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melodysnews · 2 years
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Angst
Thank you for visiting My News.
As I’m reading poems written by our new poet laureate, I can feel her angst. My friend and fellow writer, Cheri L. Roman, recently expressed her disquiet in her newsletter, Brass Rag Press. 
In the days since my COVID quarantine, my feelings of deep anxiety have frequently made me unable to accomplish what I want to do in my writing. I write to right, but where do I start? Currently, I feel overwhelmed.
While I attempt to rewrite my novel, Semi-Colon Tattoo, I’ll write postcard and other poems. I cannot concentrate on longer works right now. I’m not reading full-length novels because I lose concentration. Are you finding it difficult to concentrate? If so, you might want to try reading short stories, poems, and novellas. Please don’t totally give up on reading because reading makes us empathetic. If there is one thing our world needs right now, it’s empathy.
To understand some people, I’m trying hard to do as Atticus Finch recommends Scout do in To Kill a Mockingbird: climb into their skin and really walk around in it. Reading a book gives me the ability to identify with others. I think it may be the only way I can keep from sinking in despair.
If you need to escape from your reality for a while, I suggest burying yourself in a good book. 
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melodysnews · 2 years
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Good Morning,
New in my life today: a new poet laureate. I loved Joy Harjo, but I’m happy to read new poetry anthologies. I just ordered Ada Limon’s “The Carrying:Poems.” Have you read any of her works?
It’s also the month for reading postcard poems. Consider participating in the Postcard Festival next year.
Thank you for my blog 😊
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melodysnews · 2 years
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Metamorphosis
Thank you for visiting My News. I've decided it's time to change my blog. I'll still write to right wrongs and discuss my upcoming works and passions, but I plan to incorporate ideas for reading and writing to improve my follower's moods and enable them to be more empathetic--two of my goals in this stress-inducing world.
Step one is to change my blog title from My News to something more engaging. The two titles I'm mulling over are GrowingUp and UnmaskingSmiles. Do you find either of these portmanteaus engaging?
What is your favorite blog host?
Have an interesting day.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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I'm Back
Thank you for visiting My News. I've had a harrowing few months returning to my childhood home following Mother's death and burial, but I'm home and back at my computer.
This morning, I wrote a review of my friend, Linda Kraus's chapbook, POPCORN ICONS AND OTHER POEMS CELEBRATING MOVIES. If you love movies, I highly recommend Linda's book. If you love poetry, I highly recommend this book, if you're a poet trying to compile a book of poetry, this book is a must-read model. Every poems belongs in the book. Ms. Kraus crafted this eighty-five-page opus masterfully.
The first time I read POPCORN ICONS, I read it for enjoyment. Now I plan to re-read it as a model for compiling my quilting chapbook.
Thank you for reading My News.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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Thank you for visiting My News. I was super excited to purchase TITLE IX stamps, especially during this time when it feels as if women’s rights are in danger.
Right now, there is a movement to make pronouns more inclusive. I support all efforts to make people comfortable in their own skin. Throughout my teaching career, I championed following one’s conscience. I shall continue to do so. My choice is to use she and her as my pronouns because I’m still fighting for equity.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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Choosing a Cover
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Thank you for visiting My News. One part of publishing a book is selecting a cover. Often the author has little or no voice in this part of the publishing process. I am lucky because Dr. Custureri of Taylor and Seale Publishing allows me a say in the process.
Do any of these covers inspire you to read Broken?
Thank you for visiting My News.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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BROKEN
Good Morning,
Exciting news! Taylor and Seale will publish my novel in verse.
From the moment I read Madeleine Kuderick's book Kiss of Broken Glass, I knew it was the genre I wanted to write. Subsequently, I read Jason Reynold's Long Way Down, cementing my decision.
I set to work writing my novel. The working title was What Lies Beneath, but it morphed into Broken.
As I worked on my manuscript, I pictured a girl swinging on a rope swing hanging from a live oak tree, daydreaming about escaping from her life. If you've ever dreamed of escaping, you'll relate to Riley.
Thank you for visiting My News. More about the how and why of Broken to come.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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Whether for the songs or the story of AnnieLee, consider reading Run Rose Run by Dolly Parton and James Patterson.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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Happy Easter/Passover
Thank you for visiting My News. Wishing you a peaceful day.
