Showing posts with label Shaping Destiny. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shaping Destiny. Show all posts

Author Destiny Allison Launches the Novel Pipe Dreams

Monday, July 01, 2013
& giveaway contest!

In the opening pages of Pipe Dreams, author Destiny Allison paints a bleak picture of a world set in a not-so-distant future: The staggered progression was like a funeral procession, only no one shed tears for the dead. Inspired in part by the work of The Occupy Movement, Pipe Dreams follows the story of Vanessa Kovalic and the members of the cell "the Fallen" as they work to survive the watchful and corrupt inner workings of the New Social Order.

Synopsis:
Beneath the park bench, a young girl cries for help, her voice a cold hand on Vanessa’s throat. “Please,” the girl whispers, a tear trickling down her battered face. Vanessa glances at the empty square. A piece of trash tumbles. A bird settles in a tree. Then there is silence—no voice, no wind, no movement. It’s as if the world is waiting. The naked girl is desperate, but compassion for the Fallen is never forgiven.

Vanessa’s hesitation is her undoing. Unbeknownst to her, Lewis is still haunted by her thick, auburn hair, serious eyes, and mocking laughter. She is the symbol of all he hates and her interaction with the girl is just what he needs to gain control of the virus. Originally developed to save mankind from itself, the virus can be used to create a slave race. When it is released, Lewis will have his revenge.

As his plan unfolds, Vanessa is forced to flee. Escaping through the sewer, she finds love, heartbreak, and the red beam of a gun sight dancing on the slick, black wall. In the deep dark of the foul pipe, she also discovers she has been betrayed. That’s when she learns Texas is real.

As one reviewer writes, the book is "creepy, honest, and sometimes even bone-chilling, Pipe Dreams is a taste of reality that you won’t be able to put down.”

Paperback: 360 pages

Publisher: Destiny\Allison (June 2, 2013)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0615823742

ISBN-13: 978-0615823744

Pipe Dreams is available in print and as an e-book at Amazon.

Book Giveaway Contest:
To win a copy of Pipe Dreams, please enter using the Rafflecopter form at the bottom of this post. The giveaway contest closes Monday, July 8 at 12:00 AM EST. We will announce the winner the same day in the Rafflecopter widget. Good luck!

About the Author:

Destiny Allison is an award-winning sculptor, businesswoman, and community builder, although writing was her first love. As her passion for the written word evolves, Allison is writing what she loves. Pipe Dreams is her fiction debut and other fictional works are soon to follow.

In 2012, she published Shaping Destiny: A quest for meaning in art and life and it recently took first place honors in the non-fiction/memoir category in the 2013 LuckyCinda Publishing Global Book Contest. In it, Allison reveals the truth that life is art and it is a book Allison felt she had to write. She lives in Santa Fe, NM with her husband and dogs, alternately missing and celebrating her three grown sons.

Find out more about the author by visiting her online:

Destiny’s website: http://shapingdestinythebook.com

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/shapingdestiny

Twitter: SFSculptor

Twitter hashtag: #PipeDreams

-----Interview by Renee Roberson

WOW: This is your second blog tour with WOW!— you launched Shaping Destiny, A Quest for Meaning in Art and Life with us last August. While Shaping Destiny was a work of non-fiction, Pipe Dreams leads readers through a fictional dystopian world set in the near future. I’d love to hear about the inspiration behind the story.

Destiny: It wasn’t planned, that’s for sure. I had just returned from my honeymoon, a week driving back roads on the northern California coast. The time with my love without cell phones or a computer was blissful, quiet, and fun. On returning home—to our kids, dogs, and hectic life—I lost it. I was working on the blog tour for WOW and didn’t have a quiet place to think. My husband suggested turning a guest bedroom into an office. I said no. I had lots of good reasons. Where would guests stay? Being locked away in my own room would put strain on our family. I would be okay.

