Popping in long enough to leave a quick note. My apologies to all those who have been checking the blog looking for the writing links. It's been an insanely busy past couple of months and I haven't been able to keep up with them.
In fact, I will likely switch methods of passing the links along as I have less and less available free time. So, the bad news is that I'm suspending the roundup blog posts for now. The good news is that this has become necessary because I have several projects going that are eating up my time.
I'm still happy to pass along links to great writing posts when I see them, most likely on my twitter feed here: https://twitter.com/gerbsan and on the "Writing" board on my pinterest page here http://pinterest.com/lgerbs/
This blog will stay open, but the posts will be infrequent until I have time to start them up again. If you are a subscriber, of course, you'll get an alert when there's a new post. If you're not, please check back, or you can subscribe with the little button to the left.
Cheers!
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
NEVER ENOUGH by Denise Jaden, plus tips and links
I'm writing from Antioch University, where we're halfway through the Antioch Writers' Workshop. I'll give you a full wrap-up later, but for now, I'd like to bring you Denise Jaden, who is celebrating the launch of her latest, NEVER ENOUGH.
Denise is another GCC sister. You'd never guess it now, but she spent her high school lunch hours trying to tame her curly hair in the bathroom, or playing freeze tag in the drama room. She attended the theatre program at college, and then enjoyed a variety of occupations, including stage production, mushroom farming, and Polynesian dancing. The first draft of her debut novel, Losing Faith, was written in 21 days during National Novel Writing Month. This is her second novel. She lives just outside Vancouver, Canada with her husband and son.
About NEVER ENOUGH:
Denise is another GCC sister. You'd never guess it now, but she spent her high school lunch hours trying to tame her curly hair in the bathroom, or playing freeze tag in the drama room. She attended the theatre program at college, and then enjoyed a variety of occupations, including stage production, mushroom farming, and Polynesian dancing. The first draft of her debut novel, Losing Faith, was written in 21 days during National Novel Writing Month. This is her second novel. She lives just outside Vancouver, Canada with her husband and son.
Loann’s always wanted to be popular and
pretty like her sister, Claire. So when Claire’s ex-boyfriend starts flirting
with her, Loann is willing to do whatever it takes to feel special…even if that
means betraying her sister.
But as Loann slips inside Claire’s world, she discovers that everything is not as it seems. Claire’s quest for perfection is all-consuming, and comes at a dangerous price. And Loann is frightened she could lose the sister she’s always idolized.
As Claire increasingly withdraws from friends and family, Loann struggles to understand her and make amends. Can she heal their relationship—and her sister—before it’s too late?
Denise's tip:
When asked for a tip about writing, I usually offer my usual advice about reading a lot and writing a lot, but I’d like to expand on that a little here. Something I learned while working on Never Enough (and my more recent manuscripts) is that I need to really push myself to get to the good stuff. Word counts may just seem like numbers for some, but I use them religiously to set goals for myself now. I find that often when I start, I will flail around with my words quite a bit. It would be easy to quit at this point, decide that I’d be better to come back another day when my brain is working properly. But if I don’t quit, if I push through, more often than not, I come up with a nugget of great writing, or even a new glimpse of something that solves a story problem.
You can find Denise online on her website, on twitter, and on her blog.
Also! Denise is running a contest on her blog, and you can win stuff! Check it out!
This week's link roundup:
For MG girls, Cassidy's LIGHTS, CAMERA, CASSIDY Charmed Summer Giveaway continues with quizzes, games, and winning! (lightscameracassidy)
10 Traits That are More Important Than Talent (Jody Hedlund)
6 Things to Learn from Hemingway (RachelleGardner)
4 Lessons in Creativity from John Cleese (CoCreativity)
3 Tips for Writers: Revising, Formatting, Querying (One Word After Another)
YA Market Tips and Trends (Adventures in YA and Children's Publishing)
How Are You Going to Grab Readers' Attention on the First 5 Pages? (CarlyWatters)
Query: It's Not Who You Know, it's What You Write (Bent on Books)
Ellen Hopkins on Fearless Writing (Adventures in YA and Children's Publishing)
The Reader Must Want to Know What Happens Next (JaneFriedman)
Getting Bendy (Plotting Twists in Crime Fiction) (Finding Bliss)
Strategies for Overcoming Writer's Block (WriterUnboxed)
Boiling it Down (kidlit.com)
Character Clamor (Gail Carson Levine)
Interview with Literary Agent Gail Hochman (Barbara Rogan)
A Writer's Biggest Mistake (Yes, This Will Be On the Test)
Writers: Act Like a Professional (Writability)
Using Dialog Tags and Punctuation Correctly (Querytracker)
The Best Bad Writing Tips (Bookriot)
Fear of Failing as a Writer (The Writing Life. Simplified)
Productivity (Genreality)
Publishing Tips and YA Market Trends (Adventures in YA and Children's Publishing)
Thoughts on Reading (Read, Write, Reflect)
Look! It's an Idea! (Going from premise to plot) (The Other Side of the Story)
The Lie You're Listening To (Chance Scoggins) (Relevant to how we sometimes treat our writing selves.)
Now go push through and write!
But as Loann slips inside Claire’s world, she discovers that everything is not as it seems. Claire’s quest for perfection is all-consuming, and comes at a dangerous price. And Loann is frightened she could lose the sister she’s always idolized.
As Claire increasingly withdraws from friends and family, Loann struggles to understand her and make amends. Can she heal their relationship—and her sister—before it’s too late?
