Wednesday, May 16, 2018
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
Are Frogs and Toads Lucky? Legends and Lore
Posted by: Dani Harper, Author
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Image: Bigstock.com |
The sound of these creatures is the surest sign that the warm weather is here to stay. In fact, frogs and toads are also called
I’ve
been fascinated with amphibians ever since I was a kid scooping up
tadpoles into a jar from the creek near my house. When I grew up and left home,
my Welsh grandmother gave me a
ceramic frog for my apartment and told me that I should always have a frog in
the house for good luck. That was a long time ago, but I still keep a statue of
a frog near the door, and there are always a few frog and toad figurines
in my home.
Just in case...
Just in case...
The ancient Romans thought house
frogs were lucky too, keeping live frogs as mascots. Both the Egyptians and Greeks believed that frogs possessed a creative force – they were symbols of inspiration (Hmmm … as a writer, maybe I need some frogs on my desk!)
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Chan Chu, the Toad of Wealth Image: Bigstock.com |
Many cultures consider it a sign that money is coming to you if a frog enters the house. Figurines of frogs are used in the practice of Feng Shui in order to attract wealth both at home and at work.
A three-legged toad named Chan Chu is the traditional pet of the immortal Liu Hai, Chinese god of wealth. The toad is usually pictured with a gold coin in its mouth, and often sitting on a pile of coins as well.
Businesses often keep a statue of Chan Chu near their cash register. In the home, however, Chan Chu is never placed facing the door. The toad is to be placed as if he has just entered the home, bringing abundance with him.
FROGS AND ACHIEVEMENT
Many societies
have equated frogs and toads with great transformative powers and even reincarnation.
After all, they're every bit as amazing as butterflies. They go
through vastly different phases in their lives: From eggs they hatch into
gilled tadpoles that can only live underwater, and then gradually transform to
air-breathing land creatures. It’s not surprising that frogs are also
associated with personal growth and achievement.
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Image: Bigstock.com |
Speaking of the moon, it’s
interesting to note that while western cultures perceive the shape of “man in
the moon”, the Chinese might point to the “toad in the moon” instead. And in
some Asian tales, eclipses occur when the toad tries to swallow the moon
itself.
FROGS AND FERTILITY
FROGS AND FERTILITY
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Frogs and toads are ideal symbols of transformation and change! Image: Bigstock.com |
Egyptian women seeking to conceive or those in the midst of childbirth often wore amulets which depicted Heket as a frog sitting on a lotus flower. It’s interesting that in ancient Mesoamerica, some tribes worshipped a corn goddess who took the form of a frog or a toad. Just like Heket, she was the patron of fertility and childbirth.
Frogs also came to symbolize abundance in general. They appeared in vast numbers during the annual flooding of the Nile
and it wasn’t long before the Egyptians adopted the frog as their official hieroglyph
for an immense number: 100,000!
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Vodka or whiskey with frogs in it is considered good for you in Vietnam. Image: Bigstock.com |
Many cultures associated frogs and toads with healing powers. A supposed cure for thrush, sore throat, and colds was holding a live frog and placing its head in the patient's mouth! As the frog breathed, it was said to draw the illness away from the patient and into itself. Maybe this is why laryngitis is still sometimes described as "having a frog in your throat". You could also drink the water that a frog had been swimming in.
Although it was often believed that frogs and toads caused warts, it's also been claimed that warts could be cured by rubbing a frog or toad across them. Eating frog soup was said to cure whooping cough.
The ancient Celts
venerated natural bodies of water, and springs and wells were sacred. The
presence of frogs in the water was highly desirable since they associated frogs
with both purity and healing. Bathing in such water or drinking it was thought
to cure illness. Many such wells still exist, and one in Shropshire,
England, is allegedly guarded by three frogs who are actually faeries in
disguise!
Incidentally, there’s an
old story about how frogs came to have only four toes on their front feet while
their back feet have five. A group of young frogs ignored the advice of their
elders and hopped into the midst of what they thought was going to be a sumptuous
feast of bright fireflies. Instead, they found themselves in the midst of the
faery court. The faery queen was so outraged by this interruption that she used
her magic to remove a toe from every front foot of every frog – and threatened to
remove more if they ever came back!
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Frog brought fire to Man by carrying a burning stick. Image: Bigstock.com |
Frogs and toads have appeared in ancient stories as heroes and benefactors of the human race. In Native American legends of the Southwest, Frog is usually depicted carrying a piece of wood in its mouth, because the Mojave people believe it was the Frog who brought fire to humans.
In some stories, Australia’s Aboriginal peoples credited the frog with bringing rain to make the plants grow. And in Aztec folklore, the god Quetzacoatl assumed the form of a little blue frog in order to bring “the food of the gods” to humans – cocoa!
