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Friday, December 19, 2014

Quick Recap of 2014 and Sending Holiday Wishes

I tallied up my freelance copyediting hours to date for 2014 and also got a bird's-eye view of the year's heavy and slow months. Of course this varies from year to year.

But here's how my 2014 worked:

My slowest months (less than 100 hours worked in each), in this order from least to most, were: January, December (to date), October and July. It is normal for the publishing industry (even for Indies) to have a basic slow period from October to December each year.

My heaviest months (more than 200 hours worked in each), in this order from least to most, were: May, November, August and September. As you can imagine, my two heaviest months were back to back, which made August and September more than hectic.

But now, in my slow period, I'm able to get to stuff overlooked before in my house and yard, as well as more time for reading, fiction and nonfiction both. I'm happy with my year, professionally and personally, other than a recent bout of the thirty-day flu (not fun) and still not exercising (except for the occasional yard work).

I hope you had a great year too. Here's to a wonderful 2015. Merry Christmas, everyone! Have a safe and happy New Year.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Fighting Plagiarism and Cyberbullies

I don't know how familiar you may be with the work of Rachel Ann Nunes being plagiarized by one Utah woman with many aliases, who then used those aliases to cyberbully Nunes too, but Rachel Nunes has filed suit against Tiffanie Rushton. You can search the Internet for various articles on this matter, but here to get you started is a link to Rachel's blog: http://rachelannnunes.blogspot.com/.

Per Rachel's latest Go Fund Me update, she states:

My attorney tells me it will
likely cost another $30,000,
even to do a summary
judgment, and 100,000 for
a jury trial. That much to get
someone not to plagiarize
and harass me.

What a sad statement of our world and some of the people in it.

If you would like to contribute to Rachel's legal fees in the prosecution of this matter, please visit http://www.gofundme.com/standingagainstplagiarism.

I so hate bullies, and I really can't stomach people who make money from efforts not their own. Plagiarism is theft, stealing, having no regard for the person with the actual creativity and imagination, not to mention Rachel's hard work and diligence, to first put those words to paper.

As Nora Roberts stated in regard to her own work being plagiarized by Janet Dailey, it is "mind rape." I agree.

Best wishes, Rachel. When we fight one plagiarist, we send a message to them all.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Amazon and Simon & Schuster Reach a Multiyear Agreement

I'm so glad I'm already an Indie-published author. But, if I were a trad-pubbed author, I'd want to have been with Simon & Schuster rather than Hachette. S&S negotiated with Amazon for three weeks, and, two months before their current contract expired, reached an agreement. Which makes S&S shine compared to Hachette. For more details, there are plenty of news feeds on this subject today, but here's one to click now:
http://news.yahoo.com/amazon-signs-multi-deal-simon-schuster-business-insider-210830874--sector.html.

Best wishes to those Hachette authors.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra



Tuesday, October 7, 2014

The 101 Habits of Highly Successful Screenwriters: Insider Secrets from Hollywood's Top Writers by Karl Iglesias

Just finished reading this one tonight, and it is full of wisdom for both authors and screenwriters alike.

Have you ever read a book that fell flat? It's sometimes hard to determine exactly what went wrong (maybe because all four reasons outlined below were at work). Well, per The 101 Habits, here are a few explanations:

  1. It's a repeat of another story or a derivative that doesn't veer far enough off. It's clichéd, boring, done before. BE ORIGINAL, UNIQUE. SURPRISE YOUR READER.
  2. It's lacking . . . something. IT'S CALLED LACK OF EMOTIONS. THE READER CONNECTS VIA EMOTIONAL RESPONSES TO THE AUTHOR'S WORDS. ADD SCENES THAT CONJURE UP SADNESS, JOY, ANGER, REVENGE, ETC.
  3. It has no conflict and/or the motivation or goal is not clearly defined. UP THE DRAMA AND OBSTACLES. BE PRECISE, CLEAR, COMMUNICATE WITH THE READER.
  4. It's flat. I feel nothing for the main character. THE AUTHOR'S WORDS CAME TOO MUCH FROM HER HEAD AND NOT ENOUGH FROM HER HEART. SAVE THE BRAIN ACTIVITY FOR PLOTTING BEFOREHAND AND REVISING/EDITING AFTERWARD. USE THE HEART FOR DRAFTING FEELINGS VIA THE APPROPRIATE SCENES.
I'll have more good stuff to share from this book in a later post.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra

