Back in the swing of things

  • Back in the swing of things

    Hi,

    It’s been a while since I have posted because there have been lots of Happening Things going on here at my sunny place in Northern California. We began renovating our yard in October in preparation for our youngest son’s wedding in June. Eight and a half months of hauling, digging, pulling, moving, planting, paving . . . and our yard is beautiful and hopefully will be easier to maintain in our later years. The wedding was awesome, amazing, and inspiring.

    Just as I returned the last wedding item, my 85-year-old mother passed away. I’m at peace with that and happy she is no longer in pain.

    In anticipation of possible after-wedding let-down, I planned a huge project, which I am in the middle of. More will be revealed in the autumn.

    So, even though I haven’t been able to post here, I haven’t been idle. I’m going to get back to posting and look forward to connecting with you through The Write Spot Blog.

    Hmmm. . . as I thought about what to title this . . . “Back in the swing of things” came to mind.  That could make a great writing prompt.

    Are you ready to write?  Back in the swing of things. . . Just write.

    ~Marlene

     

     

     

  • Submit to Wordrunner echapbooks

    Two fiction collections, each by one author, will be selected for Wordrunner’s Fall 2017 e-chapbooks, to be published in September and November, respectively. Stories by authors who receive Honorable Mentions will be considered for publication in the annual spring anthology.

    Last day to submit July 31, 2017.

    Stories may be flash or longer, from 500 up to 5,000 words each. Quality trumps word count.

    Minimum of five stories and no more than 15 (if flash fiction). They need not be linked, but it would be a plus if they belong together for some reason, be it theme, location or character/s. Excerpts from novels will also be considered for these echapbooks.

    Looking for fiction that is subtle in emotional complexity.

    Submit your best work only. Each story should be original and compelling. No genre fiction, please, unless a story is good enough to transcend genre.

    General guidelines:

    At least one-fourth of any collection should be previously unpublished.

    Submission Guidelines.

     

  • Writing Success Revealed by Thonie Hevron

     Image result for thonie hevron

    Guest Blogger Thonie Hevron’s interview reveals her writing successes.

    What is the most important thing that you have learned in your writing experience?

    Keep working.

    What would you say is your most interesting writing quirk? I used to have to light a specific scented candle but I’ve outgrown that. I had to write to classical music, but I find it distracting now. I won’t drink wine while I am working or anything but water or coffee. Pretty boring, I’d say. Sometimes, those quirks become excuses for not putting my butt in the chair. No quirks, no excuses.

    Tell us your insights on self-publish or use a publisher?

    I’ve done both and each has plusses and minuses. Self-publishing has more author control. I recall after my first book, By Force or Fear, came out, a reader said he found very few editorial mistakes. That was one of my goals. Editing is one of the most exacting, tedious jobs in authorship. Then, I got a small press publisher (who eventually published my first book) for my second thriller, Intent to Hold. After Intent was published, a friend called me to tell me he wanted to give the book five stars on Amazon reviews but couldn’t because there were so many editorial mistakes. There was a whole printing of books that had most of the Mexican words underlined (the correct formatting to indicate italics). Yikes! I’d been given the galleys to check but that slipped by both me and the publisher. I had to destroy a whole $hipment.

    Any insights eBooks vs. print books and alternative vs. conventional publishing?

    For alternative versus conventional publishing: it depends on your genre, your book, your audience, and many other things. I write traditional police procedurals/crime thrillers so an alternative publisher probably wouldn’t suit me. But other authors are well served by this medium. Bottom line is, you, as an author, have to educate yourself on the business.

    Do you have any secret tips for writers on getting a book published?

    First, there is no secret. Just write and produce a marketable product. Second, get the word out: enter contests, query literary agents and publishers until you find what you need. Thirdly, but not least, market yourself and your work. Public relations is one of the most daunting aspects of today’s publishing world. But if an agent or publisher looks at your work compared to another author and you have a solid, thriving platform, chances are good they’ll look harder at you. After all, they only make money if your books sell. If you’re engaged in selling them, too, and the other author isn’t, you are the better bet.

    How would you suggest acquiring an agent?

