Author: Karen Sandler

  • From Belgium to Luxembourg to Germany

    We left our lovely B&B in Belgium for the long drive down to our B&B in Luxembourg. Along the way we stopped in at Val Dieu Abbey where we walked the grounds and bought some beer and cider in the abbey shop. On to Spa, where we ate lunch at Domino’s, a steakhouse that also featured Romanian dishes. We wandered the town, then continued on our way.

    When we arrived at the B&B, it was a real disappointment. The owners seem to have a real aversion to well-lit rooms (perhaps they’re vampires). In the room we slept in last night (we’ve switched rooms for the second night), there was space for six bulbs in the chandelier, but only two worked. It took some arm-twisting to get more bulbs.

    Then the bed was horrid. The box-springs was broken so the mattress sagged in the middle like a hammock. After an awkward night sleeping on the broken bed (my body kept wanting to roll into the middle) we did manage to get a different room with a perfectly fine bed. The only downside is the toilet is in the hall, but that’s no biggie.

    The breakfast was stellar, despite the bed issues. Incredible chocolate croissant, a lemon curd filled pastry, rolls, thinly sliced ham and cheese as well as other meats. Fresh fruit and some good coffee.

    We headed out to Larochette to hike. First up to the castle (quite a climb), where a beautiful cat followed us up, then through the countryside (including alongside some cornfields), then back into town. It was about a 7km hike in all, with some gorgeous scenery along the way. We had sandwiches at a patisserie (where the wind kicked up and nearly blew over all the umbrellas). My sandwich was ham on the world’s best baguette. Yum!

    We then drove down to Echternach where we shopped, then walked along the Sauer River until we reached a bridge that crossed over into Germany. We hung out at a German pub where everyone but me drank a glass of Bitburger ale. I’m not much of a beer drinker, unless it’s a very malty variety.

    We walked back into Luxembourg, then returned to the B&B. I should be resting, but I wanted to get the blog post and pictures out. Enjoy!

     

  • A Day in Amsterdam

    We took the train into Amsterdam yesterday where we ate two meals, visited two museums and met two new friends who were from two different countries (heh). We started the day with lunch at Renzo’s, an Italian deli with a selection of yummy pasta dishes. You pick and choose what you want–a little of this, a little of that. They warm it for you as needed, then serve it up. Since there were no tables available in the small place, we ate on benches outside. Quite delish.

    Afterward, we walked to the Van Gogh Museum and my husband and I went inside while my brother and sister-in-law ran errands. They’d recently visited the museum.

    Van Gogh has always been a favorite of mine and it was marvelous seeing so many of his famous artworks displayed right in front of me. There are of course no photos allowed, but I have memories to take home.

    After the Van Gogh museum, we did some wandering around the city (I bought some Dutch tulip bulbs) until the entry time for our ticket into the Anne Frank House. That is a moving and somewhat horrifying exhibit. To have lived that life, hidden away as such a young girl with the threat of discovery by the Nazis at any moment is unimaginable. I’m claustrophobic and the close spaces were sometimes difficult for me to navigate.

    After Anne Frank, we met up with two friends of our in-laws, Cassandra and Marco. She’s from the U.S. and he’s from Italy. We headed off across the city to Pak Nam Pho, a Thai restaurant tucked away in an alley. Although the food took forever to be served (small place, one cook), it was fabulous (phad thai & red beef curry). It was so tasty I ate far more than I should have and was completely stuffed.

    After saying our goodbyes to Cassandra and Marco, we headed back to the train station. We had good transportation karma–we caught the train just before it departed and the bus we needed at the other end pulled up right after we arrived. So we got back to the house speedily where I collapsed into bed.

    Pictures here.

  • Ambling through Downtown Utrecht

    After a shorter than expected flight (that pilot must have had the pedal to the metal during the Minneapolis to Amsterdam leg), we arrived in the Netherlands yesterday around 10:30. Felt pretty jet-lagged/zombiefied for most of the afternoon/evening, despite a nap. The weather has been a bit damp, but that han’t stopped us from getting out.

    Rather than post the pictures on WordPress, which is usually fraught with peril, I’ve set up a Flickr account and posted the first set of pictures here. And here’s a short video to enjoy from the Museum Speelklok:

    [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=weT5V_eOh2k]

  • Leaving on a Jet Plane…

    And so our exciting European vacation begins. Okay, we won’t be visiting a lot of Europe–just the Netherlands where my brother-in-law lives, plus Belgium and Luxembourg and a bit of Germany. By the way, one of my goals for this trip is learning how to spell Luxembourg. I think I can tick that one off my list.