Three Things about Authors, From a Copy Editor's Perspective

First, we all start out as newbies, and there is nothing wrong with this. We have to begin somewhere. Just think of all those people who wish to write a novel someday, yet haven't. Well, we've done it. And it's not as easy as it seems, right? So we've done something huge. Now there are relative measures as to this "newbie" status, with a few authors exhibiting their vast potential Day One, like Nora Roberts aka J. D. Robb, Ayn Rand and other greats, which leads me to the next point.

Second, we all continue to learn, to grow in our craft as we pursue our careers as authors. Yes, even the J. D. Robbs of the world. We never stop gaining knowledge as to our art. In the State of Texas, lawyers are required to annually complete a minimum fifteen hours of continuing education. For me, as an Indie author, I easily read weekly that much and more of how-to material. Even if a book/article is about things well-known to me, I still search to find one nugget of gold therein that is new and useful. But regardless of the actual time expended, we career authors continually strive to improve.

Third, we all have blind spots, no matter how brilliant our writing is on the whole (just like our cars have blind spots no matter how wonderful the make and model). We all have unconscious, as-yet-unknown oversights that show up in our writing. Hopefully some ace copy editor or critique partner can point those out for us, so we can watch for them and deal with them as needed.

I've read where some authors update their earlier work, applying their current level of expertise to novels from the beginning of their career. Whether we make this particular effort or not, our work as authors is never really done. So keep on writing, learning, perfecting.

Best wishes to all.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra


Saturday, October 4, 2014

HarperCollins Took a Tiny Step in the Right Direction

Per this article by Laura Hazard Owen, https://gigaom.com/2014/10/02/finally-a-big-5-publisher-raises-digital-royalties-but-theres-a-catch/, it seems HarperCollins has an online Web site to sell their authors' books and, based on HC's announcement on Thursday, has increased the previous royalty rate for physical books and e-books from 15% and 25%, respectively, to 25% and 35% on their Web site. It's a tiny step in the right direction for compensating the authors, the creators of all those books.

Click the link to read the full article.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra


Friday, October 3, 2014

Amazon v. Hachette

I've been watching some of the clips and reading some of the blog/newspaper articles on this subject. (Remember some of the owners of these newspapers also own some of the Big 5 Publishers.) I've run across some very succinct articles, but this one I just have to share. Check out C. J. Lyons's No Rules, Just Write blog post entitled "Three Sides to This Fight?" found here: http://www.norulesjustwrite.com/three-sides-to-this-fight/.

The Internet brought about the possibility of the situation which has currently involved Amazon v. Hachette. And while I don't think Jeff Bezos helped to create the Internet, he did have the foresight to build Amazon upon it.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Son's Gift to Author Mom is One for the Books

Here's a nice tearjerker of a story. How a son self-published his mother's book, At the End of Magic (written more than ten years ago), as his thank-you to her for raising him, for putting him first in her life. You'll love this article. It's worth the tears. See http://www.startribune.com/lifestyle/blogs/274023831.html?page=1&c=y.

I've bought my copy. Want yours? Here's an Amazon link: http://www.amazon.com/At-End-Magic-Mary-Petrie-ebook/dp/B00L6IMAMQ/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1410304482&sr=1-1&keywords=at+the+end+of+magic.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)


What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra


Standing Against Plagiarism

This just hurts my soul. There are some things I hate with a fury: bullies, abusers, people who steal the efforts of another. Here is such a story.

Rachel Ann Nunes had one of her stories stolen by someone using the pen name Sam Taylor Mullens, whose real name seems to be Tiffanie Rushton. I say this "seems to be" her real name as she has twenty-two aliases, per a recent post entitled "Utah Schoolteacher Charged with Plagiarism and Cyberbullying" at http://www.davidfarland.net/writing_tips/?a=414.

