If this weren’t a test, we’d all be running and screaming.
Filed under: publishing
03/09/2011 • 9:53 PM 0
If this weren’t a test, we’d all be running and screaming.
Filed under: publishing
03/09/2011 • 4:34 AM 4
Writing conferences are great opportunities to learn and be inspired. Though self-publishing is growing, by far most topics tend to be very oriented to traditional publishing. The experts are agents and editors. What these conferences will need in the future are workshops for the indie author.
I’m not denying we still need to hear from traditional publishing. But there are people I want to speak with, like experts in web development, DIY e-book uploading and publicity. (Watch for some savvy writing and publishing conference organizers to court Amanda Hocking as their next keynote speaker.)
I’ve already posted about the possibility of a writer’s union for the self-published. Maybe soon we’ll see new kinds of workshops from writing conference organizers, workshops that acknowledge the new reality doesn’t match the old reality.
Are you planning to attend a writing conference this year?
Here are some to consider:
Ontario Writers’ Conference, Ajax, Ontario, April 30
Canwrite, Grand Bend, Ontario, May 2 – 8
Surrey International Writers’ Conference, Surrey BC, Oct. 21 – 23
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Filed under: DIY, self-publishing, Writing Conferences, Canadian writing conferences, Do it yourself, Publish, Surrey International Writers' Conference, Workshop, writers, writing, Writing Conferences
03/08/2011 • 1:05 AM 10
Giving up things that hurt you. Hm.
Pause for thought.
What are you keeping, as a writer, that’s hurting you? Are you addicted to distractions (Farmville, mindless surfing, TV, Sheen gossip, vegetating etc.,…)? Are you getting on with what you don’t want to do so you can accomplish what you do want? Are there people in your life who stand in the way of your dreams? I’ve been thinking about what to give up on. When I talk to that agent, is that really my ego and insecurity asking for validation? Do I need to be traditionally published anymore? Should I give up the magazine work and focus on books exclusively? What am I willing to give and give up to get what I want?
If you don’t have time to write, are you making time to write?
But you know it goes deeper than simple time management issues.
To get to edit your manuscript, you have to edit your life.
There are always things or people who stand in the way of you getting where you want to be. Do you surround yourself with cool people who support you and your writing efforts? Are there people in your life you can do without? Are there energy and time vampires who drain you? The uncool people subtract from your time with the cool ones. And too much distraction is leaking time away from your productivity. Are you your last priority?
Are you calling your martyrdom selflessness or are you just being lazy in the You department? If you allowed yourself to look a little more selfish, could you be the person your loved ones would love and respect more? If your friends don’t like you if you say no, are they your friends? If you take care of everyone else first, who takes care of you? If you became the person you want to be, the one who gets the big things done, couldn’t you take care of others better? Can’t the laundry wait? Can’t you teach the kids to do it?
If you say, “But everyone needs me all the time!” your martyrdom is empty narcissism. If they can’t do without you long enough for you to write, you aren’t letting them grow up. You’re hurting their potential for independence by insisting you’re so important. You’re not being imaginative enough in the How to Deal Department. You’re injecting yourself into the center of their lives, living through them instead of living your life. You aren’t just the sun of your roles. When you became Mommy, Daddy, Wife or Husband, you didn’t give away the right to be you. If someone else is always your focus, you’re dressing up your procrastination in noble rags. And that’s pathetic and needy. You’re a person, not a role. You’re a human, not a god or a robot.
You’re drowning in busywork and busy-ness, not your business. Writing was supposed to be your business. Remember?
What are you doing to yourself? Do you really need more information? Is more research really required or is that procrastination masquerading as productivity? They say time is money. Time is much more important than that. Time is life. But time is spent like money and once it’s gone, it’s gone.
Not the reflexive answer. I mean the real answer you don’t want to hear.
