I am just about moved into our new-to-us home. One more week and I’ll have everything moved and will be settled into the smaller house. Downsizing is not easy! After 47 years, 4 kids, 12 grandkids, 2 great grandkids, I have boxes of photos that I’ve been going through. getting rid of duplicates and bad images from the days when you took the film in to be printed.
I have more furniture than this house can hold, but at the same time, I need to purchase furniture to fit in smaller spaces.
And don’t get me started downsizing from a walk-in closet to a 7 ft long closet in a 1952 older house. I see some remodeling going on in the bedroom down the road. Right now we are concentrating on making the kitchen and dining area larger.
- Many of the things I’m doing to move relate to my writing.
- Watching for duplicate words or words that aren’t strong enough.
- making better word choices that fit the scene or the character even if the word had worked well before.
- Shortening sentences to be more concise and not take up so much space in the story.
- And expanding on the mystery and subplots to show the development of my characters and explore more reasons for the murder.
While I’m making the 4-hour drive back and forth from the old place to the new, I’ve summoned up several scenes and reasons for the actions of my characters in the work in progress.
But the words aren’t popping up on the computer screen because when I do finally have time to sit down at the computer, I have emails and promotions to tend to before my brain gives out.
In the last couple of days, I’ve thought about moving my deadline for this book out, but then it feels like I’m copping out. Instead, I’ll spend the rest of the month pushing to finish the book and know it will be published a bit later than I’d planned, but I managed to write it within my deadline.
That is the hardest part of writing for me. Not lambasting myself when I miss a deadline. When I put it out to the universe that something will happen or be finished, I don’t make excuses. I push and make it happen. It is my greatest strength as a writer. Self-discipline.
I can’t remember if I mentioned that Book 8 in the Spotted Pony Casino is now available in print and ebook.
When the past knocks on their door, the future they planned begins to unravel.
On the brink of their wedding, Dela Alvaro and Heath Seaver’s plans shatter when a ten-year-old boy appears, claiming to be Heath’s son. The truth is even darker: the boy’s mother—the woman Heath thought died years ago at Pine Ridge—was an FBI informant hidden under a new identity, left to raise his child alone before dying of addiction.
As Heath wrestles with awe for the son he never knew and fury at the FBI’s deception, the past turns deadly. When the agent who lied to him is found murdered in Pendleton, the FBI shows up on Dela’s doorstep, bringing danger straight to their home.
With their future on the line, Dela and Heath must confront a web of secrets before it destroys the family they’re just beginning to build.
Universal book link: https://books2read.com/u/3LzAxJ
Buy direct from the author: ebook – https://www.patyjager.net/product/full-house-ebook/
Autographed print book – https://www.patyjager.net/product/full-house/
You can also now purchase Merry Merry Merry Murder in audiobook format.
Where comfort and cheer meet scandalous secrets—A holiday mystery set in a small town.
Audiobook website – https://www.patyjager.net/product/merry-merry-merry-murder-audiobook/
In my next post, I’ll be talking about my 20th anniversary as a published author.








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