Update Post #2 to Candid Cover’s TBR Wipeout Challenge!

Summer 2018 TBR Wipeout ChallengeSo today is the day I’m supposed to give another update to The Summer TBR Wipeout Challenge, hosted by The Candid Cover.  The last couple of weeks have been pretty busy, so I only got four more books read.  That’s okay though, because I did get some writing done, and I did get one of the books on my TBR shelf read.  Yay!

So over the last two weeks since my last update, I read these books:

  • Summer Days and Summer Nights – Various authors
  • 1,000 Years, 1,000 People – several authors
  • Red Queen – Victoria Aveyard
  • Harbor Me – Jaqueline Woodson

Only Red Queen was on my TBR plans to read at the beginning of this challenge.  I signed up to check this one out of the library in May, and finally got the chance to read it last week.

I reviewed two of the books last week, plan on publishing the review for Harbor Me tomorrow, and plan on reviewing Red Queen on September 20th (I generally review a new release book early in the week and an older book later in the week, so the older books are backed up a bit).

For the next two weeks, I’m 2nd on the waiting list for Ever the Brave and Crown of Midnight, so I may end up getting to read those.  I have an ARC for My Mother, Barack Obama, and the Last Stand of the Angry White Man that I plan on reviewing next Monday, and I’m working on reading George Whitefield: Evangelist for God and Empire; I hope to review that two Monday’s from now.  I also was chosen for Give the Dark My Love by Penguin’s First to Read program, so I’ll probably read that soon as well.

See you in two weeks!  I can’t believe this challenge is almost over!

Compliments to the Writer (Part 2)

This is part 2 of a 2 part series about complimenting authors.  Part 1 was published last week.  It deals with sending compliments to lesser-known, struggling authors.

Rock FansI wrote my first two novellas in the junior and senior years of high school.  They were stories about a music group that I liked.  In fact, just about every story of any significant length that I’ve written has been fanfiction of some sort.  The NaNoWriMo story I am planning for this year is historical fanfiction in an AU setting with original characters (okay, it’s original fiction with historical inspiration… maybe I can get over that mental block I have with original fiction if I think of it as fanfiction).  I’m starting to get decently okay at remixing ideas and coming up with new works, I guess.

Which leads me to today’s topic, which is that of fandoms.  I’ve come to the conclusion that there are a lot of struggling authors out there that would love to hear a compliment about their work every now and then, but I wonder about the bigger, more well-known authors.

The other day, I saw a tweet that says you can’t talk about an author’s works enough.  To a degree, I’m skeptical about that.  They had a good argument though.  I don’t actually watch television, but if I did, I’d see commercials about movies, but not about books.  I don’t drive on the freeways much because from where I live, I go nearly everywhere via surface streets, but if I did see billboards, there’s a better chance that they’d be for a movie than a book.

So as I thought about that yesterday, I decided to go ahead and tweet about the book I read yesterday that I think that everybody should get.  Even though I feel like maybe people are sick and tired of me talking about how much I love the same books over and over and over again, we hear about the same movies and television shows all of the time, and nobody  bats an eye over that.

People also don’t bat an eye over people that go crazy over rock bands and television shows.  Teenagers have posters of their favorite bands on their walls, scream and go crazy at rock concerts, and spend hundreds of dollars on shirts and memorabilia (I certainly did).  People have been going to Star Trek conventions for years, dressed up as their favorite characters.  How much time have people devoted to learning Klingon now?  I read about a year ago or so that some people were raising their child to speak Klingon as a native language.

Snow White with Laurana, copyright 2008 Brooke Lorren
So people can spend hundreds of dollars to see their favorite Disney characters, but is it weird to be a book fan?

I can get self-conscious when I talk about my favorite authors, or write reams of fanfiction.  Okay, so maybe it’s a little weird that I spent so much time playing Divergent Trilogy on Quiz Up that I’m the All-Time Worldwide second highest rated player in the world (#1 in America)… but weird can be good, right?  Okay, so maybe I dressed up like Tris when I went to go see Insurgent in the theaters… but people dressed up in Belle costumes when the live action feature of Beauty and the Beast came out, what’s wrong with that?  So what if I’m writing all of this fanfiction in these little fandoms… and I’m the only person that’s published there for a year.  Maybe that makes me different, but that’s okay, right?  This one fanfiction author has written over a million words in one fandom that I read.  What’s the difference in writing a million words of fanfiction in a more popular fandom and 100k words or so in a less popular fandom?