Shortly after that, a man fell in love with one of my paintings but couldn’t afford to buy it. He offered me a trade. When someone loves a piece that much, I do what I can; so I went to see the piece of furniture he was offering. It was gorgeous. Antique and hand carved on every inch of its surface, it was also huge. Where would I put it? I measured spaces and moved furniture around, but no matter how much I wanted to help him out, it wouldn’t fit in my overcrowded home. Not wanting to tell him, I ducked his phone calls and emails for a couple of weeks. Then, one day in my studio, it hit me. If I took the bed out of the guest room and made it an office, I could do the trade. So I did. I created a sanctuary and decorated it just for me. Then I committed to a new writing discipline, knowing that I needed to do a follow up for Shaping Destiny. I would write a minimum of 500 words a day, get back in the habit, and produce the book.

About a week later, after having finished all the posts and interviews for the WOW tour, I had nothing to say, so I decided to journal for my 500 words. The next thing I knew, my protagonist’s voice was speaking through my fingers and Pipe Dreams was born.

The moral, I traded a piece of art for a piece of furniture that gave me back my peace of mind.

WOW: What challenges did you face transitioning from non-fiction to fiction? How did you tackle them?

Destiny: I’m laughing as I write this because I faced more challenges than I had thought possible. Writing Shaping Destiny was a matter of choosing which stories to exclude. Writing a novel meant learning how to world build, plot, and carry a story to satisfying conclusion. At the beginning, I didn’t even know what passive voice was. When I finished the second draft, a whopping 156,000 words, I decided to enter it into a contest (Yes, my ego can get carried away). The contest only accepted manuscripts up to 150,000 words. Yikes! How would I cut that many words?

I started researching and came upon a blog written by a man I follow on twitter. The timing was perfect and he taught me which words to search for and omit in the editing process. Whack, there went 20,000 words. I sent the draft to beta readers and one of them hinted carefully that I might want to pay attention to my use of passive voice. I looked it up and boy was I surprised. Whack went another 20,000 words. The deadline was fast approaching and I was working 16 and 17 hour days to meet it. The more I researched, the more I learned. Needless to say, I didn’t make it past the first cut, but I was on fire. It was so exciting—every day a new discovery. I worked on it for three more months until I couldn’t take it any farther by myself. Then I hired a top editor, really believing the book was almost done. When I got the manuscript back, I cried. Every page was bleeding, badly. I went to work again, learning even more.

With the help of two more rounds with beta readers, I finally finished it, and wow was I glad to be done. Still the journey was powerful, insightful, and full of rewards. As the first reviews are starting to come back, I’m so glad I did all that work. People love the book.

WOW: That does sound like an arduous process, but one worked out well for you in the end! I agree that contest deadlines are great motivators for writers to edit and revise their work for submission. In addition to being a writer, you’ve spent years working as an award-winning metal sculptor and artist. I’m curious if any of your artwork or the sculpting process in general helped “shape” the setting of Pipe Dreams in any way.

Destiny: Not in terms of plot or setting, but definitely in terms of process. Writing is a lot like sculpting. First you build an armature or skeleton that defines the shape of the work. Then you start adding mass and volume. Eventually, you refine what you’ve added, cutting away unnecessary parts until the form is whole, clean, and well defined.

I think sculpting for so many years helps me understand the process and overcome obstacles along the way. I’m not scared when something goes differently than I’d planned or when I get stuck. I know how to move past blocks and follow the creative thread.

WOW: How long did it take you to finish the first draft of Pipe Dreams once the idea came to you? Can you lead us through what a “typical day” looks like in your creative life?

Destiny: The first draft was finished in 30 days, the second a month later. When I’m working, I’m a bit obsessive. It’s the only thing I want to do.

On a typical day, I wake up and check my social media accounts, respond to emails, and putter on the marketing end while I have my tea. Then I go to work—either into my office or to my studio. I push through whatever I’m working on without stopping to refine it along the way. If I slow down to edit or question a plane, I can get blocked so I get it all down first. When writing, I commit to a minimum of three chapters a day. When I can, I squeeze in more, writing around the edges of my life. These days, I’m spending more time writing than I am sculpting and I love it. I can’t get enough. I’ll pause every so often to stretch my muscles and get something to drink, but otherwise, I don’t get out of my chair until the day wanes and my family starts to come home. Then, after dinner, I read aloud what I did that day to my husband. He questions my logic, probes me to find out where I’m going, and generally gives me feedback on what I did. It’s a process we both enjoy and it’s been immensely valuable to the work.