"Intimate and enlightened... harrowing and inspiring. ...dramatically illustrates
the importance of speaking out and reaching out."
—Publishers Weekly
—Publishers Weekly
You can see the trailer for NEVER ENOUGH on YouTube
Denise's tip:
When asked for a tip about writing, I usually offer my usual advice about reading a lot and writing a lot, but I’d like to expand on that a little here. Something I learned while working on Never Enough (and my more recent manuscripts) is that I need to really push myself to get to the good stuff. Word counts may just seem like numbers for some, but I use them religiously to set goals for myself now. I find that often when I start, I will flail around with my words quite a bit. It would be easy to quit at this point, decide that I’d be better to come back another day when my brain is working properly. But if I don’t quit, if I push through, more often than not, I come up with a nugget of great writing, or even a new glimpse of something that solves a story problem.
You can find Denise online on her website, on twitter, and on her blog.
Also! Denise is running a contest on her blog, and you can win stuff! Check it out!
This week's link roundup:
For MG girls, Cassidy's LIGHTS, CAMERA, CASSIDY Charmed Summer Giveaway continues with quizzes, games, and winning! (lightscameracassidy)
10 Traits That are More Important Than Talent (Jody Hedlund)
6 Things to Learn from Hemingway (RachelleGardner)
4 Lessons in Creativity from John Cleese (CoCreativity)
3 Tips for Writers: Revising, Formatting, Querying (One Word After Another)
YA Market Tips and Trends (Adventures in YA and Children's Publishing)
How Are You Going to Grab Readers' Attention on the First 5 Pages? (CarlyWatters)
Query: It's Not Who You Know, it's What You Write (Bent on Books)
Ellen Hopkins on Fearless Writing (Adventures in YA and Children's Publishing)
The Reader Must Want to Know What Happens Next (JaneFriedman)
Getting Bendy (Plotting Twists in Crime Fiction) (Finding Bliss)
Strategies for Overcoming Writer's Block (WriterUnboxed)
Boiling it Down (kidlit.com)
Character Clamor (Gail Carson Levine)
Interview with Literary Agent Gail Hochman (Barbara Rogan)
A Writer's Biggest Mistake (Yes, This Will Be On the Test)
Writers: Act Like a Professional (Writability)
Using Dialog Tags and Punctuation Correctly (Querytracker)
The Best Bad Writing Tips (Bookriot)
Fear of Failing as a Writer (The Writing Life. Simplified)
Productivity (Genreality)
Publishing Tips and YA Market Trends (Adventures in YA and Children's Publishing)
Thoughts on Reading (Read, Write, Reflect)
Look! It's an Idea! (Going from premise to plot) (The Other Side of the Story)
The Lie You're Listening To (Chance Scoggins) (Relevant to how we sometimes treat our writing selves.)
Now go push through and write!
Thursday, July 05, 2012
Finding the Balance with Jessica Brody, 52 REASONS TO HATE MY FATHER
Today's guest tip is from Jessica Brody, bestselling author of The Karma Club and My Life Undecided, as well as two books for adults: The Fidelity Files and Love Under Cover. Jessica's a TFC and GCC sister, and an amazing organizer, writer, and all-around positive force. Her latest book, 52 REASONS TO HATE MY FATHER, is a story about a spoiled teen heiress, famous for her party-girl antics and tabloid headlines, is forced by her ever-absent mogul father to take on a different low-wage job every week for a year, if she wants any hope of receiving her trust fund. To research for writing this one, she took on several minimum wage jobs, her favorite of which was working the drive-thru at a fast food restaurant. She splits her time between California and Colorado.
About 52 REASONS TO HATE MY FATHER:
Being America’s favorite heiress is a dirty job, but someone’s gotta do it.
Lexington Larrabee has never to work a day in her life. After all, she’s the heiress to the multi-billion-dollar Larrabee Media empire. And heiresses are not supposed to work. But then again, they’re not supposed to crash brand new Mercedes convertibles into convenience stores on Sunset Blvd either.
Which is why, on Lexi’s eighteenth birthday, her ever-absent, tycoon father decides to take a more proactive approach to her wayward life. Every week for the next year, she will have to take on a different low-wage job if she ever wants to receive her beloved trust fund. But if there’s anything worse than working as a maid, a dishwasher, and a fast-food restaurant employee, it’s dealing with Luke, the arrogant, albeit moderately attractive, college intern her father has assigned to keep tabs on her.
In a hilarious “comedy of heiress” about family, forgiveness, good intentions, and best of all, second chances, Lexi learns that love can be unconditional, money can be immaterial, and, regardless of age, everyone needs a little saving. And although she might have 52 reasons to hate her father, she only needs one reason to love him.
Praise for 52 REASONS TO HATE MY FATHER:
“The #1 reason you’ll love this book? Because it’s tons of fun.”
-Bestselling author Meg Cabot
“Famous and spoiled teenage heiress Lexington Larrabee could give the Kardashians a run for their money in this opulent and fast-paced story…sharp writing and over-the-top scenes will appeal to readers looking for a fun summer read.”
-Publisher’s Weekly
“This unusual riches-to-rags tale is fun and interesting…the mysteries layered throughout, as well as the depth of the main characters, draw you in. Lexi is an obnoxious but lovable character you’ll root for!”
-Romantic Times Book Review (4 Stars!)
You can find Jessica online on her website, on twitter, on facebook, and on her youtube channel.Also, check out her celebration of the release, a fun giveaway for an “heiress prize pack!