    1. Query, query, query.
    2. Go to writers conferences (volunteering is a great way to get in cheap sometimes); join a writers club (I belong to the Redwood Branch of the California Writers’ Club, an incredibly active club that has helped me learn to set goals, organize, write better, market and so much more).
    3. Go to club workshops, pitch sessions, and volunteer to help at events or the leadership level.
    4. I belong to Public Safety Writers Club, Sisters in Crime and International Thriller Writers. All offer scoops on agents currently looking for new projects.
    5. Sometimes the agents attend the club conferences looking for new clients.
    6. Subscribe to blog newsletters like Funds for Writers: mystery writer C. Hope Clark offers a free version with agent info. I check that every week.
    7. Find a book in your genre that you like, find the author’s agent, research and pitch/query him or her.
    8. Subscribe to QueryTracker or one of the many online (free!) programs to put you in touch with agents and/or publishers.
    9. Check out this excellent post to Nancy Cohen’s site for further resources: Getting an Agent 

    Do you have any suggestions for new writers?

    Write: put your butt in the chair and write, even if you toss it tomorrow, there may be something that leads to something else. Write: if it takes a schedule carved in stone, getting up at 5 A.M., or finding a place outside the home. Write!

    Develop a thick skin: know that when you ask your mother about your newest work, she is going to tell you it’s a masterpiece. Not so with the rest of the world. I joined my current critique group ten years ago and have learned so much; become a better writer because of their criticisms. I wouldn’t trade any of them.

    Speaking of critique groups: Join one! Find a group of people with similar goals (not necessarily similar genres) to cheer you on, to point out better ways to say it, to give you ideas when you’re stuck, challenge you to dig deeper, but one of the most cogent arguments for a critique group: to produce ten pages of work every meeting.

    Join a writer’s club: even if you have to do it from a distance (online). Nothing beats glad-handing with other reclusive writers (you want me to meet other people???). These days authors are so much more than writers. They’re speakers, experts, bloggers, marketers, and so on. Like it or not, the Hemingwayian prototype of the writer as a hard-drinking ascetic is history. Today, writers network.

    What was the most surprising thing you learned with your creative process with your books?

    That I could do it. I never doubted that I had the skill to write, oddly enough. My uncertainties lay in setting and achieving a goal. Typing “The End” on the manuscript. When I finally did, I had to polish it heavily.

    I had to learn new skills such as social media, blogging and public speaking (what??? Not me, the girl who couldn’t get up in front of a crowd to be her best friend’s bridesmaid!). Not to mention formatting, even if I’m traditionally published, the editor requires the text to be just so.

    How many books have you written?

    Four: By Force or Fear, Intent to Hold both on Amazon. With Malice Aforethought to be published sometime later in 2017 and a fourth book, working title: Walls of Jericho. That one is in edit.

    Do you have any tips to help others become a better writer?

    Stay current with what my genre is producing; they evolve daily. See what is being published and what is selling. I look at the monthly reports from International Thriller Writers and Sisters in Crime. They give comprehensive info on what’s out there.

    I keep a stock of writing craft books on hand so when I get stuck at a denouement (for instance), I can research Stephen King, David Corbett, Nancy Kress, Jordan Rosenfeld and more.

    My quick go-to is my critique group. They challenge me.

     What makes your book stand out from the crowd?

    Because my topics are so real, they tend to be dark. But I have the cop-survival mechanism of humor to defuse the tension. I think the blend is unique.

    I also love to make the setting a character. Whether it is Sonoma County or Puerto Vallarta, I like to take readers there: how does it feel (humid or damp)? Smell (jungles are full of growing things that give off scents)?

    How do you promote your work?

    I use social media to get to audiences. I market heavily to cops so I belong to Facebook groups and post my blog links. Readings are huge. Our local bookstore, Copperfield’s and my writers club, Redwood Writers, host many literary events at which I have appeared as an emcee and featured author. I meet customers at local fairs and festivals. I give out freebies like bookmarks with my book info on them.

    What is the one thing you would do differently now?

    I’d have started sooner. I wrote as a kid but never had any direction. In my fifties that I decided I’d better get to it if I wanted to write a book. Marketing wasn’t on the radar then or I probably would have been scared off! Basically, I would have believed in myself sooner.

    What saying or mantra do you live by?

    Put your butt in the chair and write. Quitting is the sure road to failure.

