30 July 2014

Connect the Dots ♥

Cuteness from {apnea} and {yumyums}

Chasing Pirates ♥

Outfit: {yumyums} - Miss Captain Heart @ Fantasy Gacha Carnival (opens Aug. 8)

Freckles: { APNEA } Girly Freckles @ Body Boudoir


Connect the Dots

Hair: Ohmai Salon - Newreem
Skin: Essences - Alex 09 - Kustom9
Eyes: {Song} - Toki Sea Eyes
Lip tat: [PF] - Harley Lipstick Barbie Pink








 

How Could You Be Who I Want to See

New sexiness from DE Designs and REIGN.


Sabeth Shoes from REIGN. are exclusive at N21! Dress available at DE Designs main store.


Hair: (Milana) - Joan
Skin: Essences - Greek Goddess
Dress: DE Designs - Morgan
Shoes: REIGN. - Sabeth exclusive to the N21 event
Bracelet: [Mandala] - Omochi
Lip: [PF] - Romantic Red
Location: Verasong 



Don't know what you think you saw
You didn't know at all
Lost sight of who you are
Came to make a connection
Force myself in a dimension
Lost sight of myself

If I could force my heart, my ears, my mind
And eyes to get in line
Maybe I'll find something real
Not a fantasy so divine
Let myself down each time
Let myself down each time

How could you be what I wanna see?
How could you be what I wanna see?
How could you be what I wanna see?
When my reality
Could never live up, could never live up
To the fantasy

Revolution from dissolution, hypnotizing and demoralizing
Pressure of the future, too much for today
How many hours will I let slip away
Before I realize existing and living
Are not the same
Are not the same

MsMr - Fantasy




29 July 2014

You Scream, I Scream, We All Scream for Ice Cream! ♥

You scream, I scream, we all scream for ice cream! ♥

BOKEH - Wild Goat Thing plaid (RARE)
Shoes - JD Designs Roma @ TMD 

Hair - Truth
Skin - Essences
Lip - [PF]
Eyes - {Song}

Pants - Somnia
Top - Tee*fy
Belt - The Annex
Ring - MG

Ice Cream Truck - The Loft
Mom and Baby Mice - Oh la la!


 

FATEplay - 1 year annivesary release! ♥

FATEplay is celebrating its 1 year anniversary by releasing some amazing items! This is Willow, the female version, and includes hat, coat, pants,belt and shirt, and ArmPod. It comes in 4 colors. There's also a photography contest going on! Yay to all things FATEplay!

Stay Anonymous!

Hat, Coat, Shirt, Belt, Pants: FATEplay - Willow
Shoes: Milk Motion @ TMD
Hair: Truth - Blythe
Skin: Essences
Scar: Corvus on MP
Location: The Wastelands



24 July 2014

The Annex for Genre - makes me go Baroque!

The Annex for the round of Genre ♥
Love The Annex's take on this round of Genre. This is the Rococo Punk dress. Not quite Rococo. Not quite Punk. But just quite right. Enjoy! ♥

Taxi to Genre

Dress: The Annex @ Genre - Rococo Punk
Shoes: REIGN. - Alloy Heels
Earrings: MG - Faylinn flower charm @ FaMESHed
Hair: Vanity Hair - Alien @ Hair Fair
Skin: Essences - Jamie (gift)
Pose: DM - Voyeur #2

17 July 2014

Grid Goodies from REIGN. and The Theme Park ♥

You know how it is when you go on vacation and pack everything up nice and neat and then when you pack to leave, nothing fits in anymore? This pose prop is just like that! From Kuro @ The Theme Park.


Dress is from Coquet @ The Theme Park. Available in 7 Summery colors.♥ So cute.


REIGN. Athena Sandals. Color change shoe and laces hud - 4 color combos @ Kustom9. ♥


REIGN. Hipster necklaces. Four rares (top row) @ Kustom9. They're magical. No really. ♥ LOL

Hair: Tableau Vivant - Wingdang @ The Seasons Story
Skin: Essences -Alex09 Rare @ Kustom9
Beach Hut: {what next}
Beach Towel: {what next}

15 July 2014

NEW! {what next} Vanity Table @ TLC


Color change wood texture and bench cloth. Static and animated poses. Comes with all the beautification products you can think of to make you feel glam!

taxi to TLC
taxi to {what next}

Vanity and Bench: {what next}
Bed: [*Art Dummy!]
Rug: +sanctuaire+
Wall Hanging: LISP

NEW from [Con] for Kustom9


Love.
Frame, Stand, Hanger also available to display guitars!
Kustom9 opens tomorrow!

