November in The Meadow

(For the full experience with formatting and photographs and lovingly created assets, head on over to https://marinainthemeadow.substack.com/ — it looks much better on Substack!)

I am so glad you're here, Moonbeams.

Nov 12, 2024

A very warm hello to The Meadow community! Thank you very much for stopping by.

When I released The Meadow in the early days of spring, I had been standing at the edge of a cliff I couldn’t see. So, The Meadow that I thought would always be in season, froze just like me, wilted in the heat of the too-hot sun.

Slowly, over the span of this year I’ve been listening to myself, making the necessary changes, planting seeds. Finally, I’ve found some shade. Sometimes it falters when the wind picks up, but I’m making space again and it feels good. There’s still a ways to go, but that’s just life, isn’t it?

It’s been a while since I popped on here to connect with you all, and a lot has happened. I’ve been to Oregon and California, southern areas of Iceland, and I traversed a giant chunk of the Scottish Highlands solo just last month. I’ve done a lot of growing and thinking and generating. So, grab a hot cuppa, if you’re so inclined, sit back, and enjoy this extra special issue of The Meadow. (Please excuse any typos. I’ve been writing this edition since early September and I am immune to all its errors now!)

To revive The Meadow and celebrate all of your being here, this edition of The Meadow contains all paid subscription offerings for free.

Enjoy!

Annoucements!

There are lots of announcements this month! And you’re all the first to know! So hold onto your hats, moonbeams!

Marina Edits Autumn Sale

At the start of the Autumn season, we welcomed Kelsey Evans (who who might know as @kelseyconnellywrites on Instagram) to the team! Just one month in, Kelsey has proved to be such an asset!

To celebrate a successful opening, we’re hosting a surprise end of year sale! Any bookings that come inn for spots between now and December 31, you can book with 20% off! This is the BIGGEST sale I’ve ever had. So take advantage while there are still spots available!

Marina Edits Winter 2025 Books Opening!

Speaking of spots! We’re rolling right into the Winter Season (January-April 2025), which means we’ll be opening our books once again! For the general public, our books will open for the Winter Season on November 20th. But for all of you wonderful subscribers of The Meadow, you can start booking now! My books are always open to past and current clients, so January is already filling up.

To book with us, fill out the contact form on my website (marinaedits.com) or via this link and we’ll get working on booking you in!

If you book between now and December 11, all services book for January to April are 10% off! We’re embracing Mr. Bennet—we’re quite at our leisure!

If any young men come for Mary or Kitty, for heaven's sake, send them in. I'm quite at my leisure. - Mr. Bennet

Return to the Wild Retreat

This next announcement is the one that I’m most excited for. Yes, you read that right! I’m hosting my very own immersive, nature-based writing retreat in the heart of the Cotswolds next October 2025. And it is going to be full of magic. I just know it.

October 20-26, 2025
Cumbria, England

10 writers, six nights, lots and lots of creative magic.

Immerse yourself in the breathtakingly serene landscapes of Cumbria with the Return to the Wild Writing Retreat. Nestled in the heart of the Lake District, this retreat offers an idyllic setting to reconnect with nature, storytelling, and your creative spirit. Over the course of a week, you will partake in daily writing critique circles and faculty talks led by experienced authors, designed to inspire and enhance your craft and to rekindle your connection with writing and with nature.

Whether you are a seasoned writer or just beginning your journey, the Return to the Wild Writing Retreat is a haven for creativity and reflection, encouraging you to unleash your imagination in a wild and beautiful setting. Join us for an unforgettable experience that will renew your passion for writing and maybe even inspire your next project!

You, you beautiful newsletter subscriber, get early access to all of the retreat information!

Here’s the link! https://www.marinaedits.com/returntothewildretreat

Password to enter the site: Wild2025

Enrolment opens on December 7, 2024!

I can’t wait to tell stories with you in England!

My Pen in the air: A Writer’s Courage & Musings

But I thought, of the wren's singing, what could this
be if it isn't a prayer?
So I just listened, my pen in the air.

– MARY OLIVER

This phase of life has called to me to pick up Women Who Run With the Wolves by Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés again. Apt, considering it is partly the medicine I needed to find myself and my craft again—those two things so incontrovertibly intertwined.

“Fairy tales, myths, and stories provide understandings which sharpen our sight so that we can pick out and pick up the path left by the wildish nature.”

That path, for me, is joy. It’s at the root of why I create and I lost sight of that for a long time. I forgot that this dream I am chasing is one born out of the light, not a desire to monetize, but to share and to immortalize. While those are all things I still want, realizing this has offered me the opportunity to step back and reevaluate why I write.

If you were part of Writing With the Soul, you’ll be familiar with The Writer’s Creed. It’s that guiding light I have to come back to every time I sit town to write. Part of that, a very important part is the joy it brings.

So, now it is my job to stay in that grounded realm. To remind myself of my reason, my creed every time I begin to disconnect. The thriller I am writing has been the biggest challenge. I’ve been writing ever since I can remember, but this story is stretching my abilities, honing and challenging what I know about story. I love it so much, but my goodness, I wish writing it didn’t feel like navigating my way through a foreign forest thick with both hazards and beauty. I’ll make my way to the heartwood soon. I know it.

In those darkest parts of my process, I also have to remind myself that I want to write to be a mirror, to be a voice, especially in these darkest of days. As Dr. Estés says,

“… sometimes a word, a sentence or a poem or a story, is so resonant, so right, it causes us to remember, at least for an instant, what substance we are really made from, and where is our true home.”