Is it really encouragement and more education you need? Or is a kick in the ass needed? A wake-up call? A reminder that you are acting like you are immortal? You’re not. A reminder that not only do actions have consequences, inaction has dire consequences, too. (The kind you regret most when you’re lying on coarse white sheets watching another faceless nurse change your IV bag through a fog.)
What did you want to do with your life? Why isn’t it done by now? What can you change today to move you in the right direction? Are you even pointed in the right direction? Is the day ahead going to be filled with joy and potential and stimulation and writing? Is it just another Tuesday on a treadmill to nowhere?
Are you taking care of yourself and pushing your goals forward?
If not, why not?
When did you decide to settle for less?
What made you think that was okay?
What will you do now that you’ve read this?
The clock is ticking.
READ THE RANT AGAIN. THIS TIME MAKE IT PERSONAL. WHERE YOU SEE YOU, READ I.
EXAMPLE: IF I DON’T HAVE TIME TO WRITE, AM I MAKING TIME TO WRITE?
NOW READ IT ALOUD. AGAIN. YOU’LL GET YOUR ANSWERS.
YOU WON’T LIKE ALL OF THEM.
THE ANSWERS YOU LIKE LEAST ARE MOST TRUE.
Filed under: authors, Books, DIY, ebooks, getting it done, links, publishing, Rant, Writers, writing tips, accomplish, DIY. finding tiime to write, George Carlin, how do I find time to write?, Publish, self-publishing, Time Tracking, writer, writers write
03/07/2011 • 6:09 AM 3
It helps to be a fast typist. It helps to write fast and edit fast.
The reason is, you have to keep it all in your head. Maybe you’ve written out a plan or maybe you’re writing a day at a time without knowing how the story will twist to its end. Even if you don’t feel you have to know everything ahead of you, you still have to keep the details clear in what’s happening behind you. It’s a lot to track.
If you’re writing your first book, aim for the low end of the acceptable word count. If your first attempt is a vast sprawl of a trilogy, there’s an excellent chance it will suck. Finishing a book at all is an amazing accomplishment. Don’t try to write too long too quickly.
JK Rowling wrote a sprawling series with Harry Potter, but the first book is relatively short compared to the big bricks that came later.
Filed under: Author profiles, authors, getting it done, publishing, Writers, writing tips, edit, Stephen King, Word count, writer, Writers Resources, writing
03/03/2011 • 4:39 AM 1
I’ve talked about editing out words to watch out for. Here are some more:
Use says or said for dialogue tags. Don’t use claim unless you want to cast doubt on what the speaker is saying.
Watch out for too qualifiers. They have their place, but when around, about, a bit, somewhat, sort of, and kind of crop too much, you’re hedging. and the Your reader will pick up on your Readers notice waffling.
Avoid tautology: actual facts, adequate enough, stand up, sit down, mix together, gather together. One right word is better than two words that repeat the same an idea.
Filed under: Editing, Editors, getting it done, publishing, rules of writing, writing tips, dialogue tags, editing, editor, editorial, edits, tautology
03/02/2011 • 3:18 PM 3
In case you missed this morning’s nice comment from the post below, here it is again! Woo-hoo, Sue! That sure made me feel good.
Chazz. Glad you got your very own copy of My Camino. Hiring you to do an edit/polish, I felt confident and relieved to have another chance to clean up the grammar, tenses and spelling mistakes before the next printing. Your expertise and attitude made this editing process exciting for me. My Camino came out in 2004 with a small publishing house and I was told it had ‘long legs’ (just like me) and might survive 3 years on the shelf . Who would have thought that 7 years later the book is a national best seller, there is a feature film adaptation in development (I co-wrote the script with Bruce Pirrie) and in the next couple of weeks it will be available on Podiobooks as an audio book. What a journey and now you are a part of it. Thank you so much. It was truly an honour to work with you. See you at the movie première in 2013! (fingers crossed)
Sue
Go to her website here: Sue Kenney
Filed under: Author profiles, authors, Books, Editing, Editors, publishing, Useful writing links, Audiobook, Camino, editing, My Camino, Publish, Sue Kenney, writer
03/02/2011 • 4:23 AM 2
I just received the gift of a book in the mail. I had already read this book but I was very pleased to receive it. In fact, I’d gone through this particular book in meticulous detail. The author signed the title page for me and graciously thanked me for my advice. The book in hand was a bonus for editing the work.
