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

See all my books at AllThatChazz.com.

By the time you’re published, trees may not be involved

Many publishers are dragging their feet, squeezing the last drops of inky blood from the Gutenberg press. However, Japan is leading the way (in e-publishing and the robots who will all one day rule us.) How do I know? Because in Japan, there are already bestsellers that have never been published on paper!

Click here to check out an interesting discussion of the future of book publishing. I believe e-readers are just transitional tech, like the Palm Pilot you don’t use anymore. It makes perfect sense that we’ll be reading books on the same device we always have with us. That’s right. Our sex toys phones.

Filed under: publishing

If shorter works, you’re not done editing

There are a couple of TV shows you need to study to learn to perfect your story. Watch Dexter and Breaking Bad. There’s one element common to both: no wasted words. Every element deepens character and advances plot. Each character’s wants and needs drive the plot forward so people can end up doing crazy stuff, but it makes sense.

Writing Exercise:

Write a scene. Now cut out as much as you can and see if it still works. Now cut again. When you can’t cut anymore (meaning it’s not underwritten) see if the scene is better (i.e. readable, compelling, and advances the story.)

I write a magazine column that’s only 600 words. I often find that the first draft is closer to 1,000. It can be tough, but the cleaner it reads, the happier your editor and reader will be. Dickens wrote long, but  you’re not Dickens, that stuff wouldn’t fly today and he did that because he was paid by the word.

Filed under: Writing exercise, ,

A Tidbit I Liked

Someone said becoming a writer is about becoming conscious.

Filed under: Writers,

Rules are Rules

Rules of writing change, get bent or are broken. It’s not all bad. Language is a fluid medium. For instance, read some Young Adult books and you’ll find some authors who beat the old copy editor to death and made the new one accept dialogue without quotation marks. Things change. We can’t (and I don’t want to) freeze the language in amber.

One writing guru told his disciples: NEVER WRITE IN THE SECOND PERSON.

“Rules are rules!” he said. “Second person doesn’t work!”

Except when it does. Write in the second person if you want. Here’s the rule you should pay attention to:

If it plays it plays. Break rules if it works.

And to the guru: What?! You never read Bright Lights, Big City?!*

Bonehead.

*You’ll notice I broke a rule of punctuation there, but it conveys so it works. Your grammar and punctuation does not necessarily have to be as your eighth grade teacher prescribed. What it has to be is consistent so the reader receives the communication.

Filed under: rules of writing,

Another Rule to Ignore

Grammarians require that if you start your letter or email (to a grammarian) with an interjection (i.e. Hi or Ugh) you should stick in a comma after said interjection.

So:

Hi Aunt Gladys!

becomes

Hi, Aunt Gladys!

But no one does this except the nitpickiest of know-it-alls.

Be a rebel! Live a little! Stick it to the man!

Yee-haw, dude.

BONUS:

According to the Chicago Manual of Style, internet is still Internet. I hate capitalizing a non-place but with a team of therapists I’m learning to deal with this outrage.

DOUBLE BONUS:

Are you still writing e-mail? It’s email now. Some progress is being made on some fronts.

Filed under: grammar,

The Demand for Query Orgasms

I just read an agent blog (blagent) where the agent critiqued a query for our common education. Very brave of the person who put it out there to be publicly torn apart by an agent, but you know what? Totally discouraging.

Query letters are tough and we do have to have a thick skin. However, sometimes it sure looks like the bar is set too high. When a query goes under the microscope, sometimes it seems all perspective is lost. It’s a pitch. It’s a quick, enticing summary. Do nitpicking queries improve it? Mostly.

But if they are going to be that critical of a single page, no wonder we often have a hard time letting our writing go out into the world. If they are going to shred one page with their druthers (which really wasn’t that bad) then how easily displeased will they be with a whole manuscript?

I’ve slogged a publisher’s slush pile. I know it’s rare to find something good, but I also know I wasn’t doing a line edit as I read the submitted draft. It didn’t have to be perfect. There is no perfect. The odd weird sentence construction wasn’t a cause for exasperation and sneering. We took the time to read slowly enough that we would understand the occasional awkward sentence without getting prissy about it.

