Truth Universally Acknowledged

The title of this blog is an obvious reference to my favourite author, Jane Austen. My other great inspiration is Ella Fitzgerald. I intend this site to be general musings about things which interest me, and hopefully you as well.

Name:
Location: Auckland, New Zealand

I'm a girl in her twenties living in New Zealand - of Irish and Scottish descent. I'm married to a wonderful guy and we live in a tiny house in the suburbs with a menagerie of soft toys and model aircraft. My main occupations at the moment are attempting to become and author and surviving my day job... wish me luck!


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Web truthuniversal.blogspot.com

The Truth Universally Acknowledged Resource Centre (UK)

Browse stuff I like at Amazon.co.uk.


The Truth Universally Acknowledged Resource Centre (US)

Browse stuff I like at Amazon.com.

Thursday, 31 August 2006

Winter beauty

Taken by yours truly in the Tongiriro National Park.



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Friday, 25 August 2006

Pride & Prejudice meets Harry Potter

My connection is a bit too slow to do this justice, but apparently it's very funny.

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Beautiful books and deviant language

Click here to see gorgeous photos of the world's most grand libraries.

It seems companies want to control the way we use language. I don't know why Google has problems with us "googling" - I would have thought any publicity was a good thing.

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Friday, 18 August 2006

We'll be coming round the mountain...

Off to Whakapapa for a week. The forecast isn't that great, but hopefully we'll get one or two days in...

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Tuesday, 15 August 2006

New Citroen best car to be run over by

Good to know.



Pedestrians will stand a fighting chance of escaping head injuries if bowled over by Citroen's latest luxury car, but social conscience will carry a hefty price tag for its owners.

Although the European carmaker has yet to finalise New Zealand specifications for the Citroen C6, which is expected around Christmas or early next year, it indicated yesterday that buyers were unlikely to get any change from $100,000.

But the car, as well as being the first vehicle to win a maximum four-star rating for protecting pedestrians in European crash tests, has joined several other models in scoring top marks for the safety of its occupants.

The test results, out today and endorsed by Land Transport NZ and the Automobile Association as partners in the complementary Australian new car assessment programme, follow Citroen's provision of an "active bonnet" system to cushion pedestrians.

Impact absorbers are built into the front of the car to minimise leg injuries, and sensors trigger a bonnet-raising mechanism to shield the heads of pedestrians from hard engine parts.

Dummy body parts were catapulted at the car at a simulated 40km/h, leading Australian experts to conclude that pedestrians hit at that speed would have a good chance of escaping permanent brain injuries.

Even so, Jack Haley, of Australia's National Roads and Motorists' Association, told the Herald nothing beat "trying to avoid an impact in the first place" by jumping out of the way.

As for occupants of the new car, Citroen says it offers "exceptionally polished road manners" and such safety features as a "lane departure warning system" and nine airbags.

Citroen New Zealand general manager Mark Patterson said that although the safety of occupants would no doubt remain a priority for buyers, the company was keen to provide the best protection for everyone who came into contact with its vehicles.

The latest crash tests awarded three stars for pedestrian safety to the new Fiat Punto, which also gained a maximum of five for occupant protection, and two stars to the VW Passat (four occupant stars).

At the bottom of the class for protecting pedestrians was the Hyundai Tucson four-wheel-drive, with just one star, although it gained four for occupant safety.

The Toyota HiAce light van also gained one pedestrian star in the Australian crash test, and just under four for its occupants.

~ NZ Herald

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Wednesday, 2 August 2006

A new theory

So I sent off submission #3 this week, to another local NZ publisher. When going through all the local publishers' lists, again, a new theory on why I'm being rejected hit me. (This is of course the back up theory, firmly behind the 'my book sucks' theory)

All of the books on the local lists seem to have some kind of reference to NZ in them - they're set here, or feature NZers in other parts of the world. As you may imagine from my literary tastes, my book is firmly set in England and has no connections to NZ whatsoever (except for the fact that I live here!).

So now I am researching UK agents. The publisher I would most like to target there does take unsolicited submissions, but not by email. The international reply coupon thing is just too complicated, so I am opting to contact agents who accept email queries.

Hopefully this will shed some light on which theory is correct...

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