I don’t know if I’ll ever not be self-conscious about being uber-hyped up about books that I love, but people go crazy over the World Cup, or football, or rock bands… so maybe it shouldn’t be that weird to be appreciative of the books that bring a smile to my life… and want to share that happiness with others by telling them about it.

I hope that doesn’t make me creepy…

Compliments to the Writer! (Part 1)

This is part 1 of a two-part series discussing complimenting authors of books that you like.

LibraryI used to think that published authors were these mysterious, god-like people who were just amazing, and, of course, they knew it.  Because they were published authors and all.  I knew that most of them weren’t rolling in the dough like Stephen King or anything (which I’m sure is what I thought when I was a kid), but I thought that they all knew how magnificent their works were.  If not, they wouldn’t have gotten published, right?

I thought that sending them a compliment to tell them how I loved their book would be rude.  I mean, I’m a nobody.  Why would these wonderful authors want their day interrupted by some nobody telling them about how they liked their book?

I’ve recently come to the realization that most authors are more like me.  With the main difference being… they’re published.  But that doesn’t mean that they don’t have similar thoughts as me.

Following a few authors on Twitter, I’ve seen that some of them have doubts about their abilities.  Many are trying to get publicity so they can sell books and make a living.  Incredibly, I noticed, a rare few have fewer Twitter followers than I do (in fact, one author that I’m publishing a review on later this month does… and I loved her book).

A couple of days ago, one author tweeted that compliments can make an author’s day, especially when they were in a writing slump.

I realized that that was the truth.  Sending a compliment to a writer can make their day.  It can even get them writing again.  I know that from personal experience.  Seeing that tweet made me realize that I need to compliment more authors.  If I like their work, I need to tell them.

A few comments this year have truly stood out to me and have made me want to write more.

Back in 2016, my husband had to go to the hospital for the night.  I had just finished reading the Legend series for the second time, and I thought to myself “wouldn’t it be nice if someone wrote a short story where Day and June actually ended up together?  I could throw something like that together this evening while dh is not here.”

That’s just not possible.  I did start the story though, and 14 chapters and 85 pages later, the story was still unfinished.  But I had to move into my new house.  I published the 14 chapters of Like Normal People, the resulting story, so other people could read it.  In the process of moving (I also was intimidated because I had to write about mountain climbing and had no clue how to do it), I forgot about the story.  For two years.

On February 3rd, I got this note:

I have just seen this now and it is amazing ughhhhh I hope u go on and update this sometime in the near future

Eduemoni - Own work
Wow!

I had already started to write again.  I was working on Saving Adelinetta (still an unfinished project).  That nice note got me thinking about Like Normal People again.  Although it’s still unfinished, I have made progress on the story now.  All from one nice compliment.

In May, I had the idea for another Legend fanfic.  The idea just came to me one day, and I had to write Republican Phenoms.  It only took two weeks to write this little novella, and another two weeks to revise and publish it.  The only thing was, I was a little nervous about it.  I had gone beyond my comfort zone with a couple of the scenes.  The book had practically written itself; I was just writing down what the characters were doing in my head, and they did a couple of things that I might not have chosen for them.  I didn’t know how people would react to it.  Then I got a nice compliment on this story after I had published it.

It’ll be interesting to see the dynamic between June and Day since Day’s the first to get the perfect score and revelled in its benefits in contrast to how it happens in canon. Great June POV btw! 😀

He left a couple of other nice comments in my fic.  The comments were so thoughtful that it just made me happy all day.  He stopped commenting before the parts that I was nervous about though, so I was still wondering whether I completely screwed up the fic at the end (he did give me kudos on the story though).

Earlier this week, I got this comment on Republican Phenoms:

*pterodactyl screech* OHMYGOD I’M SO HAPPY SOMEONE WROTE AN AU LIKE THIS IT’S SO AMAZING I’M CRYING AAAAAAAA. June’s such a cutie, her transition from no-I-definitely-don’t-like-him to okay-so-maybe-I-was-wrong is so well done and cute, and Daniel is just – a cutie but also an asshole??? But also really sweet? Goddamn it I want to hug those two so badlyyyyy. This is so amazing thank you so much for writing it TT-TT!!!

