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Rachel Bostwick

Professional Book Design for Independent Authors

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~Rach

Rachel’s Very Healthy Super Yummy Lemon Cheesecake Smoothie

May 26, 2016 by Rachel Bostwick

lemons-686918_1280

Here is my very yummy lemon cheesecake smoothie.

2 cups unsweetened almond milk (I use Blue Diamond Unsweetened)
1/2 avocado
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 packet of stevia – I get mine from Aldi and you could add one more if you want it to be sweeter. I have been drinking unsweetened flavored seltzer all day so my need for sweet is very low right now.

Add all of these ingredients to the blender. Throw in as much ice as you can until it’s totally submerged. Blend until the ice is mostly smooth.

At the end, add 1/2 graham cracker and pulse lightly until it’s incorporated.

Mmm, so good. The avocado makes it smooth without any dairy too make my tummy feel bloated. The lemon adds brightness for contrast. Graham cracker gives it that feeling of indulgence without overdoing it.

Filed Under: ~Rach

Magic to Make

January 11, 2016 by Rachel Bostwick

rip-david-bowie0small

Only the keenest of observers would have noticed the slight hitch in her voice, the subtle buckling of her knees. Her speech was an impassioned one: she wove her shock into the words as though it were a part of the drama. The show must go on.

But in the rear of the packed playhouse, a barn owl perched among the rafters, his star-filled eyes trained on her. All the bodies packed into the refurbished playhouse were observers, all were there to see her perform, but this was the keenest of them all. He noticed.

He’d hidden in the theatre every night for the past week, watching. Her face was lovely as it had ever been, gently marked now by the furrows of time. Each performance had been a little different as she tested the nuances of her words against the rapt attention of her true love. Not him, of course. The audience. She played a great queen, unswayed by the advances, both martial and amorous, of an opposing Lord. The drama ended each night with the Lord on his knees before her, begging to be granted her original terms. She stood above him, haughty and grand, her face unmoved.

Tonight she seemed to look up to the rafters, her chin lifted, eyes blazing.

“You have no power over me.”

A flicker of annoyance crossed the Lord’s face. The Observer read much in the actor’s steely eyes. Oh, two names graced the front of the playbill, but the tired man who played across from his love had had to fight for his. Hers, after all, was the name that drew the crowds. At forty-five, her star still shone brilliantly across the world of little theatre. Yes, it was a small sky, for certain, but hers was the brightest star in it and that was all the joy she needed. The poor Lord was on his way down. He’d been in movies once. She outshone him in every way and he knew it. Here she was again, his eyes seemed to say, trying to upstage him. His scowl broke through character of the fallen Lord, showing the sad, angry man underneath.

The Observer understood. He had been that man once, trying to upstage her.

She didn’t notice. She wasn’t even looking at him, but out, out at her adoring audience, out at the glowing stained glass on the theatre windows, out at the balcony where sticky-cheeked children were beginning to wiggle in their parents’ laps or doze against their parents’ shoulders.

Out at him?

She ended the night with a graceful bow to her love, The People, and with a kiss on her co-star’s cheek. He was undone by her sweetness. Well of course he was. He fumbled awkwardly and offered to drive her home, or perhaps out for coffee? She declined in the sweetest possible way. The man felt glad to have asked her and fell asleep later that night with his nightly bottle only half-drunk and a smile on his face.

But the Observer cared only for her. On this, his last night, he would spare only a moment’s glance for the people that she had been entrusted with. The people she surrounded herself with. Were they enough for her? Was she as happy as she had hoped?

Home at last, she stripped off her working clothes, down to her skin and spun around in her warm bedroom. Surrounded by things that she loved. A clock that went to thirteen. Books about far-away places, each with a taste of the kingdom of her childhood. A stuffed bear. A stuffed owl. A stack of records, proper vinyl. She put on a music, words on wings. No bottle for the queen, why would she need it? She was full of the night’s glory and never drank after a show. Sank into her bed.

The feeling surfaced again. A combination of grief and fear. What was it? She stuffed it down, that cold-water shock that had hit her on stage, that shaking certainty that something was Wrong. Was it something she had read or seen or perhaps just known? She conjured up warmth for herself. The magnificence of the final speech, the way the crowd had been glued to her, the eruption of their applause.

She slept.

A fluttering against the window. She sank deeper into her covers. No. Let him fly off into the rain. He couldn’t come in against her will. She was too strong for him.

Her stomach twisted. She sat up. Threw on a dressing gown; threw open the windows. He flew in, wings fluttering with her silk sheers, to the beating of a thousand wings, to the turning of a hundred years, to the soft pulsing of the music.

