K. H. Koehler

a u t h o r / a r t i s t
February 9th, 2012 by k. h. koehler

Guest Post: What George Burns and Gracie Allen Taught Me by Louise Bohmer

Today’s post is brought to you by the lovely and talented Louise Bohmer. Please read on.

What George Burns and Gracie Allen Taught Me

by Louise Bohmer

When I was a kid I was a voracious reader, but we were poor, and Mom and Dad couldn’t always afford to buy me a new book on grocery day. So I’d head to the library and grab two or three hard covers, or, if it was winter and too nasty to walk to the library, I’d rummage through Mom’s old Harlequins and Reader’s Digest Condensed Books. Some Canucks will remember these, but for my cross border friends a Reader’s Digest condensed book consisted of a handful of current bestsellers chopped up and crammed into one volume.

And it didn’t matter what the topic. I had to read. I still read a lot when I can, but as a kid it was my favorite obsession. Didn’t matter if it was horror, a hospital drama, a historical romance. If that’s all I had to stop the constant white noise in my head, then I’d read it. Reading was my escape, my safe place, and it calmed my thoughts.

So one summer afternoon I picked up Gracie: A Love Story. George Burns’ account of his life spent with wife and performing partner, Gracie Allen. I wasn’t big on romances of any kind, but I liked George Burns well enough, so I figured what the hell.

As a kid, I didn’t believe in love. At least, not romantic love. Oh, sure, you could love your mom, your brothers and sisters, I got that. But there was no way you were convincing teen Louise romantic love really existed. Teen Louise figured people just used people, and pretended to be romantically inclined. Yeah, teen Louise was a bit of a know-it-all and way too cynical for her own good.

But, I figured if I ever did this love thing, well, I needed some guidelines I could get behind. Some pointers for avoiding the pitfalls and douche bags. That advice, strangely enough, came from George Burns.

See, here’s the thing. I don’t believe in marriage either, and I came to that conclusion by the time I was 14. No offense to those who do get behind it. To each their own is a big motto in my life. But, for me, marriage was, and is, a contract of ownership. And I don’t own anyone and no one owns me. That and the exorbitant amount of money often shelled out on a wedding, when said money could be saved for a house or car, made me want to steer clear. (Plus I hate wearing dresses, and there is no way in hell I want that many people watching me walk down an aisle in high heeled shoes, when there’s a 99.9% chance I’ll trip and fall on my face.)

But, I decided if I ever did do this relationship deal, I needed to know what I wanted as much as I knew what I didn’t want. And as I delved into the pages of Gracie, one piece of advice George gave to his readers stuck with me. To paraphrase: If you’re going to marry anyone, makes sure they’re your friend as well as your lover.

And, for me, George had a point. He said, as you get old, the sex might taper off, the lust might fade, but if you can still talk to that person, if they can make you laugh and you can make them laugh back, maybe, just maybe, you’ll make it.

So I took that interesting thought and I tucked it in my brain. Might seems strange that something so simple, a turn of phrase that’s really become somewhat clichéd, made an impact on me. But, for most of my teenage years, I hadn’t encountered a relationship like this. It seemed so novel to me. Most of the married people I knew seemed miserable, and often appeared to hate their spouses. Honestly, I thought that was the norm.

Many years later, I would meet a person who would become my dear friend and partner. Keeping George’s advice ever in the back of my head, I decided this was a person I could love romantically for a very long time. I could laugh with him, talk with him for many hours, and while it hasn’t always been easy or perfect, ten years later he is still my best friend. He takes care of me when I’m sick, and I do the same. He washes the dishes, even when I tell him not to because it’s my turn. He vacuums because he knows I hate it, and I clean up his nightstand full of candy wrappers, because I know he forgets.

It’s the little things like this that embody romance for me. See, flowers and candy are wonderful, but when a person washes laundry on their day off just so you can write, well, that’s my definition of true love.

So thank you, George Burns, for that little piece of advice I tucked in the back of my mind twenty years ago. I’ve still never walked down the aisle, and I never plan to, but I’m married to my dearest friend just the same.

***

L. Bohmer was the pen name under which Louise Bohmer once wrote erotic fiction. Today, she writes erotic fiction under other pen names, Isabel Dyakov being one.

She lives in New Brunswick, Canada, with a tattooed giant and assorted fur children. To learn more about Louise and her alter egos, visit: www.louisebohmer.com

Her erotic romance collection, Passion Plays, will be released February 14. The Passion Plays Teaser, featuring an essay On Love from KV Taylor, is now available at Smashwords, Kindle, and Louise’s website. To keep up with release news for the collection, bookmark: http://www.louisebohmer.com/site/passion-plays/

February 6th, 2012 by k. h. koehler

Wanted: Portfolios

This is an extremely unusual post for me, but I thought I should do it anyway. As my cover design services expand, I find I’m not entirely satisfied with a lot of stock images. It’s a case where I can go through hundreds of pics before finding even one or two that expresses the emotion or ideals I want for a particular book cover. I know what I want. It’s just so difficult finding something that syncs with it.