If you care to donate even $5 toward Ms. Nunes's court costs, go here:
http://www.gofundme.com/StandingAgainstPlagiarism.

For another excellent article on the topic, see http://johndopp.com/plagiarism-sam-taylor-mullens-busted/.



"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra

Friday, September 5, 2014

KDP Royalty Payments for Sales in Other Countries

I recently changed banks and had to make the related updates regarding all online transactions, deleting the old banking numbers and putting in the new.

When updating my Amazon KDP account, I thought changing my home country, my US settings within KDP as for royalty payments, would be like an automatic default for all the others.

I was wrong.

So if you are making sales in Germany, Canada, Italy, France, England, Spain, Japan, India, Brazil, Mexico and Australia, then you need to check your KDP account and change each setting accordingly.

For example, the other countries were set to "issue a check" (with a minimum of $100 required and a fee may apply before issuing) and the form of money was that of that particular country, not mine. So my UK sales were defaulted to issue a Check and payable in Pounds. France was Check + Euro.

I set all mine to EFT (electronic funds transfer) + USD (US dollars).

You Indie authors out there may have money waiting to be paid to you from countries around the world.

Check your KDP account and see.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra

Thursday, September 4, 2014

What Exactly Does a Copy Editor Do?

It's easier to show than to tell what I do as a copy editor. [Note: "copy editor" used here is the two-word open noun version.] See how many errors you find in this one sentence:

He saide 'the quick brow fox jumped over moon and the grey goose was lose in the back yard, he said.

I'll show you two correct versions at the end of this post. For now, here are the errors and quick explanations where needed:

1. He saide should be He said.

2. As a dialogue tag (the He said at the beginning of a line of dialogue), it should be followed by a comma.

3. The opening quote should be a double-quote mark, not a single-quote mark, for those authors residing in and/or publishing in the United States.

4. The first word within the quoted dialogue should be initial capped, so the quick should be The quick . . .

5. Brow should be brown.

6. Jumped over moon is missing a word. Should be jumped over the moon.

7. A comma should precede and in our example above, pursuant to 16CMS 6.28, separating the two complete sentences (each having its own subject and verb).

8. Grey should be gray per US standards as the preferred spelling found in Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Eleventh Edition (Web11). Our other US guideline is The Chicago Manual of Style, Sixteenth Edition (16CMS).

9. Lose should be loose. The first means to misplace, to not be able to find something, to have lost it. The second means running about, moving freely.

10. Back yard should be one compound word, a noun, backyard, per Web11.

11. There needs to be a closing quote mark, a double-quote mark for US purposes, after the terminal punctuation following backyard.

12. The second he said at the end of the sentence is a repeat of the dialogue tag at the beginning of the same sentence. So one needs to be deleted. First, because it is a repetitive phrase. Second, because you only need one tag per line of dialogue (and not for every line of dialogue).

13. After deleting the second dialogue tag as repetitious, then you must change the comma at the end of the line of dialogue to a period.

So here is the corrected sentence:

He said, "The quick brown fox jumped over the moon, and the gray goose was loose in the backyard."

If you prefer to have the tag line at the end (but mix these up in your scenes), here is an alternate corrected version:

"The quick brown fox jumped over the moon, and the gray goose was loose in the backyard," he said.

Hope you have enjoyed this little peek into my world as to how I copyedit a sample line of text. [Note: "copyedit" used here is the transitive verb format, or t.v., which requires a direct object, as in "a sample line of text."]



"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Another Success Story: Russell Blake Writes Eight to Nine New Books a Year

Wow. As he says in his post, http://russellblake.com/three-years-come-and-gone/, that's one book every five weeks. Impressive.

But he also tells us to have fun when we create our stories and other areas of our lives.

Amen. I call that advice worth following.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra

Friday, August 15, 2014

Amazon Offers Preorder Buttons through KDP

Here's another benefit of Indie publishing through Amazon's KDP: preorder buttons. Check it out via your KDP Bookshelf.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra

James Garner and Robin Williams

We have lost two more "greats" in the world of acting. I'm still in love with James Garner and have been watching old The Rockford Files episodes after hearing the sad news. Can't get enough of him.