14 July 2014

13 July 2014

New! Truth Hair and DE Designs ♥


I'm not usually one for short hair and when I saw the name of this new Truth hair - "Tom" - I kind of grimaced with disappointment and thought I'd toss it on just for fun. I instantly fell in love with it! This DE Designs dress is to die for and the the Aisling Wedges are, too, with lots of color change options. Happy Shopping ♥

Truth Hair - Tom (female edition)
DE Designs - Rachel dress and Ainsley wedge
Necklace - MG Alexa black choker pearls
Ring - Amala Cassie @ FaMESHed
Shades - ieQED (TMD July)
[AF] - Paris apartment



Sugar Coma ♥ REIGN. Cape Wedges


After eating so many donuts at the Atelier Kreslo Donut Festival, I went into a sugar coma. Good thing I was wearing my Cape Wedges from REIGN. so I look all cute and stuff. ♥

REIGN. - Cape Wedges @ Season's Story
Mina Hair - Sophie @ Hair Fair
Essences Skin - Galadrial @ Season's Story

LISP - Mermaids and Salty Dogs Kitchen
L2 Studio - Tarryton House
Zen Zarco- donut @ Atelier Kreslo






YUM! Donut Festival! Atelier Kreslo opens today ♥

Can I tempt you with a sugary, glazy, gorgeous, funny, or gross confection in the form of a donut? I don't really like to share! So it might be easier for you to just tp over to Atelier Kreslo today and find one... or two... or THREE of your very own. ♥

There are so many styles and sizes to choose from.

Donuts above are from:

(front row)

areve - mint tongue & pink eyeball (far left and far right)
Tala Laval - castle
Wolfy Breno - lighthouse
Zen Zarco - chocolate sprinkles
Rose Olive Doe - blue animated eyeballs!

(middle row)
Apple Fall - strawberry sammie
lxNoel - bears

(back row)
Zen Zarco - Pink Piggy
Tala Laval - large pink tongue
Sway - Bee

Not shown but equally delicious:
Isabeau Rargula - Berries
Cyclic Gearz - Iridescent
Allegory Malaprop - Matryoshkruller
hyasynth Tiramisu - birdonuts



12 July 2014

A Reading: Pride and Prejudice


For those interested in all things literary! taxi to: Fiction for a Cure

Schedule

Fiction for a Cure Schedule of Events

All events held on the American Cancer Society region.  Here’s the SLURL!


July 13th, 11am SLT: Blogging “Best Practices” for SL & RL.  Class by Vix Thibedeau. Suggested donation: L$500 (approximately 60 minutes with Q&A)

July 13th, 2pm SLT: Pride and Prejudice Chapters 3 & 4 (Jane Austen) .  Reading by Kat Alderson. Suggested donation L$500 (approximately 60 minutes)

July 14th, 6pm SLT,  21 Days to a Novel writing class by Michael A. Stackpole.  Suggested donation: L$2,000 (approximately 2 hours)

July 15th, 3pm SLT, Introduction to Intellectual Property Presentation by Kat Alderson and Michael A. Stackpole. Suggested donation: L$1,000 (approximately 1 hour, Q&A to follow.  Note: There will be no discussion of, nor questions entertained about, the LL ToS.)

July 16th: 6pm SLT, Jed & The Titanium Turtle.  Reading of an original short story by Michael A. Stackpole. Suggest donation: L$500. (Q&A after, approximately 90 minutes)

July 17th, 2pm SLT: Pride and Prejudice Chapters 5 & 6 (Jane Austen) .  Reading by Kat Alderson. Suggested donation L$500 (approximately 60 minutes)

July 17th, 6pm SLT – Silent Auction ends.

July 18th 6pm SLT, Live Auction hosted by Michael A. Stackpole. Suggested donation: L$500. (approximately 2 hours, excluding intermission for announcements.)