I don’t think I’ve ever made someone so happy from a story I wrote.  How could you not be happy after someone writes a note like that to you?

So, rather than feeling like this nobody who shouldn’t dare interrupt a writer’s day by telling them how great their work was, I’ve decided that when I read a book that I love, that I need to send a quick tweet to the writer to tell them how much I liked their story.  I might still be a nobody, but if nice comments can make my day, then rather than being annoyances, nice comments might make some other author’s day as well.

In part 2, which I hope to publish next week, I’ll be talking about more popular authors with fandoms.  Is it creepy to really like an author’s work?  Do authors think you’re creepy if you dream about the characters they create?  I actually don’t know the answers, but I’ll be discussing fandoms next week.

June Monthly Wrap-Up

I wasn’t planning on doing one of these, but I decided that I would do one anyway, which is why this is late.  Here is what happened in the month of June:

Books Read:

I read 15 books and wrote reviews on all of them.  They’re not all published yet though.

  • Indianapolis – Lynn Vincent
  • The Wrath and the Dawn – Renée Ahdieh
  • Smoke in the Sun – Renée Ahdieh
  • Use of Force – Brad Thor
  • Never Stop Walking – Christina Rickardsson
  • An Ember in the Ashes – Sabaa Tahir
  • A Torch Against the Night – Sabaa Tahir
  •  A Reaper at the Gates – Sabaa Tahir
  • Far Forest Scrolls Na Cearcaill – AAAAA (that was what was listed as the author)
  • Ace of Shades – Amanda Foody
  • My Real Name is Hanna – Tara Lynn Masih
  • Friction – Jeff Rosenblum and Jordan Berg
  • The Kiss Quotient – Helen Hoang
  • Echoes – Alice Reeds
  • Strange the Dreamer – Laini Taylor

Blog Stats

  • So in June I passed 1500 Twitter followers :-).  I gained 50 followers.
  • I didn’t set up Google Analytics until halfway through the month, but I’ve seen an increase in blog traffic.
  • Pinterest monthly views rose from about 2.3k views per month to 6k views per month.
  • I finally figured out how to add my blog to Bloglovin’.

Writing

  • I finally finished the first draft for Chapter 22 to Like Normal People (a Legend fanfic)!  I’ve had writer’s block on that thing for a couple of months now.  It needs quite a bit of work, but now that I have gotten past that little hurdle, I can finally finish the book.  The fact that I started this story in early 2016 with the intention of “throwing this thing together in an evening”, and it didn’t quite turn out that way, is why I’m no longer publishing any part of my WIPs on AO3 until at least the first draft is done.  I hate to make people wait while I have writer’s block.
  • I started a new work in progress, Gamers, which is a Young Elites modern day AU.  I wrote 38 pages.  I have a glimmer of an idea of what I want to do with the story, but I don’t know everything at this point.
  • The first draft of Saving Adelinetta (a Young Elites fanfic) is at 249 pages, and is now about 2/3 of the way done.
  • The AO3 Writers group on Facebook is having a challenge for July called fandom roulette: they want me to write a gen fusion fanfic.  I wrote 21 pages on July 1st, and it’s going to be a Legend/Divergent fusion.  I’ve never written anything like this before.  I already know the end… the story is going to stay gen (no romantic relationships) until the last page, LOL.  Don’t know how long it’s going to be, but I have to finish it this month for the challenge.

Life

I took a leave of absence from work for the entire month of June, which is why I got so much done.  Unfortunately, the LOA was due to family issues which are still ongoing, but I had to go back to work.  One good thing about going back to work is that my job really only takes about half of my brainpower, so I can dream up scenes while I work.  Today I mused over the last scene in my Legend/Divergent fusion, and while I will probably tweak what was in my brain today when I finally get there, I really like how it’s going to end.

Not much else is going on… other than my car’s starter stopped wanting to start, and I have to take it in to get fixed tomorrow.

