Wright’s Writing Corner Returns! Interview with New Author, Rose Mccauley
Hello Folks! Our weekly writing feature is back! We will, as promised last year, be looking at what makes Great Books, Great Characters, Great Themes, etc. In addition, we’ll be having some Guest Blogs. Today, we have a special treat! A guest blog from New Author, Rose Mccauley, whose book, has been receiving great praise. Below,…
PROSPERO IN HELL…the paperback
The Ups and Downs of The Magnificent Profession of Author
Prospero Regained has received some really nice reviews…and some really nice in person reactions from people eager to read it–including people who had been totally uninterested in the fact that I wrote books…until they started reading them. But yesterday, I found out that Barnes & Nobles is not carrying it in their stores. They have…
Magical Words Kindly Interviews Me
The kind folks at the wonderful website Magical Words, a site for writers maintained by authors David B. Coe, Faith Hunter, Misty Massey, A.J. Hartley, Stuart Jaffe, and Edmund Schubert, have posted an interview with me on the subject of the Prospero’s Daughter series and following in the footsteps of Shakespeare. http://www.magicalwords.net/specialgueststars/on-writing-interview-with-l.-jagi-lamplighter/#respond Thanks, guys!
At Long Last…Prospero Regained!
The last of the Prospero novels, Prospero Regained, comes out today. It has taken 19 years, and a tremendous amount of persistance and patience for this to happen, but now it has…the whole trilogy is available for everyone to read. More importantly, though, today is the thirteenth birthday of eldest son, Orville Evander Wright. I…
Eeks! Egreek! Zed!
My daughter came home from school today and told me that her advance calculator from Middle School was not good enough, she needed a new one. She gave me the name of the calculator. I Googgled it. @#!$!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! When I was in high school, calculators were NOT ALLOWED. This one cost: $125.00 How in the…
Overheard At The Wright Household
So, I was hugging the Cherubim and telling him: “I love you, but you’re silly! I love you, but you’re silly.” Juss, walking by, commented dryly, “That’s not a “but”, Mom.” In an unrelated incident, I was really touched when Ping-Ping, looking over Orville’s 7th grade math, announced that she knew this stuff and offered…
