Showing posts with label #RuthDJ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #RuthDJ. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

50 Fabulous Tomatoes for Your Garden

Ruth de Jauregui


American gardeners plant a variety of fruits and vegetables, but nearly every garden features a few (or a lot) of tomato plants. From the classic 'Rutgers,' released in 1934 and used by Campbell Soup and Heinz, to the recent development of "black" tomatoes like 'Indigo Rose,' gardeners have favorites that they plant every year.

'Indigo Rose' - A small "black" tomato
My little tomato book, 50 Favorite Tomatoes for Your Garden, was conceived after my Mom saw the row of tomato plants along the fence. "What are those black things?" When I said tomatoes, she actually jumped out of her truck and went over to look at them. Along with 'Green Zebra,' 'Medford,' 'Sun Sugar' and 'Yellow Pear,' the purple-black 'Indigo Rose' has joined the row of tomato plants growing in my backyard.

'Sun Sugar' - An orange cherry tomato
Not only does the book feature 50 favorites, from heirlooms to modern hybrids, it also contains a little history about the tomato, a native of Mexico, Central and South America, and how-to-grow instructions.

Last year's tomato garden
Right now is the time to get the seeds and start seedlings indoors. In six to eight weeks, your tomatoes will be ready to plant in the garden or in containers. (Note: Because I rent, I grow my tomatoes in Dollar Store laundry baskets lined with black trash bags and filled with inexpensive potting soil. With a soaker hose wound around the plants, they thrive on the east side of the house.)

50 Fabulous Tomatoes is available on Amazon and Smashwords. It is distributed by Smashwords to a variety of ebook vendors, and thus available in favorite e-formats.

WIP
I'm currently working on my first novel Bitter Nights, which I hope to publish this year, and have outlined several more "50" garden books, including 50 Hummingbird Magnets for Your Garden. I also have several more nonfiction and fiction projects on the back burner.

WIP
In addition to writing books and a garden column, I have a part-time job and maintain a website dedicated to science fiction and fantasy for teens and young adults of Color, Alien Star Books. It is diverse and inclusive. There's room for all good books.

Amazon: Ruth de Jauregui Author Page
Smashwords: Ruth de Jauregui Author Page
Sneak Peeks of Works in Progress: www.ruthdj.weebly.com
Alien Star Books – Science Fiction and Fantasy for Teens and Young Adults of Color: www.alienstarbooks.com

Visit our pages


Monday, February 4, 2019

Women in Science Fiction – Mary Griffith

The first edition title page
Mary Corré Griffith (1772-1846) was the first (known) American woman to write a utopian novel as well as the first author to project the main character into the far future.

Paperback edition (2017)
Not only did her book Three Hundred Years Hence predict a strongly feminist future, it also presented a peaceful resolution to slavery and a voluntary return to Africa by African-Americans, where they were able to build a successful society without interference from white society. The story also predicted the extinction of Native Americans, which while true in the case of some tribes, fortunately did not become a reality for all the tribal nations.

From the 2017 paperback edition:
A sleeping young man is sealed in his house by an avalanche and awakens 300 years later in the year 2135 when the house is uncovered by excavation. Through this character, Griffith looks into the future of America from her time in 1836 as America's first known female utopian writer. She foretells a new form of power replacing steam engines, prohibition of liquor, women working jobs outside of the home, self-propelled farm equipment, income taxes, buildings made of fireproof materials, public construction and ownership of roads, breakup of monopolies, and other changes that were to come to America. 

First published in 1836 as part of her collection, Camperdown, or News from Our Neighborhood, Prime Press republished the novel in 1950 in a limited edition of 300 copies. Authors and critics Anthony Boucher and Jesse Francis McComas called the 1950 edition "an odd and delightful item of 1836 dealing with a strongly feminist future."

In addition to Three Hundred Years Hence, Griffith was deeply interested in the natural sciences, including horticulture, natural history, and the earth sciences. She conducted experiments on her Charlieshope estate in New Jersey and published the results in newspapers and scientific and literary journals.

From the digital library at UPenn: Three Hundred Years Hence
Amazon: Three Hundred Years Hence


Monday, January 28, 2019

Women in Science Fiction - Virginia Woolf

Ruth de Jauregui

Virginia Woolf (1902)
By George Charles Beresford
Today, I want to talk about a rumor spread on the internet. There's been some articles claiming that the famed English author Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) wrote science fiction under the pen name of E.V. Odle. While Woolf was a prolific author, the claims of writing as E.V. Odle are simply not true.