Joining the Mini Blog Ahead Challenge!

Blog Ahead Challenge graphicToday’s my birthday!  Woo hoo!  I generally don’t give out my age, but three years ago my kids had first birthday balloons for me so I guess I’m turning 4!  Yay!  Today is also the first day of the Mini Blog Ahead Challenge, hosted by Herding Cats and Burning Soup!  It’s happening just at the right time too, because I have to return to work from my Leave of Absence soon.  So it would be good to get some posting ahead of time done.

The goal of this challenge is to have fifteen extra blog posts ready by July 6th (more than we already have scheduled).  I currently have five posts scheduled, so I’ll want to have twenty by July 5th.  That’s 1 extra post per day.  Hopefully I can do it!

I have a few blog posts that I had planned to write (without reading any new books) so it’s time to start tackling those, as well as reading more books so I have something else to blog about.  That way, when I do go back to work, it won’t be quite so busy (I asked for reduced hours, so hopefully that will help me get these done as well).

Head on over there if you would like to join.

Local Lunedi: Library 21C

One of the views from Colorado Springs
In Colorado Springs, you can sometimes see Air Force flybys, as pictured here, or visit Library 21C.

There are a lot of great places that you can visit in the world, and there are probably also a lot of really great places in your own backyard as well.

I’d like to review some of the places that you can visit sometimes.  I’ve lived in Colorado Springs for a little over two years now, and of course, I’ve lived in other places that you can visit, so on some Mondays, I’d like to review some of them.  If you don’t live in these places, maybe they won’t be interesting to you right now, but if you ever visit, then you can check out the review.

There’s never a bad time to check out a book from the library.  There’s always something to read.  Library 21C is probably my favorite library (we might as well start with the best, right?).

Library 21C’s biggest strength is its technology.  They have tons of things that you wouldn’t normally associate with the library of your childhood there.  You can find 3D printers (open to the public at certain hours if you take a class and learn how to use them), computers, gaming machines, and other technologies.  They teach classes on all sorts of technologically-related classes.  They even have fitness classes!  You can visit their web site for the latest details.

The library has quite a few meeting rooms that your group or organization can sign up for.  They range in size and some have different capabilities.  Many have whiteboards and large computer monitors.  You can also check out equipment to use when you are borrowing the meeting rooms, like dry erase markers and erasers.

The main downside of this library is that it doesn’t have a LOT of books.  While there are areas with books for children, teens, and adults, a lot of the space that is often reserved for books in a library is packed with all this great technology.  Not to worry though: Library 21C is part of the Pike’s Peak Library District, and you can have any of the books in this library system reserved and brought to this library for you to pick up.  You do have to think ahead if you want a book that’s kept at a different library, but that’s a small drawback for all the advantages that this library has.  You can always check out digital books at any time (without even leaving your house).  The library also has a nice variety of new books if you’re interested in browsing newer releases.

So if you’ve moved to Colorado Springs recently or are here visiting and want to spend a relaxing day of reading, you might want to check out Library 21C.

Shape Up Your Finances with Dave Ramsey

US CurrencyWe’re still less than a week into the New Year, and perhaps, if we made New Year’s resolutions, we’ve already forgotten about them.  Or maybe we’re keeping them.  At any rate, it’s never the wrong time to think about improving our finances.  I’m sure that most of us can work in that area.

One of my favorite finance guys is Dave Ramsey.  He has a daily radio program, writes books, and has a Financial Peace University that goes through all the major aspects of household finance.  He focuses on getting out of debt, saving for emergencies and beyond, and then building up a nest egg.  He tells us to “live like no one else, so that later, you can live like no one else,” that is, sacrifice today, so that later you will have a decent amount of money and you can give to others like no one else.

If 2017 is the year that you want to get your finances in order, you might want to consider reading Dave Ramsey’s Complete Guide to Money.  It’s the same book that they use in the Financial Peace University classes, and it covers almost everything that you need to know (although the hard part can sometimes be actually living the principals).

The book covers everything that you need to know about getting out of debt, building a savings, and even dealing with creditors, if you’ve gotten into trouble in the past.  It talks about getting a home, getting a bargain when you’re shopping, and investing.  It also has all the forms that you’ll need to use to get a budget started in the back of the book (although you’ll probably end up using an Excel spreadsheet, since you’ll want to do a budget every month).