WOW: It's always nice to have a member of the family guide us through a writing project in a constructive, but gentle, way! On your blog, you often discuss the importance of “paying it forward.” Can you give us an example of how you’ve done that in your writing career, and what you learned from it?

Destiny: I decided to pay it forward by donating 25% of the sales of Pipe Dreams to help other authors and artists achieve their dreams. Anyone can enter to win. All you have to do is help spread the word. If you tweet about the book, post it on facebook, etc, I’ll put your name in the drawing. Once a month, I’ll select a winner and cut that person a check.

It’s been so rewarding to see people joining in. Many of them have helped to promote the book but have specifically asked not to be included in the drawing. They just want to help, too. People are often surprisingly beautiful.

WOW: You have an impressive turnaround time for publishing your books, so I'd say being obsessive is a positive trait you have. You’ve also advised readers that “your life is your greatest work of art.” Can you show us how your own life is an example of that mantra?

Destiny: That’s a big question, mostly answered by Shaping Destiny. I suppose the best way to say it is that I determine my own life. That means I have to choose my palette, select my brushes, and color my canvas in a way that hopefully imparts meaning and inspires others. When I make mistakes and muddy the image, it’s my responsibility to either incorporate them into the vision or fix them so the painting looks right. Simultaneously, I can be inspired by others, but my expression is my own. I have to be honest and true to who I am. The painting is always a work in progress. Every so often I have to start it all over again, but each layer is part of my journey and adds to richness of the next.

WOW: Shaping Destiny was your first foray into publishing, and you’ve made the decision to self-publish all your work from here on out. Could you give us some insight on what helped influence that decision? Also, what advice would you give to authors exploring self-publishing options?

Destiny: I wouldn’t say I’ll self-publish all my work from here on out. If the right agreement was struck that would mutually beneficial, I would consider working with a traditional publisher, but I don’t see that happening any time in the near future.

I self published for several reasons. On a gut level, it feels right. I built my art career by going indie first so it feels pretty natural. On the business side, it’s the only thing that makes sense. The publishing industry is upside down right now, but even if it weren’t, publishers don’t offer much more than I can do for myself. If I were traditionally published, I would still have to do most of the marketing, give up my rights for as long as seventy years after my death, and agree to a tiny percentage of the sales. If I’m going to do all the work, I want to get paid for it and, perhaps more importantly, I want my books to have time to develop a readership. With traditional publishers, if your book doesn’t do really well in the first six weeks, it’s done and can’t be brought back. Self publishing gives me creative control, the opportunity to connect with readers in a real way, and the potential income stream traditional publishing can’t, but it is an immense amount of work.

My advice to those interested in self publishing? First, don’t rush. Make the book as good as you can and then hire help. A professional editor can make all the difference between a bad or mediocre book and a good one. DO NOT consider putting your work out there without one. The biggest hurdle indies face is themselves. Grammatically incorrect work, flat characters, typos and more will kill your book and your reputation. In the social media age, your reputation as a professional is imperative. Your creative expression is only heard when you’ve taken the time to respect your readers. If they get frustrated because you didn’t care about them, you’re done.

Also hire a professional cover designer, not just a graphic designer. Book covers are their own art form. If your book has a shabby cover, it won’t sell no matter how good it is. Finally, stay away from the predators. There are lots of companies out there that will take your book, edit it, design the covers, and do everything you can do for yourself for twice or triple the cost and then still take a percentage of your royalties forever. Friend other indie writers on social media—I love Twitter for this—and learn from them. They are some of the most open and supportive people I’ve ever met.

The most important thing to remember is that after you’ve finished writing, the book is no longer your baby. It’s a product that needs to be professionally packaged, presented, and marketed. That means that you have to hire and manage a team of skilled professional and work harder than you ever dreamed. For me, it’s worth it. If you don’t think you have the personality for that, it may not be route for you.

WOW: You work as a mentor for other artists by sponsoring a gallery space in Santa Fe and letting them keep 100 percent of their sales. Have you ever had any mentors in either the art or writing world that helped support and guide you on your own path through the years?

