C. Lee McKenzie

Young Adult and Middle Grade Author

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Farewell 2022 First Wednesdays

December 7, 2022 By C. Lee McKenzie

This is it people! The last First Wednesday of 2022. I’m shocked that we’ve met here for an entire year to talk about writing, reading, and life experiences. I’ll leave this year with a lot of good memories, many interesting experiences, and some treasured friends. Thanks for all your visits and your wonderful comments.

#IWSG
Join Us Now

Now onto the final IWSG question for 2022

The awesome co-hosts for the December 7 posting of the IWSG are Joylene Nowell Butler, Chemist Ken, Natalie Aguirre, Nancy Gideon, and Cathrina Constantine!

Every month, we announce a question that members can answer in their IWSG post. These questions may prompt you to share advice, insight, a personal experience or story. Include your answer to the question in your IWSG post or let it inspire your post if you are struggling with something to say.

Remember, the question is optional!

It’s holiday time! Are the holidays a time to catch up or fall behind on writer goals?

I definitely fall far behind in any goals I have-the writing ones included. My priorities shift to food (especially biscotti which I bake in copious batches), to my kids, to all the decorations that I’ve stored away for years. I seem to return to my “old” way of doing things and become more domestic and much more social.

The writing will be there when I put the decorations back in their boxes and when I’m no longer planning dinner parties or going to them. And when the festivities come to an end, I’ll be at my computer or scribbling in one of notebooks. But I’ll have a lot of wonderful memories of those biscottis, the kids with their presents and wide-eyed wonder at Santa, and the shared time with friends.

May you all have a wonderful December and meet the new year in high spirits and good health.


The December WEP Challenge is on.

Read the submissions

HERE!

WEP Challenge

Quote of the Month:

“Then the Grinch thought of something he hadn’t before! What if Christmas, he thought, doesn’t come from a store. What if Christmas…perhaps…means a little bit more!”
― Dr. Seuss, How the Grinch Stole Christmas!

Filed Under: Christmas, Insecure Writers Support Group, IWSG, WEP Tagged With: Insecure Writer

Last Post of 2021

December 8, 2021 By C. Lee McKenzie

Merry Christmas

Wishing all of you a wonderful December as you get ready to usher in a new year. I’m taking a break from now until after the first of January to reset and to do one heck of a lot of baking. I’ve promised cookies to just about everyone I’m sharing time with this season.

Thank you for being a great group of writers, bloggers, and friends.

See you in 2022!

Filed Under: Christmas, Holidays

December’s First Wednesday & Holiday Treats

December 4, 2019 By C. Lee McKenzie

The last post of 2019 is rather nostalgic for me. So much has happened in these 365 days-some wonderful, some not so wonderful. This is my first full year living alone, and there were times when I thought, “Nope! Can’t do this.” And then, I did.

Traveling helped. I revisited Athens, and had my own Odyessy around the Greek Islands. Morocco was next, and I learned so much about this fascinating part of the world.

Not Guilty by C. Lee McKenzie

Kindle Cover

Not Guilty, my fifth contemporary/realistic novel was published. I didn’t think I was going to make it, actually. The acceptance from the publisher came about a week before I left for Morocco, and I didn’t have a clue how I was going be on the road and get ready to launch a book. Fortunately, I was smart enough to know I couldn’t do it alone and hired MC Book Tours. They did a great job, and the launch went off without a hitch.

The book’s out to good REVIEWS, of course, I could use more, but that’s a given. I wish readers understood how important reviewing really is these days. Some do, but many do not!.

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#IWSG

Join Us Today

And now to the Wednesday business! Be sure to check us out on Twitter. Remember the next Twitter Pitch is JANUARY 15! Our Twitter handle is @TheIWSG and hashtag is #IWSGPit.

DUE TO NEW YEAR’S DAY FALLING ON A WEDNESDAY, WE WILL BE POSTING JANUARY 8 RATHER THAN JANUARY 1!

Every month, we announce a question that members can answer in their IWSG post. These questions may prompt you to share advice, insight, a personal experience or story. Include your answer to the question in your IWSG post or let it inspire your post if you are struggling with something to say. The co-hosts for the December 4 posting of the IWSG areTonja Drecker, Beverly Stowe McClure, Nicki Elson, Fundy Blue, and Tyrean Martinson!

Remember, the question is optional!

December 4 question - Let’s play a game. Imagine. Role-play. How would you describe your future writer self, your life and what it looks and feels like if you were living the dream? Or if you are already there, what does it look and feel like? Tell the rest of us. What would you change or improve?