If you’re not familiar with Dave Ramsey, he suggests going though several different baby steps on your road to financial freedom:

  1. Put together a baby emergency fund of $1000 (in case something catastrophic comes up.
  2. Pay off all of your debts (with the exception of the house) from smallest to largest.
  3. Put 3 to 6 months of expenses into savings.  This is in case something catastrophic comes up, like a job loss.
  4. Invest 15% of your income into retirement.
  5. Save for your children’s college.
  6. Pay off the house.
  7. Build wealth and give a lot of it away.

The farther along you go down these baby steps, the better it feels.  Sometimes, unfortunately, things happen and you can slide backwards (it’s happened to me… we’ve had the baby emergency fund and then the emergency happens) but if you have don’t have a plan, it’s never going to get done by accident.

The Complete Guide to Money is well-written, easy to read, and if you live it, it really works.  The closer my husband and I live to this plan, the better we feel about what’s going on financially.  It provides inspiration with little sidebars about people that have lived the plan and have succeeded.

If you’re looking to win with money in 2017, and you haven’t learned the basics of financial planning yet, I definitely recommend this book.

Ringing in 2017 with my Fitbit!

“It’s all fun and games until your pants don’t fit”.

I’ve seen that meme floating around on Facebook a couple of times, and perhaps you have as well.  My only honest response that I can make to that sentence is “yeah, don’t you hate it when you’ve been exercising so much that your pants are falling off of you?

Fitbit Zip (Magenta)
My Fitbit. Thanks to my kitty for allowing me to use her black fur as the background.

Right now, that’s about where I am.  Half of my pants are falling off me, and whenever I go to the store to get new pants, it seems like one size is ready to fall off, and the next size down is too tight.  Maybe I’m just so used to my pants being loose that I don’t want anything that is too tight fitting?  I don’t know.  I even ended up putting a shirt that was too big into the Goodwill box for the first of the year :-).

At any rate, my pants aren’t fitting very well, and I can partially thank my Fitbit for that.  My parents got me a Fitbit Zip for Christmas a year ago, and it’s a nice little motivator (they got me the magenta one, but it comes in other colors as well).

Before I got my Fitbit, I was using a Wii Fit Pedometer.  The Wii Fit pedometer is fun to use, and I like the way that it syncs with Wii Fit and has your Mii walk around virtual tracks or climb virtual towers, but it does have some drawbacks.

One advantage of the Fitbit pedometer is that it stays attached to your clothes a lot easier than the Wii Fit pedometer.  The Wii Fit pedometer fell off of my clothes on multiple occasions (usually when I was getting in or out of the car).  The clip just doesn’t grip tightly to your clothes.  This caused me on more than one occasion to walk around frantically trying to find it.  Although it did cause me to walk more steps, those steps weren’t counted.

Pokémon Kitty in the snow
I rescued this poor kitty from the cold while having fun with my Fitbit.

Another advantage that the Fitbit has is that it can connect to a lot more applications that are fun to use.  For example, I participate in virtual walks at Walking 4 Fun.com.  I’ve been doing the Pacific Crest Trail for a while now, and I’m almost out of California.  My Fitbit syncs automatically, so even if I forget to log into Walking 4 Fun, it counts my steps anyway.  Fitbit also connects to Sparkpeople.

I almost always remember to put my Fitbit on (even when I’m trying to fall asleep and I have to use the bathroom… don’t want to miss out on those extra 25 steps).  I’ve thought about getting one of the Fitbit watches before, but I hate the fact that they have “silent” alarms and I don’t trust them to not wake me up in the morning (maybe somebody has experience using those; if you do, please leave a comment).  I don’t really want to have to wear a watch and a Fitbit.  Maybe, since I’m good about taking off and putting on my Fitbit at night, I would remember to put on my watch before I went to bed.  Maybe I’ll try that one of these days.  I do have a loud backup alarm clock just in case anyway.

My Fitbit takes one of those little flat batteries (CR2025).  They aren’t rechargeable, but they do last for several months.  I’ve found that once the batteries start going, they will go fast, and you’ll want to have an extra on hand to replace it as soon as possible.  I bought a 10-pack of these batteries for pretty cheap on Amazon.com; I think I’ve had to replace the battery four times in the last year of constant use.