Destiny: I have been very blessed with people who showed up a just the right time. Some of them are still around and we talk often. Others helped for a moment and were gone. The list is too long to name here, but I will always be grateful to each and everyone of them for what they contributed to my life. Since I can’t always return the favor, I choose to pay it forward instead.

----------Blog Tour Dates

Monday, July 1 @ The Muffin
Stop by for an interview and book giveaway!
http://muffin.wow-womenonwriting.com

Tuesday, July 2 @ My Fiction Nook
Visit My Fiction Nook to read an excerpt from Pipe Dreams and an author spotlight on Destiny Allison. Plus, enter to win a copy of a the book!
http://www.myfictionnook.com

Friday, July 5 @ Thoughts in Progress
Destiny Allison, author of Pipe Dreams, shares the difference between writing non-fiction and fiction in a guest post.
http://masoncanyon.blogspot.com

Thursday, July 11 @ Selling Books
Visit Selling Books as Destiny Allison answers questions about her writing life and the types of books she likes to read for pleasure.
http://www.sellingbooks.com

Monday, July 15 @ Books I Think You Should Read
Liz Parker reviews Pipe Dreams on her blog, Books I Think You Should Read.
http://booksithinkyoushouldread.blogspot.com

Tuesday, July 16 @ CMash Reads
Destiny Allison, author of the science-fiction book Pipe Dreams, shares an excerpt from the story. Readers can also enter to win a copy of the book!
http://cmashlovestoread.com

Wednesday, July 17 @ Downright Dystopian
Thinking about self-publishing a book? Destiny Allison, author of Pipe Dreams, discusses her decision to publish two books independently.
http://downrightdystopian.blogspot.com

Monday, July 22 @ Gutsy Living
Stop by Sonia’s Marsh’s blog to hear all about Destiny Allison’s “gutsy story.”
http://soniamarsh.com/

Tuesday, July 23 @ Author Allen Watson
Learn how Destiny Allison created the world of dystopian sci-fi for Pipe Dreams at author Allen Watson's blog.
http://authorallenwatson.wordpress.com

Wednesday, July 24 @ Reader Girls
Destiny Allison explains the importance of book cover design and offers tips for self-publishing authors.
http://www.readergirlsblog.com

Thursday, July 25 @ Books and Such
Teri Polen reviews Pipe Dreams at Books and Such and interviews the author, Destiny Allison.
http://teripolen.com

Friday, July 26 @ Books and Such
Author and metal sculptor Destiny Allison describes writing as it relates to art in a guest post for Books and Such.
http://teripolen.com

Monday, July 29 @ Fresh Fiction
Destiny Allison guest posts at Fresh Fiction.
http://freshfiction.com

Tuesday, July 30 @ World of My Imagination
Destiny Allison illustrates the importance of pursuing your dreams in a guest post at World of My Imagination.
http://theworldofmyimagination.blogspot.com

Wednesday, July 31 @ The New Book Review
Read a review of Pipe Dreams, by Destiny Allison, at The New Book Review blog.
http://thenewbookreview.blogspot.com

To view all our touring authors, check out our Events Calendar. Keep up with blog stops and giveaways in real time by following us on Twitter @WOWBlogTour.

Get Involved! If you have a website or blog and would like to host one of our touring authors or schedule a tour of your own, please email us at blogtour@wow-womenonwriting.com.

Book Giveaway Contest: Enter to win a copy of Pipe Dreams! Just fill out the Rafflecopter form below. We will announce the winner in the Rafflecopter widget Monday, July 8.

a Rafflecopter giveaway


Good Luck!
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Destiny Allison, author of Shaping Destiny, launches her book tour

Monday, August 06, 2012
& giveaway contest!

Destiny Allison was living an all-too-common existence as a wife and mother who had lost her sense of self, and yet, she felt a stirring underneath. One frustrating evening she took up a handful of hobby clay and molded a figure. In this figure she recognized the chasm between the lives we bear and the lives we desire.

What lies beneath the personae we don each day? How do we uncover our masked face? Where can we find a reflection of our true self and the courage to exchange living for existence? Destiny Allison found her answers at the intersection of art and life.