Jessica's Tip:
This novel changed so much as I was writing it. Characters came and went, plot points were created and dropped, and details were being constantly shifted around in the story to make it work. I always outline before I start a book but I like to say that I outline just so I can have something to deviate from. I think it’s important to know where you’re story is going before you start writing but I also think it’s important to remind yourself that things WILL change. You don’t have to know every single detail before you start writing. In fact, I think it might be impossible. Characters will reveal themselves to you as you write. Things that you love won’t end up working out. So if you’re a plotter like me, find the balance. Don’t stress out to much. Let go of what you think you want the book to be and embrace what the book becomes.
Link Roundup:
In sunny Spain with Cassidy this week in the LIGHTS, CAMERA, CASSIDY Charmed Summer Giveaway #games #winning! (LightsCameraCassidy.Com)
Why You Should Choose Food You Don't Recognize (WritersButt)
15 Stock Characters and How to Restock Them (DailyWriteTip)
Top 10 Typography Crimes (Listography)
7 You-Know-What-I-Meant Mistakes (DailyTip)
5 Critical Things to Make a YA Story Stand Out (OutOfTheWordwork)
4 Keys to Writing an Unputdownable MG Adventure (WritersDigest)
Writing the Emotional Body Blow (RomanceUniversity)
Saving Your Sanity (LucienneDiver)
Write or Die - the APP (KarenWoodward)
The Escaping Character (LitReactor)
The Writers Guide to Twitter (InkyElbows)
Layers of Emotion (kidlit.com)
Where is Your Character Going? (WriteYourScreenplay)
Very Pinteresting (SLJ)
Worse Than a Cliche (Writers in the Storm)
Find Your Talisman (DIYMFA)
Writing Suspense in Science Fiction and Fantasy (Bryan Thomas Schmidt)
Defining Conflict in a Romance Novel (WritersDigest)
The Inconvenient Truths of our Our Own Writing (BeyondTheMargins)
Now find your balance, and go write!
Tuesday, July 03, 2012
Tips and Links: Don't Be Afraid with Diana Renn, author of TOKYO HEIST
I'm pleased to introduce to you all Diana Renn, author of the new YA mystery, TOKYO HEIST. I "met" Diana online when her editor asked me if I would be willing read and blurb her book. I was not only willing, but honored. TOKYO HEIST is a beautifully-written, masterfully-woven tale with a rich backdrop of art and Japanese culture. I enjoyed the assignment.
As for Diana. she grew up in Seattle and now lives in Boston with her husband and son. After graduating from Hampshire College and then Brandeis University, where she earned an M.A. in English and American Literature, Diana taught ESL, writing, and literature, worked in educational publishing, and authored several ESL textbooks. She also traveled whenever possible, and taught English in South AmericaWhen she’s not writing, Diana enjoys bicycling and taiko drumming. TOKYO HEIST is her first novel.
About TOKYO HEIST:
When sixteen-year-old Violet agrees to spend the summer with her father, an up-and-coming artist in Seattle, she has no idea what she’s walking into. Her father’s newest clients, the Yamada family, are the victims of a high-profile art robbery: van Gogh sketches have been stolen from their home, and, until they can produce the corresponding painting, everyone's lives are in danger -- including Violet's and her father's.
Violet’s search for the missing van Gogh takes her from the Seattle Art Museum, to the yakuza-infested streets of Tokyo, to a secluded inn in Kyoto. As the mystery thickens, Violet’s not sure whom she can trust. But she knows one thing: she has to solve the mystery -- before it’s too late.
You can find Diana online at her website, on Twitter, or at her group blog for middle grade and young adult mystery fans, Sleuths Spies & Alibis.
Diana's Tip:
In the early drafts of TOKYO HEIST, I had many moments of near-paralysis, where I thought I could not proceed because I was entering foreign territory. First, I was afraid to write about Japan. It was a country I loved and had traveled through, but at one point I doubted my expertise, and I knew I could not travel back to do research. I was afraid to write a mystery because it would involve police procedures and the FBI, things I knew next to nothing about. Van Gogh? Japanese woodblock prints? Art conservation? Laws about stolen art in Japan? Japanese law enforcement? I knew none of that when I began. Now I know a lot. At some point I got over my fear and did the research. I'd write as far as I could, then read voraciously when I hit a wall. I contacted experts when needed, and picked up even more plot points along the way. I even shadowed an art conservator at work and volunteered in an art museum for research. Getting hard facts about unfamiliar fields empowered me to go forward with the story, even if I didn't use every nugget of information I picked up. I wrote more confidently, armed with knowledge and a team of experts at the ready. People love to talk about their work. Ask for help. Don't reinvent the wheel, don't go at it alone, and don't be afraid of what you don't know.
Link Roundup:
Note: With the 4th of July holiday tomorrow, and since I will be on the faculty at the Antioch Writers' Workshop next week (and I don't know what my Internet access will be), we'll have another tip and link roundup post on Thursday with Jessica Brody, and possibly no post next week. We'll see. Check back next week in case. If I am unable to post while at Antioch, I'll catch up with you all over that weekend. OK, we will now return you to your regularly-scheduled link roundup...