He stood before her. Tried to be imposing. He knew she liked it when he was imposing.

She dropped into her vanity chair.

“Why have you come?” she asked. Pretending not to know. “I told you not to come again.” She tossed her hair, then peeked over to see if he was suitably chastened.

“I came to say goodbye.”

Her stomach turned. There it was again. Something she’d seen in the newspaper. “Goodbye?”

“Please. I am dying. I just wanted to say…”

She stood up. Worse than she feared. “Is this a trick? You weren’t to come back here until St. Valentine’s. We agreed on-”

“I don’t have the strength for a battle. Please. I’m sorry. The magic is almost run dry.” He held out his hand.

She took it and drew close. Peeled off the black glove to find long, gnarled fingers. Cold and dry. Her fingers wrapped his in warmth and he shuddered.

“Why didn’t you tell me?” Her voice was tiny in the dark. “We could have had more time.”

“There’s never enough time.”

“We could have – I could have come to you.”

“I didn’t want you to see me weak. Old.”

“And now I won’t see you at all. When… when did you get old?”

He chuckled. “I’ve been old as long as you’ve known me.”

“You never were.”

“I was! But it didn’t matter. In the songs, in the stories, in the adventures, it never matters.”

“So now there won’t be anymore?”

“Not new ones, no. But you can keep everything I’ve given you. You can visit me in all the old places. I’ll see you. And I’ll be there. And… I’ll come back for you. Just once. One more time, when your time is ended.”

“You don’t mean it. That’s just something people say.”

“I mean it. I always mean what I say.” He enfolded her in his arms and kissed her head. “I’ll be back, darling. One more time.”

And then he was gone, in another flutter of wings.

She walked over to the windows; pulled them closed. She swiped at her face, pressed her hand to the glass, tears mingling with the rain. She swallowed. “I wish… I wish…”

She stepped back. Not yet. Not today. Now she had her own magic to make.

RIP David Bowie

 

R.I.P. David Bowie

Filed Under: ~Rach, Thoughts

Her Skin Knows

November 25, 2015 by Rachel Bostwick

Happy black couple kissing

http://rachelbostwick.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/her-skin-knows.mp3

 

Her skin knows. It knows the things she doesn’t want to admit, not even to herself.

Imagine a girl. Imagine you meet her. And you share a meal, and you make her laugh.

Imagine her laugh warms your heart and you reach out and touch her cheek with the back of your hand. Her eyes flutter softly closed.

The next time you meet, if you reach your hand to her, her skin will prickle lightly and she will not pull away. Her body’s largest organ knows what your hand is for, anticipates it, calms her. If you touch her again, the memory will strengthen. If you step in to her, so close to her body that the waves of warmth off your skin dance out to mingle with hers in thermosynthesis, if you graze the pads of your fingers up the side of her arm until gooseflesh raises, then with no fear she will step closer to you and tuck her head into the safety of your neck. You stroke her jawline and press your lips to the top of her hair. Her skin sends out a thousand notes of symphony, telegraphs a million tiny messages: this is good, this is right, stay here.

“Do you love me?” you whisper.

“I don’t know,” she answers. “Do I?” Blood swims to the surface of her cheeks. You reach down to cup her face and she leans into it, hot happiness against the palm of your hands. When you go to touch her arm, the goosebumps are already there.

Her skin knows.

Now imagine someone else.

When she stands alone he comes up behind her and yanks her head back by the ponytail. She asks him to stop, but he laughs and pulls harder. “You like it,” he says. “And anyway, I’m only teasing.” He lets go and she laughs. They both laugh. Later, she gets in his way in the kitchen and he twists her nipple ’til she cries out in anger. He laughs again, then hugs her.

“Please don’t do that anymore.”

“That’s not how the game works. You’re mine.” He laughs, like it’s a shared joke, smiles at her with affection.

Her friends ask her about him and she smiles. “He’s a good man; he really loves me.” She crosses her arms over her chest.

Another day, he walks by her to get something out of the fridge. She quickly ducks out of the way.

He laughs. “You flinched. That’s funny.”

Her skin knows.

