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Story Ideas Are Tiny Treasures
7 Ways to Educate and Motivate Your Muse
"7 Ways to Educate and Motivate Your Muse” by Joan Y. Edwards
What can you do after you've submitted a manuscript to a publisher or agent?
What can you do when you're not working on marketing your work?
I believe this is the time to educate and motivate the muse within you. Here are 7 ways to educate and motivate your muse:
1. Experience Life, attend workshops, take courses.
a. Bake cakes.b. Go on a tour of an Historic house.
c. Attend a weekend workshop.
d. Volunteer at a homeless shelter for children.
e. Take a writing course at a community college or other learning institution.
2. Read three books about the craft of writing.
a. Darcy Pattison: Novel Metamorphosisb. Donald Maass: Writing the Breakout Novel Workbook
c. James N. Frey How to Write a Damn Good Novel
d. James N. Frey The Key: How to Write Damn Good Fiction Using the Power of Myth
e. Karl Iglesias: Writing for Emotional Impact
f. Margaret Lucke: Schaum’s Quick Guide to Writing Great Short Stories
3. Read three best-selling books in your favorite genre.
4. Watch three movies in the genre you write.
5. Study the websites of three best-selling authors.
Here is a list of many to choose from or search for your favorite online.Best-Selling Authors for Children
James Patterson
Rick Riordan
Jeff Kinney
Victoria Kann
Jane O’Connor
Suzanne Collins
J. K. Rowling
Best-Selling Authors for Adults
John Grisham
George R. R. Martin
Catherine Coulter
Janet Evanovich
6. Study and find three matching three publishers and agents for your manuscripts:
a. Jeff Herman’s Guide to Book Publishers, Editors, and Literary Agents 2011: Who They Are! What They Want! How to Win Them Over! by Jeff Hermanb. Sally Stuart’s Christian Writers’ Market Guide
c. Children’s Writer’s And Illustrator’s Market, Writer’s Digest Books
d. Writer’s Market by Writer’s Digest Books
c. Visit the Preditors & Editors website to check out the editors and agents you’ve chosen. It’ll tell you if they are legitimate or warn you about them. http://pred-ed.com/
f. Check the submission guidelines of the websites of the publishers and agents of three of your favorite books.
7. Write.
Copyright © 2014 Joan Y. Edwards
Joan’s Elder Care Guide, Release Early 2015 by 4RV Publishing
For more articles to inspire you and help you market your writing, read Joan's Never Give Up Blog
Midwest Review's Selected Titles for Writers
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In a recent article in his newsletter, Jim Cox, founding guru of the Midwest Review, includes his suggested titles for writers and I'm flattered (and glad to be one of them). I thought the readers of this Writers On The Move blog might want to select one or two for the betterment of their careers in 2014.
52 Ways To Sell More Books! by Penny C. Sansevieri
The Author's Guide To Publishing And Marketing by Tim Ward & John Hunt
Book Marketing De-Mystified by Bruce Batchelor
Book Promotion Made Easy by Eric Gelb
Brilliant PR by Cathy Bussey
The Complete Guide To Book Publicity by Jodee Blanco
The Economical Guide To Self-Publishing by Linda F. Radke
The Frugal Book Promoter: 2nd Edition, by Carolyn Howard-Johnson
Grass Roots Book Marketing by Rusty Fischer
Grassroots Marketing For Authors And Publishers by Shel Horowitz
Grassroots Marketing: Getting Noticed in a Noisy World by Shel Horowitz
Grumpy's Guide To Global Marketing For Books by Carolyn Mordecai
Maverick Marketing by Lisa Messenger & Mel Carswell
Maximum Exposure Marketing System by Tami DePalma & Kim Dushinski
Mosquito Marketing for Authors by Michelle Dunn
Musings Of An Online Bookseller by John Landahl
Online Book Marketing by Lorraine Phillips
Publicize Your Book! by Jacqueline Deval
Publishing For Profit by Thomas Woll
Red Hot Internet Publicity by Penny C. Sansevieri
Sell More Books! by J. Steve Miller & Cherie K. Miller
Sell Your Book Like Wildfire by Rob Eager
Selling Books as Premiums & Incentives by Marilyn & Tom Ross
The Selling Of An Author by Bruce E. Mowday
Simple Guide to Marketing Your Book, by Mark Ortman
The Step-by-Step Guide to Self-Publishing for Profit! by C. Pinherio & Nick Russell
Why, When, Where, & How To Write, Publish, Market, & Sell Your Book by Bill Thurwanger
Write, Publish & Market Your Book by Patrika Vaughn
You Can Market Your Book by Carmen Leal
Finding Appropriate Literary Magazines For Your Stories
Melinda Brasher has sold short stories to several magazines, including Ellipsis Literature and Art and Intergalactic Medicine Show. You can read her most recently published story, "Passcodes," free at The Future Fire. She's currently living in the Czech Republic and loving the nature (and the wild blueberries and raspberries for dessert during her hikes). Visit her online at http://www.melindabrasher.com/
Blogging Smart
By Karen Cioffi
It’s a give-in that you need to blog to make connections, to gain readers, to increase visibility, to increase your authority, to increase ranking, and to become the go-to person in your niche.
