Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Write that memory down NOW!





My next book out will be Without Harry Dean which is my version of a family story. My father's older brother was a crackerjack air pilot back in the early days of flying. Sadly, he was badly injured in an air crash in 1931 and died hours later in Freeman Hospital, Joplin, Missouri.



My father and his siblings are long dead so I had no one to question about my air pilot uncle. So my story is mostly just a made up tale.


That's why I feel it is important for anyone reading this to write down those squibs of memory about an old aunt or uncle, a grandparent and any family member that comes to mind. Put into words everything you know about your family , give it as an insert in a birthday or holiday greeting card. You may never know, but perhaps there's a future family member who will wri
because your memories gave them inspiration.

Friday, May 20, 2011

New Jersey's Pinelands

The Pinelands, or Pine Barrens, of New Jersey are unique. Covering acres of land, long ago they were home to bog iron industries, then their vast bogs and lakes offered a perfect setting for cranberry harvesters. Driving through the Pinelands over a period of weeks, I fell in love with its landscape of pine trees, wild rhodendrons, and hollies, and then with two centuries old brick houses on either end of a small Pinelands town. Hence, my book, Comings and Goings, a Story of the New Jersey Pinelands, began.
Come to New Jersey, drive through the vast Pinelands, and you'll find yourself enchanted with this wild, haunting landscape.

Friday, November 26, 2010

New Jersey stories


My story of a grandmother's special gift to her beloved grandson, Diary Secrets, will be coming out in paperback this winter. It will be available on Amazon and Barnes and Noble and will cost approximately $11.50. This is my Civil War story although most of my writings touch upon the Civil War or World War II. The story line goes this way. Young Charlotte Frazier escapes Civil War era Virginia with her special needs brother lest their crazy father murder them. They are taken in by a kind but elderly Quaker abolitionist, and from this safe haven, Charlotte eventually goes on to find love and happiness. She wills her old Virginia homestead to her grandson Ken, hoping that he can restore it and find his own happy life.
Coming out in kindle format in the next few weeks is my other story,The Folksinger, which tells of two childhood friends, Jim McFarland and Ted Peterson, who rise to musical fame in the 1960's . Jim remains beside Ted's side through very dark times, and after Ted's tragic death. Jim drops out of the world of music and devotes himself to saving high-risk teenagers. The Folksinger is definitely not light-hearted comedy, but it is also not dismal and depressing. This is my story of the longlasting effects of childhood sexual abuse and it has an underlying theme of the need to carry on no matter what life brings.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

My Website!!!


Okay, it won't get awards for greatness, but I worked on it and now I have a website. It is
http://www.jbdinizo.com. Mostly, it tells about books that I will be publishing in the near future. Remember, you can always reach me at adinizo@hotmail.com.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Living beyond Childhood Abuse

I am a survivor. Many of us are, whether of physical, verbal or sexual abuse as children. Sadly, we came from all backgrounds, rich, poor, urban, suburban. Some of us make it and go on to lead productive lives. Others do not fare as well, and end up dysfunctional, sometimes alcoholic, drug addicted or even dead.
What gets the abused child through to adulthood and an enjoyable life are the comfort zones that give hope and support. Consider becoming a positive influence in a small, sad someone's life the next time you find them crying or acting out in strange ways. You can never know how much good you do with a simple act of kindness.

Friday, April 16, 2010

What else have I written?

Next will be Diary Secrets which is the story of a young girl who flees Civil War era Virginia with her learning disabled brother lest they both die at their father's hand. They settle in Philadelphia in the home of a Quaker abolitionist. The girl is forced to flee eventually from what seemed a safe home. She ends up, quite by accident, in Seaside on the New Jersey shore. Many years later, her grandson goes back to the Virginia homestead, now just ruins, and begins life anew.

Sometime in the near future, Without Harry Dean will be in print. Harry Dean Burke is an early aviator. He dies in a senseless crash as did many pilots of those early times. His young bride must continue life without her beloved Harry Dean, and this is her story of how she managed those decades as a widow, enduring loss and finding the love of family in a most unusual way.