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Members who wish to submit a blog entry should send it to sandiegowriterseditorsguild@gmail.com. A review committee will consider each submission for membership interest and may suggest edits before publishing the submission to the blog. For more information, see Blog or Be Blogged.

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  • 4 Aug 2025 3:38 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    Saturday, August 23, 2025

    10 a.m. - 4 p.m.

    Reserve your free general admission tickets now!

     

     

    Let’s bring our community closer together through the shared experience of reading and discussing great books! The inaugural KPBS San Diego Book Festival on the University of San Diego campus is a free event for book lovers of all ages. Attendees will enjoy panel discussions with award-winning authors, activities, live entertainment, exhibitors including local authors and independent booksellers, and more.

    Check out over 70 author exhibitors joining us this year in The Writers' Block area of the festival. Authors are listed in alphabetical order. The Writers' Block will be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

    https://cdn.kpbs.org/6f/66/b947777e4a79a25803a20c32cb60/book-graphics2.svg

     


  • 4 Aug 2025 2:07 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    • August 23 — Visit the Library Shop SD booth at the KPBS San Diego Book Festival featuring workshops, activities, photo booths, live entertainment, and award-winning authors. Registration is encouraged. Parking at USD is free.
    • SeptemberLibrary Card Sign-up Month is the time San Diego joins libraries nationwide to promote library card sign-ups and the power and perks of the card.
    •  October 1 - November 1 — The Library Shop SD's Matchbook Story Contest opens for entries into our San Diego's shortest story contest.


  • 2 Aug 2025 6:12 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    In partnership with the San Diego Writers Festival and Coronado Public Library, Acorn Publishing is launching a nationwide contest to discover one exceptional unpublished author.

    The winner will:

    --receive a full-service publishing package valued at over $11,000.

    -- be announced live on stage at the 2026 San Diego Writers Festival in Coronado, CA.

    Key Dates

    • Submissions Open: August 15, 2025
    • Submission Deadline: November 15, 2025
    • Winner Announced: March 28, 2026 (Live at the Festival)

     Submit

     Eligibility Snapshot

    • Open to unpublished authors (no prior published novels or memoirs)
    • Novels or memoirs only (50,000–95,000 words)
    • Submission fee: $35
    • Writers must be 18+ and submit an original manuscript in English

     The winner will be selected based on voice, execution, and overall breakout potential.

     Learn More

    Contact: Holly Kammier, Co-Founder, Acorn Publishing CONTACT@ACORNPUBLISHINGLLC.COM

    www.acornpublishingllc.com www.sandiegowritersfestival.com https://www.facebook.com/AcornPublishingLLC https://www.instagram.com/acornpublishing/ https://www.instagram.com/sdwritersfest/


  • 31 Jul 2025 5:40 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    It isn’t the trauma that almost ruins Lavender, it is the shame she swallows when she keeps a sexual assault she experiences at a college party a secret. As she pushes away those closest to her, she finds herself alone and lonely.

    To her former fifth-grade teacher, Mrs. Gordon, she’s the reliable babysitter; to her devoted extended family, she’s the beloved daughter, niece, and cousin; and to Jana, who attends the same high school, she is best friend. But her assault at a college party, leaves Lavender terrified of being truly seen and known.

    Lavender unexpectedly forms loving relationships with a boy pen pal in Cuba that she’s never met, and a grandmother who usually doesn’t remember who Lavender is.

    When her lies begin unraveling in a very public way, how will others treat Lavender?

    This book kept me glued to the page, wondering how it would end for Lavender.


  • 25 Jul 2025 12:47 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    SDWEG member, Debbie Wastling has released her third book in the Bell Family Series.

    In the early 20th century in Northern England, Elizabeth writes to her two daughters, sharing her memories as she is dying of ovarian cancer.

    She tells of her travails when both her parents died while she was in grade school. Her oldest brother, an estranged bastard offspring of her parents, runs the family pub and quickly runs it to the ground. After that, Elizabeth and her younger brother, not yet finished with schooling, struggle to survive with the help of wealthy family members.

    At 19, Elizabeth meets the love of her life while she distributes suffragette pamphlets. Percy is not high-born, but he is hard-working. He, too, lost his parents at a young age. He and Elizabeth form a strong friendship that helps each of them bear and overcome life’s challenges.

    Through Elizabeth’s stories, the reader learns what daily life is like for women living before and after WWI. During the war, she becomes an ambulance driver, and her husband, though not enlisted, is separated from the family to oversee the repair of damaged ships.

    Women fill men’s jobs while men are away at war; however, when men return home, many resist allowing women to fill men’s jobs or even to wear trousers. It is even frowned on for a woman to bicycle to work. These, and other facts, portray the culture and customs related to British females. By the end of the book, women over 30 years old have gained the right to vote.

    Wastling brings history to life by sharing details of daily life down to cooking, sewing family members’ clothes, knitting and crocheting sweaters, and even how to get around using an outhouse in the winter; in this way, we see how women and their families lived in pre-industrial times.

    Whether you are a history buff or a general fiction lover, this book is an enjoyable read.



  • 18 Jul 2025 6:58 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    M. Lee Buompensiero, has released her first novel in the Spirit Club Mystery series. Something Wicked features a reluctant heroine, Sophie Lawton, who not only sees and talks to ghosts, she solves crimes with their help. An aunt Sophie has never met, dies and leaves Volare Investigations to her.