    About Thonie Hevron:

    After accepting a dare, I was hired by San Rafael Police in 1973 as a Parking Enforcement Officer. Now, 35 years later, I look back on a long and varied years in law enforcement. It was a career that fuels BY FORCE OR FEAR and many more. I spent nearly seven years on the street as a Community Service Officer but the bulk of my tenure has been as a dispatcher. During that time I have written several technical manuals. Because of my interest in writing, I have authored law enforcement related newspaper columns for the Inyo Register, Tri-City Times and the North Valley Times. I write like I think: like a cop. After spending so much time in the field, I’ve  learned many things. My most useful lesson is that I’ll never know it all. There’s always research to be done, people to talk to, stories to write.

  • Flash Fiction – What it is and is not.

    When I prepared this blog post, I neglected to note the source. I only have “White” as the author. I considered not posting this, but I love this definition of flash fiction. If you know who “White” is, please, let me know.

    Flash Fiction

    According to White, flash fiction “combines the narrative grip of traditional short fiction with the compression, imagery and allusiveness of poetry. A good flash tale instantly intrigues us, may also momentarily bewilder us, and delivers an emotional jolt to the solar plexus—all in fewer than 1,500 words.”

    White lays out the steps to writing flash fiction. Briefly:

    • The best flash stories are bona fide stories in which a viewpoint character struggles with internal or external conflict.
    • Aims for intrigue and complications.
    • Includes unique ways the protagonist struggles with the problem.
    • A lesson is learned or an epiphany experienced.
    • Uses sensory detail.

    What Flash Fiction is not

    A flash story isn’t merely a hyper-compressed regular-length story; rather, the compression unlocks a dimension of experience that eludes us in other modes of creative expression. — White

  • If you could change . . . Prompt #323

    If you could change some things in your history, what would you change?

  • A little known fact. Prompt #322

    Write about something most people don’t know about you.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Something lost or stolen. . . Prompt #321

    Write about something that was lost or stolen from you or your fictional character.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Make Sense of Your World Through Writing

    “Portable Corona number 3. That’s my analyst.” — Ernest Hemingway

    Heal Through Writing

    “Several incidents contributed to social psychologist James W. Pennebaker’s interest in ‘healing writing.’ But when his parents’ visit during college launched a bout of the asthma he thought he’d left behind in the dry Texas of his childhood, he realize climate wasn’t to blame; his emotions were. Once he recognized the connection, the asthma attacks stopped.” —“Writing to heal,” by Gail Radley, May 2017 The Writer magazine.

    Pennebaker has conducted multiple studies indicating that writing can lead to healing.

    Dr. Edward J. Murray investigated healing through writing and concluded “’It seems that putting our thoughts and feelings into language helps confront them, organize them, and wrest the meaning from them. . .” —Gail Ridley, May 2017 The Writer magazine.

    Perhaps we can make sense of our world by using freewrites as a vehicle.

    Note: If you are experience troubling thoughts that are disabling or disturbing, please seek professional help.

    Posts on The Write Spot Blog about healing through writing

    How To Write Without Adding Trauma    

    Does Your Heart Hurt? Prompt #269   

    Things Falling Apart is a Kind of Testing  

  • Who will you interview? . . . Prompt #320

    Today’s writing prompt

    Interview yourself or your fictional character, by answering these questions:

    How did you get started in your line of work?

    How did you become interested in your hobby?

    What did you desire at age 12?

    What did you desire at age 18?

    What did you desire at age 25?

    What did you desire at age 26 or older?

    What do you desire now?

    More ideas on Interviewing Character . . . Prompt #6

  • Mini memoirs unfold naturally

    Remember the joke: “How do you eat an elephant?”

    “One bite at a time.”

    Same with writing memoir . . . one incident at a time.

    “Whether your life story has an over-arching motif or you plan to cobble together a montage of more diverse meditations, the project can seem less overwhelming if you approach it as a series of mini memoirs—two-to three-page essays . . . pivotal points. . . in the broader portrait of your life.” Richard Campbell, January 2017 Writers Digest

    “The beauty in approaching your life story in terms of mini memoirs is that when it comes to themes, you don’t have to pick just one. Write scenes or vignettes on each theme that speaks to you.

    You may find that mini memoirs unfold more naturally than the more unwieldy, longer story you have to tell—and that they build momentum strong enough to carry you through the manuscript.”

    More on How To Write Memoir:

    How To Write A Memoir – Part One

    How To Write A Memoir – Part Two

    However you decide to write . . . Just Write!