Woolf's closest brush with science fiction was her novel Orlando: A Biography, which featured a young nobleman who lived for three centuries. In addition to the unusual premise of his long life, Orlando also changes sex in the novel, from man to woman, at about age 30. The novel encompassed feminism, gender, literary history and unconventional lifestyles.

A commercial success, Orlando has been analyzed by many, from popular magazines to scholarly tomes. Yet the inspiration for the novel was clearly stated in Woolf's diary on October 5, 1926, "And instantly the usual exciting devices enter my mind: a biography beginning in the year 1500 and continuing to the present day, called Orlando: Vita; only with a change about from one sex to the other."

Woolf and author Vita Sackville-West met through the Bloomsbury Group of English writers in 1922. The long relationship, began as romantic and sexual and evolved into friendship by the 1930s. Sackville-West was very supportive of Woolf and encouraged her to have confidence in herself, to write and rest instead of wearing herself out with physical activities.

Vita Sackville-West in 1926
Sackville-West's son, Nigel Nicolson, wrote: "The effect of Vita on Virginia is all contained in Orlando, the longest and most charming love letter in literature, in which she explores Vita, weaves her in and out of the centuries, tosses her from one sex to the other, plays with her, dresses her in furs, lace and emeralds, teases her, flirts with her, drops a veil of mist around her."

According to some sources, the two women remained friends until Woolf's suicide in 1941. Other sources, however, indicate that their friendship ended in 1935 over politics and the looming Second World War.

Meanwhile, the true E.V. Odle (1890-1942) was an English editor and author, the first editor of British Argosy Magazine between 1926 and 1935. He published The Clockwork Man (1923), the first novel of a cyborg. The clockwork device in the protagonist's body allows him to travel from 8000 CE to the present, where he plays cricket and describes his experiences in a machine-regulated future.

Odle's known works also  include a short fantasy "The Curse upon Isaac Knockabout" (April 1923 Gaiety) and a second novel, Juggernaut, which was reportedly published as an ebook in 2016.

Amazon: Virginia Woolf Author Page
Amazon: The Clockwork Man by E.V. Odle







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Erika M Szabo via Google+

4 days ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Today Ruth introduces an English writer, Virginia Woolf. In her novel Orlando, she encompassed feminism, gender, literary history, and unconventional lifestyles.
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She was a complex woman. Thank you for sharing!

Joe Bonadonna

3 days ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Wow, Ruth - this is fascinating. I know very little about Virginia Woolf (I know, my bad), never heard this story and I am not familiar with Odle at all. Fascinating! as Mr Spock would say.
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Joe Bonadonna via Google+

3 days ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Today on #OurAuthorGang, Ruth de Jauregui sets the record straight on whether or not Virginia Woolf ever wrote science fiction under a pseudonym.
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Ruth de Jauregui via Google+

3 days ago  -  Shared publicly
 
My contribution to #OurAuthorGang today. Setting a rumor at rest while sharing Virginia Woolf's foray into fantasy.
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Ruth de Jauregui

3 days ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Virginia Woolf was a complex and fascinating woman. I'd really put Orlando on the side of fantasy rather than science fiction. EV Odle's book is certainly worthy on its own merits.
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Chris Weigand

4 days ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Thanks for putting the rumor to rest.
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Thank you! It didn't take but a few minutes and a google search to find the truth. I'm glad I was able to put it to rest!

Rick Haynes

4 days ago  -  Shared publicly
 
I'd never heard of E.V. Odle before but looking back, I do recall reading something about The Clockwork Man. Clearly, by feeble brain failed to register the link. Alas, the web is full of misleading information, but even I know that Virginia Woolf did not write Science Fiction. Thank you for posting such an interesting post, Ruth.
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Chris Weigand shared this via Google+

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Thank you for sharing!

Toi Thomas via Google+

4 days ago (edited)  -  Shared publicly
 
Today, Ruth de Jauregui addresses some rumors and truths about the writings of Virginia Woolf. #OurAuthorGang
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Thank you for sharing! Yes, a little research set that rumor to rest, but SMH, most people don't bother to look anything up. And Orlando looks fascinating!

Eva Pasco

4 days ago  -  Shared publicly
 
An interesting facet of writing I didn't know about Virginia Woolf.
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it's an interesting story. Thank you for sharing!

Stephanie Collins via Google+

4 days ago  -  Shared publicly
Erika M Szabo originally shared this
 
Today Ruth introduces an English writer, Virginia Woolf. In her novel Orlando, she encompassed feminism, gender, literary history, and unconventional lifestyles.
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Thank you for sharing!

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