July 18th 7pm SLT, Raffle Drawing and Announcements, hosted by Kat Alderson

Interview with Mike Stackpole






I had a chance to chat recently with Mike Stackpole (Noble Charron in Second Life), co-founder of the first ever Fiction for a Cure event in SL to benefit Relay For Life of Second Life.  Mike is a New York Times bestselling science fiction and fantasy author best known for his Star Wars and Battletech books and a resident of Second Life since 2007.  He owns Third Life Books, a Bookstore and SL publishing house of Sci Fi, Fantasy, Mystery, Erotica titles and a space where he maintains weekly office hours, promotes and publishes books, holds inworld readings, and offers classes. 

Fiction for a Cure is program in which notable authors and rising stars in the world of first life publishing can offer signed books, personalized books, entertainment (readings and Q&A’s), classes, critiques, signed books, and personalized signed books and naming rights to Second Life residents to raise funds for Relay for Life. Mike and his business partner, Kat Klybourne (Kat Alderson in SL) are organizing the event, which will be held July 11-18. 100% of the funds raised through the Fiction for a Cure event are donated directly to Relay For Life of Second Life, including all sponsorship fees, exhibitor fees, donation items, and raffle ticket purchases.

I wanted to find out more about Mike as an author and an SL avatar, as well as learning about the event.

Joonie Jatho:  Hi Mike, and thanks for taking the time to talk with me.

Mike Stackpole: My pleasure, Joonie.

JJ:  How did you learn about Second Life?

MS: I’d seen the program offered for a download on the Apple site for years, but never took the plunge. Then Kat said I simply had to come into SL. SL was the realization of the sort of virtual reality I’d envisioned in a story of mine titled “Kid Binary and the Two-bit Gang,” and, before that,  Gibson’s Neuromancer (for which I worked on the computer game) and Stephenson’s SnowCrash. I was hooked. 

 JJ: How long were you in SL before you got involved in the SL literary scene: Book Island, and so on? 

MS: Must have been inside a month. Kat didn’t have to work very hard to convince me that SL would be a great opportunity for marketing and promoting books. There have been bumps along the way, and learning how SL users interact with fiction has been interesting. But figuring out puzzles like that is fun.

JJ: You hold weekly office hours in SL and answer all kinds of questions from all levels of writers. Not
many authors take the time to support the dreams and goals of other writers. Why do you think that is important?

MS: Two reasons. First, I was very lucky, when I started, to have writers like Manly Wade Wellman, Hugh B. Cave, Roger Zelazny and Fred Saberhagen offer advice and opportunities for me to get better and advance my career. Sharing what I learned from them is a way to honor the gift they gave me. Second, and this is selfish, but when I want to sit down and read, I like having good books to read. I hope, by helping young authors, I can guarantee a crop of books that I’ll enjoy.

JJ: How do your fellow authors feel about you being so involved in a virtual world?  Do you think they understand it?

MS: Some do, some don’t. The writing community is by no means uniform, and is not necessarily any more savvy than the general populace when it comes to tech stuff. So, the same objections or lack of understanding that the average person has certainly applies to authors. On the other hand, those who are involved in Science Fiction especially get the allure. Then it’s a question of time management. Robert E. Vardeman, the author of over 150 novels, is a good friend and regularly stops by at Office Hours to chat about writing. And there have been other authors who’ve come in as well.  Ultimately, Second Life is like all other social media: some folks take to one form of it over another. If they view SL solely as social media, I think they miss the best parts of it. Just wandering around, seeing how everyone has indulged their imaginations is wonderful. It’s easy to get lost here, and easy to get inspired.

JJ: Do you think SL is still a good place for writers to gather, network, and improve, and promote their work?

MS:  Absolutely. SL provides a chance for authors to talk with readers from all over the world. I’ve met readers of mine in SL from a variety of nations, like Poland and Italy, that I’d probably never meet any other way. In addition, just being able to sit down and chat with other writers allows us to get ideas, gain information and even collaborate on projects that wouldn’t get done if we had to wait for a chance meeting in First Life. Lastly, readings and discussions do draw an audience, so there’s definitely room to promote work.

JJ: How has SecondLife changed over the years you have been here?

MS: First, the platform has become more stable—it’s been forever since I lost body parts crossing a region border. Second, the technical skill that designers and builders are bringing to their work in SL is really spectacular. Many years ago I used to make some basic fashions for male avatars, but now I wouldn’t know where to begin. The same is true on the building and programming fronts. I absolutely love it, and am amazed by it.