Good frog!
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
LEGEND ∙ LORE ∙ LOVE ∙ MAGIC
The fae are cunning, powerful and often cruel. The most beautiful among them are often the most deadly. Hidden far beneath the mortal world, the timeless faery realm plays by its own rules—and those rules can change on a whim.
Now and again, the unpredictable residents of that mystical land cross the supernatural threshold…
In this enchanting romance series from Dani Harper, the ancient fae come face-to-face with modern-day humans and discover something far more potent than their strongest magic: love.
STORM WARRIOR, STORM BOUND, STORM WARNED, STORM CROSSED
Note: Every book in this series is designed to stand alone.
It's fun to read them in order, but you won't get lost if you don't!
See ALL Dani's novels on her Amazon Author Page
It's fun to read them in order, but you won't get lost if you don't!
See ALL Dani's novels on her Amazon Author Page
Labels:
Dani Harper author,
faeries,
fairies,
folklore,
frog superstitions,
frogs and fertility,
frogs and money,
frogs as heroes,
frogs as medicine,
frogs in mythology,
lucky frog,
lucky toad,
myth and legend

Learn more at www.daniharper.com
Monday, May 14, 2018
Here Be News
Posted by: Veronica Scott
No New Releases This Week...
Other News:
Jenny Schwartz is re-covering her titles and here are two of the pretty new covers!
Bring It Back(list):
Veronica Scott shares an excerpt from HOSTAGE TO THE STARS. When Sara is taken by space pirates, Special Forces soldier Johnny Danver refuses to leave her behind...
Buy Links: Apple iBooks Amazon Kobo Barnes & Noble
........
Sales & Promos:
Geneva “Neva” Ross doesn’t want to die. But now that she’s been turned into a werewolf against her will, she’ll do anything to protect her family and friends even if that means taking her own life.
Too bad Travis Williamson saw her jump. A lone Changeling with a dark past, he feels compelled to use his powers to save her. The last thing he expects is to feel a connection to the strong-willed woman. And when Neva is hospitalized, Travis risks everything to kidnap her, knowing the approaching full moon will put everyone in jeopardy.
Bickering constantly to hide their growing attraction, Travis and Neva run from the authorities and from Neva’s sinister sire, Meredith de la Ronde. Meredith is determined that Neva will join her murderous wolf pack. Or die.
https://www.amazon.com/First-Bite-Dark-Wolf-Book-ebook/dp/B00BI4W7G2
Other News:
Jenny Schwartz is re-covering her titles and here are two of the pretty new covers!
Bring It Back(list):
Veronica Scott shares an excerpt from HOSTAGE TO THE STARS. When Sara is taken by space pirates, Special Forces soldier Johnny Danver refuses to leave her behind...
Buy Links: Apple iBooks Amazon Kobo Barnes & Noble
........
Sales & Promos:
![]() |
https://www.amazon.com/First-Bite-Dark-Wolf-Book-ebook/dp/B00BI4W7G2 |
Too bad Travis Williamson saw her jump. A lone Changeling with a dark past, he feels compelled to use his powers to save her. The last thing he expects is to feel a connection to the strong-willed woman. And when Neva is hospitalized, Travis risks everything to kidnap her, knowing the approaching full moon will put everyone in jeopardy.
Bickering constantly to hide their growing attraction, Travis and Neva run from the authorities and from Neva’s sinister sire, Meredith de la Ronde. Meredith is determined that Neva will join her murderous wolf pack. Or die.
https://www.amazon.com/First-Bite-Dark-Wolf-Book-ebook/dp/B00BI4W7G2
Saturday, May 12, 2018
Bring It Back(list) Hostage to the Stars
Posted by: Veronica Scott
VS Note: Johnny is one of my favorite characters!
The story:
The story:
He rescued her from space pirates … but can he keep them both safe from the far greater evil stalking a deserted planet?
Space travel without Kidnap & Ransom insurance? Not a good idea. University instructor and researcher Sara Bridges can’t afford it, so when pirates board her cruise liner, she’s taken captive along with the mistress of a wealthy man, and brought to a deserted planet. When a military extraction team sent to rescue the mistress refuses to take Sara too, she’s left to the mercies of a retired Special Forces soldier, along as consultant.
Reluctantly reactivated and coerced into signing up for the rescue operation to the planet Farduccir where he once was deployed, Sgt. Johnny Danver just wants to get the job done. But when the team leader leaves one captured woman behind, he breaks away to rescue her himself.
As Johnny and Sara traverse the barren landscape, heading for an abandoned base where they hope to call Sectors Command for help, they find villages destroyed by battle and stripped of all inhabitants. A lone survivor tells a horrific tale of the Sectors’ alien enemy, the Mawreg, returning after being pushed out …
Searching for evidence to give the military, Johnny is captured. He regains consciousness in a Mawreg cage–with Sara next to him. Death is preferable to what the aliens will do to them… And even if they do escape their captors, can they alert the military in time to prevent another invasion of the Sectors?
