Showing posts with label Writing Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing Tips. Show all posts

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Giveaway & Guest Post: 10 Things You Didn’t Know About Becoming a Published Author - By Author J. L. Lawson

Today, author J. L. Lawson joins us with a guest post as part of the virtual book tour for his latest book, Just a Curtain.  He is also giving away an ecopy of the book to one lucky reader of today's post so be sure to leave a comment.

10 Things You Didn’t Know About Becoming a Published Author


By Author J. L. Lawson
When I was in my late twenties, in between contracts in California, and only had an old Remington typewriter, loads of copy paper---borrowed from a previous employer---and my local Boulder Creek Library as my tools for writing---there wasn't a world-wide web or extensive internet yet---my first forays into putting together entertaining, evocative narratives based more on fact than fictions was tedious to say the least. There followed a lot of just plain life for many years before I finally, actually, started writing as a vocation. That was by then rather late in life, relatively speaking. By that time, well after the advent of the internet, POD, social media and other such marvels of industry, getting published had become a relatively simple matter of formatting one's materials properly, choosing a reliable and efficient printer and bam, you've got a book published. But that's not the end of it by any stretch---unless one is content to merely have one's own shelves populated with one's own books and have no exposure or audience beyond that.

TEN: Do your research. No matter if you're writing about totally imaginary worlds devoid of seemingly any touch with reality, in order to connect with an audience you're going to have to get your facts straight. Even if you are making them up as you go along, everything needs to be at least internally consistent. Most fiction and all non-fiction, however, requires a more constant reality check. In my youth it was the library that stood as the bastion of facts and data, history and general information. With a laptop and the web, constant trips to the local branch aren't the impediment to sound research any longer. But you must still check and cross-check your data. Just because there's a lot available out there doesn't mean it's all valid, even correct.

NINE: Make sure you say what you really want to say. That may sound obvious, but unless your thoughts are clear in your own mind, what comes across to the reader will be a fog of notions. Take the time to hash out your ideas, opinions and most importantly: storyline, so that there are no loose ends, no internal inconsistencies, no circular logic sabotaging your best efforts to bring your story to an expectant audience. See my blog: Preparing for Interviews, How Writing is Therapy... section.

EIGHT: You gotta have style. You can put one word after another in a convincing manner, but would the average reader recognize your writing from, say, their own or some other writer's hand? I will not encourage anyone to adopt the bon ton paradigm of the day: the overpopulation of crude language, steamy and out-right explicit sexuality or the omni-present tone of disdainful cynicism that appears to pervade the marginalia-made-book-form of some contemporary 'literature'---Unless that's actually your chosen genre! What you must attempt to cultivate in any event is your own voice. Your writing style will follow as surely as night follows the day.

SEVEN: Nothing new under the sun. I'm sorry to be the one to tell you this, but whatever astonishing new idea you have for your best-seller has very probably, most very likely been written... many times before... to death. Cold facts. But here's the kicker: Shakespeare didn't come up with anything new either! His plots were already old and moldy before he picked them up. What breathed new life into that staleness was: HOW he filled them out; WHO his characters really were; with WHAT cleverness, depth and flow he imbued their dialogues and soliloquies. So take heart. Even Boy-Meets-Girl can come to new life in your hands---just make it your own.

SIX: So you have your narrative. Your friends and family grudgingly read through it and are pleasantly surprised that it doesn't stink. Then the other foot falls: you need some editing---not just proofreading for typos and the odd transposed word or out of place homonym---seriously cut, move stuff around Editing. If you're brave (or masochistic), you can post it on your blog and open it up to readers' comments. Probably better however, and less demeaning, is to have a professional dispassionately make your work shine as it was intended. It may cost a bit, but what's the price of avoiding Professional Embarrassment?

FIVE: Judging a book by its cover. That little phrase is still with us because it's more than a splinter of truth in this business---it's axiomatic. I assure you that I have built my own covers, was pleased at how they appealed to my eye, but set them up next to others in their genre and they were the red-headed step-children. Sad, disheartening, but true. Look at what's catching the eyes of Bookstore customers---brick-and-mortar stores or the on-line variety---there's always a Here's what others are looking at... section to be inspected. What catches your eye as you look at those shelves? That should be a clue.

FOUR: Knock on the biggest door. Unfortunately, major publishing houses, almost without exception, do not accept unsolicited manuscripts. You'll need an agent to go there in your stead. What? Not enough budget for hiring and retaining an agent? How about a publicist, a marketing analyst, a distribution agency? No? Don't give up just yet. How about utilizing an indie press and taking on the marketing, sales and distribution with your own sweat and tears? It has been done successfully. In fact, that's likely why you're reading this right now---you ARE using the available means at your disposal and spending as little as possible to make your title a household word.

