Showing posts with label author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label author. Show all posts

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Author Ransom Noble visits with Anna Maria Prezio


We're excited to have author Ransom Noble drop by for a visit on her Virtual Book Tour. Ransom Noble has always loved stories. She's been an avid reader and writer as long as she can remember. Believing determination can help one attain any goal, she set her sights high and achieved many goals. Her love of the sciences led her to a career in mechanical engineering and often pushes her imagination into the speculative fiction realm.

Ransom and her husband enjoy watching movies and playing games with their friends. She likes to go see local bands play and occasionally attends sports events at her alma mater. Her live-and-let-live policy extends to stinging insects and spiders, which earned her the nickname the Wasp Whisperer. Ransom currently resides in Des Moines, Iowa, though she's lived several other places. She's sure she isn't fond of snow since she was born in Modesto, California, and didn't learn what it was until she was eight. She graduated from engineering at the University of Iowa in Iowa City.


Her work includes "Qui's Contract," a short story that appeared in Ruins Metropolis in June 2008 and The Art of Science, which will be published in 2009.



Ranson, we'd love to know more about you, so here goes:




1. What three words do you think describe you as a human being?

Creative, determined, curious

2. How do you think others would describe you?


About the same way. Some would say caring instead of curious, I think.


3. Please tell us what you are most passionate about outside of writing.


Yoga. I used to teach, but have moved and not yet found a new class. Now waiting until I have the baby before finding a new venue- I hate restricting students to my pregnancy routines, though they are more challenging than most in my condition.

4. Do you have any pets? If so, introduce us to them.

I have three plants. Peace is a peace lily, Porthos is a creeping Charlie type, and the geranium that graces my doorstep in the summer months.

5. If you weren't a writer, what would you be doing with your life?

I've just retired from mechanical engineering, and I enjoy yoga. Have previously been part of an at-home sales jewelry company. Next year I'll become a mother.

6. Can you describe the time you realized you were indeed a "real" writer?

This year I've been working hard to send out a lot of things. The first time I got an acceptance email, I squealed. I jumped up and down in my chair (luckily no one else was in the house.


7. What is going on with your writing these days?


Working on my second YA novel and I just finished a submission to a science-fiction anthology.



Sunday, November 23, 2008

Linda Ballou appears on Yolanda Renee's Radio Show

Linda Ballou is author of Wai-nani: High Chiefess of Hawai'i - Her Epic Journey. http://www.lindaballouauthor.com/ Linda's travel articles and photos have appeared in numerous national publications, and my essays have appeared in the Los Angeles Times and various literary journals. "Look Both Ways on Small Islands" was included in the I Should Have Stayed Home anthology published by RDR Books. www.blogtalkradio.com/yolandarenee

Friday, October 10, 2008

Singing Soprano in the Cowgirl Church of God

Singing Soprano in the Cowgirl Church of God
October 1, 2008 / by robertflynn



Billy “Tex” Bob Thornwall had only two ambitions in life: being a cowboy and singing Gospel songs. He had accomplished his first ambition winning top honors in bareback and saddle bronc riding when sixteen. Gospel singing was tougher because Billy “Tex” Bob’s voice was stuck in Vienna Boys Choir. Billy “Tex” prayed earnestly that God would give him a voice with cockleburs in it.

One day working on his roping skills he chased after a wild steer on a greenbroke horse. Billy “Tex” Bob stood in the stirrups his lasso swinging over his head and when he threw his loop his untrained horse spied the rope passing over its head and came to an abrupt conclusion. Billy “Tex” did not. The saddle horn took the seat of Billy “Tex” Bob’s jeans and his parts with it.

Billy “Tex’s” life changed. And not for the better. No one wanted him on their bulldogging team or in their chawing circle. He was shunned in pool halls and domino parlors. “Go play hopscotch with the girls,” cowboys laughed. “Join a sewing circle,” they hooted. No one wanted to hear him sing “Empty Saddles in the Old Corral.” “Sing Bringing in the Sheep,” they chortled. “Shearing on the Old Camp Ground.”

Billy “Tex” Bob prayed for the reconstruction of his pride of Solomon. God had other plans, including the Cowboy Church with clapboard walls, plank floor, a cross made of fence posts and barbed wire, with hardwood benches and funeral parlor pasteboard fans. The communion cup was tin and the bread was sourdough bullets. The preacher wore spurs; his Bible wore a brand. Cowboys used their Stetsons to round up the offering, sometimes passing them again if the stray bills and dogie coins didn’t add up to a full herd. In his hour of despair the Lord led Billy “Tex” Bob to the Cowboy Church. Where he was denied entrance for lacking cowboy characteristics.

When the cowboys came out of church Billy “Tex” showed them roping tricks and lassoed car antenna, rearview mirrors and roguish boys. “Hmmm,” Arizona said, scratching a saddle burn and spitting at a red ant. “He’s got sand.”

“He’s got spirit, too,” Dumas said, switching his wad to the other side and smiting the ant that Arizona had missed.

The other hands allowed he wasn’t no cowboy but he could be a Christian roper.

The following Sunday Billy “Tex” entered the church with special dispensation but there was disputation when he tried to join the Ranchhand’s Sunday School Class. He was pushed into the Gingham for God Class and was not allowed to sing in the choir. But when they sang “When they ring those golden bells” Billy “Tex” Bob’s voice rang clear and true and high. Way high. Those around him stopped singing. The choir stopped singing. The piano stopped playing and the fiddle, the washboard, the washtub bass, the musical saw, the guitar, the mouth organ, the squeeze box until all that was heard was dogs howling and the church-glass-shattering voice of Billy “Tex” Bob nearly high as heaven is above the earth.

And when he finished, the whole congregation shouted with one voice, “There ain’t no saddlehorn sopranos in the Cowboy Church.”

Billy “Tex” Bob prayed the Cowboy Church would have a change of heart; instead, God turned Billy “Tex’s” heart. Billy “Tex” met Broomhilda Factorymacker who was raised by her father with no companions but jackasses. When Broomhilda brayed bass and Billy “Tex” trilled soprano on “Ghost Riders in the Sky,” it led to a camp meeting, tent revival, rededications, baptisms, marriage and the Cowgirl Church of God. Where the pastor wore leather saddle skirts and carried a pink Bible with a lace trim. Billy “Tex” Bob roped dollar bills out of the cowgirls’ hands.

“A cowgirl church is like an Islamic honky-tonk,” the cowboys said. Few stepped inside but they took a chaw break so that they could stand outside and listen to the special music at the Cowgirl Church of God. And it is rumored that when Broomhilda rode bass and Billy “Tex” rode soprano and they rounded up “When they ring those golden bells,” some of the cowboys held hands. Most often with cowgirls By Robert Flynn

Saturday, May 3, 2008