My Photo

Blogher

ADVERTISE HERE

Pay it forward.

GRAVY

  • My first novel started with a mole. Yes, a MOLE - a freckle, a birthmark, whatever you want to call it.
  • I was at the pool with my daughter getting ignored by our swim instructor when a lifeguard with a particularly ripped abdomen walked by. He stopped to flirt with one of the female lifeguards and my eyes flew directly to an adorable mole on the top can of his six-pack.
  • "How cute!" I thought (among other things). "He looks like a character in a romance novel!"
  • So I went home and started writing fiction for the first time. That was over a year ago and I still haven't been able to stop. GRAVY is the story of a suburban housewife who wants another baby, but gets a man with a mole instead.
  • GRAVY is now available on Kindle and Nook!

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Become a Fan

« Babble babble blah blah blah | Main | Guess who's home? »

May 04, 2006

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Sarah

Speaking as someone from Sunnyvale who now lives in DETROIT (ok, 40 minutes away in Ann Arbor, thank God)....it doesn't matter how you pronounce it; why anyone would go there is beyond me. I'm just mad it's now my closest city instead of San Francisco!
Anyway, enough of that....I am sure Dave will come home in plenty of time to help....and it's completely understandable why you'd 'need' a man - they're fun to have around :)

Arwen

Ooooh, believe me, Detroit does not demand to be said with authori-tah. We Detroit-area people (and I'm with Sarah in Ann Arbor, but I've lived in what is referred to as "metro-Detroit" all my life) say it more like Duh-TROIT, with the end of that second syllable petering off into quiet oblivion. Trust me, the city is headed that way too - it's a sad, sad place.

And awwwwww, and I feel exactly the same way about my husband. Sweet.

Elizabeth Jones

I feel the same way about my husband. It is nice to need someone like that.

Chrissie

Every time my husband goes away, I am reminded how absolutely useless I would be as a single mom. I honestly don't think I could do it.

I love him and need him in much the same way you need yours. And I think he loves and needs me like that as well. :)

LisaK

Don't say you could never be a single mother. You would be surprised at what you can do when you have no choice. I always thought I could never do it alone either. Then my husband died unexpectedly - and here I am. A single mom. I still can't believe it sometimes but there it is. You just have to find an inner strength and do it. We all have it.

GraceD

I need my man. My man needs me. We're both feminists. We punish anyone who says otherwise by making them listen to hours of Lilith Fair music.

The comments to this entry are closed.

Blogherads

Bare Down There Waxing

Photos

  • www.flickr.com
Blog powered by TypePad