THREE: Location, location, location. It's the marketing of published work that creates the greatest challenges and forces the most attention and creativity an author can muster. There are now an over-abundance of resources and advice out there. Let me offer a shamelessly promotional example: I am writing this now, because I am part of Orangeberry Book Tours because Pandora Poikilos has connections and know-how I don't. I have contracted with Substance Books for other branding and marketing efforts for the long haul because Hajni Blasko has the experience and expertise I don't have.

I work at Voyager Press who utilizes: KDP, iBooks, Bowker, CreateSpace, for print and eBook production, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, GreatReads and many other outlets for distribution---including their own online VPDirect Store. For Industry exposure they contract with the Jenkins Group and Combined Book Exhibit, as well as those firms affiliates. The gist of this note is that networking with those who have the know-how, the connections and talent is how to put together a winning team.

TWO: Which brings us to the penultimate Need-To-Know item in Publishing: It takes a Village!

Just like raising children or getting a mom-and-pop store out of the red, getting a book into the hands of potential readership takes all the talent, experience and relationships you can garner and gather around yourself from the very beginning. Anyone who thinks they can go it alone in this most highly interconnected world village of today is either fabulously wealthy already and can buy their way into a reader's hands, or is, as was suggested at the outset of this article: ...content to merely have one's own shelves populated with one's own books and have no exposure or audience beyond that.

ONE: Simply put: In the end, a writer has to make informed decisions and never let loose of her/his pursestrings all too easily for un-researched, un-validated, un-verified printing, editing, developing or marketing avenues constantly bombarding email portals with wildly fantastic claims for success. Keep it Simple---Read, Research, Review, Write, Re-write, Request---those are the new R's of publishing success in this day and age. But be prepared: Change is always a day away---it wasn't long ago there was no interweb...

About Just a Curtain

Curtain coverGenre: Literary Fiction, Adventure, Coming of Age

“If you had virtually unlimited resources and a pristinely practicable imagination, and a knack for turning air into butter, what do you suppose you’d do next?”
 —Tera Elphinstone, Drummond Group Director


Just A Curtain is the remarkable, fast-paced gateway to both The Elf series and the grander epic recorded in J. L. Lawson’s other works: The Donkey and The Wall trilogy and The Curious Voyages of the Anna Virginia Saga.

Just A Curtain chronicles the remarkable life and achievements of Dashiel Drummond and the capable group of people he gathers around him to make a change for the better in the world in which he finds himself. A coming of age story, orphaned at sixteen, he rises through the angst of adolescence to the challenge of fulfilling the promise of his potential—from ranch hand and welder to the pre-eminent global entrepreneur and builder of starships.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/148188929X/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=148188929X&linkCode=as2&tag=stephaniesbookshelf-20

About Author J. L. James


I am a father, a grandfather and a “Came-to-Writing-Professionally-Late-in-Life” kinda guy. After rewarding careers as a Land Planner, Standards Engineer, Technical Writer/Graphic Designer, and as an Educator (High School and College Literature/Composition) I settled down at the laptop and began storytelling for a living. My wife and I live in the Cross-timbers country of North Texas and spend as much time seeing this amazing country, its National Parks and Forests, as we can manage.

My own journey has taken me both far afield and deep within. It is a journey, no doubt, similar in nature to many seekers’ travels who have come before me. However, an unconditional commitment to the work is the trait of only a handful of those who set their aim very high indeed, and then to find a guide who knows the way through this rarely known land, is without question what all others have equally sought. Some gave up the search, some became distracted by the lure of other interests, many became satisfied with the knowledge they had already gleaned from their initial searches. There is, in the end, only so much gold.


justacurtain
 




Don't forget to leave a comment on this post to enter to win an ecopy (mobi) of Just a Curtain by Author J. L. Lawson!

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Giveaway & Guest Post: Find Your Voice by Author Philip Johnsey

Today we have the pleasure of visiting with Author Philip Johnsey! 
He will be sharing a guest post, 'Find Your Voice', as part of the virtual tour for his new book, Climb that Fence and Take that Leap
'Find Your Voice' is a very encouraging guest post for aspiring authors.
 
Philip is also offering a tour wide giveaway for a $50 Amazon Gift Card for one lucky commenter!  Be sure to leave a comment to enter!
 
Without further ado, please welcome author Philip Johnsey!
 

Find Your Voice by Author Philip Johnsey

 Hi Stephanie, thank you for the opportunity to share a guest post. As soon as I read it was author’s choice, I knew exactly what I wanted to share.
 