That is the crux of it all. I write to capture what makes us all human. And what’s more human than joy?


Sometimes There Are No Rules: Industry, Craft, & Other Gathered Seeds

As long as you are dancing, you can
break the rules.
Sometimes breaking the rules is just
extending the rules.

Sometimes there are no rules.
– MARY OLIVER

Recently, I came across this quote by Barbara Kingsolver:

“Close the door. Write with no one looking over your shoulder. Don’t try to figure out what other people want to hear from you; figure out what you have to say. It’s the one and only thing you have to offer.”

This is something else I’ve been exploring lately. I’ve been challenging the rules of writing craft as I dream up new stories. Studying some of my favourite books and pulling them a part. If a story is all roots and trunk and branches, what would happen if I remove one of these parts? Surely it won’t be fatal if it’s just a branch here and there. Surely.

Challenging the rules of writing has come from drafting my thriller. It has so many layers, so many ways of telling, I’ve been spending hours and hours sitting with it, visualizing all of it’s parts wondering at the final shape. It feels like I’m making this story out of clay. It takes every part of my mind, my body, to make one small step forward. It isn’t because I’m sticking to any strict set of rules. I’m trying to listen to how it needs to be told (and I am hoping beyond all hopes that that will be the right way for readers). My one rule is that there must be a happy ending.

So, I’ve got to let go and trust. Which for someone who loves being in control (and works in publishing and therefore trusts in the “rules” of story and plot) is going to be a gargantuan feat of its own.

Your Bones Knowing: Those Things That Settle My Soul

you must be able
to do three things:
to love what is mortal;
to hold it

against your bones knowing
your own life depends on it;
and, when the time comes to let it go,
to let it go.

– MARY OLIVER

Reading

How lucky am I to know so many talented writers. Here are four books written by four of my friends and they’re good, moonbeams. Really, really good.

THE WOODSMOKE WOMEN’S BOOK OF SPELLS by Rachel Greenlaw

In a magical new direction for One Christmas Morning author Rachel Greenlaw, an evocative and mysterious story about lost love and the magic of coming home, for readers of Adrienne Young and Breanne Randall.

There is an old tale woven through the mountain town of Woodsmoke about a stranger who appears as the first snow falls in winter, who will disappear without a trace as the frost thaws in spring, leaving a broken heart behind.

Carrie Morgan ran from Woodsmoke ten years ago, and the decision has haunted her ever since. Spending a decade painting and drifting around Europe, she tries to forget her family’s legacy and the friends she left behind. But the Morgan women have always been able to harness the power of the mountains surrounding the town, and their spells—and curses—are sewn into the soil. The mountains, they say, never forget.

Sure enough, when Carrie’s grandmother dies and leaves behind her dilapidated cottage, she returns to renovate—certain she will only be there for one winter. She meets Matthieu as the temperature dips, a newcomer who offers to help refurbish the cottage. Before long, and despite warnings from her great-aunt Cora of the old stories, Carrie finds herself falling for the charming stranger. But when the frost thaws in spring, Matthieu goes missing.

Carrie is convinced he’s real, and he’s in danger. As she fights her way across the mountains to find him, she must confront all the reasons why she left Woodsmoke and decide whether the place she’s spent the last decade running from is the home she’s been searching for.

Rachel Greenlaw, the beloved author of One Christmas Morning, returns with another beautifully crafted, emotionally charged, and romantic tale about lost love and the magic of coming home.

"The Woodsmoke Women's Book of Spells captivated me from the very first page... I absolutely treasured it from beginning to end." —Cecelia Ahern, New York Times bestselling author

FOR SHE IS WRATH by Emily Varga

A sweeping, Pakistani romantic fantasy retelling of The Count of Monte Cristo, where one girl seeks revenge against those who betrayed her—including the boy she used to love.

Three hundred and sixty-four days.
Framed for a crime she didn't commit, Dania counts down her days in prison until she can exact revenge on Mazin, the boy responsible for her downfall, the boy she once loved—and still can't forget. When she discovers a fellow prisoner may have the key to exacting that vengeance--a stolen djinn treasure--they execute a daring escape together and search for the hidden treasure.

Armed with dark magic and a new identity, Dania enacts a plan to bring down those who betrayed her and her family, even though Mazin stands in her way. But seeking revenge becomes a complicated game of cat and mouse, especially when an undeniable fire still burns between them, and the power to destroy her enemies has a price. As Dania falls deeper into her web of traps and lies, she risks losing her humanity to her fight for vengeance--and her heart to the only boy she's ever loved.


Watching

I can’t stop thinking about this show. Or playing That song (see Listening below). What an incredible feat of storytelling and romance—which really rubbed in the fact that I am very single haha!


Listening

See Her Out (That's Just Life)” by Francis and the Lights. It doesn’t get any more romantic than an agnostic sex podcaster and a newly single rabbi kissing (especially when that newly single rabbi is Adam Brody).

I’ve been gravitating to anything folkloric these days (see my nature-based storytelling retreat ha!), and “The Lost words Blessings” just fits that bill.

Okay, listen. At the end of this year, Spotify is going to know what’s up. It’s going to tell me that “Comfort” by Nicholas Galitzine is my most played song and I won’t be able to deny it. Not one bit. That’s just the way it is.

Even on the darkest days, I hope you can find a sliver of light.

Yours, with best wishes,

Marina x

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Drafting a Thriller: Part I - The Seeds