More winning going on with the LIGHTS, CAMERA, CASSIDY Charmed Summer Giveaway. If you know any young teens who love travel, adventure, mystery, and romance (and a chance to win great prizes), send them over! (LightsCameraCassidy)
16 Tips on How to Survive and Thrive as a Writer (LiveWriteThrive)
8 Publishing Landmines and 8 Ways to Deal with Them (NovelRocket)
7 Ways To Give Away Your Power - and How To Avoid It (RachelleGardener)
5 Tips and Prompts on How to be an Everyday Writer (BeyondTheMargins)
5 Ways to Get Readers to Beg For More (FindingBliss)
5 Mistakes of New Fiction Writers (CreativePenn)
The Myth of All-You-Can-Eat Sensory Details (WritingForward)
Evolution of the YA Genre (WastepaperProse)
Cohesion in Your Writing (SusanKayeQuinn)
Accomplish Your Goals - Make a Schedule to Meet Deadlines (WritersDigest)
Publishy Questions - an editorial director publishing Q&A (BehlerBlog)
Unusual Inspiration: Character Arcs Made Easy (WritersInTheStorm)
How To Polish Your Writing Until It Shines (QueryTracker)
Flip the Switch: Use Adverbs Fearlessly (WriterUnboxed)
Are You Telegraphing Your Plot? (TheOtherSideOfTheStory)
The Yes-But Method for Deepening Plot (BuildingCharacter)
Why Crowded Coffee Shops Fire Up Your Creativity (The Atlantic)
Visualizing Revisions (CrissaChappel)
A Study in Opposites - the power of the thesaurus (WriterUnboxed)
Making History Appealing to Teen Readers (TheOtherSideOfTheStory)
Irreversible Plot Points (Kidlit.com)
Writing YA - Capturing the Teen Voice (DIYMFA)
What Makes Your Character Think That Will Work? (MoodyWriting)
Plotting With Layers (The Other Side of the Story)
So You Want To Read YA? (Stacked)
Literary Law - Using Real People in Fiction (WritersFunZone)
Only You Can Write It (Adventures in YA and Children's Publishing)
Learning Through Stories (AnnieMurphyPaul)
Going Both Ways - Character Outlines for Pantsers and Plotters (TheOtherSideOfTheStory)
Finding Themes in a Brainstorm (LiveWriteThrive)
Alliteration and Repetition (WriteAnything)
Now don't be afraid, and go write!
As for Diana. she grew up in Seattle and now lives in Boston with her husband and son. After graduating from Hampshire College and then Brandeis University, where she earned an M.A. in English and American Literature, Diana taught ESL, writing, and literature, worked in educational publishing, and authored several ESL textbooks. She also traveled whenever possible, and taught English in South AmericaWhen she’s not writing, Diana enjoys bicycling and taiko drumming. TOKYO HEIST is her first novel.
About TOKYO HEIST:
When sixteen-year-old Violet agrees to spend the summer with her father, an up-and-coming artist in Seattle, she has no idea what she’s walking into. Her father’s newest clients, the Yamada family, are the victims of a high-profile art robbery: van Gogh sketches have been stolen from their home, and, until they can produce the corresponding painting, everyone's lives are in danger -- including Violet's and her father's.
Violet’s search for the missing van Gogh takes her from the Seattle Art Museum, to the yakuza-infested streets of Tokyo, to a secluded inn in Kyoto. As the mystery thickens, Violet’s not sure whom she can trust. But she knows one thing: she has to solve the mystery -- before it’s too late.
You can find Diana online at her website, on Twitter, or at her group blog for middle grade and young adult mystery fans, Sleuths Spies & Alibis.
Diana's Tip:
In the early drafts of TOKYO HEIST, I had many moments of near-paralysis, where I thought I could not proceed because I was entering foreign territory. First, I was afraid to write about Japan. It was a country I loved and had traveled through, but at one point I doubted my expertise, and I knew I could not travel back to do research. I was afraid to write a mystery because it would involve police procedures and the FBI, things I knew next to nothing about. Van Gogh? Japanese woodblock prints? Art conservation? Laws about stolen art in Japan? Japanese law enforcement? I knew none of that when I began. Now I know a lot. At some point I got over my fear and did the research. I'd write as far as I could, then read voraciously when I hit a wall. I contacted experts when needed, and picked up even more plot points along the way. I even shadowed an art conservator at work and volunteered in an art museum for research. Getting hard facts about unfamiliar fields empowered me to go forward with the story, even if I didn't use every nugget of information I picked up. I wrote more confidently, armed with knowledge and a team of experts at the ready. People love to talk about their work. Ask for help. Don't reinvent the wheel, don't go at it alone, and don't be afraid of what you don't know.
Link Roundup:
Note: With the 4th of July holiday tomorrow, and since I will be on the faculty at the Antioch Writers' Workshop next week (and I don't know what my Internet access will be), we'll have another tip and link roundup post on Thursday with Jessica Brody, and possibly no post next week. We'll see. Check back next week in case. If I am unable to post while at Antioch, I'll catch up with you all over that weekend. OK, we will now return you to your regularly-scheduled link roundup...