And Robin Williams's suicide was just another shock.

Miss you both.

Denise Barker

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Thanks, Amazon, Jeff Bezos and KDP


Just wanted to say thank-you to all for sending monthly KDP royalty payments. How great is that?



"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Seven Books on Writing and/or Plotting

Lately I’ve been rereading my notes and highlights from a lot of writing books, mostly on plotting, and I’ll share some thoughts from each. Even as a pantster (this is how I both pronounce and spell the term, with the “-ster” suffix at the end), these plotting books make valid points—although I may be easily swayed since I am a hybrid, preparing a long scenes list which encompasses 60 percent or more of my main plot points before writing.

Story Engineering by Larry Brooks

This is a comprehensive book and not a light read, so plan on spending a few days digesting it slowly. I like his six core concepts presentation. I particularly enjoyed his chapter on the three dimensions of characters. Of course if you stay within just one dimension (the external), you end up with flat characters. If we add in the character’s backstory, his reasons for his actions (the internal), he graduates to a two-dimensional character. But for a truly three-dimensional character, we need to show his choices, his growth as a person, someone who does what needs to be done. I also loved Brooks’s section regarding themes.

This book set forth new information for me along with a nice review of other items, such as to jot down about sixty scenes for your novel before you begin writing (which is good NaNoWriMo advice too) and to have a scene in mind for each of the major plot points (which he calls the eight milestones).

The last topic covered was voice, and Brooks gives an example that I had seen before and was just as blown away by no matter how often I read it. See the opening paragraph to Colin Harrison’s Manhattan Nocturne within Amazon’s Look Inside feature if you don’t already own the book. Just another reminder for me to watch my LY adverbs and adjectives but also to quit “holding back” too.

Here's a link: http://amzn.to/1qIbgPl.

~ ~ ~

Create a Plot Clinic by Holly Lisle

I believe this is the longer version of the Professional Plot Outline Minicourse also offered by Holly Lisle. She too believes in compiling a scene list—only she advocates about seventy-five because some will not end up being used in your current book—and having five major plot point ideas in mind, incorporating plot twists and cliff-hangers as needed. Lisle covers theme, concept, voice and the characters’ needs. It was fun to see her brainstorm a new book throughout this one, using each principle as we read along.

Here's a link: http://amzn.to/1lSaFnK.

~ ~ ~

Outlining Your Novel: Map Your Way to Success by K. M. Weiland

Weiland covers some of Story Engineering by Larry Books and also a bit from Save the Cat by Blake Snyder, but I was happy to find four particular points. First, conflict is delayed gratification. Second, at the midpoint of the book should be the scarlet thread of theme. Third, the three fundamental elements of story are humor, action and relationships (whether love, family, friendship, etc.). Fourth, how the length of our chapters carries tone and pacing. All very good points. Plus she gives an excellent debate in favor of plotting so that we can place foreshadowing in our first drafts.

Here's a link: http://amzn.to/1oz8mJm.

~ ~ ~

Write Your Novel from the Middle by James Scott Bell

I was glad to see that two of my own fiction books proved his premise, so this idea works intuitively as well as practically, meaning, if your gut didn’t tell you to do this, you can still add it after having read this particular nonfiction work by Bell. Great book, short read, with one major point about the “look in the mirror” found at the midpoint of novels or even movies. How, once you know your midpoint, you can write from either side of it, whether the first part or the last part. Bell covers brainstorming ideas, making a mind map, telling a story with emotions and themes and resonant endings, plus provides a listing of his fourteen sign-post scenes. He also recommends other writing books and gives his "mirror moment" examples from The Maltese Falcon, Casablanca, The Fugitive, Gone with the Wind, Hunger Games and Lethal Weapon. Love the examples.

Here's a link: http://amzn.to/1oFuFPa.

~ ~ ~

Drawing on the Power of Resonance by David Farland

Of course we can’t have good writing without certain elements like voice and tone and themes and emotions, and Farland reminds us of this. Plus he shows poetry’s effects on our prose as to cadence and rhetorical devices, which reminds me to study both. And how our writing will outlive us, leaving a legacy. That’s a wonderful thought and a driving motivation all at once.