I have three more stories that I would like to see published. One is with my agent, one is sitting on my C-Drive while I decide how to manage it, and one is in draft form and out to a beta reader. If these books make their way into the world, I’m thinking it’s time to take more hikes, do more traveling, and maybe attend to all of those chores I’ve put off while laying down one word after another.

IWSG Anthology Contest 2019

Now’s the time for those Holiday Treats-the winners of the anthology contest. Here they are! Congratulations to all of them! The stories are awesome.

 

 

 

The Third Ghost – Yvonne Ventresca http://yvonneventresca.com/blog.html
A World of Trouble – Rebecca M. Douglass https://www.ninjalibrarian.com
Winter Days - Katharina Gerlach https://www.katharinagerlach.com
Feathered Fire – Roland Clarke https://rolandclarke.com/
The Ghosts of Pompeii – Sherry Ellis http://www.sherryellis.org/
The Blind Ship – Bish Denham http://bish-randomthoughts.blogspot.com/
Return to Cahokia – L.T. Ward
Dare Double Dare – Louise M. Barbour https://selkiegrey4.blogspot.com
Simon Grey and the Yamamba - Charles Kowalski https://charleskowalski.com/
The Orchard - Beth Anderson Schuck https://twitter.com/schuck_beth

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Sign of the Green Dragon by C. Lee McKenzie

 

 

On my Email Connect this month, I’m giving away three signed copies of Sign of the Green Dragon and digital copies of Bouhaki, a bit of feline Christmas escape. Merry Christmas. If you don’t celebrate that holiday, then Happy Hanukkah or Yule or Pancha Ganapati or Bodhi Day.

Bouhaki by C. Lee McKenzie

 

 

 

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Did you sign up for WEP? There’s still time, and this theme is ripe for some very special posts.

 

 

 

 

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One more bit of great news is from J.Q. Rose. Her latest book is non-fiction, and it’s a perfect gift for someone thinking of writing memoir. Your Words, Your Life Story will help you spark and share your memories.

 

 

 

 

And if you’d like to jump into this Advent Calendar Event for Writers, do it here. Some great gifts await!

 

 

 

Quote of the Month:

“For last year’s words belong to last year’s language and next year’s words await another voice. And to make an end is to make a beginning.” T. S. Eliot

Filed Under: Christmas, Email Connect, Giveaways, Insecure Writers Support Group

WEP Entry, Ribbons and Candles

December 12, 2018 By C. Lee McKenzie

I’m always open for criticism, but since this is a nascent piece, I’d really like it if you’d answer some or all of the questions I asked at the end. I guess that means something close to NCCO?WEP

©The Ribbon Tree

by
C. Lee McKenzie

Jason Whitaker dreaded this visit home. Sure he wanted to see his mom, but what if she wasn’t holding it together? The answer was simple. His lifestyle would go up in smoke. Goodbye, Malibu. Hello, Fish Creek.

It wouldn’t hurt his brother to step up when Mom needed help, but Stanley—the number one bleeding heart in New York City—argued that his down-and-out clients needed him at the law clinic. That excuse got good old Stanley out of helping with Dad’s funeral arrangements, dealing with the termites at the family home, and almost everything else Jason asked him to do.

Stanley was already on the front stoop when Jason stepped out of the car. Jason wondered how long his brother had stood there waiting for him, not brave enough to go inside on his own.

Well, it hadn’t been good last year, Jason had to admit, so this time Stanley had a valid reason to wait for reinforcements. The call about their dad had come the day before Christmas. They’d both caught flights home and when they’d arrived they found their mother in her chair next to the Whitaker traditional Ribbon Tree. She’d been a devastated C-curve of a woman, not the ramrod matriarch they both loved and always obeyed.

Recalling that tableau from last year, and fearing that he’d see his mother like that again, he joined Stanley on the porch.

“Been here long?” Jason asked.

“A couple of minutes.”

Jason lifted his hand that was weighed down by a thousand pounds of reluctance and rapped on the door before shoving it open. “Mom!”
Her chair was empty, but he froze in the doorway because the tree stood decorated with shimmering gold ribbons the way he remembered from all the Christmases he’d spent in this house. The Ribbon Tree had always been Dad’s project, but it seemed his mom had decided to keep the tradition alive. A dozen candles flickered on the mantel, but unlike the candles that had delighted him as a child, these cast ghostly shadows against the wall. When he peeked into the dining room, the table gleamed under more candles and Mom’s china. All of these decorations were usual, yet not. A chill corkscrewed up his spine.

He sniffed. Roast beef and Yorkshire Pudding.

