Monday, August 4, 2025

The Beatles Induction into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

 

There are those moments in time where there is a confluence of greatness and humility. Such is the case of The Beatles, who were four lads from Liverpool, England, who went out and conquered the world. Most everyone, even younger people, have heard of the Beatles and know something about them, but many do not know about their humble beginnings.

These videos will give you some idea about how they started out and got their first contract, the way they were still perceived by Mick Jagger (in 1988), and Mick is someone who knows something about fame and performing and rock and roll. Mick's gratitude for The Beatles' help early in his career is wonderful to hear.

So sit back and enjoy these videos. It is also a bonus to hear Yoko Ono speak on John's behalf and to also hear from John's young sons Julian and Sean. The Beatles certainly deserved this honor, and it just is painful to remember the reason why John Lennon is not there to accept the award. 

Enjoy the videos. 






Thursday, July 31, 2025

My Book 'Life and Death in Venice' in Goodreads Giveaway

 


My new novel, Life and Death in Venice, is now in a Goodreads Giveaway. During the period of August 1st, 2025, through August 15, 2025, you can get into the running for a free copy of my book. 

Book Summary

Life and Death in Venice is the story of New Yorker Robert "Bobby" Valenti who moves to Venice to start over after divorcing his wife and the death of his mother. In the magical city he navigates the streets and yearns to get to know the place on an intimate level while wanting to forget a past that he is trying to escape. He joins a writers' group where he makes friends and hopes to enhance his goal of writing a novel. Bobby starts seeing Mireille, a beautiful French girl who is a group member, but she has many personal dramas that cause their relationship to be on and off again. After he meets Elena in a bar, he takes her home and learns that she is a prostitute who has an abusive pimp, so he reluctantly pays her. He continues seeing Elena even after Mireille comes back from a long trip to Paris, creating an unusual love triangle. As he attempts to write his book and hopes to find some peace and happiness in Venice, many obstacles are standing in his way.

The summer reading season is here, so what would be better than reading a book about exotic Venice that you got for free?

Get your chance to get your free copy here!

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Overcoming POV Issues with my Book ‘Life and Death in Venice’

 


When I had the idea for my new novel, Life and Death in Venice, it was inspired by a short story that I wrote 20 years ago based on my first experience in Venice. That story – about the Grim Reaper stalking gondola riders – was in third person. None of that story appears in my new book, although the Grim Reaper does pop into the narrative here and there.

I began wondering what point of view I was going to use. Most readers may not even think about POV when reading a book, but it is something that nags at writers like me. It is an enormously important choice because it will make the difference in how the story is accepted and enjoyed by readers.

Third Person

As I began writing the first chapter, I started off in third person. There were going to be many characters in the book, so I figured it would be good for me to be able to delve into the thoughts of numerous people – this is called omniscient third person. Let’s look at the first paragraph of the novel in third person.

Bobby was a writer. He loved writing, and that was why he hated it. Now, he was living in Venice, Italy. Bobby hated Venice, and that was why he loved it. There was something for a writer there that was palpable as the murky waters of the canals. At night there was a shroud around every lamppost and a specter on every bridge over the canals as life passed by in the gondolas below. Working to alert the Grim Reaper, they waited patiently to collect those whose time will eventually come.

 

After writing the first chapter, I sat back and read it over repeatedly. Something bothered me about it. Yes, I wanted the book to be written in omniscient third person, but something felt off to me. The whole story was not going to work this way. Then I had I little flash of what I thought was a brilliant idea.

 

Second Person

I remembered reading short stories by Edgar Allan Poe (“The Tell Tale Heart”) and Jamaica Kincaid (“Girl”). Poe’s story went back and forth from first to second person, while Kincaid’s piece was totally in second person. I really liked both stories, so I figured I would try it and hope that I would feel better about how it worked.

You are a writer. You love writing, and that is why you hate it. Now, you are living in Venice, Italy. You hate Venice, and that is why you love it. There is something for you here that is palpable as the murky waters of the canals. At night there is a shroud around every lamppost and a specter on every bridge over the canals as life passes by in the gondolas below. Working to alert the Grim Reaper, they wait patiently to collect those whose time will eventually come.