Of course, there are even fewer editors now and they are even more pressed. They’re using agents as the first line of defense (many more people submitted directly to publishers 20 years ago.) More egregious, now there’s all this bullshit about hiring a freelance editor so the author pays for what all publishers used to do in-house. (We’ll see even more of this now that the virus is out of the bottle.) I do freelance editing. I never saw Outhouse Book Doctor as my role.

Editors and agents tell you they want “to be delighted.” Okay. Does it have to deliver orgasms, too? And how is it that the stuff that does get through that editorial sieve comes out to so much bookstore shelf space that is not delivering me any orgasms? (…you know…unless I’m actually in the animal husbandry erotica section of the bookstore.)

Conclusions? I look at a pretty clean query and think, that sounds like an intriguing story. I want to know more. Send a partial. The agents look for any excuse, no matter how flimsy, to say no. Maybe they’re so overworked they’re cynical. Maybe this is why so many books that eventually become bestsellers get rejected by too many nosepicking nitpicking crankypants agents and editors.

What I learned from working in publishing is people know what they like. (I remember when the evaluation was, twofold: Can we develop this author and whether I like it or not, can I sell it? That’s actually easier than demanding I fall in love with everything I represent. Nobody can do that.

For instance, as a sales rep for a whack of publishers, I sold everything. I didn’t love everything. And some things I sold were so beyond hope your eyes went googly. I repped Margaret Atwood, Bret Easton Ellis and a book about female Saskatchewan artists that didn’t have a single picture in it. (That last one we called The Credibility Book. When we mercifully steered the unwitting bookseller away from that disaster, they believed us when we told them they needed to order a bigger stack of the unknown but promising midlist author.)

Also, nobody knows what’s going to be a hit, no matter how much they make their subjective opinions sound objective. Too much microscopy. Too many reasons for anyone to say no, no, no, no, no. But if one agent is interested, suddenly they are all interested and you’re suddenly not some boob who dared to send them that same fucking manuscript they sniffed at last week! I think I need to meditate more. And no more reading agent blogs for a week!

Filed under: publishing,

Dreary Publishing Stat

There are roughly 180,000 books produced in english each year in North America according to the president of Harper Collins. 465 of them sold more than 100,000 copies last year. The majority sold under 99 copies.

So…doesn’t this mean that for all the hoopla, publishers suck at their jobs? Sure, you could blame writers, but writers aren’t the gatekeepers, are they? Editors and agents are. That’s a failure rate that would get you fired in any other industry. No wonder we need to blow the dust off and take another look at how the whole business is conducted.

Filed under: publishing,

How many words makes a minute?

 

I just finished another speech writing gig for a lobby group. It was an hour presentation. When the speech is that long it had better be good and it better be funny here and there to keep the audience from thinking about how numb their bums are getting.

Ever wonder how many words on paper equals how many minutes of a speech?

If you’re writing a radio script, I use the BBC standard of three words per second. However, for a speech, 125 words per minute is safe. That can still be a little fast for some. Power Point also adds a little time. Still, it’s useful as a rough guide and once the individual speaker does a run-through, you can cut from there.

POWER POINT VALUE-ADDED BONUS POINT:

Never make your speech exactly what appears on the screen. You’ll lose your audience as they read or, worse, your speaker will just read the Power Point visual. Instead, use the Power Point deck for (brief!) headings and let the speaker explain them a bit.

Filed under: speechwriting, ,

Be Wary of Writing Gurus

If your writing teacher is attempting to get you to write just like they do , you’ve got a lousy teacher with an ego that’s getting in your way.

Filed under: rules of writing,

Torture and Redemption

Writing can be torture. However, when you win a prize for your writing, or see it published, suddenly it seems like all the waiting and wondering and false starts were worth the trouble. Here’s a story that won third prize in the Toronto Star’s Annual Short Story Contest. There is torture, some magic realism and ultimately, redemption. Enjoy!

Filed under: Uncategorized

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

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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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