Shaping Destiny: A Quest for Meaning in Art and Life isn’t just a book on transformation; it includes studies in form, structure, and vision. It isn’t just a book about art; in it the author candidly shares personal philosophies and life changes. This is a book with a holistic view of the mergence of art and life.

Destiny begins each chapter with an art lesson followed by her autobiographical narrative bringing us along as she discovers her passion for art, uncovers her abilities, and sculpts a new life. Shaping Destiny has been compared to Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance and Destiny’s writing has been compared to that of Anne Lamott and Annie Dillard. If you are a creative or artistic person, if you enjoy memoirs, or if you are at a crossroads and need a bit of encouragement I highly recommend Shaping Destiny: A Quest for Meaning in Art and Life.

Shaping Destiny: A Quest for Meaning in Art and Life is available in print and for Kindle at Amazon.
Free Download Days! Download your copy of Shaping Destiny for Free today August 6 and on the following Saturdays: August 11, 18, & 25. Enter to win a print copy in the Rafflecopter form at the bottom of this post.

Enjoy the book trailer of Destiny talking about her book below!



About the author

Destiny Allison is an artist, a business woman and an author. Her work is collected by public institutions and private individuals internationally. In addition to her numerous awards for excellence in art, she was also recently named Santa Fe Business Woman of the year for 2011. She works as an artist full time. She is also a managing partner in La Tienda at Eldorado—a commercial complex, community center, and arts center in Santa Fe, NM. She is represented in prominent galleries across the country and owns her own gallery, Destiny Allison Fine Art, located at La Tienda. Allison’s first love was writing. Her first poems were published while she was a child and she received numerous awards during adolescence. The story of how she became a visual artist is told in her book, Shaping Destiny: A quest for meaning in art and life. While her focus over the last 20 years has been primarily on sculpture, Allison also paints on steel using acids and natural oxidation, and in acrylics. Allison currently resides in Santa Fe, NM.

Find the author online:

Website for Destiny’s Art: http://www.destinyallison.com/

Book Website/Blog: http://www.shapingdestinythebook.com/


------Interview by Robyn Chausse

WOW: Your love of language goes back to your childhood; can you share a little on that?

Destiny: I have always been an avid reader. I think I learned to read when I was three and have been literally devouring books ever since. When I was eight, I started writing poetry. I’m not sure what inspired me to do this but it brought me very close with my father. We spent countless hours together going over my poems and when I watched what happened when we replaced one word with another, or rearranged a line, I was enthralled. Later, in high school, I was fortunate to have Latin as a required class. I loved it. The origins of words, their roots and intended meanings opened up a whole new world for me. When I began to study Greek mythology, that awareness deepened and I was forever hooked. The stories of Narcissus, Pan, Eros, inspired my imagination. Language, or rather the written word, was my first love.

WOW: Tell us about your pre-sculpture writing life.

Destiny: I was first published at nine. The local newspaper ran a youth section and regularly paid young authors for their poems, short stories and essays. I was one of their frequent contributors. After that first taste, I planned to be a writer. Through high school and into college, I pursued writing with a vengeance. Then, in my early twenties, I re-read a couple of my favorite books and realized I didn’t have an original thought in my head. I was just recycling what I had gleaned from them. I gave up any aspirations to write for a living and after that, I only wrote for myself.

WOW: When it came to discovering, or uncovering, yourself, what did sculpture give you that words could not?

Destiny: Sculpture is so demanding physically that it is almost impossible for me to get lost in the wanderings of my mind or my emotions alone. It requires an intense focus not unlike the focus you develop when you are engaged in competitive sports. Somehow, the combination of physical and mental exertion is merged and it’s like I am in the “zone.” I am not thinking. I am just being. Mind, body, and spirit are working in unison and I am fully present in my creativity. What that really means is that I can’t talk myself into or out of anything when I’m working on a sculpture. It will demand its own from me and it has taught me how to be fully present in whatever media I happen to be using.

WOW: What prompted you to write Shaping Destiny?

Destiny: Something called me to do it. I’m not sure if I can say with any certainty what that was. I think there were lots of things at play. I knew I was ready to look back and let go of some of the grief I was still carrying. I also wanted to understand how I got to where I did and really look at the impact of art on my life. There was also a very real desire to share what I had learned with others who find themselves trapped in lives that make them miserable. I wanted, through the book, to inspire them to break out, walk away, do what they have to do to be themselves and make a life of their choosing.