It’s a common occurrence for people to say “I’d love to write, wish I could write like you”. Their eyes are full of delayed hope they think will never come. It’s like someone with very little resources staring at an expensive, exotic car and saying “if only I had money”……
I always encourage them by saying “you can write, get published and even more, as you”. They always respond that “they’re not good enough”, “they can’t” and the usual mantras that we all tell ourselves that keeps us from moving forward.
Looking back at how I got started in writing, I remember those same thoughts; those same mantras.  I initially had success with one article that I didn’t put much thought into. I just wrote from the heart and what came to me.
That was fun, but I really wanted to improve my skills further so I took several different writing classes. However, I began to notice a pattern after the classes.  I’d attempt to change my style, my delivery to be more like the people and genres I studied.
Soon, I had trouble writing a simple paragraph, let alone an article. Every time I sat down, it was an ordeal. I wouldn’t use my voice, I wanted to be like the success stories I studied. My voice was pushed to the corner; it’s not good enough, the world won’t accept it, etc. In an attempt to become better, I gave up my style, my voice.
One day, I scrapped all of that and just wrote what I felt and what a relief!! I literally felt free, like I’d been let out of a cage. It felt so good to just write and not worry about being like someone else. Sure, I incorporated all the writing tips from the classes I took, but I used them with my voice.
Whenever someone talks about being a writer, I share my story and encourage them to find their own voice. Writing is a creative craft; a place where one expresses themselves, their soul, their voice. We can’t all write the same; if we did it’ll all be pretty darn boring.
So if you dream of writing, or anything else for that matter, find your voice, tune it, and share it gladly. The world can always use something refreshing and new. The world needs YOUR voice….

 

About Author Philip Johnsey

Raised on a farm and having been a volunteer at different animal rescues, it’s no surprise that his first two published articles were about animals. So it’s only fitting that Phil’s first book is about animals and the connections we share.
 
From Phil’s first high school job to present, he’s spent his career working with clients, explaining complex ideas in an easy to understand manner.  In addition Phil enjoys exploring the world and sharing those adventures via writing, photography, and videography.
 
Phil’s credits include, multiple certifications, Reiki master, photographer, author of two blogs, author of a travel column, creates short segments for a local T.V. station and whatever else he can get into 
 
 

About Climb that Fence and Take that Leap 

 
Edmund blasts across the yard against my calls to come in. He gleely runs off and I chase him across the grass only to find a unique butterfly or a sky filled with stars. As soon as I stop and admire, Edmund promptly comes to my side and rubs against me.
 
Do you ever wonder if there is more to your pet's behavior than meets the eye?  Sometimes their antics are more than just random behavior.  Can we learn something about ourselves by watching them?
 
I believe so and Climb that Fence take that Leap is a compilation of personal, inspirational animal stories and the life lessons I gleaned from them.
 
After enjoying these stories, hopefully you'll enjoy more quality time with your furry friend and know what it takes to Climb that Fence and Take that Leap!
 
 
 
Kirkus Review of Climb that Fence and Take that Leap
 
 
 

 Also available at Createspace.
 
 

~ GIVEAWAY~

 
Don't forget to enter the giveaway!
 
Author Philip Johnsey is giving away a
$50 Amazon Gift Card
to one lucky winner from this tour.
To enter, simply leave a comment on this post.
 
You can earn additional entries by following the Climb that Fence and Take that Leap tour and commenting at each stop! You can find the rest of the tour at: Goddess Fish Promotions.

GOOD LUCK!
 

 

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Guest Post: 3 Things Every Writer Needs to Know About Succeeding In Publishing Today



By Rachel Eliason-
Author of Run, Clarrisa, Run

The internet, the ebook revolution and the indie revolution have thrown the entire publishing industry into a state of flux. Social Media sites like Goodreads and Shelfari, coupled with retail sites like Amazon.com have revolutionized how we discover and buy new books. Amazon's kindle has brought ebooks to the mainstream. Ebooks currently run about 20% of total book sales, enough to say that they are here to stay. In an effort to get more content onto its platform Amazon made publishing on it's Kindle almost ridiculously easy, whether you were a major corporation, a small press or an individual. In doing so they fueled a new wave of “indie” authors.

For many writers, bloggers and freelance editors this is the wave of the future. Why would an author surrender the lion's share of her/his profits to publishing company? Gatekeepers? Let the readers decide for themselves what they want to read or not. Crowd source the gatekeeper role through reviews and social media sites. They cream will rise and the rest will sink.

