What's the Story?
I'm
editing a science fiction novel right now, the first novel I've
attempted that has multiple points of view, and it's gotten me
reflecting on how vital it is to decide whose story it is, and what are
the point-of-view characters.
The
book involves two four-way relationships and an antagonist involved in a
political thread. This is the third major revision. The first time I
told the wrong story, that of the younger four, from a first person POV.
The second I wrote for an online class that required I write a certain
number of words on a new story. Though the draft was sketchy, I tried to
both the older four and younger four. One of the POV characters was the
main character from the first revision, and as a result the primary
story lost focus.
I
had put the second version aside and was, I thought, almost finished
with the first version when a reader convinced me that my heart wasn't
in it, that I was much more invested in the thread involving the older
four characters. Reluctantly, I decided she was right, and went back to
rethink the whole thing.
I
decided to concentrate on the older four. Any scene involving one of
the younger four's point of view went out the window. That left me with
the four older characters, some of whom had been short-changed in both
previous versions, and the antagonist. I knew from the first version
that not having him as a point of view character weakened the story.
I
decided to start with two chapters featuring my main character, and
then a chapter devoted to each of the other POVs. These chapters were
new and they forced me to consider what I needed to show about the
characters, why it was important to the story, and how to tell it. One
character especially, who had been the most neglected in the two
previous drafts, sprang into focus when I wrote her initlal chapter.
This influenced the interplay between them and how the story unfolded
from then on.
I
am not a detailed plotter, and certain things only become real to me as
I write them. In the previous version, the characters in the primary
relationship had been off stage often enough that I did not sufficiently
develop the nuances of their relationship. In this one, I was forced to
consider them each far more carefully in order to clarify their voices.
I
did have some scenes I quite liked from version two, and fortunately
they involved the older four, so I was able to use them. The first
version also had a couple of scenes I liked, but, alas, they did not --
could not -- make it into the book. Perhaps at some point I can write a
short story that could include some of it.
All
this, of course, still left me struggling with the sheer mechanics of
managing five character's voices, and of keeping track of whose voice I
was in at any one time. I started by naming the chapters for the
character and switching only at chapter breaks. About a third of the way
through the writing gods smiled on me, and Terry Odell sent a
shout-out on the Savvy Authors email loop about her upcoming point of
view workshop. I signed up immediately. It was a huge help.
Will
I do better next time in deciding on my point of view characters? Maybe
-- maybe not. I will give it the thought it deserves, but I'm still
going to be ready to discover that I've made a mistake and need to go
back and regroup.
Here are some other articles you might want to check out:
Writing, publishing, book marketing, all offered by experienced authors, writers, and marketers
Market Yourself As the Expert You Know You Are
Someone Beat You To It, Huh
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Guest Post by Carolyn Howard-JohnsonMaybe we all have a tendency to feel disgruntled when our local newspaper quotes an expert who isn’t—really!—as expert as we are! Worse, what about when CNN features a talking head on the subject of their book and they disagree with you! Seems you have a choice. You can grumble or you can take action.
- Use your Googling skills to contact whoever was in charge (or to blame!) for this lack of foresight. Journalists. Producers. Talk show hosts. Give yourself enough time to cool off and put your tactful hat on and contact them.
- Introduce yourself being very clear about your credentials. In fact, put the credentials upfront before your name unless you’re already famous. (For a script/template of how to approach reporters and others responsible for stories from master marketer Raleigh Pinskey, see the Index of The Frugal Book Promoter (www.budurl.com/FrugalBkPromo).
- Follow up with a personal cover letter and a copy of your book. Oh, and your media kit!
- Follow up again when something similar hits the news. You may be remembered. In fact, expand your campaign to include others who might cover the story.
Don’t assume that because you write fiction, you can’t be an expert. Of course you can! I am an expert on tolerance, polygamy, and a host of related subjects based on the theme and setting of my novel This Is the Place (www.budurl.com/ThisIsthePlace) and on my life’s experiences on those topics. And yes, I was a guest on at least a dozen radio shows because of that expertise. All you have to do is examine the subjects of your fiction and see how it relates to what’s in the news.
------
Carolyn Howard-Johnson, author of This Is the Place; Harkening: A Collection of Stories Remembered; Tracings, a chapbook of poetry; and how to books for writers including the award-winning second ediction of, The Frugal Book Promoter: How to get nearly free publicity on your own or by partnering with your publisher; The Frugal Editor: Put Your Best Book Forward to Avoid Humiliation and Ensure Success; and Great Little Last Minute Editing Tips for Writers . The Great First Impression Book Proposal is her newest booklet for writers. She has three FRUGAL books for retailers including A Retailer’s Guide to Frugal In-Store Promotions: How To Increase Profits and Spit in the Eyes of Economic Downturns with Thrifty Events and Sales Techniques. Some of her other blogs are TheNewBookReview.blogspot.com, a blog where authors can recycle their favorite reviews. She also blogs at all things editing, grammar, formatting and more at The Frugal, Smart and Tuned-In Editor .