To that end, I would love to have more private portfolios available to me, so if you’re a photographer or a cover model, please drop me an email. I will do my very best to compensate you for your work, assuming your rates are reasonable, of course. You will also receive full credit in the book and I will be happy to help promote your work and services.

In your email please include:

- A link to your online portfolio, so I can see if your models or modelling meshes with my needs, or at least a sample in the email so I can get some idea.

- Your rates or your expected compensation, so I can tell if I can afford you or not. Please don’t be offended if I tell you your work is beautiful but I can’t afford your rates. Keep in mind I’m just a little person running a one-person company. :)

- Any stipulations you may have in regards to using your work.

- Current contact information, so your email doesn’t bounce.

Please send this to khkoehler(at)yahoo(dot)com. I will get back to you in approximately 48 hours or sooner, if I can, and we’ll take it from there. Please also let me know if you are the photographer’s or model’s representative, and please do NOT contact me unless the artist or model is aware of it. If you have questions or concerns, please include them in your email.

Keep in mind, I love working long-terms with models and photographers, so our relationship will likely not end with just one or two projects.

That’s it and I’m looking forward to hearing from you.

February 4th, 2012 by k. h. koehler

Playing Around

Presently, I have a fun little personal project I’m playing around with, as time allows. I’m putting together an anthology of random short stories and maybe a novelette or two. The stories will range from recent to going all the way back 15+ years. The finished project will be released on Kindle, Nook and Smashwords.

I’d thought about doing this for some time, and I’m finally gathering enough material, although this might take a bit longer as I’m waiting to see if a short story will be inducted into a new anthology project (or not). I also want to work on an original that’s never been published anywhere. My lineup, so far, is thus:

Ouroboros (novelette)
“Retirement Home” (formerly offered as only a book signing giveaway)
“Bad Hand Man”
“The Innkeeper’s Widow”
“Past Imperfect: A Scorpion Story” (original Scorpion short)
“The Clockwork Vampire” (the lost chapter from A Clockwork Vampire)

More material will be added and announced in the next couple of months. The subject material will range from horror and romance to drama and steampunk. And for those who want to see the cover, a preview!

Stay tuned.

January 31st, 2012 by k. h. koehler

Google Minus

This is just to inform everyone who’s interested that I dropped my Google+ account. No reason, except I really just don’t have the time available to spread myself out over social networks anymore. Too many covers to do, too many clients to attend to, too many books to write, and too much work at KHP to handle. I’ll also be writing for a monthly column soon, details forthcoming. And when it comes right down to it, I really want to use my free/fun time getting a new book done for you folks. I mean, I like LOL cat pics and all that, but I’m finding myself rather too bogged down of late and it’s a point of contention with me that I get my work assignments done on time.

But I’m hardly a hermit, and I’m definitely not hiding. I’m still available at Twitter and Facebook (which has failed to upgrade for me for some odd reason, but I’m fine with that, as the new FB is fugly as hell and ridiculously complex-looking). I also have an account at Youtube and 8Tracks, but I only use them to upload promotional material of interest. I don’t generally interact with the communities. Of course, this site has no intention of going anywhere. My old DeivantArt account remains, but I’m only keeping that around as a means to communicate with other artists who offer stock images for sale or trade, so if you need to contact me for any reason, your best bet is directly here. Anything else, and you might be waiting a bit. It’s not unusual for me to get so distracted I may go days or even weeks without checking an old account somewhere.

Please be aware that I do NOT have accounts at any other social networking sites—Myspace, Goodreads, etc. There really is no reason why I can’t do here what I would be doing there, so I think this keeps things neater and simpler for me.

I do think it’s possible for writers to get very caught up in social networking beyond just keeping in touch with readers, fans and other writers. Writers are, by their very nature, semi-celebrities, so the desire to connect and stay connected and “on center stage” can be incredibly powerful. But the truth is, we’re no different than anyone else, and we struggle and speak like everyone else. The difference is we design our careers around speaking. But I often see writers overwhelmed by the sheer weight and power of the internet, and so caught up in social awareness issues and “speaking online” that they can lose focus on their first job, which is to react, write down that reaction, and deliver it to the masses, whether sad, funny or cathartic. My belief is that, with a little work, a writer can balance both ends.

I won’t be far. And I’ll see you online.