Posted in Blog Post, Game Reviews and Recommendations

The Best New Cozy Game You Can’t Miss

I often play farm sims and other relaxing cozy games while I’m listening to audiobooks, and recently I found a gem called Fields of Mistria. The game is in early access, but already feels polished and content-rich.

In Fields of Mistria, you play as an adventurer who has recently moved to town to farm, ranch, and help revitalize the town, which has recently been struck by a destructive earthquake.

The game itself is a love letter to the farm sim genre, with many thoughtful quality of life improvements over your standard farming game. Save game anytime, change your appearance and outfit from the in game menu, and enjoy the smooth experience all the little improvements provide.

Be sure to check it out, and while you’re at it, why not start up your favorite cozy mystery audiobook and curl up with a good story and a great game!

http://bit.ly/Mistria

Posted in Blog Post

A Quick Update

Hi readers! It’s been a hot minute since I last updated this site, and for good reason! I’ve been hard at work on my first mystery novel, which after many rounds of beta readers and edits, querying, yet again more beta readers and more edits and now more querying, I am hoping to find representation for soon. I’ve also moved cross-country not once but twice, and am now residing in the Windy City!

All of that has been exciting and has kept me busy, and I’ve added birdwatching to my list of obsessions which occasionally keep me away from my desk. Being out in nature feeds the creative mind, though, so as I see it, it’s all in service to the work of writing.

Now that life is a bit more settled- and now that I need to keep myself busy while I wait for query responses- I plan to start posting on this site more often again. Hopefully I will have book reviews, game recommendations, and birdwatching photos to share.

Til next time, happy reading!

Posted in Blog Post

Digital Journaling

As a planner lover, one of my favorite things has been the tactile nature of journaling. Layering decorative paper and stickers onto a page to create a beautiful spread is immensely satisfy. So, when I heard of Goodnotes, a digital planner app, I was skeptical that I would get much out of using it.

Now, the past few months have been several orders of magnitude more busy than my usual life. I haven’t had time to invest as much energy in making my physical planner look nice, and it was starting to get pretty discouraging.

Enter Goodnotes 5.

Within a few minutes of playing around with the app on my iPad, I was smitten. It’s a different experience than using my physical planner, but I found it quite freeing to be able to undo and erase any mistakes, playing around with different ideas without the worry of wasting paper.

This added freedom means that it takes less mental energy to make a nice looking page spread in Goodnotes than it does to make one in my physical planner.

If you’re a planner enthusiast like me, and you feel like trying a new medium, I have only good things to say about Goodnotes 5. (As far as I know, it’s only available on iOS)

Happy planning!

-Kat

Posted in Blog Post

Chore Tracking with Kat

After using several variations on store bought chore charts, I finally decided to make my own. With a little help from Google Sheets, I made a printable chore chart, filled in with my most frequent chores.

An example of how I use my printable chore chart.

You can see how I left some extra rows for writing in extra chores or appointments. I also used a pink zebra mildliner to highlight the rectangle for the day I planned to do each task.

This kind of simple chart works really well for me, even when I don’t need the reminder to do certain chores that have become habits.

As I check off completed tasks, I essentially create a log of my “wins” for the week. This is important to me, because like a lot of us, I often get in a slump and feel as if I haven’t accomplished anything, or that my day was a waste.

Keeping a log like this allows me to see that I have, in fact, accomplished things, even on days when it feels as if I haven’t.

If this post makes you think “hey, I could do that!” please feel free to take my idea and run with it. If you got something out of reading this post, or you try my idea and like it, please feel free to let me know in the comments section.

-Kat

Posted in Blog Post

Planner Love

My planner, featuring a sticker from the “Pumpkin Days” booth at PAX South. (The sticker says “I carrot about you”)

One of the things that has gotten me through the craziness of the last year is my planner. What started as jotting down a log of my daily activities slowly morphed into a paper crafts hobby and an ever growing collection of planner stickers.

I’ve been using a combination of bullet journaling techniques, scrapbooking, and diary entries to keep track of everything going on in my life. It’s been an incredibly helpful tool for me, not only for keeping up with appointments and to do lists, but for mindfulness as well.