New Business Logo Design for A Writer's World Ezine
Creating a business logo design for your writing, especially if you offer services or products is an essential part of marketing.
Taking this into account and listening to my writing coach, I've been working on creating a focused platform for my writing and writing services and I think I finally came up with something.
Above is the new logo for The Writing World newsletter.
I've done a poll on the logo design, you can check it out HERE, but after getting emailed feedback, I decided on a more unique logo.
Now I know I'm taking a risk with the 'old world' feel of this design, but once anyone reads my posts or other content, they will quickly realize my writing is current, informative, and professional.
While you do need acquire and analyze input from others when deciding on a logo, unless you can hire a professional you'll have to go with your gut for the overall design. And, remember, you can't please everyone. Some people will 'get' what you're conveying and others won't. That's the nature of things.
Also, when promoting your newsletter, or now some marketers are calling it an ezine, you need to have a FOCUSED landing page for the opt-in.
What? Why?
Simple, today's readers are usually scanning what they read and looking for more information. This will likely have them scanning your site, if the information they read is valuable, for other articles or offers. THIS IS DISTRACTING.
If a reader lands on a page that ONLY tells them WHY they should OPT-IN to your ezine or newsletter, and your copy is effective, they will be focused and be much more likely to SIGN-UP.
You can check out my new OPT-IN page at The Writing World Newsletter
(In regard to the url for the site, I tried to get the domain name awritersworld.com, but it was taken.)
Another tip for promoting your ezine is to always offer something of value - a free gift. The gift should relate to what your site is about and be something the reader can use.
That's about it, except I'd love your feedback on the new logo. PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT AND LET ME KNOW WHAT YOU THINK.
Oh, if you haven't signed-up yet, PLEASE DO! Want to know why you should? Check out
The Writing World.
If you have the inclination to sign-up NOW, there's an opt-in on the sidebar, right on top!
Thanks!
~~~~~~~~~~~
Visit Karen Cioffi Writing and Marketing for more writing and marketing information.
For more on logos, check out:
Logos for Writers
=====
Design an eBook Cover Webinar
Writers on the Move has its next FREE webinar set up:
Design Your Own eBook Cover in 10 Easy Steps Using Microsoft Office 2010
Title: Design Your Own eBook Cover in 10 Easy Steps
Date: June 22, 2012
Time: 7 PM - 7: 45 EST (U.S.) - May run a bit longer
Presenter:Karen Cioffi
Cost: Free
Format: Live Webinar
Handout: YES (after workshop)
We will be recording the workshop. Any handouts and the recording link to the workshop will be provided after the event. Attendees will be added to A Writer's World ezine for updates on Writers on the Move upcoming webinars, along with writing and marketing information.
DESCRIPTION:
What author today hasn’t thought of self-publishing a book through Kindle? If a poll were taken, the results would probably be close to 100 percent. Most will have either considered or are considering this new wave of publishing freedom.
In fact, ebook authors and marketers, such as Jim Edwards, consider traditional publishing as a weak link in your writing armor, especially in regard to information ebooks.
Whether you want to publish with Kindle or you prefer selling your ebooks from your own website, you’ll need a cover. But, not just any cover, you’ll need a unique and appealing cover. A cover that may very well be the determining factor as to whether a potential customer clicks on the BUY button.
You might be thinking that you’re not tech savvy and don’t have any special programs for the job. Well, if you have Microsoft Word 2010, you don’t need anything else. Most of this is possible with MS 2007, and possibly MS 2003. You’ll have to test it out.
And, aside from creating great book covers, you can create amazing business logo designs with the same process.
Join Karen for step-by-step instructions as she actually creates an ebook cover on this screen-sharing webinar.
To register for the webinars email Karen at karenrcfv - A T - yahoo
Please put "Design an eBook Cover" in the Subject box.
Details and the actual REGISTRATION to attend the LIVE WEBINAR will be provided upon your sign-up request.
You won't want to miss this. To register, email Karen at:
karenrcfv - at *yahoo* dot *com*
Want even more information in an in depth ebook? Check out:
http://karencioffifreelancewriter.com/books-on-marketing/design-your-own-ebook-cover-in-10-easy-steps/
If you get the ebook, you can attend the webinar to see the information in action!
~~~~~~~~~~
For more on marketing check out:
Websites That Work: 7 Key Factors (Part 1)
Book Promotion: The Foundation
~~~~~~~~~~
To keep up with writing and marketing information, along with Free webinars - signup for A Writer's World Newsletter on the right top sidebar!
