Riley Adams's Blog, page 196

August 6, 2011

Twitterific

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Below are my tweets from the last week.

Hope you'll enter this month's WKB giveaway for a chance to win Donald Maass' excellent Writing the Breakout Novel, from our friends at Writer's Digest.
Enter the drawing by signing up for the WKB newsletter.

Blogging with typewriters? Sure! http://bit.ly/p4IpyV

Incompetent characters in crime fiction & how they add to a story: http://bit.ly/onl3lw @mkinberg

The core of the arts: http://bit.ly/nTOM3M @WriteAngleBlog

3 Ways to Rehab Your Inner Critic: http://bit.ly/p7Pwew @BookEmDonna

The 5 Biggest Mistakes Writers Make on Their Websites: http://bit.ly/n0lH7G @thecreativepenn

How to Style Names of Food: http://bit.ly/qKL8TS

Should You Make Your Romance Novel Erotic? http://bit.ly/nZv73e

5 More Mistakes That Will Expose You As a Rookie: http://bit.ly/qkTqEU

The Hybrid Writer: Balancing Traditional and Self-pub: http://bit.ly/qw2uqB @pubperspectives

Writers' Blogs: 5 Essentials for Engaging Your Readers: http://bit.ly/nFRTzB @jfbookman

What 1 writer told her family about publishing: http://bit.ly/npp0Ko

1 Simple Question All Writers Should Ask Themselves: http://bit.ly/pJG3J3

Being the other: http://bit.ly/ogHzMS @bookviewcafe

Healthy Eating Habits for an Awesome Writing Day: http://bit.ly/nG2OXb

How To Make One Story into Many By Being Multimedia Savvy: http://bit.ly/oqxD1d

A Look behind Lod's World, or How to Strike Gold: http://bit.ly/r9rjdI

Reasons why 1 writer opted for a book trailer: http://bit.ly/qwR2z5 @JodyHedlund

Saying You Want to Write Versus Actually Writing: http://bit.ly/p9xvIh

Google+ for writers: http://bit.ly/nzVbQb

Don't query until the manuscript is ready: http://bit.ly/qLzSDn

Research your book's details, but... http://bit.ly/oq3MVw @authorterryo

Thesis statement for fiction: http://bit.ly/pjuls3

3 tricks to make your manuscript seem fresh when revising: http://bit.ly/oXKZmk @jillkemerer

Why Blogging About Writing Can Help Writers Improve: http://bit.ly/okjVzx

Everything I Needed to Know About Living with a Writer I Learned by Living with a Writer: http://bit.ly/neyhps @BTMargins

Author branding vs. experimentation: http://bit.ly/o6rqYW @mkinberg

A mid-distance point of view: http://bit.ly/n9RoHo

An agent on first lines: http://bit.ly/qR7Zcx

What everybody misses about chapter breaks: http://bit.ly/p6soPN @dirtywhitecandy

Why Most of What You've Read About Characterization is Untrue: http://bit.ly/p7Nqcq

Choosing Narrative Distance in Multiple Third Person: http://bit.ly/o88kCz

4 Writing Crutches that Insult the Reader's Intelligence: http://bit.ly/nqefsO

Should Books Have a Rating System? http://bit.ly/qcSOuz @JamiGold

Revisions: raising your story on multiple levels: http://bit.ly/pTMArF @JulietteWade

The Art of Revising: Macro Revision: http://bit.ly/nbpfQZ

How to Make Yourself Write When You Really Really Don't Want To: http://bit.ly/pTtwJj

Why Fantasy Isn't Just for Kids (WSJ): http://on.wsj.com/ql88vr

Why Your Serial Fiction Is Likely to Fail and What To Do About It: http://bit.ly/r4FPSy

What it Takes to be an Indie Author http://bit.ly/pzs63T @JoanSwan

A look at layering in subtext, with Harry Potter as an example: http://bit.ly/nAUSVe

Writing lessons from the U.S. women's soccer team: http://bit.ly/phTKii @laurapauling

Editors are Calling For Projects, But Where Are The Authors? http://bit.ly/qWxHAJ