     A librarian by training, Sophie resists the calling to run her dead relative’s investigative services. However, her first case involves a kidnapping that very much resembles her birth mother’s unsolved case. With the help of a ghost secretary, Maude, and Maude’s deceased, disgraced police investigator ex-husband, Sophie becomes convinced to join forces with the couple to solve a girl's disappearance. It's a race against time to save the girl before a serial killer makes the girl his next trophy victim. Sophie battles against the odds to find the missing girl before it's too late.

    I like the idea that ghosts might be helpful to a detective and that they are unpredictable; often disappearing just when they are about to disclose valuable information. I highly recommend this book, even to people who are afraid of ghost stories.

    Marcia has published a mystery novel: Sumerland, which was winner of the 2017 San Diego Book Awards, Best Published Mystery category. Writing under the pseudonym "Loren Zahn," she has published the Theo Hunter mystery series: Dirty Little Murders (2009/2017), Deadly Little Secrets (2015), and Fatal Little Lies (2018). Deadly Little Secrets was a finalist in the 2015 San Diego Book Awards unpublished manuscript division.

    Marcia acted as Managing Editor and publisher of ten anthologies for the Guild between 2013 and 2019. She is the publisher of five novels and biographical work for authors, including members of SDWEG. She holds the office of Treasurer as a member of the Guild's board of directors.


  • 14 Jul 2025 12:18 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    SDWEG member, Muffy Walker celebrates the release of her debut novel, Memory Weavers. The book has received the Firebird Book Award, the Literary Titan Silver Book Award, the Hawthorne Prize, and was selected as finalist for the 2025 International Impact Book Awards in the Women's Fiction category.

    Rachel, in her early twenties, was raped in her college dorm. Traumatized, she quit college. At age 28, she continued to suffer from panic attacks and sometimes hallucinated a replay of her rape.

    Hadley, in her forties, has three children and a loving husband. Unfortunately, she has a form of early-onset Alzheimer’s.

    Meeting in a psychiatric practice waiting room, the two women form a supportive friendship. Their bond strengthens as each struggles with individual memory issues.

    Memory Weavers helps the reader to understand the struggle of each woman and shows how their conditions affect their family members. The story attests to the power of friendship. Rachel gains needed help to recover and heal while Hadley’s husband and children benefit from Rachel’s friendship as they cope with the painful decline of their parent and wife.


  • 10 Jul 2025 7:50 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The KPBS San Diego Book Festival will be held on Saturday, August 23, 2025, 10 AM – 4 PM.

     Location: University of San Diego, 5998 Alcala Park Way, San Diego, CA 92110. 

     Admission: General admission is free; however, registration is strongly encouraged. Parking on the USD campus is complimentary for Festival attendees.

     Activities: This event is for book and library lovers of all ages. Enjoy workshops, photo booths, live entertainment, panel discussions with award-winning authors, and more!

     




  • 30 Jun 2025 4:24 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)



    Long time SDWEG member, Dr. Ruth Leyse Wallace, recently released her fourth book, Integrating Nutrition and Mental Health Care.

    While the book is written for clinical settings, it is written in plain English and offers sensible nutritional facts. I found it helpful in my everyday life and recommend it to the general public

    Here is an excerpt from the book:

    Mental health counselors, psychologists, social workers, and psychiatrists realize that nutrition may be a factor in their clients’ mental health, but a lack of nutritional science background and resources makes it difficult for them to incorporate nutrition into the care they provide. Likewise, registered dietitian nutritionists new to the field of mental health care (whether in a facility or in private practice) may feel the need for succinct resources geared to this area of nutritional care. Integrating Nutrition and Mental Health Care illuminates the intersection between nutrition and mental health, bridging the gap for professionals in both fields. It presents resources in areas such as caffeine intake, family history of a genetically transmitted nutrition-related condition, interpretation of laboratory nutritional assessment, and safe upper limits of supplements, as well as additional nutrition factors, helping practitioners easily incorporate selected nutritional aspects into the mental health care of clients.

    Wallace received her doctorate from the University of Arizona in Tucson. She practiced clinical dietetics in the areas of mental health, eating disorders, substance abuse, and general psychiatry at Osawatomie State Hospital in Osawatomie, Kansas; at The Menninger Foundation in Topeka, Kansas; and at Sharp Mesa Vista Hospital in San Diego, California. While in Topeka, in the early 1980s, she established one of the first private practices for nutrition counseling in the state.

    Wallace served as an adjunct faculty member at Pima County College in Tucson and Mesa Community College in San Diego. She has published three books: Nutrition and Mental Health, Linking Nutrition to Mental Health: A Scientific Exploration, and The Metaparadigm of Clinical Dietetics: Derivation and Applications.

    A 50-year member of the American Dietetic Association (ADA), now the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, she has been an active contributor to the Behavioral Health Nutrition (BHN) dietetic practice group in the Academy serving as Mental Health Resource Professional on the Executive Committee and as co- author of the 2018 revision of the Standards of Practice and Standards of Professional Performance for the BHN dietetic practice group. In 2010, she was presented the BHN Excellence in


  • 22 Jun 2025 3:58 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    Guild member, JR Stayer, JR has produced his third book in the Braxton Century series a historical fantasy set in the late Victorian, Edwardian, and early 20th century. Braxton, as Europe hurtles toward war and revolutions ignite across continents, possesses the foresight to shape the future. He builds wealth that rivals that of Elon Musk, all while navigating two world wars, secret intelligence networks, and the deadly schemes of those who would see him ruined. Being a prince, a financial genius, and a man of varied sexual appetites, Braxton lives an enviable life and eventually becomes King of the British Empire.

    For those who revel in historical persons of power and influence, your fantasies will be fulfilled.

     


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