Showing posts with label Island of Glass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Island of Glass. Show all posts

Nov 11, 2021

🌺 Happy Veterans' Day



Check Nora Roberts' Beautiful Post @ Instagram




in Island of Glass' READERS GUIDE


2. As a soldier for centuries, do you think that Doyle can truly give up the fight even if

the war against Nerezza is over? We’ve seen the difficulties many veterans face in

reality - do you think Doyle can adapt to a civilian life?



How to Help Veterans Adjust to Civilian Life





Dec 7, 2018

How to Build the Perfect Fireplace Fire





Doyle dumped her duffle, prepared to step out again and leave her to it.
But she walked to the fire, looked at him, looked back.
“What? I’m supposed to light a fire for you now? Christ.”
Muttering all the way, he took bricks of peat from a copper bucket, arranged them on the grate as he had as a boy.
It was simple enough, took only moments, and if the scent squeezed his heart, he ignored it.



Island of Glass






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By FASTILY (TALK) - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=28046203







I have a fireplace, a cord of split, seasoned wood, and a cold family. So I make a lot of fires.

There are many resources for building fires that promise successful fire-building. Many. So, so many. I urge you to review them. There’s the lean-to method. The teepee method. The pyramid method. The top-down method.

But, for me, nothing about a fire is ever consistent—not the tinder or kindling or logs.










Nov 12, 2018

Drawing can help you think and focus better










Since one of Sasha’s sketch pads sat on the table, he picked it up, 
took one of her pencils. He drew quickly.
The structure, to Riley’s eye, looked more like a barn
 than Bran’s house, but it made the point. So did the curved lines, 
the squiggles to represent garden paths, shrubs, trees, the cliff wall.
And as far as she could tell, he had everything in its place, 
and nearly to scale.






Island of Glass





___________________





UnknownUnknown author [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons






Do you ever draw? Most of us don't, and the reason we usually leave drawing to the artists is because we're not very good at it. Who wants to do something they're bad at? 
But maybe we should rethink this assumption, especially since drawing has so many benefits, artist or not.




___________________

But it was the drawing on his worktable, one he'd anchored with an empty beer bottle and a chunk of quartz, that grabbed her attention.
He'd taken their grid, their site survey, their map and had created the settlement with paper and colored pencils.
There was no road now, no old farmhouse across it. The field was wider, the trees ranging along the creek, spreading shadows and shade.
Around the projected borders of the cemetery he'd drawn a low wall of rock. There were huts, grouped together to the west. More rocks and stone tools collected in the knapping area. Beyond, the field was green with what might have been early summer grain.
But it was the people who made the sketch live. Men, women, children going about their daily lives. A small hunting party walking into the trees, an old man sitting outside a hut, and a young girl who offered him a shallow bowl. A woman with a baby nursing at her breast, the men in the knapping area making tools and weapons.
There was a group of children sitting on the ground playing a game with pebbles and sticks. One, a young boy who looked to be about eight, had his head thrown back and was laughing up at the sky.
There was a sense of order and community. Of tribe, Callie noticed. And most of all, of the humanity Jake was able to see in a broken spear point or a shattered clay pot.



Birthright