More winning going on with the LIGHTS, CAMERA, CASSIDY Charmed Summer Giveaway. If you know any young teens who love travel, adventure, mystery, and romance (and a chance to win great prizes), send them over! (LightsCameraCassidy)
16 Tips on How to Survive and Thrive as a Writer (LiveWriteThrive)
8 Publishing Landmines and 8 Ways to Deal with Them (NovelRocket)
7 Ways To Give Away Your Power - and How To Avoid It (RachelleGardener)
5 Tips and Prompts on How to be an Everyday Writer (BeyondTheMargins)
5 Ways to Get Readers to Beg For More (FindingBliss)
5 Mistakes of New Fiction Writers (CreativePenn)
The Myth of All-You-Can-Eat Sensory Details (WritingForward)
Evolution of the YA Genre (WastepaperProse)
Cohesion in Your Writing (SusanKayeQuinn)
Accomplish Your Goals - Make a Schedule to Meet Deadlines (WritersDigest)
Publishy Questions - an editorial director publishing Q&A (BehlerBlog)
Unusual Inspiration: Character Arcs Made Easy (WritersInTheStorm)
How To Polish Your Writing Until It Shines (QueryTracker)
Flip the Switch: Use Adverbs Fearlessly (WriterUnboxed)
Are You Telegraphing Your Plot? (TheOtherSideOfTheStory)
The Yes-But Method for Deepening Plot (BuildingCharacter)
Why Crowded Coffee Shops Fire Up Your Creativity (The Atlantic)
Visualizing Revisions (CrissaChappel)
A Study in Opposites - the power of the thesaurus (WriterUnboxed)
Making History Appealing to Teen Readers (TheOtherSideOfTheStory)
Irreversible Plot Points (Kidlit.com)
Writing YA - Capturing the Teen Voice (DIYMFA)
What Makes Your Character Think That Will Work? (MoodyWriting)
Plotting With Layers (The Other Side of the Story)
So You Want To Read YA? (Stacked)
Literary Law - Using Real People in Fiction (WritersFunZone)
Only You Can Write It (Adventures in YA and Children's Publishing)
Learning Through Stories (AnnieMurphyPaul)
Going Both Ways - Character Outlines for Pantsers and Plotters (TheOtherSideOfTheStory)
Finding Themes in a Brainstorm (LiveWriteThrive)
Alliteration and Repetition (WriteAnything)
Now don't be afraid, and go write!
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Tips and Links with Myra McEntire, author of TIMEPIECE
I'm pleased to welcome GCC sister Myra
McEntire to the blog this week, celebrating the release of her new book, TIMEPIECE. Myra knows the words to every R&B hit of the last decade, but since she
lives in Nashville, the country music capital of America, her lyrical talents
go sadly unappreciated. She's chosen, instead, to channel her "mad word
skills" into creating stories. She's an avid Doctor Who fan and will argue
passionately about which incarnation is the best. (Linda's note... it's #10 David Tennant, right?) : )
Kaleb
Ballard was never supposed to be able to see ripples—cracks in time. Are
Kaleb’s powers expanding, or is something very wrong? Before Kaleb can find
out, Jonathan Landers, the man who tried to murder his father, reappears. Why
is he back, and what, or whom, does he want?
In the wake of Landers’s return, the Hourglass organization is offered an ultimatum by a mysterious man. Either they find Landers and the research he has stolen on people who might carry the time gene, or time will be altered—with devastating results for the people Kaleb loves most.
Now Kaleb, Emerson, Michael, and the other Hourglass recruits have no choice but to use their extraordinary powers to find Landers. But where do they even start? And when? Even if they succeed, just finding him may not be enough. . . .
The follow-up to Hourglass, Timepiece blends the paranormal, science-fiction, mystery, and suspense genres into a nonstop thrill ride where every second counts.
In the wake of Landers’s return, the Hourglass organization is offered an ultimatum by a mysterious man. Either they find Landers and the research he has stolen on people who might carry the time gene, or time will be altered—with devastating results for the people Kaleb loves most.
Now Kaleb, Emerson, Michael, and the other Hourglass recruits have no choice but to use their extraordinary powers to find Landers. But where do they even start? And when? Even if they succeed, just finding him may not be enough. . . .
The follow-up to Hourglass, Timepiece blends the paranormal, science-fiction, mystery, and suspense genres into a nonstop thrill ride where every second counts.
Myra's Tip:
Writing
the first draft of TIMEPIECE almost broke me. I couldn’t make it happen the way
I wanted it to, so I was pushing my deadline like crazy. I would hole up in my
room and do nothing but stare at the computer for hours.
I
learned that you can’t make stories if you don’t live life. I learned that when
nothing is coming, nothing at ALL, you might need to walk away for a bit.
I
learned about BALANCE.
This Week's Writing Links:
The winning continues at the LIGHTS, CAMERA, CASSIDY Charmed Summer Giveaway! Please feel free to share the link with any MG girls you might know!
Writer'sButt Wednesday: Getting Down with Fish Oil (Ginger Calem)
50 Iconic Writers Who Were Repeatedly Rejected (OnlineCollege)
15 Grammar Goofs That Make You Look Silly (Copyblogger)
5 Story Mistakes Even Good Writers Make (Writer's Digest)
3 Tips for Writing Heavy Emotional Scenes (Jamie Gold)
3 Myths About Villains (QueryTracker)
MediaBistro's Blackmail Writing App (MediaBistro) Love it!
Who Publishes YA? A Breakdown of the Big Six (The YA Curator)
Break the Rules of Writing to Get Inspired (WritersDigest)
Putting Your Writing First (Adventures in YA and Children's Publishing)
Is Your Modifier Dangling? (PocketFullOfCharms)
Taking the Mystery Out of Query Letters (Rachelle Gardener)
The Rules of Storytelling Pixar Style (WritersDigest)
On Staying Open to Inspiration (BeyondTheMargins)
Adjective Advice (GailCarsonLevine)
Writing Lessons Learned from MATCHED (Julie Musil)
How Agents Choose the Best Publishers to Submit to (Rachelle Gardner)
When your MC Changes her Mind (Kidlit.com)
Who Publishes YA? A breakdown (The YA Curator)
How to Tackle Critique Notes (Writer Unboxed)
Comics for SCBWI Conference Newbies (InkyElbows) : )
Performing the Invasive Edit (MagicalWords)
Middling Beauty (BeyondtheMargins)
The Trips and Traps of 1st Person (Omnivoracious)
What Makes Bad Writing (WallStreetJournal)
Character Block (Gail Carson Levine)
How Writing the Query Helped Me Finish the Novel (BeyondTheMargins)
Authenticity of Voice (MagicalWords)
The Rules for Suspense Writing (Writer's Digest)
Sell it to Me (QueryTracker)
Now go find your balance and write!