The excerpt:
Johnny faded
to the end of the column and kept watch on their back trail. Once the group
ascended to the plateau seeking the designated landing zone, and he heard the
muted sound of the incoming shuttle, he sought out the captain, crouched in the
lee of a large boulder, close to Ms. Immer.
“Just fyi, I’m goin’ for the
other woman,” Johnny said. “You have a nice flight home to base. Don’t forget
to tell them I’m here. Good luck to you, Ms. Immer.”
“Who the hell do you think you
are, sergeant?” The captain’s voice was tense and angry. “You don’t get to
change mission parameters to suit yourself. I don’t care if you’re in the
goddamn Special Forces or not, I gave you a direct order. We’re not going after
any other civilians this trip.”
“No, you’re not, I see that.”
Johnny couldn’t keep the contempt out of his voice. “In my branch of the
service, we don’t leave people behind. In case it’s escaped your notice, I’m
not under your command. Special Forces operates independently.”
Holding his pulse rifle where it
could conveniently be considered a threat by Captain Scortun if he was feeling
paranoid, Johnny backed away. None of the other soldiers wanted to challenge
him.
“We’re not waiting for you,” Scortun
yelled. “When our shuttle lands, we’re gone.”
“Good riddance,” he said under
his breath, as he faded into the underbrush and slipped away down the steep
hillside.
Another small snippet from earlier in the book - the scene where Sara is taken by the pirates:
Friday, May 11, 2018
Romance and Mother's Day
Posted by: Ruth A Casie
The family is getting together Sunday to celebrate Mother’s Day with a big brunch. Instead of anyone cooking, we’re going to a local family style restaurant. I’ve been saving calories all week to enjoy a stack of pancakes that my husband will finish.
Last Thursday, I stood at a rack
of Mother’s Day cards to buy one for each of my two daughters. This is always a
long process. I make every effort to get cards that have the right sentiment and reflect something of their personality. It took some time, but I came away successful.
There are others in our group, Cori’s mother-in-law and sister-in-law. I searched for cards for them as well and found myself smiling.

Paul and I, along with our daughters and their families went to Boston for graduation. Saturday, Ari and his girlfriend Kate had a Cinco de Mayo graduation party. Ari thanked everyone for their support and help. He saved the best for last, thanking Kate. He turned to her and told her how he couldn’t have made it through grad school without her, he couldn’t do anything without her, and the truth of the matter is he didn’t ever want to be without her. He got on his knee and proposed.
His friends were curious why
Kate was so surprised. Surely, she picked out her ring. Well, no. The ring belonged
to Ari’s great grandmother, Ida, who gave it to my mother Grandma Jessie, who gave
it to Uncle Alan, who gave it to me to hold for Ari. My mom is no longer with
us. I know she would have been pleased to see Ari and Kate so happy. There wasn’t
a dry eye in the backyard.
Last Thursday, standing at the card rack, while I
still reveled in the excitement from the weekend and looked forward to Sunday,
I found myself thinking of the Mother's Days of finger paint pictures, pasta necklaces and single carnations. I browsed reading the sentiments and realized what a wonderful, loving family. So, Happy Mother’s Day everyone!
Labels:
Graduation,
Mother's Day,
proposal,
Ruth A. Casie
Thursday, May 10, 2018
There is no such thing as a new idea
Posted by: Shona Husk
I know some writers fear the blank page. I’m not one of
them.
I love a new idea and I love exploring it while plotting and world
building and working out who my characters are.
I love starting a new manuscript. It’s after that the wheels
fall off. What was once a fantastic shiny new idea is now nothing but a tarnished
pile of junk. I become convinced that it was a dumb idea and that even if it
was a good idea I have now ruined it and I haven’t done enough research, and that
someone else has done it better and I shouldn’t even bother.
Most of the time I shake those feelings off and remind
myself that there hundreds of thousands of Cinderella stories, a billion
billionaires and more Dukes in romance than have ever existed in the history of
the world.
There is no such thing as a new idea.
What I bring to that idea is my life experiences and my way
of seeing the world. The way I tell it makes it different. That doesn’t mean it
won’t end up being a trash pile left by the road of the ebook super highway—not
every book can be a flying car zooming straight to the NYT best seller list,
though it would be really nice to soar to those illustrious heights.
All of this knowledge doesn’t stop the doubts from trying to
throw sand in the gears to jam up my creativity machine, but it does mean I
know how to clean them out and keep going until I have a finished first draft
and can get a second opinion from my critique partners.
It's never been as and as I feared, nothing that a cut and polish wouldn't fix.