WOW: In your preface you state that several of the stories you shared later proved to be incorrect, yet it was those memories that shaped you. “Getting the story straight” can block a would-be memoirist; what advice would you offer her?

Destiny: I wrote that in deference to my mother and other people in the book who remembered some things differently than I did. I think what is true is always a matter of perspective. For example, let’s say I am sitting on one side of a table and another person is sitting across from me. In the center of the table there is a large vase of flowers. From where I sit, I see three daisies, two roses, a sprig of green, and a purple iris. My companion, looking at the same vase, sees two daisies, three roses, and a sprig of green. We both agree we are looking at the same vase of flowers. Later, when we describe that bouquet to a friend, I might speak of the purple iris. My companion will not recall an iris. She might even swear that there were no irises in the vase and imply that my memory was faulty. The truth is we are both right. Our memories of the same thing are distinctly different. One memory is no more valid than another. For me, the purple iris may have stuck in my mind because it reminded me of the wild irises growing in the canyon where I grew up. As a memoirist, it is not my job to be a historian. It is my job to sort out what the memory means to me, how it informed my knowledge, and what part it played in my story.

WOW: Wonderfully stated!  

Shaping Destiny has a wide appeal—beyond those who might be considered “artists.” What are your thoughts on that?

Destiny: I am thrilled by this. I had imagined that the book would primarily appeal to women artists. As it turns out, men and women, artists and non-artists love it. I think this might be because we all wrestle with the conflict between who we are supposed to be and who we actually are. The letters and comments I get are filled with appreciation for the inspirational aspects of the book. I think people who read the book realized that they can change their lives. They can be honest with themselves and those they love and that fundamentally they are also creative, passionate, amazing people whether they are artists or not.

WOW: I fell in love with the book by the end of the first chapter; Shaping Destiny is up on my “top five” list! The way you tell your story encourages readers to take an objective look at themselves and their lives.

So often people are afraid to move forward—whether it is out of an unfulfilling relationship or into a new career or self-expression. What would you like to say to them?

Destiny: Do one thing that makes you happy. Just one. Then see where it goes. We all get stuck and afraid from time to time and we think that we need to make a huge shift in our lives in order to be happy. I have found that baby steps usually take me where I need to go.

Just recently, I made a small change that has made a huge difference. Over the last year, I have been increasingly unhappy and have been feeling really guilty about it because I have nothing to be unhappy about. I love my husband. I have great kids. My sculptures and book are selling well. Things are great. So why do I feel like crying or raging so often?

In an off the cuff comment to my husband, I realized that I am miserable because my life is really noisy. Kids, dogs, telephones, video games, Television, on top of the noises of work—grinders, compressors, and business meetings—fill pretty much every waking minute. I need quiet. I need alone time. One afternoon, without telling anyone, I took over a guest bedroom, decorated it with things I love, and made a space just for me. I told my family they were not to enter without permission. I promised myself I would meditate every morning for at least fifteen minutes, and I would write a minimum of 500 words a day. Basically, I gave myself permission to take an hour every morning to myself. I reminded myself that I am as important as everyone else in my life. The effect has been profound. I am bubbling. I am writing fiction, of all things, and having a blast. My family is cheering me on because, frankly, I’m a lot more fun to be around when I’m not so cranky. They couldn’t give me what I needed until I was willing to take what I needed.

Maybe you can’t take an hour a day. Maybe you can only take an hour a week. It doesn’t matter. Take what you can and do one thing you want to do. But just do it. Don’t take a class. Don’t even share what you are doing. Don’t let anyone watch you, or try to help you. Let it be your secret, your treasure, your sacred space. Then, journal about what you experience when you take that time. Write about all the thrills, fears, joys and frustrations. Give your journal 5 minutes before you start doing whatever it is you decide to do. You don’t have to make major changes all of a sudden (unless you are in an abusive relationship. Then you have to run). As you find your joy, your life will evolve and the changes you seek happen naturally.

