A Kabri From Windemere

By Kabri Last updated: Sun Aug 30, 2009 9:25am PDT
  • Write It Down! (Part 4)

    By Kabri, on Sun Aug 30, 2009 9:25am PDT

    Alright, you've written your manuscript - now what? You want to see it in print ... in 'real' book form, right? Consider self-publishing. I searched the internet for self-published authors and came up with the following:  FAMOUS SELF-PUBLISHED BOOKS: Remembrance of things Past, by… Read More »

  • Write It Down! (Part 3)

    By Kabri, on Thu May 14, 2009 3:40pm PDT

    You are UNIQUE! You are different from every person who has lived, is alive now or will live in the future. Everything you have heard, felt, tasted, seen or smelled and every experience you have had, are a part of what and who you are. No one else can lay claim to a tiny part of the uniqueness that… Read More »

  • Write It Down! (Part 2)

    By Kabri, on Tue May 12, 2009 4:10pm PDT

    The competition for a place on Oprah’s list of reading recommendations is awesome. I can only guess how many would-be authors submit their work to her. How many of these great works of art do you think she actually reads? Getting one of the major publishers to look at your work - the work of an… Read More »

  • Write It Down!

    By Kabri, on Thu May 7, 2009 7:46pm PDT

    Every day I receive questions from aspiring authors about where and how to start. What was my inspiration ... and of course, could I offer any advice ... how hard is it to get published ... what’s the… Read More »

About This Author

Science Fiction for me is an escape from reality ... if only for a little while.

The possibilities are endless ... new worlds to explore ... new beings with new ideas. Perhaps because so much that has been written in the Sci-Fi genre hasn't happened - YET!

My inspiration for writing science fiction came when I was a patient in the hospital. I was "the patient in room 231". That's it... just another body ... no identity, no dreams and aspirations, no thoughts and ideas ... just "the patient in room 231."

Doctors and nurses would come in and ask "How are you feeling today" ... never looking me in the eye ... in fact, rarely looking at me. I don't think they ever saw the "ME" behind the patient.

As I recovered, I thought how wonderful it would be if I could touch a doctor or a nurse and they would FEEL what I was feeling. Then, with my limited vocabulary, I wouldn't have to explain that 'degree' of pain in numbers from 1 to 10. (What's with THAT anyway? is that really a way to gauge pain?)

It also occurred to me that 'Aliens' were horrible beings in most of the Science Fiction writing of today. So, I started writing my own ideas of how Aliens might be ... and here I am.

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I am now a PUBLISHED author!
*faints from excitement*

http://karenmlane.com/