JJ: Tell me more about Fiction for a Cure. How did it come about?

MS:  It was Kat’s idea. In the past, when working on RFL events with a variety of teams, we’d done readings and held auctions on a much smaller scale. We knew the concept would work, and this year just decided to broaden it out. Kat especially wanted to be able to bring First Life content into Second Life, making FFAC manifest in both SL and First Life.



JJ: Are you hoping to make FFAC an annual event?

MS: That is certainly a consideration. As you can imagine, getting something like this together is a big undertaking. By and large, the folks we have reached out to have responded incredibly positively and generously. I think the trick will be finding the right time within the season to make sure we can focus folks on what sorts of great opportunities they have at FFAC.

JJ: There are many good causes and charities that one can support in Second Life.  Why did you choose Relay for Life?  Has cancer touched you personally?

MS: First off, Kat is a cancer survivor, and I’ve known her since before her diagnosis. Add to that the fact that I’ve lost family members to cancer, and a host of friends like Roger Zelazny, Fred Saberhagen, Patty Vardeman and David L. Arneson (co-creator of Dungeons & Dragons) to cancer. I don’t really think you can be alive and aware in this day and age without being touched by it. As such, I think RFL is a great cause, and one I’m very happy to support.

JJ: At the Fiction for a Cure live auction, attendees will be able to bid on works from well known authors like Dana Stabenow, Alan Dean Foster, and Robert E. Vardeman, and, of course, you.  What was the reaction of these authors when you approached them about helping with Fiction for a Cure?

MS:  The response was just overwhelming. Authors offered incredibly rare and generous packages of items to be auctioned off. They’ve all been incredibly supportive and very responsive, in getting me the material we need to put together all the packages. It was truly fantastic, and I can’t thank them enough.

JJ:  I know you were soliciting donations for the auctions. Can you divulge any secret surprises that might be awaiting bidders?

MS:  We have over a dozen packages being offered by New York Times bestselling authors alone. John Kovalic is offering a signed copy of the game Munchkin, signed by both him and Steve Jackson, as well as a level up card hand drawn by John. Claudia Christian will personalize a copy of her autobiography, Babylon Confidential. Brian Pulido, the creator of Lady Death, has sent us one of the metal cover, Emerald Editions of the 20th Anniversary Lady Death comic (#31 of 50). Stephen R. Donaldson has sent three sets of books, all UK editions, all to be personalized for the winners. And there are a number of “Tuckerizations”—the chance to be written into an upcoming book. That means you as a character in an actual book. Those sorts of things are rarer than hens’-teeth.

JJ: That sounds awesome! You will be offering your class 21 Days to a Novel on July 14. What can attendees expect to learn?

MS:  21 Days to a Novel is a two-hour seminar I’ve given both nationally and internationally. If anyone has ever attempted a novel and had it die after a handful of pages or chapters, this seminar will cure that. If the intricacies of plot baffle a writer, this seminar will cure that. If a writer has trouble with dialogue or characterization, this will cure that. The seminar will set writers of all skill levels and levels of experience up to write the best novels they possibly can.

JJ: How can people donate if they can’t come to the event?

MS:  If they can’t actually come to the event, then this  link to our direct donations page:http://main.acsevents.org/site/TR?fr_id=61576&pg=team&team_id=1667474 will allow them to contribute to the cause.

JJ: What is one thing you want people to know about Fiction for the Cure?

Fiction for a Cure is a great opportunity for folks to help fight cancer, to be entertained, and to win some fantastic items that they’re likely never to see again. It’s one of those rare convergences where you can do something really good, and get rewarded for it at the same time.

JJ: Awesome! I want to find out a little more about Mike Stackpole, the author. What made you want to start writing?

MS: I always liked telling stories. The idea of making money or my living from that really appealed. (Otherwise I’d have been a conman and ended up in jail, I suspect. Or in politics.)

JJ: That would be our loss! Why the science fiction/fantasy genre?

MS: I like the endless possibilities and, to tell the truth, I’m a tech-slut, so playing with new gadgets and imagining how they will work in the future is fun. That all being said, I also write fantasy and mysteries and pretty much anything anyone will pay me for. Such is the lot of a working writer.

JJ: Who inspired you?