WOW: You have a wonderful community on your blog, plus you support other artists at La Tienda; tell us a little about how you give back to other artists.

Destiny: As a culture, we put so much emphasis on the art object that we actually kill the creative process in many instances. Artists and writers work so hard on the things they think will sell that they stop being artists and become manufacturers. This is not good for the world. Artists need places where they can be passionate about the work that matters to them. They need to be part of communities that accept, embrace, and support their creativity. Communities need artists to express our commonality, local aesthetics, and community values. Consequently, my husband and I sponsor a large professional gallery space that we let local artists use for free. The artists keep 100% of their sales. We also sponsor monthly independent film screenings, author readings, art talks, live music, and anything we can think of to promote the arts and ensure that art is an intrinsic part of community life. The effects of this have been amazing. The community has transformed itself and the businesses are healthy, in spite of the current economic climate. Having art be part of every day life has inspired even non-artists to pursue their passions. We now have garden tours, cycling groups, and lots of other community activities that all stemmed from making artists, as well as their art, important.

WOW: What are you working on now?

Destiny: I think the best answer to that question is, “What time is it?” I think I am always working on something. This fall, I hope to start a new nonfiction work that focuses on how art transforms communities and I am doing research and collecting data for it now. I am also working on a novel and am ridiculously excited about it. In addition, I continue to sculpt and am in my studio for several hours almost every day. When I am not writing or sculpting, I am at La Tienda where, as a managing partner, I am running the exhibit space, performance space, and doing the marketing for the center as a whole.

WOW: Sounds like a beautiful, passionate . . . and very busy life! 



---------Blog Tour Dates

August 8 @ A Slice of Life Writing
Destiny Allison shares her perspective on the relationship between art and life.
http://lindahoye.com/

August 10 @ Beads & Books
Gain an artist’s perspective! Artist and Craft Book Editor, Michelle Mach, hosts an art-centered interview with Destiny Allison today and also gives us her review of Shaping Destiny.
http://michellemach.com/blog/

August 13 @ CMash Loves to Read
Destiny Allison says our lives are our greatest works of art. Join us for a guest post today! You might win a print copy of Shaping Destiny: A Quest for Meaning in Art and Life
http://www.cmashlovestoread.com/

August 15 @ Women’s Memoirs
Confused by publishing options? Destiny shares why she chose to self-publish her book Shaping Destiny.
http://womensmemoirs.com/

August 20 @ Margo Dill's Read These Books and Use Them
The husband, the kids, the bills…and work! How do you do it all? Join us as Destiny talks about the unique challenge of being a woman artist. You might win a print copy of Shaping Destiny!
http://margodill.com/blog/

August 22 @ All Things Audry
Because life is too short not to! Destiny guest posts today about living your passion!
http://www.allthingsaudry.blogspot.com/

August 23 @ Women’s Memoirs
Learn more about Destiny Allison and her experience with her autobiography, Shaping Destiny.
http://womensmemoirs.com/

August 28 @ Craft Gossip
Join indie-crafts editor Rosie Bromberg for a review of Shaping Destiny!
http://indiecrafts.craftgossip.com/

August 29 @ Book Talk with Barbara Barth
Author Barbara Barth shares her review of Shaping Destiny: A Quest for Meaning in Art and Life
http://barbarabarthbookblog.blogspot.com/

August 30 @ Woman on the Edge of Reality
Join us for one of Linda’s fun, and sometimes revealing, interviews! Today’s guest is Destiny Allison, author of Shaping Destiny: A Quest for Meaning in Art and Life. Enjoy a book review and enter to win a signed copy of Destiny’s book!
http://womanontheedgeofreality.com/

To view all our touring authors, check out our Events Calendar here. You can also follow our tours by adding @WOWBlogTour to your Twitter account!

Get Involved!
If you have a website or blog and would like to host one of our touring authors or schedule a tour of your own, please email Robyn or Jodi at blogtour@wow-womenonwriting.com.

Prize Giveaway Contest:
Enter to win! The winner will receive a signed copy of Shaping Destiny: A Quest for Meaning in Art and Life! Fill out the Rafflecopter form below. Winner will be announced on Friday, August 10th.

a Rafflecopter giveaway


Good luck!
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