At Least A Nickel's Worth by Ryshia Kennie


Author Bio:
In my travels there’s been many unexpected and amazing things and the memories of those are only the beginning of the fictional adventure. From earthquakes in Hawaii to being chased by enraged water carriers in Morocco to a deep-sea fishing trip gone slightly askew in Venezuela, it all happened. While most of my trips haven’t been earth shaking adventures they are still incredible vignettes into another world.
The scenes of foreign lands play vividly through my mind long after I return home. And it is these scenes where my hapless characters land but soon it is not them but me who is hapless as they lead me through adventure after adventure. From another country to another era – the world is full of the unique and the unusual and it is a joy to find it, live it and write about it.
Follow the adventure on my blog Passport to Romance
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At Least a Nickel’s Worth
If you have a book you don’t need a passport. A story is a passport to live in another world and in someone else’s life. But what do you love most about a story and what makes it unforgettable?
I’ve always thought that it’s character that makes a story unforgettable. One character that you remember long after you leave the book behind. As a writer you always strive for that unforgettable story and a lucky few find it.
As a writer it’s setting that is the catalyst for my stories. Is that the key? What about character? I don’t know but I do know that I love the setting almost as much as my characters. In fact, in a way, it is a character. I can hear the leaves brush on an ocean breeze, feel the sharp grains of sand roll under my feet and taste the raw ocean salt that so easily blister slips. The ocean whispers to my hero and terrifies my heroine. It’s always there lurking in the background, providing that ambience, making it real for me as I write. And it’s not just foreign lands,setting is everywhere, past, present and future. Like a nickel, five senses - seeing, hearing,tasting, feeling and smelling it all. For me that’s what takes me into a story – that nickel. And for every author that gave me a nickel’s worth of setting and more and made the journey unforgettable, I like to give something back. It might only be a nickel – I can only hope it’s more.























I love all those elements of setting also. Characters are my favorite, but setting comes in a close second for me. And I do want my full nickels worth. *grin*
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