Here's a link: http://amzn.to/1vYitKr.

~ ~ ~

2K to 10K: How to Write Faster, Write Better, and Write More of What You Want by Rachel Aaron

FYI: At one time, most, if not all, of this info could be found on her website. But I bought her book anyway to have everything in one cohesive construction which I could easily find whenever needed on my Kindle. Again the plotting camp makes a good argument for planning ahead where here Aaron states it improves your writing speed if you already know what to write. She has her triangle formula for accomplishing all she talks about in her subtitle. She even has a section on how she wrote a novel in twelve days (really less) with three days spent plotting this new series opener and its two sequels. I had to laugh when she wrote that “boring scenes had no place in my novels” and “if writing feels like pulling teeth, you are doing it wrong.” I think we all need to be reminded of each of these thoughts at times.

Here's a link: http://amzn.to/1mGvubS.

~ ~ ~

Story Bones: How to X-Ray Any Novel for Plot, Conflict and Character by Mary L. Mercer

Mercer covers a wealth of resources, and so this is another book to set aside a few days to absorb all of her topics. She speaks of eight sequences of scenes that lead up to seven events, which I particularly resonated with, as well as examples of each from The Hobbit and While You Were Sleeping. She also speaks of the four throughlines as found in DEEP Story by Carol Hughes. Mercer discusses themes, subplots, stakes, while giving us authors a good overview of the eight archetypes, the three character arcs and the nine enneagrams (like as taught by Laurie Schnebly Campbell). Mercer has this great five-point listing of how to make your characters empathetic. She also, like Aaron above, has her own triangle formula to guide her and us, which consists of five high points from the story and the mirror effect two of them share with two of the others.

Here's a link: http://amzn.to/TRf5V9.

~ ~ ~

Each of these books enriched me in some way. Hope you enjoy them too.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra

Monday, July 7, 2014

Sugar in My Salt? I Mean, Really?

I do read labels, for the most part. I like to stay as healthy as I can, whether my freelance earnings are nil or nice. But salt? Do I have to read salt labels?

Guess I do.

Little did I know that salt wasn't all my salt contained.

Here are the Ingredients, straight from its own label:
Salt
Calcium Silicate
Dextrose
Potassium Iodide
And is there any surprise why Americans are getting fatter and sicker each year when dextrose, aka sugar, is added to salt?

I'd like to know how this was approved by governmental standards.

This was a store brand, which I won't embarrass on the Net (at this time). And I bought it because "This salt supplies iodide, a necessary nutrient," which is clearly printed on its label. But given what else is detailed on its label, I'm wondering if we can trust anything this manufacturer and its distributor says.

I wasted good money buying a cheap brand of iodized salt, which is now relegated to my trash can. I would suspect that salt without the added sugar would have been even cheaper, so I have no clue what was going on here. Sugary salt should never have been offered for public consumption to begin with. Shame on everyone involved in this fiasco.

Rant over.

For the moment.



"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra





Friday, June 20, 2014

Love Always . . . Short Story #2 Collection

Earlier today I uploaded my Love Always . . . Short Story #2 Collection. If you need some noontime reading material, a short story should fit right in. Instead of dinner and a show, it's lunch and a quick read that'll take you away from your job, if just for a while.

This is my fourteenth book, among my various fiction and nonfiction offerings. I'm working on getting out more full-length novels. That is my biggest goal this year and for those to follow.

Looking forward to the first day of summer. Hope you enjoy yours too.


"If your vocation isn’t a vacation, then quit, leap, change careers."

Denise Barker, Author, Blogger, Copy Editor
Books that Build Character(s)



What lies behind you and what lies in front of you pales in comparison to what lies inside of you. Ralph Waldo Emerson
When you give someone a book, you don’t give him just paper, ink, and glue.  You give him the possibility of a whole new life. Christopher Morley
The best inheritance you can leave your kids is an example of how to live a full and meaningful life. Dan Zadra