I’ll be posting some of my journal pages here from time to time to share some of the things I’ve found particularly helpful or enjoyable.

Posted in Blog Post

I’m Back from Hiatus

Hi folks! I know it’s been a while, and my extended hiatus from this blog was not a planned one, but I’m back now!

Life has been well… I heard a saying once that went something like “everything happens so much” and that’s pretty descriptive of the last year or so of my life. I wrote a book, I’m learning how to cook and cross stitch, and my house is being remodeled. That’s a lot of plates spinning in the air at once.

All that said, this year will probably be a slow one for my writing as I slowly work on edits for the witchy book I wrote last year, and hopefully I will have plenty of time to write book reviews and updates for this blog.

Thanks for reading!

-Kat

Posted in Blog Post

Writing Update

So I know it’s been a while since I posted here, and I am trying to do better about that.

I’ve been working on what seems like the millionth round of edits for The Book at the Top of the Closet, and that’s going really well. I’m hoping to have the edits done before Christmas so I can start querying at the beginning of 2019.

I’ll be posting more updates here as well as book reviews and maybe some other stuff as well. Until next time, happy reading!

Posted in Blog Post

Fashion and Books

I’d like to share something that helps me when I feel stuck in my writing. For me, all the creative things in my life are entangled with one another, and while that can be distracting, sometimes it can also be useful.

One of the most useful things I’ve found is playing around with fashion. Using dress up games and closet apps, I create outfits inspired by my characters, imagining what they would wear and how they would express themselves.

Not only does this often break me loose from the grip of writer’s block, it also helps me get to know my characters better. Many craft books and writer tip sources advise doing mock interviews with your characters- this is my own twist on that strategy.

By giving myself a visual representation of my character, I allow the character to nudge me, show me who they are through clothes and aesthetics.

If anyone else has tried this or has similar suggestions, feel free to discuss in the comments.

Happy writing!

-Kat

Posted in Blog Post

Working Through the Slumps

So, I’ve been writing reviews for this website, but I’ve known for a while that I also wanted to blog about my writing process. After all, I started this site with the intention of it being my primary author page, where someday I will have information about my books, etc. I didn’t really know how to jump in, though. I don’t have a book deal or even an agent yet, and I’ve been really unsure whether anyone would actually want to read about my writing process.

Then, over the past couple of weeks, writer’s block struck. Call it a burn out, call it a minor depressive episode, but a rose by any other name still draws blood with those thorns.

It sucked. It stung. For the first time in my life I found myself thinking about things like “how am I ever going to make a living with my writing” and “oh God, That’s how taxes work?”

I want to take a minute to acknowledge the fact that it takes a mindblowing amount of privilege to be 23 and only just now starting to worry about these things. I’ve been incredibly lucky to have the support system I do, and I can’t even imagine how hard it would be to write without it.

I’ve never had a full time day job, partially because my spouse supports me while I write full time and partially because my anxiety made it hard to work anywhere when I was younger, and now no one really wants to hire someone who is 23 and has never held a “real” job.

Ok so backstory over, here I am watching my email refresh over and over while I wait for news, and it hits me that I’m only good at this one thing. I have dedicated my life to writing from the time I was in elementary school. There is literally not one single profitable skill I have, because I’ve spent every waking moment on this one. And it hit me all at once that I might not ever make it.

Like, ever.

And then another thing occurred to me: I might make it, might get published, and still not actually ever make as much money as I could have if I’d gone into teaching. In case you don’t know (somehow) teachers are grossly underpaid. The idea that I might be pouring my soul into something that often pays even Less? Too horrible to even consider.

Cue a multi-day cry fest in which I question every life choice I’ve made since age nine.

Eventually I arrived at the conclusion that no matter how scared I am of failure, I am still a writer. For two weeks I’ve allowed myself to toss out my rigid schedule, stop forcing it, and let the creative well fill back up. I realized that sometimes the only way I can get through a slump is to stop pushing and pulling myself and just take a breath. Look around, absorb the scenery of the Slump. Stop and smell the roses instead of trying to force myself through the middle of the thicket.

So I guess that’s the first piece of writing advice I have to share: give yourself permission to be where you are, even if where you are is the Slump. When it’s time to get moving again, you’ll know.

-Kat