6 More Things Writers Won't Miss About the Big 6 "When They're Gone": http://bit.ly/nn6xE2 @annerallen

4 Tips for Pitching Guest Posts Like a Pro: http://bit.ly/rkGy6B

How to rewrite rapidly and efficiently: http://bit.ly/ndwMui @jammer0501

What Will Publishing Look Like in 2021? http://bit.ly/okihUn @AnneRAllen

Scaling Syndication: http://bit.ly/pQxUkh @RavenRequiem13

Word Count Goals: How Much is Too Much? http://bit.ly/raWEEq @GeoffreyCubbage

Writing with an IPad: http://bit.ly/nFSohy @yamuses

On Brands and In Person Appearances: http://bit.ly/p0dQCz

Beasts, Monsters and Eldritch Abominations: http://bit.ly/qlEUpG

Why 1 social media guru failed at maintaining 2 Twitter accounts: http://bit.ly/qTlldS @MarianSchembari

The best-laid plans: http://bit.ly/ni6dhy @elspethwrites

The importance of writers' networks: http://bit.ly/rpR3EA

So, You Want to Sell More Books at Amazon--reviews: http://bit.ly/py3pbS

Conference Prep: Six Essentials for Your Checklist: http://bit.ly/ofHJZ3

Writers: You Are Responsible For Your Own Career: http://bit.ly/nUn3ZA @PassiveVoiceBlg

The "New Author Platform" – What you need to know: http://bit.ly/pDf6Gi

Choosing the Right Literary Magazine for Your Work: http://bit.ly/ofpepr

An agent with tips for effective email communication: http://bit.ly/pT1ONJ

The Three P's of Writing Women's Fiction: http://bit.ly/r4tPDX

Logic, Emotional Truth and Inspiration in Stories: http://bit.ly/pSqWOW @dirtywhitecandy @Janice_Hardy

Identifying Your Writing Strengths, step 3: http://bit.ly/oxLaeu @msforster

Draft Your Platform Action Plan: 5 Worksheets: http://bit.ly/np8goc @JaneFriedman

How to Save Money on Your Book Proof Corrections: http://bit.ly/nA3gZp

5 ways to keep our writing brains active: http://bit.ly/rj57Tb @JulieMusil

The 99 Cent Ghetto: http://bit.ly/rapRbM

The Art of Writing Continuities: http://bit.ly/oJ63q3

Good Writing = Good Grammar: http://bit.ly/q7nbR4

Tips for Surviving the Pitch Session: http://bit.ly/nIk5A9 @MuseInks

The Cure for Frustrated Writer's Syndrome: http://bit.ly/nZ8KHW

Saturated settings: http://bit.ly/puJWoL @RavenRequiem13

Cyberpunk as a SF subgenre: http://bit.ly/mXqyOS

My thoughts on Google+: http://bit.ly/qUCesO

5 Ways to Use Flickr Photos for Writing Inspiration: http://bit.ly/nvwzq1 @writeitsideways

On ADD and Writing: http://bit.ly/poAIFs

On influencers: http://bit.ly/nbUmqt

A 10-Point Comma Quiz: http://bit.ly/num7rL

Would You See Your Character At The Mall? http://bit.ly/ntU1PQ @greyhausagency

A ratings system for books, part 2--including context? http://bit.ly/oPzPtR @JamiGold

What Drives a Story: Plot or Characters? http://bit.ly/qhumER @JamiGold

6 Daily Habits for Facebook Marketing Success: http://bit.ly/pYdkxg

Anton Chekhov's First Lines: http://bit.ly/qKbjzs

The importance of team-building on Twitter: http://bit.ly/p4v58r

An agent on creating genres: http://bit.ly/p5IMAy

Speech mannerisms and body language: http://bit.ly/qNDtdG @JulieMusil

Tips for short story writing: http://bit.ly/r0UaTY @sherryisaac @JoanSwan

Twisting and deepening the final battle (with plot twists): http://bit.ly/ngnIvf @HP4Writers

