C h a z z W r i t e s . c o m

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Monday Writing Links

Sci-fi

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It’s mid-afternoon. You need a break. Here are three good links to perk you up. Indulge with a writer recommendation (I have a soft spot for Irish writers), some titles that will sound familiar (but not quite) and a useful guide to clichés to avoid when you’re constructing your next sci-fi epic.

John Self on the best Irish writer you’ve never heard of.

The Guide to Sci-fi Clichés

 

Filed under: publishing, Useful writing links, writing tips, , ,

The Ontario Writers’ Conference

Highway 401 west of the Don Valley Parkway/Hig...

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I went to the Ontario Writers’ Conference in Ajax last May and really enjoyed it. Sadly, it’s only one day, but it’s packed with agents, editors, authors, aspiring authors, workshops, blue pencil sessions and readings. I really enjoyed connecting with so many other writers. The event was incredibly well-organized and inexpensive.

Check out their offerings here. Will I see you there?

Filed under: web reviews, Writing Conferences, writing tips,

Comparing E-readers (because I’m running out of room!)

 
Friday's Library Sale Haul
Friday’s Library Sale Haul

 

But the problem is...
But the problem is…

 The bookshelves are groaning. I’m going to need to get an e-reader so I can store my books in the weightless, spaceless ether.

Are you wondering what e-reader to buy? Here’s a an interesting link that compares the tech:

How five e-readers stacked up – USATODAY.com‏

Filed under: Books, ebooks, web reviews, , , , , , , , ,

CONTEST #3 is STILL OPEN

New York Times, book review of Image:Thus Spak...

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Got a book you’re burning to review?

Is there a book you’ve read recently you feel so passionate about, you want to make the leap from just reading books to writing about them? You have until Wednesday, October 27 at 9 PM EST to submit your book review (400 words max.) 

The Chosen One shall receive one free copy of The Writing & Critique Group Survival Guide by Becky Levine. She’ll teach you how to improve your chances of getting published by organizing like-minded writers to help you critique writing with clarity and sensitivity. Please paste your book review into the body of your email to chazz@chazzwrites.vpweb.ca.

 

Filed under: book reviews, Contest announcement, ,

Friday Publishing Advice Links

iPad with on display keyboard

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Sorry for the late post today. I’m feeling a bit under the weather, but that must not stop the great publishing links!

 To kick things off, the top link is a great review of the iPad as a writing tool. Mr. David Hewson confirms my opinion that iPad is a great information consuming tool. It’s not a productive writing tool. He’s got me excited about Android tablets as an intriguing alternative to the iPad.
Read his detailed review here: David Hewson.

Remember those old Ronco ads? But wait, there’s more!

A writer’s blog on taking the NaNoWriMo challenge.

I Want to Publish My Book. Now what?

How to Write for Love and Money

10 Marketing Excuses That Can Kill Your Book and Career | The Official BookBuzzr Blog

Interview with Richard Hine on building a better book trailer.

Will You Be An Independent Author? « BubbleCow

A writer in the final stages of the book polish contemplates the wait ahead.

And last, but not at all least from Roger C. Parker…(make a drumroll sound in your brain)…

The 100 best writing books
 More to come Monday morning, but first…a nap!

 

Filed under: Friday Publishing Advice Links, NanNoWriMo, publishing, self-publishing, web reviews, writing tips, , , , , , ,

Poll: What’s your preoccupation?

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What blog content do you most value?

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Book Review: I Am Not a Serial Killer

Stephen King's House in Bangor, Maine

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Even when an author makes a choice that doesn’t sit well with the individual reader, when a book is written well, perceived flaws are easily forgiven. Dan Well’s debut novel, I Am Not a Serial Killer is a solid writer. From the first chapter, I knew I was going to like this book and I could see why his agent and publisher were grabbed immediately.

Wells has done his research so well, you’re convinced he’s been hanging out in mortuaries a long time. He details the embalming process is grisly, convincing detail. He’s acquainted himself well with how a sociopath thinks. I wish Jeff Lindsay, author of the Dexter books, understood serial killers so well. (While the Showtime series, Dexter, is superb, the books are get progressively worse.)

When Wells’s tale threatened to go off the rails for me, he kept me riveted with realistic detail. I’m not going to spoil the story for you. I will say that Wells makes a daring choice by sliding a gritty portrayal of a young sociopath into a supernatural story. Had he kept his horror altogether in reality, it would be In Cold Blood for the juvenile set. I got antsy about the supernatural turn the story took, but Wells controlled his story by going back to the realistic context.

Reality is what makes horror so effective. It’s viruses escaping from government labs. It’s the threats that lurk behind every corner which end at a police station, a hospital or a morgue. Think of Stephen King’s portrayal of big bad things happening in tiny, ordinary towns in Maine. What makes effective horror so effective is that it occurs in such ordinary contexts. That’s why Wells’s choice to opt for the supernatural is daring. Each time he went out to the edge of reality, he compensated by getting right back to a realistic context.

The flaws I mentioned? Near the end, vague explanations are made to police that are skimmed over. I’m not even clear what explanations were offered so alibis seemed underwritten. (If Wells had omitted that scene, the denouement would have been shorter, as well.) I didn’t buy that part and would have preferred that the police not be brought in at all. Unless you’re writing a police procedural, I find bringing police into thrillers is problematic. Generally, when the forces for order show up, they either chase the bad guys away and order comes closer to being restored. That’s why so many effective horror stories occur in remote places where the outside world is cut off, the bridge is out and civilian protagonists have to rely on their own wits and tendons. (In my own stories, cops are never a factor. Their role is to show up after all the real action is over. The people they tend to catch are standing over their spouse holding a butcher knife and covered in blood. In reality, there’s a lot less drama after the authorities get involved.) 

However, despite these quibbles, Wells ends his story perfectly. It could be the beginning of a series. The protagonist’s voice is so authentic, dangerous and vulnerable at the same time, I’m looking forward to reading more of Mr. Wells’s work.

Want to know more about the Dan Wells? Go to http://www.fearfulsymmetry.net/.

Filed under: book reviews, Horror, writing tips, , , ,

Poll: Followers! What Do You Do?

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Cool Words of the Day

I think I'm givin' up

Image by assbach via Flickr

Octonocular ~ Having eight eyes

Lugubrious ~ Mournful, indicating sorrow

Lupine ~ belonging to a wolf, also ravenous

Lumbago ~ pain in the low back

Jeunesse ~ the rich spendthrift youth of a community

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Bestseller with over 1,000 reviews!
Winner of the North Street Book Prize, Reader's Favorite, the
Literary Titan Award, the Hollywood Book Festival, and the
New York Book Festival.

http://mybook.to/OurZombieHours
A NEW ZOMBIE ANTHOLOGY

Winner of Writer's Digest's 2014 Honorable Mention in Self-published Ebook Awards in Genre

The first 81 lessons to get your Buffy on

More lessons to help you survive Armageddon

"You will laugh your ass off!" ~ Maxwell Cynn, author of Cybergrrl

Available now!

Fast-paced terror, new threats, more twists.

An autistic boy versus our world in free fall

Suspense to melt your face and play with your brain.

Action like a Guy Ritchie film. Funny like Woody Allen when he was funny.

Jesus: Sexier and even more addicted to love.

You can pick this ebook up for free today at this link: http://bit.ly/TheNightMan

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