Labels:
Shona Husk,
story ideas,
writing

Wednesday, May 9, 2018
Fun Book Hashtags
Posted by: Veronica Scott
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DepositPhoto |
I thought I’d share something simple and easy that I do
weekly to share content, entice readers (hopefully) and have something fresh to
post on my various social media. There are specific hashtags on twitter that
I’ve found particularly helpful. Here’s the Merriam-Webster definition of a
hashtag: “a word or phrase preceded by the symbol # that classifies or
categorizes the accompanying text (such as a tweet).”
The beauty of a hashtag is that many people use them and
will search on them to find content. A hashtag can relate to virtually
anything, like a TV show, politics, or themes like the ones I’m going to share.
First on the short list of the ones I employ is the
venerable #1linewed, established by the Kiss of Death Chapter of the Romance
Writers of America. Frankly, this one is the least useful to me, although I do
it faithfully on Wednesdays to be supportive. They publish a weekly theme and
you’re supposed to find one line or sentence in your current WIP using that
word and put it in a tweet. No buy links, no book title, no pretty cover art.
So if someone really likes your one sentence, that’s a positive, but then
there’s nowhere for them to go from there.
Contrast that with #bookqw (‘book quote Wednesday’),
established by author Mindy Klasky. She also suggests a one word theme for the
week but then pretty much anything goes, as far as content. What I do is
include the hashtag and the theme word in my tweet and then attach my actual
quote in a graphic format, with the cover art and a buy link. I go to Canva, a
free tool for creating visual content, and make my graphic in about five
minutes, cutting and pasting the selected sentences from my book into their
template and adding my cover art. I’m sure there are many great tools for
creating simple graphics but Canva is my go-to tool.
Sometimes I use a stock photo as well (which I purchase from
DepositPhoto, which has great once a year deals on stock photo packages –
merely one resource – there are many other stock photo sites) to further
illustrate my quote. I definitely want the eye appeal factor to draw the reader
in. I have a tendency to want to pick too long a snippet and adding the cover
and/or a photo forces me to be more concise.
The nice thing is, I also post this #bookqw item on my
author Facebook page, my Instagram, and Share it on Facebook with several
groups and pages in my scifi romance genre where snippets of this type are
allowed. Other people often share it
from there, or retweet it on twitter, if my quote and graphic has caught their
fancy, so there’s potential for a nice signal boost.
A similar hashtag that really works for me is #SciFiFri.
Again, they do suggest a theme weekly, but don’t insist you have to stick to
it. Since I write science fiction romance, I can pretty much always find
appropriate content in one of my books and it’s a nice way to draw a little
attention to some of my backlist. They also do a #SciFiSat, with no theme other
than science fiction-related. I don’t do that one as often because I’m in a
weekend snippet hop and I don’t want to give my social media audience too many
snippets or excerpts all at one time.
On occasion, I’ve bundled up a few of my hashtag graphics,
and combined them into one post for my blog.
Even if a hashtag doesn’t work for you personally as a
contributor, there may be cool content you can retweet or share. My favorite
was #MerMay where people worldwide shared all kinds of mermaid and other
fishfolk drawings, some of which were amazing or funny or colorful and I shared
and retweeted the most eyecatching twice a day. I didn’t retweet so many as to
make my followers block me (hopefully!) but I curated the best that I saw.
There was also #inktober in October but that one wasn’t as much to my taste.
Everyone likes different things!
You can find hashtags by googling and you can also find the
definitions for the hastags. Some which you think are for one subject were
snagged by someone else and might not be what you were anticipating. I found a good
post on Author Media.com entitled
“44 Twitter Hashtags Every Author Should Know” by Caitlin Muir. I’m not sure
how old that post is but there are some nice lists there, slightly off the
topic that I’m covering, which was how I use the weekly hashtags to generate
social media content.
I will say, another hashtag I love is #rwchat, which the
creators define as “ …a weekly chat for Romance & Women's Fiction Writers
every Sunday at 4pm PST | 7pm EST.” I try not to ever miss it – there’s a
specific topic every week and the discussion is fast and lively. People are
very generous about sharing their innermost thoughts on the topic at hand.
We’ve had threads on everything ranging from creativity, marketing tactics,
being introverted, tricks of characterization, doing pitches and blurbs, to
stealing time to write. The participants include published and unpublished
authors, so the contributions from people cover a lot of ground and are of
interest no matter what level of publishing you may be at. Everyone is welcome,
even if you just want to lurk. The organizers typically post 6-8 questions
during the hour and then the participants comment and interact, using the
hashtag.
So you don’t have to be a social media expert to make use of
hashtags and even just dipping your toe into the pool may bring some good
results, in terms of your social media reach.
What are your favorite hashtags?
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