Dangling, Squinting, Messed Up Modifiers: http://bit.ly/nRwPXb @YAHighway

17 Stock Plots: http://bit.ly/oqzCIf

Turn off your distractions: http://bit.ly/p9GFfu

Working with book bloggers: http://bit.ly/re3fLG

One writer asks, "Do I still want an agent?" http://bit.ly/rjVZfB @DorteHJ

3 mistakes 1 newbie critiquer made: http://bit.ly/rlaSVu @marybaka

Creating the *Feel* of a World: http://bit.ly/oLHZ8M @JulietteWade

How to Keep Up Online Without Losing Your Mind: http://bit.ly/pw1RSt

Agents in Conflict with Clients – Issues and Responses: http://bit.ly/qbj7BE @PassiveVoiceBlg

Why Bad Writing is Essential to Good Blogging: http://bit.ly/qqgnkC

In Praise of Working Late: 10 Reasons to Write at Night: http://bit.ly/njYgnR @GeoffeyCubbage

Powerful Settings: Finding What is Unique for Your Characters: http://bit.ly/pb1zMn

Killing the Sacred Cows of Publishing: Book as Event: http://bit.ly/n5NV2A

Why You Should Never Comment on Blogs. Ever. http://bit.ly/pfCEc2

Writing from the Panicked Side of the Brain: http://bit.ly/nMOXp1 @BTMargins

Why Prologues Often Don't Work: http://bit.ly/qgOani

How book bloggers are like agents: http://bit.ly/pxmfdT

Dialogue Development: http://bit.ly/ruLiu6

On phobias and tips for handling public speaking (1 of the most common fears): http://bit.ly/qL9iKr @Jhansenwrites

How to build a villain: http://bit.ly/riR0k6

How to speak publisher - D is for deadline: http://bit.ly/qJOkxv

Revising a scene--remembering the big picture & questions to help you edit: http://bit.ly/q5Ufmd

How to Write Like a Viking: http://bit.ly/nPyoEI

Beating the "Sugar" Addiction–Tightening the Writing: http://bit.ly/olScOK

Finding Your Hidden Audience: Advice from a Book Marketer: http://bit.ly/qxd0u6

Being careful of what we say and write: http://bit.ly/pTClqW

Why You Should Kick Your Story Aside and Write a Different One: http://bit.ly/pdRk8P @KMWeiland

Pre-Revision: Before You Break Out the Red Ink: http://bit.ly/qMC0nm

Using dashes instead of ellipses: http://bit.ly/oOJYHJ

An agent's tips for writing queries: http://bit.ly/r83H8B

How To Co-Write A Book Without Falling Out (Or Committing Murder!): http://bit.ly/qUwIAk @BubbleCow

Working mythical allusions into your story: http://bit.ly/ptaBvY @HP4Writers

Build your brand name: http://bit.ly/qBZhVN @keligwyn

Thoughts on writing for kids: http://bit.ly/nVSyRn

Quirky Characters: Can You Relate? http://bit.ly/pGYTZI

Friends or Enemies? http://bit.ly/ogglSS @KatieGanshert

Ageism in the literary world: http://ind.pn/qa4Skb (The Independent)

It's Not Who You Circle; It's Who Circles You: http://bit.ly/qEhRgb

Practical Tips on Writing a Book from 23 Brilliant Authors: http://bit.ly/qIrSL5

Novel Pitching Made Easy: http://bit.ly/p15zaq @catewoods

The true price of publishing (Guardian): http://bit.ly/r62Wtn

How to Read a Book Contract – Agents and the Law: http://bit.ly/pRfGud @PassiveVoiceBlg

Digital and high r.r.p.s hitting hardback sales: http://bit.ly/o9iWBn

Tips for writing for kids: http://bit.ly/pvGGP3 @writeangleblog

The Don't Ask, Don't Tell of Writing: http://bit.ly/qg84cg @AEWrites

The ultimate ordeal from the hero's journey, with Harry Potter as an illustration: http://bit.ly/okMvZ4 @HP4Writers

The 23 Blogger Breeds—Which Are You? http://bit.ly/oFMexQ

Dialogue as a rhythm: http://bit.ly/rbTVvK @FantasyFaction

5 Ways to Kick Your Writing up a Notch: http://bit.ly/nqVDEL

If you normally blog about writing, how will you promote your fiction? http://bit.ly/q2Mppb @dirtywhitecandy