P.S. I have no idea how come parts of my blog are highlighted in white and the rest of it is black. If anyone knows how to avoid this, please let me know. I should be writing, so I haven't the time to figure it out!
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
What Makes it MG with Amanda Ashby
I'm happy to welcome my friend and TFC and GCC sister Amanda Ashby to the blog, celebrating the release of her new MG series, SOPHIE'S MIXED-UP MAGIC. You might know Amanda as the author of YOU HAD ME AT HALO, FAIRY BAD DAY, and ZOMBIE QUEEN OF NEWBURY HIGH. Her books have been nominated for Romantic Times Reviewer's Choice award, New York Library's Stuff for the Teen Age, and selected as Voya's Top Shelf Fiction for Middle School Readers. She's also a SCBWI Crystal Kite Finalist for the Australia/NZ region.
She lives and writes on the Sunshine coast, where she also likes to eat chocolate, watch TV, and sit around doing not much. (Her words, not mine. Personally, I don't believe the not do much bit. I've read her books. She's doing. Plus she's got two kids, so not doing much isn't even an option!)
Anyway, here's the lowdown on her new series:
Be careful what you wish for…
After eleven year old Sophie accidentally gets herself turned into a
djinn, she starts to think that it might not be so bad after all. (Of course,
that’s after she gets the whole orange skin problem sorted out.) Who wouldn’t
enjoy having the power to grant wishes! But when Sophie develops RWD (Random
Wish Disorder) and can’t STOP granting wishes, things get more than a little
mixed-up!
Book Two: Under a Spell (May 31st
Puffin)
And that spells T-R-O-U-B-L-E…
As Sophie gets used to her magic, her relationship with the adorable
Jonathan Tait is blossoming. There’s only one problem: Jonathan’s twin sister,
Melissa. She’s a total mean girl who seems intent on making Sophie’s life
miserable. On top of that, Melissa somehow seems to sense that Sophie has
powers–and manages to bind Sophie to her in a totally self-serving way. Can
Sophie figure out a way out of this–without ruining her chances with Jonathan?
Amanda's Writing Tip:"When I started writing this middle grade series, I read somewhere that the difference between YA and MG is that while MG characters do have cellphones, they still need to ask permission to go to the mall. That advice really resonated with me and helped me out so much when I was writing Sophie's Mixed-up Magic. In fact, I used it when her djinn guide tried to tell her that they needed to fly to Istanbul to get the secret cure she needed!"
You can find more about Amanda's books and
This week's link roundup:
LIGHTS CAMERA CASSIDY Charmed Summer Giveaway (LightsCameraCassidy)
A Checkup from the Neck Up (Ginger Calem)
1,000 Words A Day Or Else! (Arthur Slade)
7 Strategy Tips from the World of Screenwriting (Big Spaceship)
5 Things that Turn Agents Off in Chapter One (Words I stole)
5 Reasons Your Current Scene Isn't Working (Great Minds Ink Alike)
5 Techniques for Adding Subtext to Your Stories (The Bookshelf Muse)
3 Writing Exercises in Search of Character (Jungle Red Writers)
2 Questions That Will Stunt a Writer's Progress (Christie Craig)
Ursula LeGuin's Hypothesis (Book View Cafe)
The Need for Speed (Is it advisable?) (Nephele Tempest)
Your Punctuation Personality Type (Brian Thomas Schmidt) Made me laugh.
How Writing is Like a First Date (Novel Rocket)
The First Basic Question (Genreality)
Remaining True to Your Vision (Write it Sideways)
There Are Two Kinds of "Busy". Is Yours the Good Kind? (Jane Friedman)
What Inspires Sarah Zarr (Distraction No. 99)
Using Setting as a Character (Rachelle Gardner)
Making the Most of a Scene (Jamie Gold)
Layering Emotion (Kidlit.com)
Fight Scenes: The Waltz of Death (Fiction Notes)
What Makes a Children's Book Great? (Publishing Perspectives)
Write a Killer Query Letter for Your YA Manuscript (WriteWorkshop)
The Ultimate Guide to Pitch Writing (Jamie Gold)
Now go. Write!
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
ETERNAL SPRING with Jennifer McAndrews, plus links
We have a very special guest this week. My own dear friend, crit partner, and workshop co-presenter, Jennifer
McAndrews, is joining us today to celebrate the release of ETERNAL SPRING, a young adult anthology
available as a free kindle download from Amazon. Jen's one of my favorite writers ever. You can find out why by picking up her latest novel, DEADLY FARCE
is a humorous mystery from Avalon Books, and by checking out her contribution in ETERNAL SPRING.
About ETERNAL SPRING:
Flowers,
vacation, baseball, prom...what does spring mean to you? From unicorn hunters
and teenage exorcists to Egyptian princesses and aspiring ballerinas, this
collection of thirteen stories by some of the most exciting authors in Young
Adult fiction explores young love and new beginnings during the most beautiful
time of the year.