Editing is such picky work. I zip into and out of the on-line Chicago Manual of Style a lot. I tweak here and economize there. No matter the level of the edit, the key to good editing is asking the right questions.
Here’s a sample of the sorts of questions that run through my mind as I work:
Should that be 18th Century or Eighteenth century? Should I leave a quirky passage alone to keep the author’s voice or is the joke too much of a reach? Should I suggest new elements? Does the material make more sense if it is reorganized? Does this follow logically from that? Is that assertion a fact? Is that translation correct? What design elements could I suggest to make the book pop? What elements could I suggest that would convert a browser into a buyer? Is there an opportunity missed here? What marketing strategy could I suggest to make this a book with real long-tail potential? What’s missing? (That last one can take the work to a new level.)
In short, a good editor or proofreader will question everything.
An experienced editor will pick up on what’s on the page and what’s not there that’s hurting the book.
In the end, I let it go back to the author to decide which of my suggestions to act upon. When it’s done, the author’s name is on the front cover. I always say some variation of: “She’s still your baby. She’s healthy and you’ll recognize her. She wasn’t sick but she’s feeling even better now.” The reader will never know how much or how little I did. The job is to make the author look good. (And sell more books.)
And you know what? It’s fun. I’m not gleeful about it in the way I know some editors are. When I was in journalism school and when I worked for a daily newspaper, I ran into editors who were looking for stuff so they could catch you out. It was a game for them and they acted like it was the only way they could find to feel good about themselves. When they caught something—anything—writers got snarky remarks and not just a little passive aggressive indignation. Editors like that are sad and make me tired.
I find editing fun because it’s an intellectual challenge and the collaborative process makes the book better than it otherwise would have been. Higher quality editorial work translates to more authority to the author, more sales for the current book and more sales for the author’s next book. A helpful edit can morph an experiment that didn’t quite come together into a legacy book that will delight, distract, elevate, educate, provoke, redeem and earn for years to come.
A good edit will pay for itself.
And generally? No, an unedited book doesn’t stand a chance.
Filed under: authors, Books, ebooks, Editing, Editors, grammar, publishing, self-publishing, Writers, writing tips, Author, bad editing, book, Business, Chicago Manual of Style, Copy editing, developmental edit, edit, editing tips, editor, editorial help, writer, Writing & Editing, writing tips
03/01/2011 • 10:28 PM 1
Good for her.
Good for all of us.
Filed under: Author profiles, authors, Books, self-publishing, Writers
03/01/2011 • 4:41 AM 3
There are words you can lose without losing meaning. For example, writers who repeatedly precede statements with “I think” generate in their readers a suspicion of insecurity or uncertainty. Make your assertions, state your arguments, declare your narrative.
Writers have idiosyncrasies. Repeated phrases crop up. As you revise your manuscript, look for them and make a note.
Take the example “my own.” That can — and should — be shortened to “my.” That’s my own business. See? You lose nothing by losing “own.” What you gain is economy with this small edit and your reader will appreciate it (though they won’t know why.) I’m an editor. It’s my own business to know.
When you identify your own idiosycrasies, use the search and replace feature and you’ll find the number of instances of the phrase. You may not want to replace them all. Idiosyncratic phrases can be fine in dialogue.
I think that’s right.
No.
That’s right.
Filed under: Editing, Editors, publishing, Writers, writing tips, edit, editing, editing tip, editor, good tips, Publish, what editors want, Word count, writing tip