A to Z Challenge: More Fictional Favorites! Day 7: Hermione Granger

G is for — Hermione Granger from J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series A2Z-BADGE-0002015-LifeisGood-230_zps660c38a0

I enjoyed immensely all the Harry Potter books and movies, and Hermione Granger is one of the main reasons why. Harry and Ron would have been toast many times over if not for her intelligence and her quickness with wand and spell.

When we first meet Hermione, she gets on everyone’s nerves because she knows every answer to every question ever asked. Harry and Ron soon learn, though, how valuable that knowledge is and how lucky they are to have Hermione as their friend. Her strength, courage, and loyalty far outweigh her annoying know-it-all-ness.

Two of my favorite Hermione moments from the movies — the poignant scene from Deathly Hallows, part I, when she uses the spell on her parents to erase their memories of her existence, and the scene in Prisoner of Azkaban, where she punches Malfoy in the nose. Not that punching people is the best way to solve problems, but with a creep like Malfoy… yeah, he deserved it.

Photo Credit: www.fanpop.com

Photo Credit: http://www.fanpop.com

 

Photo Credit: epn.tv

Photo Credit: epn.tv

 

Photo Credit: Harry Potter Wikia

Photo Credit: Harry Potter Wikia

 

 

 

 

© Lori L. MacLaughlin and Writing, Reading, and the Pursuit of Dreams, 2015. All rights reserved.

Alex J. Cavanaugh’s Dragon of the Stars Release Day Scavenger Hunt! and A to Z Challenge: More Fictional Favorites! Day 6: Princess Fiona

Dragon of the Stars - Alex J Cavanaugh

Available today!

Dragon of the Stars By Alex J. Cavanaugh

Science Fiction – Space Opera/Adventure/Military

Print ISBN 9781939844064 EBook ISBN 9781939844057

http://alexjcavanaugh.blogspot.com/   http://whatarethekargrandes.com/

 

The ship of legends…

The future is set for Lt. Commander Aden Pendar, poised to secure his own command and marriage to the queen’s daughter. But when the Alliance declares war on their world, Aden finds his plans in disarray and told he won’t make captain. One chance remains – the Dragon. Lost many years prior, the legendary ship’s unique weapon is Hyrath’s only hope. Can Aden find the Dragon, save his people, and prove he’s capable of commanding his own ship?

SCAVENGER HUNT! Comment to win an autographed copy of Dragon of the Stars, tons of bookmarks & postcards, and a $20.00 iTunes gift card – where is Mini-Alex? Visit Alex for a list of the participants. (Open through April 11 – winner announced April 13 at Alex’s blog.)

Mini Alex 7

Amazon     Amazon print     Amazon UK     Barnes and Noble

Kobo     Chapters     iTunes     Overdrive     Goodreads

 

Now on to A to Z!

F is for — Princess Fiona from Dreamworks’ Shrek films A2Z-BADGE-0002015-LifeisGood-230_zps660c38a0

Princess Fiona starts out as the typical fairy tale heroine — the beautiful damsel in distress, trapped in a tower, awaiting a handsome prince to come to her rescue. In a creative twist to the story, Fiona’s “handsome prince” turns out to be an unhandsome, un-princely ogre named Shrek.

Fiona soon proves that she’s not what she seems, either. When surrounded by enemies, she shows off some pretty cool ninja moves, both as a human princess and as an ogress. In Shrek the Third, she organizes the other princesses and fights against Prince Charming and his minions, and in Shrek Forever After, she rescues herself from the tower and leads a band of rebel ogres against the evil Rumplestiltskin. No helpless damsel is she.

I also like how Fiona embraces her ogre side. She realizes that, for her, this is “love’s true form.” So what if she’s not the most beautiful in the land, or if she has to shave her face like Shrek, or if she makes rude noises like he does? She’s beautiful on the inside where it counts, and she’s found someone who loves her the way she is. And, most importantly, she’s happy just being herself. You don’t have to be the “fairest one of all” to have a happy ending.

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

 

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo Credit: Amazon.com

Photo Credit: Amazon.com

Photo Credit: Amazon.com

Photo Credit: Amazon.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

© Lori L. MacLaughlin and Writing, Reading, and the Pursuit of Dreams, 2015. All rights reserved.