But, did you know that as of early September 2015, there are 1 BILLION websites online. That's a lot of noise . . . and competition. So, blogging smart is even more important than ever.
But, how do you blog effectively and smart? What does that mean?
To blog smart, you want to ‘prove’ to your visitors and subscribers that what you’re writing about or doing actually works.
How do you do this?
Simple. Show them.
For example:
A blog post at Karen Cioffi Writing and Marketing (site has since been deleted) on email marketing and spam got over 3700 views in just a couple of days.
This is blogging smart.
The image below is a screen-shot of that particular post's views in less than 24 hours - a couple of days later it was over 3700. A little after that it was at 3841. I haven't checked since then to see how far it has gone.
Okay, I’ll admit that sometimes it’s the ‘luck of the draw’ or the ‘right content at the right time,’ but if you’re not blogging smart to start, it’s unlikely you’ll get that far.
So, some things you should be including in your posts are:
• Screenshots to aid in comprehension and prove what you’re saying
• Links to relevant content bringing the reader deeper into your web pages, further demonstrating your knowledge in the niche
• Links to other useful information that will further benefit the reader
• Tips on what you should and shouldn’t do and why
• Strategies that work for you and proof
• Problems you’ve overcome and how
• Doable step-by-step guides
• Personality (a bit of personal tidbits)
• Videos
• Audio
• Images
• Call-to-action (CTA)
These are the elements you should be including in your blog posts, obviously not all at the same time - mix it up. This is blogging effectively and blogging smart. And, this strategy will motivate the reader to model your processes. This is one of the best compliments.
Even more important, it will motivate the visitor/reader to say YES to your CTA and SHARE your content.
Note: Images and CTAs should be included in everyone of your blog posts. And, in regard to images, at least one image should be at the top of the content. It's this image sites like Pinterest will pick up when you share the post.
Another part of blogging smart is to optimize your blog posts. Part of this includes using:
- Grabbing titles
- Keywords
- Tags
- Categories
- Descriptions
- Sharing your posts to your social media networks
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More on Writing and Marketing
Creating 3D Covers in Microsoft Publisher
Strategies to Get Book Reviews
You Know You’re a Writer When
Revision, Part 1: An Early Fiction Checklist
Writing on the Run
Deep in the throes of revision while having to go on a recent short trip, I had to face that writing time would be hit or miss; normally squeezed in whenever there's a free moment. To really dig in, though, I wanted to take more than could possibly fit in my catch-all bag: a dictionary, my thesaurus, reference books, as-of-yet unread writing books, etc., etc. Knowing this was impossible, I took a break to think about what I could realistically get accomplished on the trip, sat back and read an article, "4 Tips for Writing Scenes," by Ingrid Sundberg, http://ingridsnotes.wordpress.com/2014/07/01/4-tips-for-writing-great-scenes/.
Sundberg's article changed everything. Maybe I couldn't have all my tools, but I was at a place in my story where a preliminary check would be helpful. After a cursory look at my WIP with Sundberg's advice in mind, I made a startling discovery. The drama and emotion I thought I'd poured into my draft--heart, gut, and soul--didn't have the impact I'd envisioned. An editor might even call my scenes downright flimsy! I chose three areas that Sundberg suggested need to be present in each scene and decided not to wait until the end of the entire draft to consider them, but to review them early in the draft and see what would happen.
Three Scene Booster Musts
I backtracked to Chapter One and evaluated each scene according to Three Scene Boosters suggested in Sundberg's post. In each scene, I isolated these three areas:
- Significant Emotional Change: Does your character go through some sort of emotional change?
Revised emotional change: I needed to show a starker contrast between my character's boredom and fear.
- Dramatic Action: What action does your character take to get out of the bind she finds herself in?
Revised dramatic action: As the car picks up speed, I needed to show how frightened she is more clearly, which was to show how helpless she feels.
- Scene Summary: What is the main action in the scene? At the end of the scene go back and look at your character's main action(s).
- What is your character's main emotion(s)? Fearing for her life.
Just think, if another short trip comes along I won't have to take so many writing tools in my backpack. All I'll need is a pencil, eraser, colored pen, post-its, and extra paper. Oh, and a book to read in my spare time!
See if this plan works for you: In coming months more revision highlights will be explored to help narrow down important areas in your manuscript, one at a time.
Gearing Up for September
- Work Space - Do you need to do some filing and organizing? Are there outdated post-it- notes stuck around your space? Is your chair comfortable? Do you have enough room? How is the lighting? I recently moved my desk to another part of the room and it really made a difference.
- Supplies - School supplies are being sold everywhere at some really good prices. Now is the time to stock up! I like the composition notebooks (used come only in black and white) that now come in lots of colors. I use one for each project I'm doing. Every idea, deadline, contact, etc., goes in the color-designated notebook. I've found this works best for me instead of a file folder for current projects.
- Schedule - How is your writing schedule working? Are you taking ground? Even if it feels slow and steady, it counts! Are you trying to work in the morning, when you do your best at night? Have you been able to balance your personal life with your professional life? Take a good look at your writing routine. If you're not producing what you had planned, it's a good indication something needs to change. Don't be afraid to do it.
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