 

I changed the pronouns in the first chapter and read it over. I wanted to like it; I wanted it to feel different and wonderful and breathtakingly unique but, as with other things in my writing life, I was not happy with it. The prose seemed forced or even an attempt to be different just for the sake of being different. I honestly could not imagine having to read an entire book in that POV, and if I could not how could I expect the reader to want to read it?

 

First Person

 


In my last novel, Unicorn: A Love Story, I wrote in third person POV. In that case it worked well for me because there were three main characters. Their lives go in unique trajectories, with them living on different continents, and it felt right to use the third person omniscient narrator because it worked for me. I had toyed with the three main characters telling their chapters in first person, but it did not feel right.

 

I have written books in first person POV before, so that was not an issue, but when I started this book, I was concerned about all the other characters’ points of view, but I figured I would try it in the first chapter and see how it felt.

 

I am a writer. I love writing, and that is why I hate it. Now, I am living in Venice, Italy. I hate Venice, and that is why I love it. There is something for a writer here that is palpable as the murky waters of the canals. At night there is a shroud around every lamppost and a specter on every bridge over the canals as life passes by in the gondolas below. Working to alert the Grim Reaper, they wait patiently to collect those whose time will eventually come.

 

When I read it over a few times, it felt right to me. Despite all the other characters, the book is really Bobby’s story. Because of what happens in his life, he has no choice but to tell this story. He must get it out because if he kept it all inside of him it would eventually explode and harm him emotionally.

 

First person POV allows the writer to make the story more personal, which I tried to do in this book. Even during conversations, Bobby will let the reader know how he feels about the people involved. His honest reactions to people and events make the story more intimate, and I hope this enhances his personality.

 

Hesitancy to Use First Person

 

Why, you may ask, was I hesitant to use the first person POV? Well, the answer goes back to Poe again. In that amazing story “The Tell Tale Heart,” the first person narrator is very unreliable. He talks about hearing things in hell and the sound of an old man’s heart from across a room. He also describes how he killed the man, dismembered his body, and did all of this in a few hours before the police came. None of this seems remotely plausible. If you cannot trust the narrator, how can you accept the story?

 

Like a Camera

 

My decision to go forward with the first person POV in the novel was reached when I realized that I would make Bobby like a camera. He would record everything that he saw with accuracy. He would comment on the people in each scene, describe them, and relate dialogue accurately. I wanted Bobby’s narration to be brutally honest – especially when it came to himself.

 

Bobby disparages himself throughout the novel, even causing Paula to tell him to lighten up. He cannot help himself because he takes full blame for the mistakes that he has made, and he makes many of them. In accepting his failures, I wanted him to look in the mirror and be honest about himself.

 

Final Thoughts

 

When I finished writing the book, I sat back and took a deep breath. I read it over again and believed that Bobby’s story was told the right way. He became so real in my mind that at times he would push back at me. I heard him saying, “I would never say that” or “I would never do that.” I had no choice but to listen to him.

 

So, I believe the story is the way it should be because Bobby told it in his first person POV. I was just the one who wrote down the words.

 

 

 

 

 

 




Monday, July 28, 2025

Gary Larson's FAR SIDE Cartoons About Teaching

 


It's the middle of summer, and the last thing that teachers and students are thinking about is school (boo, hiss)! Teachers are getting a well deserved break, while students are firmly in "No more pencils, no more books, no more teachers' dirty looks" mode. 

However, it is an ideal time to have a few laughs about the zany things that sometimes happen in the classroom. Cartoonist Gary Larson had an array of weird and wild characters to choose from when he decided on whom to use in these cartoons.

Please check out them out. I am certain that you will find them entertaining, and at least teachers and students have another month before they are reunited in September.

Enjoy Larson's cartoons here. 


Saturday, July 19, 2025

The Unbearable Lightness – Letting Go of My New Novel

 


I recently published my new novel – Life and Death in Venice – and I am feeling the unbearable lightness of letting go. This is a relatively new experience for me. I have authored other books and published them, and I never felt like this before. Oh, wait a minute, I realize that I have felt this kind of anxiety before.