Until next time,
Karen Cioffi
Multi-award Winning Author, Freelance/Ghostwriter, Editor, Marketer
Find Karen’s eBooks on writing and marketing at:
http://karencioffifreelancewriter.com
=====
Writing for Theme-Based Contests
Writers draw
inspiration from many sources, including words, phrases and pictures--and many
contests require you to do just that. Writing about the same
"theme" as other writers can be challenging but can also push you to
greater levels of creativity in search of the unexpected angle.
As with any other
type of writing contest, it's important to stick to the guidelines. Stay within
the proscribed word count, use the required formatting, and DO NOT miss the
deadline.
In order to succeed
in theme-based contests, you have to look beyond the obvious responses and
surprise the judges. You might even surprise yourself.
One of my earliest
wins as a writer was in a poetry contest that wanted humorous takes on love.
Rather than go for outright humor in every line, I set up a typically romantic
scenario before delivery the final deadpan line.
red rose
valentine
gift
treasured
keepsake
symbolic of
our love
pressed flat
The judges got the
joke, and I got first prize.
The first time I ran
a contest, I asked entrants to write about "the first time." The
phrase might bring to mind memories of first love or first sex, but I wanted to
see something more. What I got was an eclectic mix of stories, including tales
of skydiving, wartime, jail, and a woman's first encounter with her grandchild
who had Down's Syndrome.
Whether you're
writing for theme-based contests or simply looking for inspiration for your
next project, keep an open mind. Details don't change, only your perceptions.
Trust your
instincts. Don't be afraid of the "strange" ideas that pop into your
head. Don't listen to the little voice that whispers, "You can't write
that." If you hear that voice, get the "strange" ideas on paper
as fast as possible. You're probably onto something good.
Betty
Dobson is an award-winning writer of short fiction, essays and poetry. She also
writes newspaper and magazine articles but is still waiting for those awards to
materialize. In the meantime, she continues to run InkSpotter
Publishing, which has three new books available and several more in
the works for 2012.
IN HONOR OF MEMORIAL DAY:WRITING DOWN YOUR MEMORIES
WRITE YOUR LIFE STORY
Today is Memorial Day here in the United States. I am spending some time writing before I visit my father's grave site in the Delaware Veteran's Memorial Cemetery. I invite you to honor yourself today by capturing your life's most precious memories on paper. Writing your life story is a powerful exercise that will lead you directly to your own truth. What are the most pivotal moments in your personal history? What are the patterns that keep repeating in your life? What have you learned from these life lessons? How can you utilize what you learned to help others? Write your life story and be prepared to uncover your purpose in a powerful way. If you are having trouble writing about your own life, write about the life of someone who has inspired you greatly. Once you get your creative juices flowing, you will likely find it easy to delve into your own story and truth. Here is an example of a life story that demonstrates a powerful purpose. I wrote this story in honor of my father, John McCabe.
A Hero’s Journey to Purpose
He sits in a tattered blue reclining chair, his eyes shining with mischief and exhaustion. His day began promptly at five thirty this morning, just as it has every other morning for the past sixty three years. From the moment his feet hit the floor they are in perpetual motion, each step dedicated to helping others. Selflessly, he devotes the majority of his day to assisting other people with their activities of daily living. No small feat for a survivor of a tragic childhood, five brain tumors, and a tour in Vietnam. Although he conceals it well, some days it is difficult for him to get out of bed. The tumor in his brain wreaks havoc with his balance and hearing. He is completely deaf in his left ear. Frequently, he stumbles into walls and is plagued with seizures and nausea. His head bears faded torturous scars from the three brain surgeries he has endured. There are tiny blue tattoos sprinkled across his forehead which are souvenirs from two bouts of radiation therapy. Rarely does he speak of his illness, only if he feels by sharing his story it will benefit another. The tasks he undertakes may seem mundane to the average person. However, these important gifts he freely bestows upon others are priceless. His list of good deeds is endless and clandestine. He does not believe in tooting his own horn, but rather quietly performs these tasks with no expectation of gratitude or appreciation. His list of daily contributions to others is infinite. It includes fixing toilets for widows, mowing the lawn for the wife of an imprisoned man, teaching new immigrants the idiosyncrasies of American culture, repairing the broken bicycle of a fatherless child, fixing a strangers flat tire, helping a lost, drunken man find his way home, and tutoring a failing student in chemistry. On the days when he is too ill to move about, he contributes by lending a listening ear and compassionate words to those in need. He completes all of these activities with an altruistic joy that permeates his whole being. He takes pride in making someone else’s day and is constantly on the look out of a person in need.
