get through the checkout line. Today I drove myself to the doctor and back home again without difficulty!
Hopefully, this will be the last lupus update for awhile at On Pointe. Thanks for all your prayers and support. They've meant so much!
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Poetry Friday: The Best Medicine
The Best Medicine
By moon and stars, ears
and smiles, they lift me to laugh
above my illness.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Many thanks to all who have made me laugh during this lupus flare.
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Friday, April 19, 2013
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
#rockthedrop tomorrow!
April 18, 2013, rgz are celebrating Support Teen Literature Day! In addition to dropping YA titles for readers to discover, consider a book donation to 826NYC to help grow their library. Team with Figment, I Heart Daily, Soho Teen, and 826NYC to celebrate YA lit.
•Follow @readergirlz on twitter and tweet #rockthedrop
•Print out the below bookplate (designed by the super-talented Lindsay Frantz) and drop books in your area on Support Teen Literature Day:
•Donate books to 826NYC:
826NYC
attn: Joan Kim
c/o: readergirlz Rock the Drop
372 Fifth Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11215
372 Fifth Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11215
Post pics at our facebook of any books you drop or find! That's the skinny. Now get ready to drop!
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Poetry Friday: Blink
Within the orb of
my eye, pulse living stories,
caught between each blink.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Many congratulations to Zondervan for the launch of their new imprint, Blink! I'm thrilled to be onboard!
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Monday, April 8, 2013
Living with Lupus: How Very Vampiric
Aha! A quick post to share that I've learned the sun can nab me in the shade and through windows. Artificial light is also a culprit. That said, sunscreen is my new friend, outdoors and indoors, around the clock.
Short trips out at night have been the most successful. How very vampiric, right? You can still see spring in the moonlight.
Approaching 100 days, I'm finding a normal in the slow climb out of the hole. Strangely, as the lupus gradually loses strength, the rheumatoid increases. I find it easier to function with bone pain in a limited way rather than to be knocked completely flat by my entire body. So, I am encouraged.
With difficulty chewing the jaw specialist recommended:
Pretty clever, huh? He also said this is my new normal. Thankfully, much scrumptious food is soft. Just think of giant marshmallows... Anyway, I've been adapting since October 2012, so this isn't new news. And now I have a cookbook to consult.
Hm. Maybe this not chewing is also vampiric. Just staying in style. Here's hoping I bypass the zombie craze. For sure.
I have a few drug potentials in the arsenal, but having had cancer already once, I'm hoping to avoid them. We'll see what must be done. In the meantime, I'm off to simmer soup, sunscreened.
Friday, April 5, 2013
Poetry Friday: 28 Years
28 Years
Calendar pages
collected and stored, our
memories, our life.
Lorie Ann Grover, 2013
Reading Viktor Frankl's, Man's Search for Meaning, I was struck by an illustration he offered. Think of your life as a calendar wherein you tear off a page each day. You have the choice to look at the little that is left of the calendar in your hand or you can store each page in a drawer and dwell on those treasured memories. Lovely, yes?
Here's to 28 years of marriage memories!