If you wish to connect with me, please do not send messages on Facebook PM. Go to www.MelodyDeanDimick.com and click on Contact Melody. Thank you.
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Sadly, this is my first Easter without Mother. In this photo, she is holding my book, Blame. This was at my last book signing in Plattsburgh, NY, before COVID.
Thank you for visiting My News. Enjoy Easter with family.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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St. Joseph's Day, March 19
Good Morning,
Thank you for visiting My News. A few days ago, I celebrated my birthday and St. Joseph's Day.
My mother's father, my favorite grandfather, was named Joseph. I adored him and was devastated when he died when I was very young, so it was a birthday gift to learn I could celebrate St. Joseph's Day on my birthday.
Papa Joseph and I shared secrets because neither of us seemed to measure up to the expectations of the other adults in our family. We often hopped into his truck and drove to the nearby gravel pit. He had a beer, and I got to ride in the sled he gave me.
I've decided to name a character in my next story Joseph. My grandfather deserves to be immortalized because he made my early life tolerable. Is there a special person in your life you would like to celebrate?
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melodysnews · 2 years
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Free
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Good Morning,
Thank you for visiting My News. Today's news is I'm going to participate in a panel discussion at a poetry festival in St. Augustine, Florida.
A celebration of creative writing and reciting
Friday, April 8, and Saturday, April 9, 2022
Inaugural St. Augustine PoetFest Events
ALL EVENTS ARE FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
As you know if you know me, I write to right wrongs. This poetry festival is a celebration of writing and reciting that fits my reason for writing. On Saturday, April 9, 2022, I will participate in the panel: Create Change with Poetry. One of my works in progress is designed to provide an option to teen suicide. I'm thrilled to be sitting on a panel moderated by Michael Rothenberg, a co-founder of 100 Thousand Poets for Change.
Crisp-Ellert Art Museum – Stage
48 Sevilla Street
11:00 to 11:50 a.m.
Create Change with Poetry – panel discussion
Michael Rothenberg, founder of 100 Thousand Poets for Change, will lead a panel on changing the world with words.
Moderator: Michael Rothenberg
Panel: Jennifer Wolfe, Chris Bodor, Melody Dimick
Please consider joining us. I'll be wearing my mask because I still fear COVID. I hope you'll join us. Thank you for visiting My News.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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Thank you for visiting My News. The banned book I ordered arrived. As I’m sure you can guess, I’m not a fan of censorship of books. If we don’t allow people to read, how can they make informed decisions, or critique?
I find the cover to be intriguing. Does the line on the cover, “MY FATHER BLEEDS HISTORY“ capture your attention?
What are your thoughts about banning a graphic novel about the Holocaust? I think the manga-loving characters in my first book, Silent Screams, would enjoy reading it.
I don’t enjoy graphic novels, but many teenagers do. Why stifle them? Do we really plan to rewrite history to suggest we always made the best choices?
Thank you for visiting My News. Please contact me to share your thought.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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Inspiration
Good Morning,
Thank you for visiting My News. If you aren't a follower, I hope you will decide to become one today.
Woohoo! I completed the second draft of my novella last night. This morning, I'm preparing to begin my next work. It's always daunting to start a new project. I turn to a lake, a river, the clouds, a former classroom, or the ocean for inspiration when I'm seeking a new subject or theme.
This morning, Rick Frishman of Author 101 University, posted a quote on Facebook that he attributed it to Confucius: The man who moves a mountain begins by carrying away small stones.
That quote inspired me to write a poem. Writers are told our characters must grow in our books. The reader expects a change.
Stones were my nemesis as a young girl growing up in the Adirondack area of New York State. I was told the great glacier had dropped them on our land. To plant a garden, we had to pick stones, so they wouldn't damage the plow or tiller.
Dad would put a hay wagon in the middle of the garden and tell me to fill it with stones. I cried much of the day on stone-picking days. The stones scraped against my fingernails and sent chills through my body all day. As I look back at those days, I wonder why I wasn't given gloves.
There wasn't any quitting. When Dad gave me a job, it had to be completed. Slowly, stone-by-stone, I filled the wagon as directed. I hope I built character as I picked those stones and completed my task. I know it resulted in gardens full of fresh vegetables.