A to Z Challenge: More Fictional Favorites! Day 5: Edmond Dantes

A2Z-BADGE-0002015-LifeisGood-230_zps660c38a0E is for — Edmond Dantes from Alexandre Dumas’ The Count of Monte Cristo

I’ve always been a fan of Alexandre Dumas’ adventure novels — The Three Musketeers, which I wrote about last year with D’Artagnan; The Man in the Iron Mask; and this year’s entry, The Count of Monte Cristo.

Edmond Dantes is a fascinating character. He is the hero of the story, but as the Count of Monte Cristo, his actions in the name of vengeance could easily be described as villainous. He manipulates everyone around him and destroys the lives of three men. Yet who could blame him, when these three men so thoroughly destroyed his, in the past?

Edmond had everything to live for. He’d just returned from a successful sea voyage, he’d been given the captaincy of a ship, and he was about to marry his beloved fiancée. Three men wrongfully condemned him as a traitor, and he was sentenced, without trial, to life in prison in the grim Chateau d’If.

Thoughts of revenge sustain him during his grueling imprisonment and fuel his daring escape. Edmond discovers, though, that vengeance can leave a bitter taste, and it’s not only the guilty who suffer as a result of his actions.

The Count of Monte Cristo has been adapted into numerous movies, TV shows, and even a comic book series. I enjoyed the 1975 movie with Richard Chamberlain as Dantes, though I wish it had stuck to the original ending from the book. The 2002 version with Jim Caviezel is on my to-be-watched list.

 

 

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

 

E_Count_of_Monte_Cristo_Book

 

 

 

© Lori L. MacLaughlin and Writing, Reading, and the Pursuit of Dreams, 2015. All rights reserved.

A to Z Challenge: More Fictional Favorites! Day 4: Donald Duck

D is for — Walt Disney’s Donald Duck.

I grew up on Walt Disney cartoons. Out of the Mickey Mouse gang, Donald Duck has always been my favorite. Whenever he’s on the screen, you just know his famously short temper is going to get the best of him. His epic tantrums are hilarious, and so is his distinctive manner of nearly-unintelligible speech.

He’s a bit of a prankster, and his mischief-making gets him into trouble with just about everybody. Some of the funniest cartoons involve battles with his nephews, Huey, Dewey, and Louie, and with those loveable chipmunks, Chip and Dale. And Donald, usually deservedly, gets the worst of those, too.

Donald Duck was created by Disney in 1934 as a friend for Mickey Mouse. Interestingly, I read that Disney gave Donald his less desirable character traits because he wasn’t able to show this type of personality with Mickey Mouse any longer, since Mickey had become more of a role model for kids.

While it’s true that Donald Duck’s actions are not always the kindest, he pays the consequences so thoroughly and hilariously that I forgive him. If there was ever an example of why you should control your temper and think before you act, he’s it.

 

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Photo Credit: Disney Wikia

Photo Credit: Disney Wikia

 

 

 

 

© Lori L. MacLaughlin and Writing, Reading, and the Pursuit of Dreams, 2015. All rights reserved.

Celebrate the Small Things! and A to Z Challenge: More Fictional Favorites! Day 3: Chief Inspector Jacques Clouseau

Celebrate the Small Things is a weekly celebration created by VikLit and now hosted by Lexa Cain to celebrate the happenings of the week, however small or large. You can learn all about it and sign up for it here. CelebrateSmallThings_Badge

This week I’m celebrating getting my book into a local independent book store! I’ve always wanted to see my book on an actual brick-and-mortar store shelf. I’m really excited about it!

And now for today’s A to Z — A2Z-BADGE-0002015-LifeisGood-230_zps660c38a0

C is for — Chief Inspector Jacques Clouseau from Blake Edward’s Pink Panther films.

Jacques Clouseau is a police inspector in the French Surete. Dimwitted, bumbling, and hilariously inept, he, nevertheless, and usually completely by accident, manages to solve the case. At least, most of the time.

Anyone who has ever watched any of the Pink Panther movies starring Peter Sellers knows he is a slapstick comedic genius. The first time I watched the movies, I laughed myself to tears. The silliness of his clumsy antics and his over-the-top disguises still bring fits of giggles. And his warped French accent is priceless. How he did all that with a straight face, I’ll never know.