The Fitbit App that works for your iOS device (and I’m assuming Android devices too, but I’ve never used it) allows you to easily track your steps for the day, see how far you’ve walked, and participate in challenges with your friends.  You can also earn badges for losing weight, and hitting different walking milestones.  You can also log into Fitbit on your PC.

If you’re looking to move more in the New Year, and you’re hoping that you’re having so much fun and games that your pants don’t fit any more (too big, of course, not too small), then maybe you want to try out a Fitbit.

Hello! ¡Hola! Willkommen! Здравствуйте!

mexican ruins
Visiting some ruins in Mexico.

Hello!  Welcome to my new blog, Brooke Reviews and Sweeps!  Since this is my first post, let me introduce myself.  I’m Brooke, and I’ve been a “Momtrepreneur”, in a way, since around the year 2000.  I’ve done several different things over the years, including content production, entering sweepstakes, and writing reviews (one of the first things I did to make money on the internet was writing for Epinions.com, where I was one of the Top Reviewers).

I hope that I’ll be able to do a few things with this blog.  For one, I hope to be able to provide reviews of different things and places in my life, like books that I read, places I go, etc.  I live in Colorado Springs, so my place reviews will probably include places in Colorado, but I’ve been blessed in that I’ve been able to go a lot of places, so you never know, maybe I’ll end up writing about Kentucky Fried Chicken in Jamaica!

I suppose that some people might think that I’m a little eccentric, so although some of my posts might be normal, you might also find a few things in my blog that you won’t find in many typical “mommy blogs”.  For example, I just finished reading A History of Modern Europe from the Renaissance to the Present, so I might end up reviewing that.  But I’ll also be reviewing more normal things, like Veronica Roth’s new book Carve the Mark, which I’ve already pre-ordered and will probably have finished reading on the day it comes out or the day after (I read all three Divergent books (in English) in two days).

Here are five things about me that will affect what ends up here:

  • I’m a Christian. – Okay, that one’s pretty normal, but it’s an important part of my life, so it comes first here.  My husband works for a non-profit here in Colorado Springs, we go to church almost every Sunday, twice, and are in the choir.  So don’t expect to see a review of the next 50 Shades of Gray movie here.  One note, however: some of the sweepstakes I enter offer gift cards as prizes and might be sponsored by products that I don’t endorse.  I’m not going to blog about theology here, but being a Christian does affect my worldview.
  • I’m a polyglot. – It’s possible that some people wouldn’t consider me to be a polyglot, so I’ll say what I mean by that.  I speak English (obviously), am fairly proficient with Spanish and German, am okay with Russian, and I dabble in several other languages, including Portuguese, French, Italian, Irish, Danish, Hebrew, and ASL.  There may be some others that I’m forgetting.  Languages, for me, are like… ooh, an ardilla (squirrel)! and then I want to go learn it.  If you want to post in some of these languages listed, go ahead (I can always get Google Translate to help).  Sometimes I might throw in a foreign word here or there, but if I do, the meaning should be obvious from the context.
  • I’m a homeschooler. – Homeschooling is a lot more common than it used to be, but it’s a big part of what I do.  My kids are currently in 5th and 9th grades.  We’re still hoping to add to our family (which is part of the reason why I’m starting this blog, but more on that another day), so eventually, we’ll probably have younger grades to teach again.
  • I read non-fiction for fun. – I’m not sure if this is strange or not; after all, some people are buying all of these books.  I was on a waiting list at my local library for months in order to borrow Pendulum, so I know that I’m not alone here.  While you will see some fiction books reviewed here, there will be plenty of history books included here as well.
  • I’m into health and fitness. – I try to live a healthy lifestyle, even when it’s not the time of year that people make New Year’s resolutions.  I’m not, in fact, making any New Year’s resolutions this year.  I’m just trying to continue to do what I’m doing.  I drink kombucha, use essential oils, exercise, prefer organic when I can, that sort of thing.

So that’s a little bit about me, I’m hoping to get to know some of you in the future!  Leave a comment and say hi!