Other writers, editors and industry types claim this revolution will be short lived. Readers need gatekeepers, they don't have the patience to wade through hundreds of poorly edited self-published books. Writers need publishers to edit their works and bring them to market.

Who is right? Where will these changes lead? After reading as many books, blogs and points of view as I can on the subject I have come up with one thing that I am fairly certain of:

1. Nobody knows what is going to happen next.

Anyone claiming otherwise is probably full of it. If, for example, some author were to write a guest blog about “three things every writer should know” they are probably just blowing smoke.

Seriously, no one really knows where this all headed. In a hundred years, when all the dust has settled, some historians will look back say, “so and so was right.” Right now no one can do that. Be they a huge success like Joe Konrath or a struggling newcomer, none of the Indie crowd really knows where this is all headed.

Agents, editors, publishing executives and traditionally published authors might seem like experts. After all they have the insider view of publishing. But they don't know either. Anything they say is just their own personal experience.

Publishing today needs to come with a warning label, like late night paid advertisements have. In fact lets give it one right now:

2. Individual results may vary.

Almost every diet has these words in the fine print somewhere. The book, video or infomercial features  people who lost 20, 30 or even 40 pounds. But the average dieter will probably lose far less.

Writers are full of glib advice. You want to make money? Write romance. Romance sells. Ya is hot right now. Werewolves/vampires/zombies are big right now.

The romance genre is consistently the highest selling genre. But there is also fierce competition with many good established romance authors out there. There are conventions in each genre and writers who are not familiar with them probably won't do well in that genre.

YA is hot. But a few really big bestselling series (Harry Potter, Twilight, The Hunger Games) makes the genre look hotter than it really is. Werewolves, vampires, zombies are a great fodder for the writer and themes that come and go in literature.

My point is that the fact that Romance sells doesn't mean that you will have luck selling your romance novel. The fact YA is hot doesn't make it easier for you to start a career writing YA.

The same goes for other aspects of writing. Some writers are having great luck marketing kindle singles or short stories in ebook form. Other writers are finding they don't really sell. Some writers claim that series are where it is at.

Some writers find twitter to be a great platform for promoting themselves. Others prefer to interact with fans on Facebook or Goodreads. Others keep email list. Many authors do all of their promoting online and ignore old fashioned book signings and readings. Others make most of their money that way.

What will work for you?

3. It really comes down to trial and error.

If you are looking for a sure-fire guaranteed method for jump starting your writing career, you probably think this is pretty sucky advice. Would it make you feel better if I told you those bloggers with sure-fire answers are lying to you? They probably are. I refer you back to points one and two. Publishing is in such a state of flux that no one really knows what will work or not work. Individuals will have different experiences anyway.

Within this piece of advice is an incredible sense of freedom. Do you want to succeed? Try, try anything. Too many writers get bogged down in how-to books that they never actually write. Of those that do write, many get bogged down in books and blogs about publishing and never take a chance.

So take a chance. I have published a couple of short stories. I haven't had much luck in terms of sales, but that's doesn't mean you won't. I have written a couple of contemporary YA novels. They are important stories and I am glad I wrote them. They sell consistently but not particularly well. I am certainly not going to live off royalties on those books. Lately I have been drawn back to my first love, fantasy. Will my fantasy novels sell better? Time will tell.

I have many story ideas in my head and on my computer. They span many genres. I recommend that every writer should write the stories they have inside them and not pigeon-hole themselves as romance authors, fantasy writers or whatever too early in their career (or ever for that matter.) Take a chance and write a story that isn't in your usual genre. You might find a more comfortable niche for yourself.

I am most active on Facebook, Goodreads and Twitter. I have accounts on almost all of the major social media sites. As new sites emerge I sign up and check them out. Some become part of my ongoing marketing and some don't. Again, I would urge all writers to try out as many social networks as possible. As time goes on you will have a first hand sense of where to prioritize your time.

When historians look back on this time period in a hundred years I think they will all agree on one thing. The writers who succeed will be those that were willing to try new things. So get out and try.

Connect with Author Rachel Eliason


Monday, September 30, 2013

Guest Post: Writing for Children: A Challenging Reward

 Please give a warm welcome to author James L. Butler. After a recent interaction with James in regards to his latest children's book, The Cow-Pie Chronicles, I invited him over to share a guest post related to writing. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. So, with out further ado, please welcome author James L. Butler . . .