The movie series with Sellers includes The Pink Panther (1963), A Shot in the Dark (1964), Return of the Pink Panther (1975), The Pink Panther Strikes Again (1976), and Revenge of the Pink Panther (1978). Other Pink Panther movies were made with other actors, both before and after Sellers’ death in 1980, but in my book, Sellers owned the character, and none of the others even comes close to equaling his portrayal.

Here’s a brief example of Sellers’ inspired lunacy from The Pink Panther Strikes Again:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=64yianfGvzc://

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

C_JacquesClouseau_PinkPantherMovies

 

What other celebrations are going on out there?

 

 

© Lori L. MacLaughlin and Writing, Reading, and the Pursuit of Dreams, 2015. All rights reserved.

A to Z Challenge: More Fictional Favorites! Day 2: Bard the Bowman

B is for — Bard the Bowman from J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit A2Z-BADGE-0002015-LifeisGood-230_zps660c38a0

No list of my favorites would be complete without at least one Tolkien character. (I had three last year.) 🙂

Of all the characters in The Hobbit, I found Bard one of the most heroic. When Smaug wreaks havoc on Laketown, Bard alone faces down the terrifying dragon and kills him with his black arrow. He is courageous, fair-minded, and compassionate and does his best to help his fellow townspeople regroup after the destruction of their town.

I love Luke Evans’ portrayal of Bard in Peter Jackson’s Hobbit movies — the way he loves his children, how he stands up for what he believes, and how he helps the Dwarves against his better judgment because he can’t ignore those in need. I feel for him every time someone brings up his ancestor whose missed shots long ago failed to kill Smaug, as if it were Bard’s fault and he who should be ashamed. The confrontation between Bard and Smaug at the beginning of Battle of the Five Armies was, for me, the highlight of the whole movie. That and Bard’s interactions with the hilarious Alfred.

After the battle, Bard oversees the rebuilding of the city of Dale. As a descendant of the Lords of Dale, Bard eventually becomes King of that city and returns the city and its people to prosperity once more. I wish the real world had more leaders like Bard.

 

 

Photo Credit: http://moviepilot.com

Photo Credit: http://moviepilot.com

 

B_HobbitMovies

 

 

 

 

© Lori L. MacLaughlin and Writing, Reading, and the Pursuit of Dreams, 2015. All rights reserved.

IWSG and A to Z Challenge: More Fictional Favorites! Day 1: Anne of Green Gables

Today’s the day for the Insecure Writer’s Support Group (IWSG) where, on the first Wednesday of every month, writers get together to share their insecurities and offer encouragement. The IWSG was created by Alex J. Cavanaugh, and you can learn all about it and sign up for it here. IWSG_Badge

I took a couple of my print books to the local independent book store and talked to the manager about stocking them. I was nervous, but he was friendly and encouraging and said the store was happy to support local authors. He took the books on consignment and said he’d let me know if and when they needed more. Deep breath.

I’d love to hear about other self-published authors’ experiences with indie book stores and what worked for them.

 

Now on to the A to Z Challenge!

A2Z-BADGE-0002015-LifeisGood-230_zps660c38a0

A is for — Anne from Anne of Green Gables

Anne Shirley, the lively, imaginative orphan girl of Lucy Maud Montgomery’s 1908 classic, Anne of Green Gables, enchanted me when I first read her story many years ago. I was a schoolgirl myself at the time and loved reading of her adventures. Who can forget Anne’s cracking her slate over Gilbert Blythe’s head when he called her red braids “carrots,” or her walk along the ridge-pole of a neighbor’s roof on a dare, or her accidentally dying her hair green?

Her wild imagination and indomitable spirit endeared her to me. Of course, the fact that she was a budding writer made me love her even more. Montgomery wrote several sequels, which I also enjoyed, and Anne’s story has been portrayed in numerous TV series and in film. My favorite of those I’ve seen is the 1985 CBC TV mini-series with Megan Follows as Anne — a must watch for Anne fans.

 

 

A_AnneofGreenGables_Book

 

 

© Lori L. MacLaughlin and Writing, Reading, and the Pursuit of Dreams, 2015. All rights reserved.