MS: My grandfather, Austin H. Kerin, had a book published in 1937, so that helped. But as I was growing up, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Lester Dent and Walter Gibson would have been the big three. I learned tons from reading their pulp novels.

JJ:  How old were you when you realized writing was important to you?

MS:  Must have been about 12, in the 6th grade. I wrote some long stories then—long for a 6th grader. But, fact is that the first piece of mail I ever got addressed to me (aside from birthday cards from kin) was a rejection slip. I got it when I’d written a poem in 1st grade which my mom sent in to a magazine. So, from the age of six I had a chip on my shoulder for publishing, I guess.

JJ: Wow! Do you have any writing rituals?

MS: Not really. Any one project might develop something, but they usually change between projects. I get bored easily, hence the variety of things I work on.

JJ: Do you write every day? In the morning or evenings?

MS: I usually write in the morning and again the afternoon, but not every day, and not always both sessions. If I’m on a tight deadline, I might even squeeze in an evening session.

JJ: What’s one piece of advice you would give an aspiring author?

MS: The one secret is: write. All writers do things differently, but the one unifying factor is that we pile up the words until the story is done.

JJ:  You attend  lot of conventions. What’s it like to meet the people who know your work?

It’s actually very cool. Writers work in obscurity, so meeting folks, getting feedback, and just seeing that what we do entertains people is gratifying. Knowing that what you’re doing will put a smile on someone’s face, or relieve the boredom of a long journey, is very inspiring.

JJ: Sounds like a lot of fun. What is the most memorable experience you’ve had at these conventions?

MS:  A number of years ago, at DragonCon, a young woman presented Aaron Allston and me with handmade cloaks. She’d made them herself, and gave them to us to thank us. She’d been diagnosed with cancer as a teenager and underwent treatment. Chemo and radiation, as most folks know, can be an incredible bitch. She was not faring well. Her spirits were down. Her doctors talked to her mother about how the low spirits could seriously and negatively impact the young woman’s treatment.
So, when they got home, her mom went into the young woman’s room, pulled all the Star Wars X-wing novels off the shelf, and plunked them down in front of her. She told her to “Read.” And the young woman did. She told us that for the first time in months she smiled, then she laughed. She kept going and credited Aaron and me with getting her through her treatment. Aaron and I were both very happy that our books were there to help her through, and seeing her smiling face was an even greater reward than the cloak.

JJ: I love that story! Now to the important questions. What is your favorite color?

MS: Green.

JJ: Do you have a favorite author?

MS: I admire so many it’s tough to pick a favorite. Rex Stout, however, is a great go-to when I want to relax.

JJ:  If you could be or do anything, what would it be?

I actually like being a writer and teacher. The only other thing I would have wanted to be would be a doctor. Any time I’m on a plane and I hear them call for one to help some passenger in distress, I feel some regret.

JJ:  If you were stranded on a desert island indefinitely, what three things would you hope/want to have with you?

MS:  Not a fair question for a science fiction and fantasy writer. See, were I on Verne’s Mysterious Island, I’d want access to Nemo’s Nautilus—and on a real desert island I should be able to find Aladdin’s lamp. Of course, with my luck, it would be Dr. No’s island and Bond would blow it up under me. So, to be practical, I’d want a solar-powered, short wave radio receiver, a really cool survival knife and, given my complexion, a metric ton of SPF 85 sunscreen.

JJ: I can’t let you go without asking you a couple of Star Wars questions. In a galaxy far, far away…Who is your favorite Stars Wars character? Do you think you relate to your favorite character in RL, if so, how?

MS:  My favorite would be Han Solo. Not sure I relate to him, as much as just think he'd be fun to hang with. I mean, if one were to survive hanging with him (And Chewie, of course), could life get better?

JJ: I don’t think so! With J.J. Abrams making the new Star Wars movie, what would you like to see brought to the big screen?

MS: What's interesting about the new movie is that I'm really staying away from any expectations. After having worked in the universe, I get to be a FAN again. Of course, if somewhere down the line, ABC wanted to an X-wing TV series, I think that would be wonderful.

JJ: Thank you so much for spending time with me, Mike. I appreciate your time and I’m looking forward to Fiction for a Cure!

MS: Thanks for having me, Joonie. 

More information on Mike Stackpole can be found on his website at: www.stormwolf.com

More information on Fiction for a Cure is here: http://fictionforacure.com/




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