Writing for Children: A Challenging Reward

The Cow-Pie Chronicles
The Cow-Pie Chronicles
by James Butler
By James Butler - Most of my fiction writing over the past thirty years has been in the sci-fi genre. That was what I enjoyed reading and I have always had a deep interest in the progress of science in all fields. Sci-fi is not the easiest genre to write in as it has some pretty strict rules that the fan base expects an author to follow or they will reject it outright. But writing in sci-fi is almost free-form compared to writing for children.
 When my son turned nine, I decided I wanted to write something with him that he would enjoy to get him more interested in writing. That effort ended with my first middle-grade book, Raptor Ravine. But the journey was long and tenuous at times. I started by reading a few articles by successful authors of middle-grade stories and books. It was immediately apparent I had a lot to learn. There are not set plot and structure rules like there are in sci-fi writing. Instead, there are about a hundred things a writer has to be aware of and cautious about and all of them are a little ambiguous. On the grand scale, there is the basic challenge of working from a child’s viewpoint of the world he is in, using language that is authentic, with emotions that are genuine. For me, that meant one thing; going back to the old writing adage write what you know. I grew up in rural America so that would need to be my setting.
 The specific challenges were not so easily overcome. The writer has to be intimately aware of level of language, complexity of sentences, use of appropriate subject matter, etc. etc. etc.! With so many technical issues, it would be easy to lose sight of the main objective, to be entertaining. One evening I was watching an interview with the director of “BIG” about Tom Hanks’ role playing a thirteen year old boy. He said the reason Tom excelled at the role was because he never gave a clue in his performance he knew he was an adult playing a thirteen year old boy. And his co-actor, who was a thirteen year old boy, said they would pal around as thirteen year old playmates so often between scenes, he would forget Tom was an adult. In short, the key is always staying in character. In order to write for children, I needed to become a child when writing and make sure the readers never saw a hint I knew I was a character created by an adult. Sounds simple, huh? Yeah, right!

 The biggest single challenge in this transition was the dialog. It is not as simple as using small words and short sentences. That approach can make it look like the writer is ‘talking down’ to the readers. And that never works. I had a unique opportunity to learn how kids talk. I did many things with my nine year old son and his friends. I coached them in soccer, officiated at swim meets, helped with their birthday parties and sat and listened to them all day during long, away swim meets. There are some basics about kid’s dialog that appeared consistently in all of the conversations. Kids speak in short, emotional bursts. They respond quickly when other kids speak to them. They are quick to make their point. They use as few words as possible to make a point. They are often simplistic and brutally honest in their opinions of people and situations. They have many conversations with each other they would never share with their parents or any adult. (I spent so much time around them I became invisible to them as long as I was quiet.) And each group has their set of code words which have secret meanings only their group understands.

 Knowing these things and implementing them in my writing was two different things. But I had a secret tool there as well, my son. I would write a chapter of the story, and then ask him to read it. He would tell me things like “My friends would never say that.” Or “That’s not what that word means to us.” Or “That’s how my friends would react if she did that.” Once he was satisfied the chapter was written in his language, we went one step further. We role played the entire chapter. (I could never get him to do any of the girl parts though.)   It took a long time to get through 70,000 words of story, but it was worth it.
 The time my son and I spent together working on the story was enough reward for me. We learned things about each other we never would have learned doing anything else. Having the story published, read and enjoyed by other kids was a big bonus. And the highlight was visiting a small rural school that had read my book. When adults like an author, they may admire him. When kids like an author’s story, they worship him. The best part of that is it gives a person a chance to make a positive influence on a child’s life. My current children’s book, The Cow-Pie Chronicles is bringing a different equally satisfying set of awards. Since it is based on a real child-hood life, I hear from many adult readers about similar, happy times in their young lives. It appears to be the kind of story a parent buys for a child so the parent can read it first! As for the children, it is rewarding to see them enjoy being introduced to a world few of them have experienced and enjoying it. I am looking forward to entering a few classrooms to share some of the real stories the book is based on and answering questions about growing up on a farm.

Meet the Author

  Jim Butler spent his first eleven years on a family dairy farm. Those years were filled with hard work, adventure, and sometimes suffering. He then moved to a town far away from country life where he became an excellent student and a track star setting two school records. All the running he did on the farm really paid off!  Writing always fascinated him, even in grade school. In 1963, in sixth grade he attempted to write a book about traveling to the moon for an English assignment. He got a “C” because the assignment was late and unfinished.
Connect With James L. Butler
To request a review copy or to host author James L. Butler on your blog with a guest post or interview, please leave a comment below with a link to your blog and an email address where he can contact you. You can also find the free Teacher's Guide for The Cow-Pie Chronicles on the publishers site at Publishing Syndicate.

If you would like your post deleted afterwards (due to the email address listed) please notate to 'delete after information is received'. I will copy the info and forward it to him so that your info is not available.