The Book Reminded Me of My Kids

When did I feel like this before? When my kids went off to their first days of school. The babies that I cherished from birth, the ones who sat on my lap drinking a bottle as I sang songs! The children with whom I created magical worlds where we played inconceivably weird games mixing genres and playsets – like having the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles come into a cowboy town, Lazy Town characters invading Cinderella Castle, or Batman driving the Batmobile into King Arthur’s Camelot.

I took the kids everywhere with me and then had to take them to their first days of school and say goodbye to them; letting go of their hands was not easy, but what was worse followed. I went home alone to start working, but all their toys reminded me that those glorious days of their being all mine were over.

All My Books Are My Babies

That is how publishing this book feels now. It was ready a few months before it was published, but for some reason I could not let it go. I held onto it like it was my child – in essence all my books are my babies. I loved them, nurtured them, and prepared them to go out into the world, but this book felt different. It was like my youngest child in a sense – I did not want to let it go.

I went back in and kept tinkering. I changed dialogue, altered some settings and scenes, and even decided someone had to die whom I really did not want to kill off, but I realized that the death of this person was essential to the story. It changes everything and helps to clarify events that happen because without that death they would not make sense.

This was like driving one of my kids to school and realizing I forgot one of his assignments that he needed in class that day. So, going back in and making changes to the story was like driving my son home to retrieve the assignment. His day would have been inextricably different without that assignment, and the same can be said for my book.

Holding on to It Out of Love

Once I made all the final changes and edits, I still went through the book one last time to hold on to them. The “them” I am referring to are all the characters, but especially my protagonists, Bobby and Paula. I loved them – I mean really loved them – and letting go of them would be the end of our time together.

Once they were out in the world in the published book, I could not protect them anymore. Just like my kids going to school, they are out of my hands now. I wanted the best for them, but the funny thing is that they both pushed back at me. It was truly magical as I wrote their dialogue – it was like their voices were in my head telling me what to write. So, if you do not like what happens to Bobby and Paula, blame them and not me.

Total Exhaustion

Life and the Death in Venice was my most exhausting book to write. Writing is hard work, and all my books have taken something out of me – Love in the Time of the Coronavirus broke me emotionally, but since it was written during the pandemic, I think that should have been expected. However, this book about living (and some people dying) in Venice just bled me dry in every way possible.

So, dear readers, the book is now out my hands. I struggled to let it go, but to be honest it is a relief. The heavy weight has been lifted from my shoulders, and I do not miss the heft of having to sit down each day to slip into that world and deal with everything happening in it.

All Grown Up

I have successfully let go of my book. It is out there to be read and liked or hated. I still worry about it, but it is an adult now and on its own like its siblings that came before it. I wish it well and will stay in touch, but life goes on.

As for my next book, I thought I would start writing it right away, but I have decided to wait. I am not ready for late night feedings and changing its diaper. I think I will take the rest of the summer off or maybe even longer. Man, I like this letting go thing. I think I can get used to it.

Check out the song "Letting Go" by Paul McCartney and Wings





Wednesday, July 16, 2025

'Life and Death in Venice' in Kindle Countdown Deal!

 


My new novel, Life and Death in Venice, is entering a Kindle Countdown Deal. The promotion begins with the book being available for 99 cents starting on July 17, 2025, at 11:00 EST. It will end on July 24, 2025 at 11:00 EST. 

With the summer reading season here, Life and Death in Venice makes a good read for the beach or on your vacation wherever planes, trains, ships, and cars can take you. 

So, please get in on this great deal that will last one week. Thank you to everyone who has already ordered a copy. 

Also, the paperback version of the book is coming soon. Please keep checking back here for details. 

Get your deal here: Kindle Countdown Deal 

Thursday, July 3, 2025

Victor Lana Author Interview in 'New in Books'

 


Please check out my author's interview in New in Books. I answer questions about my new novel Life and Death in Venice. You will be able to learn about my history with Venice and why I wrote the book and get some insight into my creative process. 

You can check out the interview here

Thank you to all those who pre-ordered the book or who have ordered it since it was launched. I appreciate your support!