Today author J.G. Źymbalist takes over our blog to tell us about life and writing. His latest novel, Song of the Oceanides (13 January 2016, J.G. Źymbalist, 766 pages), a Young Adult Fantasy, is currently on sale for only .99!
"Źymbalist writes in a lovely, highly descriptive prose that luxuriates in the details and curios of his setting [...]
The world Źymbalist creates is so rich and vast that, for a certain type of reader, 750 pages will not be nearly enough.
A clever and finely wrought steampunk tale about aliens and misfits." - Kirkus Reviews
Synopsis | Teaser | Guest Post: Balancing Life and Writing | About the Author | Giveaway & Tour Stops
"Źymbalist writes in a lovely, highly descriptive prose that luxuriates in the details and curios of his setting [...]
The world Źymbalist creates is so rich and vast that, for a certain type of reader, 750 pages will not be nearly enough.
A clever and finely wrought steampunk tale about aliens and misfits." - Kirkus Reviews
Synopsis | Teaser | Guest Post: Balancing Life and Writing | About the Author | Giveaway & Tour Stops
Balancing Life and Writing
I don’t know how to balance life and writing. I’ve seen others do it, so I suppose it can be done. That having been said, I only know what I did to resolve the struggle: First, from my early life through the better part of my forties, I lived and lived alone—and wrote very little other than two rough prose drafts and a handful of lousy poems. This approach afforded me the time to keep extensive idea books and to develop my own heartfelt belief system and world view. Living without a great deal of writing also afforded me the chance to read and to lose myself in the study of the craft of fiction. In addition, keeping an emphasis on living afforded me the luxury of traveling and learning about several different European and Middle-Eastern cultures.Living and night clerking in various Palestinian youth hostels in the Old City of Jerusalem was perhaps my greatest and most informational experience. On any given day in the Old City of Jerusalem, I might encounter Palestinian Muslim culture, Palestinian Christians, Greeks, Armenians, Secular Jews, Hasidic Jews, pilgrims from Africa, and tourists and photojournalists from pretty much anywhere and everywhere.
Now that I am much older, I’m beginning to understand how Einstein could have come to cherish his solitude. In some respects, I feel that I’ve already lived. Now I can retreat from the world and redraft the materials that I have accumulated and/or rifle through my idea books. Growing old does not bother me so much because I know that now it is time to work.
J.G. Źymbalist
16 comments:
Thank you for hosting
Thank you to everyone at bookschatter! I love your blog, and I love all the photos of Jerusalem! You do great work! Pray for the peace of Jerusalem!
Oh, one other thing! Soon, very soon, I'll be offering Song of the Oceanides for free. And it will be available in apple and nook form as well as kindle. Actually the free versions at apple iTunes and Barnes & Noble's site are already up. The free kindle version will be available in the next few days.
Hi! Thank you for popping by and for the heads up. I will update the posts :-)
Glad you like it around here! It's a pleasure hosting you today :-D
Flora
Awesome photos, thanks for sharing them!!
This is a must-read!! Thank you for the reveal!
Victoria,
I think it was BooksChatter's Flora who added those wonderful images of Jerusalem.
Thank you for your kind words, Nikolina!
Congrats on the new book and good luck on the book tour!
You're most welcome! :)
Thank you, Ally!
Excellent guest post! Looking forward to checking out this book!
Came to wish you a happy monday! :)
Thank you, Nikolina. I do need happy Monday greetings along with a very big cup of coffee. I have just had my coffee, and now I have my happy Monday greeting. I'm ready for the day. Oh, and happy Monday to you!
What an interesting perspective.... Thank you for sharing that piece with us. I really enjoyed reading that. :)
Cheers! Glad you liked it.
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