I never think of stones without thinking of Robert Frost's poems "Mending Wall" and wondering if he was given the task of picking stones and hated it as much as I did. He said, "Something there is that doesn't love a wall."
One thing is for sure. In New England, stone walls bound borders, and as much as I hated picking stones, I love the stone walls that are part of the New England charm. However, like Frost, I hate that we build boundaries that wall us in and others out.
There's a poem in picking stones, and I plan to write it stone-by-stone or word-by-word in the next few weeks.
Thank God it's Friday. Thank you for visiting My News, and thank you, Rick Frishman, for posting inspiration quotes.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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Censorship
Good Afternoon,
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Thank you for visiting My News. Censorship has reared its ugly head again, but did it backfire? I think so.
When Tennessee removed the Pulitzer-Prize winning graphic novel about the Holocaust from the shelves of public schools, sales surged. In fact, I've ordered and paid for a copy of Maus, but shipment has been delayed. I wanted to read and critique the book. I'll have to wait.
What I can criticize is censorship by the state. The First Amendment Freedom of Speech should not be denied. If students don't learn to be critical readers, our society is in trouble.
The question is, did Tennessee do author, Art Spiegelman a favor? Sales have skyrocketed. People know the name of his book. Writers and students are rushing to purchase copies. Perhaps, he's laughing all the way to the bank while people are rushing to purchase copies of naked mice. Oh, wait. Aren't all mice, except Mickey and Minnie unclothed?
Just musing. Should our leaders do a little more thinking?
Thank you for visiting My News.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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It's Martin Luther King Jr. Day and National Bootlegging Day
Good Frosty Morning,
Thank you for visiting My News.
Enjoy the holiday, preferably avoiding huge crowds and parades. Martin Luther King Jr's family has asked those wanting to honor him to do so by fighting for voting rights. I applaud them. I think he would have too. Our right to vote is one of our most precious rights. It is also a serious responsibility. We must support legislation to protect it if we want to live in a democracy.
I celebrate Dr. King's peaceful protests and powerful speeches. As a Communication 101 instructor at the State University of New York at Plattsburgh, my students and I analyzed his "I Have a Dream" speech. This powerful speech is my favorite speech. By studying his references to religion, repetition, parallelism, and rhythm speakers can learn how to capture and hold the attention of an audience.
Today is also National Bootlegger's Day. I've been fascinated by Prohibition my entire life because my family was impacted by a bootlegger. During Prohibition, a major route from New York City to Canada passed by my family's home. My dad's sister was hit and killed by a bootlegger. The accident created a rift in my family that was never mended. I do not celebrate bootleggers or any other smugglers. Instead, I salute Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.
Thank you for reading My News.
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melodysnews · 2 years
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It’s Kiss a Ginger Day
Thank you for visiting My News. I’m excited because it’s National Kiss a Ginger Day. Why?
I consider people with red hair, freckles, and green eyes to be ideal friends and relatives. It’s a family thing. Most of my mother’s aunts had red hair. My first cousins on Mom’s side of the family often smiled and laughed when we got together. They had red hair and freckles.
Comedian Lucille Ball entertained me when I was young. “The Ransom of Red Chief” is one of my favorite short stories. Ron Weasley served as a great sidekick for Harry Potter.
When I wrote my Silent Series, it seemed fitting that the sweet girl nicknamed Squirrel would have bushy red hair and be an animal lover. I’ve never met an unfriendly Ginger.
Do you have a special Ginger girl in your life? Is she worthy of a kiss 💋
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melodysnews · 2 years
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Thank you for visiting My News.
Yesterday, Barry Dimick and I traveled to St. Petersburg, Florida to visit the Museum of Fine Arts’ “Pieced & Patterned” exhibit.
Serendipitously, we learned the James Museum was featuring Andy Warhol‘s Western art. As we are wont to do, we walked to the museum to see this unique perspective.
The most fascinating aspect of the exhibit for me was this poster and the information on the card that accompanied it. This is quite the contrast to Warhol’s tomato soup can images I studied in college and far more interesting. It is aLeo a perfect example of art imitating life.
I’d love to hear about a time a chance encounter changed your viewpoint. Thank you for visiting My News.
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