Stanley shrugged when Jason looked at him with an unspoken question. Mom’s special Christmas dinner wasn’t what either of them had expected, but the cooking smells filtering through the air somewhat eased the tension between Jason’s shoulder blades. He shook off the vague uneasiness. He was just tired from the flight and worried about his mom’s mental state. Mom was okay. He was off the hook for extended Mom care. Even Stanley managed a smile that looked like relief.

“In here boys.” His mom’s voice came from the kitchen.
She stood guard at the stove, the oven door open and the steamy aroma of perfectly roasted meat and baked pudding pouring into the room. She’d tied the candy cane stripped apron at her waist and wound her salt and pepper hair at the back of her head into a tidy knot. At sixty-five, she still had a slim figure, and her keen eyes sparkled the way they always had. That vacant look of last year had disappeared.

“Your timing is perfect.” She hugged them to her, then set about directing them to uncork the wine and slice the roast while she dished up the whipped potatoes, set the puffed Yorkshire puddings on a plate, and tossed the salad. When dad was here, he’d do the carving, but now that job fell to Jason, and he tried to remember how it should be done. HIs mom was a stickler for well-presented plates, especially during the holidays.

Once at the table, Jason reached for the mashed potatoes, but his mother shook her head. “Has California made you forget to be thankful?”

“Sorry.” Jason bowed his head while his mom said a short prayer.

“Now, let’s give this a taste test,” she said, passing the meat platter.

The only thing he missed in Fish Creek was his Mom and her cooking. Stanley had to be thinking the same thing the way he inhaled the steam rising from his plate and practically purred.

Stanley should have been a woman, Jason thought, not for the first time. Always soft-footed when he entered a room, a voice so low that people had to lean in to catch what he said. The word delicate flitted across Jason’s mind. Delicate and precise. That was why Dad allowed Stanley, and only Stanley, to hand him the ribbons while he stood on the ladder to reach the top branches. Dad had a delicate touch and precision in him, too.

That had been fine with Jason. He’d rather watch football. Ribbons weren’t his thing.

He’d often wondered how two such different people could come from the same genetic material. Jason concentrated on his abs and always had three girls on the string at a time. Stanley’s abs didn’t exist unless you looked very closely. The only exercise he did was to walk up courthouse stairs. They were both about six feet, but Jason had a square jaw and short dark hair. Styled. Stanley’s jaw receded a bit, and his hair curled around his face in a brown fringe.

Yep, we’re very different, Jason thought.

His fork was half way to his mouth with a small mound of mashed potatoes when his mother said, “Your father has come home.”

Stanley, who as always, was beatle-ing his way through his food, one nibble at a time, stopped chewing.

“Say what?” Jason let his fork clatter onto his plate.

“Just what I said. He’s back and he plans to stay.”

Stanley always had a pale complexion, but his face had turned pasty. Jason thought his might have the same washed-out look.

“Surely, you don’t think I could have put up that beautiful tree,” she said. “He didn’t trust me to do it right either, so he did.” She sipped her wine as if she’d just commented on the weather. “I rather like having him back. It’s a comfort.”

Inside his head, Jason’s life exploded. His mom had lost it. He’d have to call work and beg for family leave again. Then there was Kylie and Marian and Jill. Cancel those dates.

“Where is he now?” Stanley’s soto voce question barely riffled the air.

“Upstairs. He didn’t want to shock you, so I was supposed to prepare you.” She looked first at Jason, and then at Stanley. “Are you?”

One didn’t prepare to meet a ghost, and certainly, not the ghost of your father.

“It’s a bit of an adjustment, but so worthwhile. I was terribly lonely, and I didn’t want to move in with either of you. Heaven forbid. This is the perfect solution.”

She walked to the stairs and called, “Malcom! They’re ready.” Looking back at them, she said, “I think.”

Questions:

So is she an addled, lonely widow in need of her sons’ help? Or is there a ghost waiting to descend those stairs and blow reality to shreds. What’s your preference?

Is Jason terribly self-centered or is he only trying to do what’s right by his mother while making his own way in the world?

And about Stanley—the do-gooder, except for his family—is he at all like-able?

The delicacy and precision characteristics that Dad and Stanley share play into a larger piece of this pie, at least at this moment. Was it distracting or intriguing?

Filed Under: Christmas, WEP

Christmas Presents and Break!

December 18, 2017 By C. Lee McKenzie

My last post of 2017.

For all my great blogger and writer friends, I’m sending you the very best wishes for whatever holiday you celebrate this season. And if you’re one of my followers, I have a few gifts to add some cheer.

[Read more…] about Christmas Presents and Break!

Filed Under: Christmas, Holidays

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h59dYGrVQvs

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