    We will be celebrating our 30th anniversary at a B&B in Luxembourg, in what I’m told is a lovely little town. How cool is that? We’re also planning on a day trip to Köln, Germany and certainly traveling around the Netherlands. And we’re hoping for a chance to do some folk dancing with one or two local groups. It’s great that dance is international.

    I’m hoping to blog a bit here and there and post photos. We’ll see. I don’t want to spend too much time glued to a computer screen.

    I already miss my kitties, but we have a great housesitter staying with them. I’m sure she’ll give them lots of scritches and ply them with lots of treats.

    Next post from the Netherlands!

  • Adventures in Self-Publishing

    I’ve finally dipped my toe into the self-publishing waters with a paranormal romance titled UNFORGETTABLE. UNFORGETTABLE was originally published in 1999 by Berkley/Jove for their Haunting Hearts line. Long before paranormal story lines became so mainstream, Berkley’s Haunting Hearts line published books that all featured ghosts of some kind. In the case of UNFORGETTABLE, the ghosts are Laura and Johnny, teen sweethearts who died in (and are haunting) a 1955 Ford Fairlane.

    The most common question I’m asked as a writer is “where do you get your ideas?” so here’s the story behind the story for UNFORGETTABLE. Years ago, our family was on a camping trip in Northern California. We’d taken something away from my older son (a video game, maybe? I don’t remember) and had locked it in the glove box. A determined kid, my son managed to get the glove box open, but he broke the lock in the process. Which meant he had to buy us a new lock.

    A replacement from the car dealer was exorbitantly expensive, more than my son’s modest allowance could afford. So we decided to trek down to the local “pick-and-pull” wrecking yards. We spent a couple hours wandering the lots looking for the part, which we eventually found. Along the way, we passed one totaled car after another. Sometimes we’d look inside and see what had been left behind–fast food wrappers or a ball cap, or even toys. It was a hot July day, but it gave me a chill thinking about who had been the occupants of those cars when the accident happened. Did they survive uninjured? Could someone have possibly been killed?

    That visit to the pick-and-pull planted the seed of an idea in my mind. It sprouted roots and with time, it eventually developed into a full-fledged book. I’d written maybe a third of the book when heard a Berkley editor speak at the San Francisco chapter meeting of Romance Writers of America. That editor suggested to those at the meeting that if you can, it’s best to submit to new editors. She gave us a couple names and soon after, I submitted a partial to one of those new editors at Berkley. Since I’d already published three books at that point, the editor was willing to offer me a contract based on an unfinished book. The rest, as they say, is history.

    As I said, that was back in 1998-1999. I had the rights reverted to me several years ago, sold large print rights sometime later, then the book sat on my hard drive for years. I finally got off my duff recently and sent a copy out to be scanned, then found an artist who could do the cover for a modest price.

    Then I had to get the darn thing properly formatted for Amazon. The problem was, I started off in the wrong direction, using fancy and over-large fonts for my titles and chapter headings. I also encountered contradictory instructions. One guide said don’t use page breaks for a new chapter, but Amazon said yes, use page breaks. The latter turned out to be accurate. Without page breaks, the chapters all run into one another.

    The scan, while good overall, wasn’t perfect. Many, many paragraphs broke to a new paragraph prematurely (like in the middle of the paragraph) and the only way to find the bad breaks was to scroll through slowly enough to visually scan for them. Spell check can fix a multitude of sins, but not those erroneous paragraph breaks unless the break results in a misspelled word. For instance, “running” chopped into “run” and “ning” it will flag. “Backward” split into “back” and “ward” it won’t.

    Then there were the weird characters sprinkled throughout–forward slashes and numeral 7 in place of I, the occasional quote mark interpreted as superscript, and these odd “optional hyphens.” The problem with the optional hyphens was that they were only visible when the “show all” option was turned on. When I finally spotted them, I couldn’t figure out what exactly they were called, which I had to know so I could do a search and replace for them. After much trial and error, I stumbled on “optional character” and was able to delete them all.

    Then there was the spacing issue. Every time I converted the file to Kindle format, all the blank lines would be gone. They were stripped out in the conversion. I finally found a solution online. Where I wanted space, I had to go into the paragraph option and define 12 point or 24 point spacing before and after the paragraph, depending on how much white space I wanted.

    There were other little bumps in the road that I’m not remembering (blocked them out of my mind, maybe). But the book is finally up on Amazon, waiting for hordes of readers to discover it and buy it. Feel free to go take a look. If you own a Kindle, or have the Kindle software on your phone, iPod, or PC, you can check out the free sample and be awestruck by my masterful formatting. Or maybe you’ll find the typos I undoubtedly missed. Feel free to leave a comment to let me know if I’ve blundered. Because with an e-book, I can fix the typos after it’s published. Isn’t that cool?