by gayemack | May 17, 2012 | Writer's Work and History's Mysteries
Although I’ll be blogging in the next few days on Sunday’s forthcoming solar eclipse, I just couldn’t help myself from posting this wonderful info- graphic, “How a Book is Born,” which appeared on my Facebook page yesterday courtesy of publishing...
by gayemack | Apr 15, 2012 | Writer's Work and History's Mysteries
I often wonder why so many of us are ‘taken’ with fictional stories woven around historical fact and legend. Perhaps it’s the fantasy of it all, being able to put one’s self in the shoes of the characters or perhaps it’s the opportunity...
by gayemack | Apr 1, 2012 | Writer's Work and History's Mysteries
I had intended to blog about something entirely different this morning but have put it aside to post the following news article which actually appears on Susan Higginbotham’s blog. Susan is an historical fiction author and if you like reading about the Tudor...
by gayemack | Feb 25, 2012 | Writer's Work and History's Mysteries
In my last post I wrote about the effect of Mars turning retrograde and how that signals a slow down and re-evaluation in our charts. Currently I’m experiencing this Mars effect in the ‘circumstances of life areas ‘(the houses) of my own chart...
by gayemack | Oct 15, 2011 | Writer's Work and History's Mysteries
Rosslyn was and has been an important site long before Dan Brown and Hollywood arrived in the small village of Roslin, located about 7 miles south of Edinburgh. The Chapel was founded in 1446 as a collegiate chapel for study by Sir William St. Clair, 3rd...
by gayemack | Oct 10, 2011 | Writer's Work and History's Mysteries
There’s no castle I’ve visited over the years that possesses a more dramatic presence than Dunnottar. Located to the south of Aberdeen, Scotland, Dunnottar is dramatically perched on a massive flat topped rock of sheer proportions that end into the crashing sea. The...