Books

Want to take a Cruise?  

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My Own Pineapple Paper Chase Adventure!

Many readers have asked how book ideas come to fruition. Is it inspired by a place, an adventure, or perhaps something I have personally faced? My fiction is truly a blend of imagination, research, and a touch of my own experiences.

In my book, Silver Cowgirls Ride Again, the women discover the courage to face their fears in the Pineapple Paper Chase on a Caribbean island. The adventures woven into the story are drawn from my own life. Still, the island itself was created from my imagination. The result was a distinctive island as realistic as I could invent.

I am grateful for the extraordinary adventures and successes I have experienced through my writing journey. In celebration, we booked our first cruise to nine islands in the Caribbean. It was a delightful revelation to discover that my fictional island of St Tiersa, my own invention, was much like a Caribbean island known as "the nature island."

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The island called Dominica possesses a unique habitat. The people of Dominica are self-sustaining and live in harmony with their environment. Because our Viking ship was small, we were able to dock at a port inaccessible to larger vessels, making us the only ship present that morning. A lone ship on an ominous morning, we sailed through murky fog and drizzle. I thought perhaps this was to be a bad weather day. Wrong.

Dominica is a mountainous island blanketed with rain forest and lemongrass, home to nine active volcanoes and, as locals say, a river for every day of the year. The mountains of Dominica rise from the landscape, creating multiple peaks on the horizon. Along the coastline, the beaches plunge directly into the sea, sand blended with black rocks, remnants of ancient lava flows. The winding roads that cut through the dense greenery, offer both challenge and breathtaking views. Because of the different terrains there was sunshine, mist, fog and rainbows.

Homes are clustered into the rugged landscape with an appearance that they also fall into the ocean. As our cruise ship approached, the morning was filled with eerie screams, a mix of rooster cock-a-doodles with (as I soon learned), the sounds of chicken frogs or crapaud. These frogs have an average length of 7 to 8 inches and are on the endangered species list. Dominica is also home to freshwater crabs which can only be eaten two days out of the year.

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The people of Dominica were very welcoming and the Kalinago are indigenous to the island. We were invited with open arms to lunch and dance with them in celebration. (Yes, that's me dancing in the picture above my dear Scott!)

The adventures above were only the tip of the iceberg. Visiting such an inspiring island was truly a blessing, as it allowed me to immerse myself in an magical place like St Tiersa, my imaginary creation. I want to thank the wonderful people of Dominica, our tour guide and Viking.

Deciding to follow my heart has proved to be a journey. I hope you can find your adventure! If you can’t make the trip to the Carribean, reading The Silver Cowgirls Ride Again will bring an island to life!

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The Village of Write

The African proverb, “It Takes a Village,” speaks to many aspects of our lives—the writing life included.  I discovered building alone was not easy. We need neighbors. Before I erected my own village, my journals were locked behind doors—suffering from rejection and fear.

I began to see constructive patterns of those who boldly paved roads around me. They had a similar foundation. So, I began the literary journey to build a village I call Write.

My mother laid the first stone. In Write, my mother lives on Main Street, adjacent to the church. Her door is always open to fill me with homemade pie… and red wine to energize my body. But when I must rekindle my soul, she points to the steeple and advises, “Every village needs a church. It’s neighbors and faith that will send you angels to guide you.”

My village of Write has a school with teachers, from the very first professor who red lined my every word to doctors and nurses who rebuild my creations today. The library houses lots of books with advice including, 101 Ways to Get Published, Writer’s Market, and Writing with Soft Hands. The shelves are lined in classics by Atwood and Twain to awaken the soul… and Harlequin romances to stir the bones.

At the village conference center, the best authors and mentors come to speak. I have autographed copies of their books, signed with encouragement like “Never give up,” or “Persist at all cost.” I visit the Write Salon after days of edits. My stylist conditions, massaging my creative brains. At the Writing Gym on Mondays I exercise with my aspiring peeps and ponder all the ways to pen “his chiseled jaw,” or “her beating heart.”The village newspaper employs agents and publishers who read my queries… and if I get lucky send one-word critiques.

My church is growing, with new angels every day, like Demi Stevens; her Year of the Book process was a road map to success that introduced me to an inspirational woman, Debbie Herbert, best-selling author, and 2017 RITA finalist, who shrouded me in incentive.

“It takes a village.” We share a path, and our community builds me up when I am adverb-tired, genre-lost, or POV perplexed. Together we survive.

This is a partial version of my story, The Write Village. I hope it inspires you.

Alicia Stephens Martin author of Spurred to Justice to be released summer, 2018.

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Saint Rita and My Writing Quest!

This week I fell to my knees and begged for success. My heart dream of writing has been exhausting at this stage as I pray for my fame and fortune. I even contemplated sharing the Saint Rita Novena someone posted online—Share this novena and in an hour Saint Rita will grant you your miracle. I always loathed the bribery involved in such an idea. I would yell out to myself that this is not the way the miracle thing works. To think, I almost pushed the send button. There would have been a lot of extra Hail Mary’s for that and sadly I already have too many to say for real dilemmas.

It’s just not that easy, nor is it smart to have success land directly on your kneeler. (Although Saint Rita, it sure would be nice just once, and maybe this little mention of your name would count.)

So I was moping and then an angel sent her inspirational blog post. This week Demi Stevens suggested tiny, consistent steps toward your goal that can be more valuable than a huge leap. I read her story of success—proof the path to overcome a mountain in life is best climbed on a steady path.

The nice thing about showing up for church each week is that it is a quiet time to think and talk to God and make a weekly plan for strength to move on. It is like that in front my computer. I struggle with numerous projects on my desk that pile higher than the steeple at St. Mary’s. By the end of the week, I hide from the office, instead typing on my faithful iPad Mini.

I attack bookwork, organize my diary entries, and work on placing notes in my novels. I read blogs from my mentors like Debbie Herbert, Demi Stevens, and Paula Munier. I might even receive divine inspiration from Saint Rita or whoever is the patron Saint that week.

I organize, manage, and write in little steps. I zero in on my writing success. Remember, zero in and be fearless at your writing.

Alas, Demi is right. Two years ago googling Alicia Stephens Martin might have produced Alicias like Keyes or Silverstone. Today there is a whole page of Alicia Stephens Martin successes—a blog, a Facebook page, a Twitter account, and even published articles and posts. I think I won’t ask for the miracle just for the strength and energy to keep going.

I hope this helps you in your quest…

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