Filed Under: ~Rach, Thoughts

Bite Sized Book Review ~ Shadowshaper by Daniel José Older

October 2, 2015 by Rachel Bostwick

shadowshaper

 

Read if:

  • You like fantasy YA. Nothing to dislike here. Fast-paced adventure for teen readers. Entrancing contemporary dialect if you like that sort of thing. (Love it when done right.)
  • You like urban fantasy and don’t mind a young viewpoint. Nails the UF tropes with a splash of originality
  • You enjoy an artistic look at urban culture. I loved that he didn’t translate the bite sized chunks of Spanish that were sprinkled throughout.
  • You like the idea of art as magic.
  • You care about the ideas of a young woman of color as a protagonist. If you care about that, go to Amazon or your local bookseller, buy the book, and put your money where you mouth is.
  • You like a little Spanish mixed in with your stories. (What? Seriously. I love languages.)

Don’t read if:

  • You don’t like YA or a younger protagonist voice. Older lays it on pretty thick. It bothered me for the first couple chapters. I like YA, but I don’t really want it written different. Harry Potter is written for kids, but it’s not written *like* it’s for kids. Percy Jackson is. This is more like Percy in that sense.
  • A little culture that isn’t your own offends you. Boo. What are you reading for? But, yeah, it’s definitely written with the flavor of another culture, but in modern days and modern times. If you’re one of those cranky people who are going to call that an agenda, don’t read it. Maybe don’t read the Internet, either. Older even hints at intra-cultural conflicts that an outside like myself won’t understand. That’s okay with me. I loved it. More, please.

Cover-Judging: 9/10

I picked up the book for two reasons: because my buddy recommended it to me personally (he knows I love NYC and art-as-story-device and kickass female heroes of color), and because the cover was awesome. Check out that hair. And the color and the skyline. It gives you the selling points right away. I might have gone with a slightly younger look on the model in order to sell the genre a tiny bit better, but whatever, it works. It sold me.

My verdict:

Loved it. Want to go back. If there’s ever another, sign me up. Go buy it.

Filed Under: ~Rach, What I'm Reading

Book Covers

September 4, 2015 by Rachel Bostwick

 

If you don’t get a great cover for your book, you’re wasting all the time you spent crafting it.

The reality is that people judge a book by its cover all the time. If you think about it, we wouldn’t have a saying encouraging people not to judge books by their covers if people didn’t judge books by their covers every single day.

The democratization of publishing is a great thing. It means that people whose stories aren’t valued by New York publishing are able to find an audience. It means that more and more, people are able to make a living wage doing something they love. It means readers have a greater variety of stories at their fingertips than at any other time in human history.

And it means that if you’re publishing something, you have to take steps to let readers know you’re not one to the random schmucks who finishes NaNoWriMo and puts their novel up on Dec. 1. You have to take steps to let readers know that you’re not just another chump. You have to let them know that even though they have never heard of you, you’re serious about this and that one day—soon—you’re going to be a big shot.

 

“That’s fine,” I hear you saying, “once they read my story, they’ll know I’m legit.”

Yeah, no. You have to convince them you’re legit before they read your blurb, let alone your novel. Fact is, if you don’t have a great cover, almost nobody will ever give your book a chance and it won’t matter a whit what kind of promotion you do.

You can’t just be good. You have to be outstanding just to get noticed.

 

Filed Under: ~Rach

Busy November (Book Trailers and Covers)

November 18, 2014 by Rachel Bostwick

For my friends who may be wondering what the heck I’ve been up to, I offer a small sampling of some of the work I’ve been putting out this last month.

As we all know, with Great Power comes Great Responsibility, and I aim to use my superpower of Killer Graphic Design for good.

So I’ve been pitching in to help make my fellow authors look great! Check out the results

So Not a Heri
mrs-blackpool
4-bricks-200
link-200
cover with softened eyes-200

Comic Book Business Cards

So if you’re looking for a gorgeous cover, a stylish trailer, or some friendly beta-reading all starting at five bucks, check me out on Fiverr. I have a bad habit of giving my customers a little more than what they pay for, and I’ve got the kick-ass reviews to prove it.

Filed Under: ~Rach

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Primary Sidebar

Hi, I’m Rachel, and I can help you self-publish your book.

Professional Book Formatting

Finished your book and looking for professional book formatting? Visit me on Fiverr to find out if I am open for new projects and talk to me about an estimate.

I specialize in children's book formatting, but I also love working on fantasy and scifi novels, romance, self-help, and books to help others grow in their faith.

Book Covers

I design professional book covers. On the front page of my site you can see a few samples of my particular design style. I'm not a painter or an illustrator, but rather I specialize in graphic design and top class typography.

אֵל גִּבּוֹר

My business is adoringly and gratefully dedicated to Jesus Christ, my mighty hero, who has rescued me over and over again. I love you, Jesus, please keep me by your side.

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