This joyous saint of a man in this chair is my father. Ironically, twenty years ago my father was convinced his life was without meaning or purpose. As a well-educated and accomplished genius in the pharmaceutical industry, my father once derived his identity from his career. Much of his time was spent on business trips and tending to the needs of his company. After his second brain surgery, my father became too ill to work. The surgery and subsequent radiation had impaired his short term memory and ability to concentrate and focus. With a heavy heart, he reluctantly resigned his position after being deemed permanently and totally disabled by a panel of medical experts. The first few years after he stopped working were extremely difficult for him. He sat listlessly in that big blue chair, wondering what the next day would bring. He had loved being productive but sadly his body and mind were no longer what they used to be. His liquid brown eyes were full of pain and anguish. I think some days he was just waiting to die. Well-meaning friends and family, including myself, would ask him what he was planning to do with his time, as if he were on some sort of extended vacation. These questions served only to increase his anxiety and depression. Limited by his medical condition and disability, he lamented why he was on his earth.
I do not recall any single incident that arouse my father from the slumber of his depression and hopelessness. Rather, it was an insidious series of events that made him clearly see the path of his life’s journey. Perhaps it began when my father received a teary late night telephone call from a former colleague whose seventeen year old daughter was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor. Without a moment’s hesitation, my father went to this young girl’s bedside to offer her words of comfort and inspiration but most importantly, truth. My father became like a man on a beach with a metal detector in pursuit of buried treasures. Everywhere he went, he sought out to identify a human need and fulfill it. It seemed as if disadvantaged people were placed directly in front of him by a force of divine intervention. An elderly man standing in the middle of the road bleeding. A single mother with a dead battery in the parking lot of a convenience store. My father’s eye once gain became bright pools of light and inspiration. He discovered something that is available to us all if only we can silence our minds to hear the divine calling.
As his sits in the recliner the pearls of wisdom roll of his tongue. “I spent a long time wondering why I was here and why I have survived.” He murmurs deliberately “Now I know that I am here to help others on their journey.” And from his a small offering of words I learn a vast lesson. Do not spend the majority of your time and energy contemplating your life’s mission and purpose. Your purpose on earth is more readily discovered when you increase your awareness about what is going on around you and seek to help others. Put simply, just be, do what it placed in front of you and turn the rest over to God.
Aileen McCabe-Maucher is the author of the book "The Inner Peace Diet" which was published by Penguin Books and released in December 2008. Aileen is a licensed clinical social worker and psychotherapist who has helped many people find inner peace and discover their unique life purpose. She has worked for over fifteen years as a licensed psychotherapist and registered nurse providing individual and group counseling to a diverse client population. Aileen is currently pursuing a doctorate at the University of Pennsylvania and writing her third book.
Get your completely free Inner Peace Diet ECourse by visiting www.theinnerpeacediet.com
Deep Wells - Understanding Your Writing Moods
Deep Wells
Understanding Your Writing Moods
Writers
feel deeply and think deeply. They draw from a deep well of experience, observance, and expression. How wonderful when we are drawing fresh, clear thinking from that well! Thing is, that
deep well can also bring up some silt in the form of muddy, cluttered thinking, too. Feelings of negativity or failure can ensue.
Some of my
best writing has actually come from when I’ve been feeling blue. It seems I am more in
tune with myself and my surroundings. Some of the greatest composers and
artists suffered with moods and even depression.
But the downside is those feelings can work against me, leaving me feeling discouraged, rejected, and finally, a failure. Feelings are fickle and they are not always accurate, truthful, or dependable.
It’s
important to know yourself. Feelings may work for you and produce a creative
writing streak, but it may not work for you if you bottom out and give up.
Don’t
get me wrong. I love those writing streaks! But I occasionally still grapple with
feelings that end up making me feel like a loser. That is when I go with it
until it’s over, otherwise, I may make decisions that I will regret later –
like giving up.
Once and
awhile, someone rains on our parade. Sometimes, a surprise spring snowfall
threatens your long awaited spring flowers. There are times when your
writing isn’t producing. You want to give up. Don’t. Because just as quickly as
that low season came it will leave. Remember that when those times intrude upon
you, they can leave just as quickly.
Here are some further ideas to help:
- Join a writer's group. If there isn't one in your area, find one online. Here is where you will find encouragement. We all need this!
- When you're feeling discouraged because of writer's block, rejection letters, or if you've gotten off track, don't give up. Ride it out.
- Believe that you have a unique voice that people want to read. If you give up, someone will lose out!
- When those times of discouragement come, go with it. Take a break. There is nothing written in stone that you have to produce everyday.
- Be yourself. Comparing ourselves with other writers and authors only stunts our growth. Be confident! Learn all you can about your craft but at the end of the day - you are you.
Kathleen Moulton is a freelance writer and nature lover.
She is married, has 8 children, ages 10-28, and has
been homeschooling for 25 years. You can find her passion to bring
encouragement and hope to people of all ages at http://kathleenmoulton.com/
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