You can catch Jen at RWA Nationals next month, presenting on the Hero's Journey in YA (with yours truly), and you can find her online on her website, on twitter, on facebook, on pinterest, and at Honestly YA.
Jen's Tip:
For a minor character, there’s no need to move
beyond a “simple” motivation. To say the minor character mows the lawn for the
elderly couple on the corner because that character is kindhearted is
sufficient. If, however, we’re talking about a main character, a major
character, kindhearted is only the surface. For the main character, dig a
little deeper. Why is kindness important? What need does the character have
that showing kindness fulfills?
Let’s say he or she does kind things because
failure to consider others’ needs during childhood resulted in a scolding from
Mom. One step deeper? That scolding from Mom resulted in feelings of guilt and
inadequacy. So acts of kindness today may be motivated by fear of inadequacy.
On the flip side, what if the character does
kind things because doing good deeds during childhood resulted in praise from
Mom. One step deeper? That praise from Mom resulted in a feeling of happiness
and security. So acts of kindness today may be motivated by a desire for
happiness.
Either way, now you know that main character’s
core motivation. That motivation is going to define that character, in easy
situations and in tough ones. You’ll know how a character is going to react
because you know that motivation.
And for extra fun, next time someone pretends
to be a “suffering actor” by whining “but… what’s my motivation?”, answer them! (hint: tell them it’s fear. that stops ‘em
every time!)
This week's link roundup:
My latest, LIGHTS, CAMERA, CASSIDY Episode Three: HACKED, hits the shelves tomorrow, June 14, 20012. Please join me for a Lights, Camera, Cassidy Charmed Summer Giveaway (starting tomorrow) to celebrate. You could win stuff. Bonus points for sharing the love (and the link).
My latest, LIGHTS, CAMERA, CASSIDY Episode Three: HACKED, hits the shelves tomorrow, June 14, 20012. Please join me for a Lights, Camera, Cassidy Charmed Summer Giveaway (starting tomorrow) to celebrate. You could win stuff. Bonus points for sharing the love (and the link).
21 Ways to Make Your Plot More Compelling (Writing at High Altitude)
10 Quick Tips to Better Fiction (WG2E)
6 Reasons Editors Will Reject You (Writer's Digest)
5 Ways Writers Get Lazy (Jody Hedlund)
5 Ways Adult Heroes Differ From Their YA Counterparts (Romancing the Naked Hero) : )
5 Super Villain Schemes so Crazy They Might be... Crazy (Tor.com)
3 Tips for Staying Focused (Writing on the Ether)
3 Important Rules for Writing Endings (The Write Practice)
How to Influence Editors (Rachelle Gardner)
The Good Seed (Writer Unboxed) Part III of Donald Maass's series
Different Ways to See the Same Thing (Paranormal POV)
The Sound of Silence (Write Brained)
Fill In the Blanks Plot Template (The Other Side of the Story)
How to Plot By the Numbers (WordServe Water Cooler)
Hard Word and Getting Lucky (Writer Unboxed)
Climbing Mt. Revision One Step At a Time (Story a Day) Revising Short Stories.
Detailing (Gail Carson Levine)
What Teens Are Really Reading (School Library Journal) One librarian's survey.
Worrying Isn't Action (Kidlit.com)
What Makes a Real Book (Content or Container)? (Chicago Tribune)
Tips for Effective Dialog (Writers on the Storm)
Let's Try That Again (Bent on Books)
Literary Devices: Allusion (Fantasy Faction)
Secrets to Character (Jungle Red Writers)
Conflict in Story is Like Finding Gold (Moody Writer)
Don't Leave Me Hanging (Romance University) Happy Endings in Romance.
Romance Structure and Romantic Moments (Genreality)
Easy Ways to Keep the Reader Interested (Moody Writing)
The Single Most Important Characteristic for Success (Writing on the Ether)
Now go. Write!
Wednesday, June 06, 2012
Surrender by Elana Johnson, plus Link Roundup
I'm pleased to welcome GCC and Storymaker sister Elana Johnson to the blog this week. Elana's the author of POSSESSION and REGRET, and is celebrating the release of her latest book, SURRENDER. You might also know Elana from around the web, as she's a founder of the QueryTracker blog and co-organized WriteOnCon (which, if it isn't already on your radar for August, most definitely should be. Free writing conference. Online. Fabulous.) Elana has also written the ebook FROM THE QUERY TO THE CALL (which you can actually download free here). In short, Elana keeps herself busy!
When she's not running the online writing universe, Elana wishes she could experience her first kiss again, tell the mean girl where to shove it, and have cool superpowers like reading minds and controlling fire. To fulfill her desires, she writes young adult science fiction and fantasy... like SURRENDER.
The Book:
Raine has always been a good girl. She lives by the rules in Freedom. After all, they are her father's rules: He's the Director. It's because of him that Raine is willing to use her talent--a power so dangerous, no one else is allowed to know about it. Not even her roommate, Vi.
All that changes when Raine falls for Gunner. Raine's got every reason in the world to stay away from Gunn, but she just can't. Especially when she discovers his connection to Vi's boyfriend, Zenn.
Raine has never known anyone as heavily brainwashed as Vi. Raine's father expects her to spy on Vi and report back to him. But Raine is beginning to wonder what Vi knows that her father is so anxious to keep hidden, and what might happen if she helps Vi remember it. She's even starting to suspect Vi's secrets might involve Freedom's newest prisoner, the rebel Jag Barque...
Elana's Tip:
I think every author owes it to themselves to find out the way they work best. With SURRENDER, my agent asked me for an outline before I wrote the book. It took me three months to write the outline (20 pages), because I hate outlining, and I'd never done it before.
I then wrote the book in 25 days. So it was easier and faster to write 350 pages! BUT. But I learned I can outline, that I do like knowing a little bit in advance the things that are coming in the story, that outlining isn't of the devil. Well... Ha!
You can find Elana online at her website, on her blog, on twitter, on facebook, and blogging with The League of Extraordinary Writers.
Bonus! Elana is hosting a Spectacular Seconds GIVEAWAY this week! You can enter to win one of five signed sophomore books by Beth Revis, Ally Condie, Veronica Roth, Kristi Cook and Kim Harrington. Details here: Spectacular Seconds Contest.
This week's link roundup:
12 Style Blunders in Fiction (Mystery Writing is Murder)
10 Great Tips from 10 Great Writers (Looking for Mr. Goodstory)
8 Things You Might Not Know About the NYT Bestseller Lists (YA Highway)
5 Ways to Explore Your Story (Revision) (Fiction Notes)
5 Top Mistakes Writers Make at a Crime Scene (Novel Rocket)
5 Ways to Connect With Other Writers (Creative Penn)
4 Temperaments (Characters) (My First Book)
4 Tips for Writing a Middle Grade Novel (Karen Cioffi)
3 Things Writers Should Look For in a Smart Phone (Procrastinating Writers)
Rhythm and Pattern in Picture Books (The Other Side of the Story)
Converting Backstory into Character (Romance University)
Untraditional Story Outlining Techniques (DIY MFA) (Love the Hunger Games subway map.)
When the Best Writing Happens (I.N.K.)
Why Write Fiction? Why Even Read It? (Beyond the Margins)
Surprises in Stories (Gail Carson Levine)
Unmasking the Muse (Writer Unboxed)
How to Get a Book Deal When You Suck at Pitching (MuseInks)
What Writers Can Learn From Barry Eisler (The Book Deal)
Why Daydreaming Isn't a Waste of Time (MindShift)
Why Self-Conscious Writers are Doomed (Wordplay)
Words to Live By (Genreality)
Writing About Painful Memories (Julie Musil)
Now go have a fantastic day. And write!
When she's not running the online writing universe, Elana wishes she could experience her first kiss again, tell the mean girl where to shove it, and have cool superpowers like reading minds and controlling fire. To fulfill her desires, she writes young adult science fiction and fantasy... like SURRENDER.
The Book:
Raine has always been a good girl. She lives by the rules in Freedom. After all, they are her father's rules: He's the Director. It's because of him that Raine is willing to use her talent--a power so dangerous, no one else is allowed to know about it. Not even her roommate, Vi.
All that changes when Raine falls for Gunner. Raine's got every reason in the world to stay away from Gunn, but she just can't. Especially when she discovers his connection to Vi's boyfriend, Zenn.
Raine has never known anyone as heavily brainwashed as Vi. Raine's father expects her to spy on Vi and report back to him. But Raine is beginning to wonder what Vi knows that her father is so anxious to keep hidden, and what might happen if she helps Vi remember it. She's even starting to suspect Vi's secrets might involve Freedom's newest prisoner, the rebel Jag Barque...
Elana's Tip:
I think every author owes it to themselves to find out the way they work best. With SURRENDER, my agent asked me for an outline before I wrote the book. It took me three months to write the outline (20 pages), because I hate outlining, and I'd never done it before.
I then wrote the book in 25 days. So it was easier and faster to write 350 pages! BUT. But I learned I can outline, that I do like knowing a little bit in advance the things that are coming in the story, that outlining isn't of the devil. Well... Ha!
You can find Elana online at her website, on her blog, on twitter, on facebook, and blogging with The League of Extraordinary Writers.
Bonus! Elana is hosting a Spectacular Seconds GIVEAWAY this week! You can enter to win one of five signed sophomore books by Beth Revis, Ally Condie, Veronica Roth, Kristi Cook and Kim Harrington. Details here: Spectacular Seconds Contest.
This week's link roundup:
12 Style Blunders in Fiction (Mystery Writing is Murder)
10 Great Tips from 10 Great Writers (Looking for Mr. Goodstory)
8 Things You Might Not Know About the NYT Bestseller Lists (YA Highway)
5 Ways to Explore Your Story (Revision) (Fiction Notes)
5 Top Mistakes Writers Make at a Crime Scene (Novel Rocket)
5 Ways to Connect With Other Writers (Creative Penn)
4 Temperaments (Characters) (My First Book)
4 Tips for Writing a Middle Grade Novel (Karen Cioffi)
3 Things Writers Should Look For in a Smart Phone (Procrastinating Writers)
Rhythm and Pattern in Picture Books (The Other Side of the Story)
Converting Backstory into Character (Romance University)
Untraditional Story Outlining Techniques (DIY MFA) (Love the Hunger Games subway map.)
When the Best Writing Happens (I.N.K.)
Why Write Fiction? Why Even Read It? (Beyond the Margins)
Surprises in Stories (Gail Carson Levine)
Unmasking the Muse (Writer Unboxed)
How to Get a Book Deal When You Suck at Pitching (MuseInks)
What Writers Can Learn From Barry Eisler (The Book Deal)
Why Daydreaming Isn't a Waste of Time (MindShift)
Why Self-Conscious Writers are Doomed (Wordplay)
Words to Live By (Genreality)
Writing About Painful Memories (Julie Musil)
Now go have a fantastic day. And write!
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