The correct way to format dialogue: http://bit.ly/oB4nOH @bubblecow

How Books Work: The Hunger Games: http://bit.ly/nejVVk

Using Distractions to Your Advantage: http://bit.ly/pmQUUn

Write even faster: http://bit.ly/nFsNlB

How to lose a reader in 10 pages--the visual disadvantage: http://bit.ly/qpkhLV

How to Silence Readers From Commenting on Your Blog: http://bit.ly/naPvzr

1 writer's tools of the trade: http://bit.ly/qrr1VK

On Showing Up, Changing Your Life & Limited Goals: http://bit.ly/pSbiM9

Things Are Changing But We Have To Be Careful: http://bit.ly/p2FWzO

When writers embellish the truth: http://bit.ly/oerUtn

5 Reasons Why All Freelance Writers Should Learn To Write a Sales Letter: http://bit.ly/okuQ3x

Finding your voice: http://zenhabits.net/voice/

The art of getting more traffic for your blog: http://bit.ly/oC7hH2

The tricky nature of sending free book promo to bloggers: http://bit.ly/oVyluh

Antidotes for excuses: http://bit.ly/q4PDVq @JulieMusil

What's Inside Your Dystopia? http://bit.ly/pke9KV

5 filler words to choke out of your writing: http://bit.ly/qppVZO @Grammar_Diva

How to Undress a Victorian Lady in Your Next Historical Romance (WSJ): http://on.wsj.com/nNxbuW

Book Blog Tours and Review Sites: http://bit.ly/ogzZ9d

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Published on August 06, 2011 21:01

Thoughts on Creating Ebooks

Amazon-Kindle-3-300x488Creating an ebook has been a learning experience.

First off, for some reason I'm always surprised that non-writers aren't really aware of the major changes going on in publishing.  I guess I shouldn't, but I'd think that as a reader, they'd realize that things were rapidly changing.  I've certainly been aware of changes in the music and film industries.

But when friends and acquaintances ask me if I've got any releases coming out, I tell them, "Yes, I've got a book coming out in November—the third book in the Memphis series with Penguin.  And I'm about to put out an ebook, myself."  And you should see the reaction.  They're very confused about my reasons for self-publishing.  Actually, every one of them have been completely shocked.  I just tell them that the industry is changing and I'm trying to just go with the flow and pursue both traditional and e-publishing.

Another thing I've noticed is how confusing the process is for someone who's just been casually reading about e-publishing for the last six months.  You can find advice supporting nearly any position you want to take on price, platform, and formatting.  The writer has to pick through this huge mess of services and information to find a match—who can edit?  Who can design a cover reasonably?  Who can do interior design (which is something I wanted—page design for my ebooks)?  Is it better to upload to Smashwords?  Through each platform separately?  Where do I get ISBNs and should I get them? And e-publishing is changing daily.

It makes me think that there is definitely a job market there for ebook service Sherpas.  I don't think it's something agents should go into unless they quit being agents, though, for obvious conflict of interest reasons.  (If they want to sell you e-publishing services, are they actually going to try to send your manuscript out to traditional publishers?  How thoroughly would that search for a publisher be?)

I've also noticed a reticence among some traditionally published writers to give e-publishing a go—although this reticence is being quickly eschewed to chase the money. :)  But I've seen real arguments on some of my writing loops where authors who've already taken the plunge are fussing at other authors for not wanting to put more money into the upfront costs of the project for the long-term benefits. 

That's because, I think, traditionally published writers haven't had to worry about all the mechanics of book production and suddenly picking up those costs is a shock.  Many traditionally published authors also tend to quickly forget that ebooks are forever….they don't have the short shelf life of our physical bookstore novels.  So any upfront investment is for a long-term harvest. 

Have you taken the e-book plunge?  What have you learned in the process?

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Published on August 06, 2011 04:40

August 4, 2011

Short Descriptions of Our Book

blog12A couple of weeks ago we visited family in Alabama.

My father-in-law offered to take the kids and me to see the new Harry Potter movie. Of course they were delighted (it was all sold out here in Charlotte) and we headed off to the theater.

We settled into our seats, put on our 3-D glasses, and I leaned over and asked my father-in-law if he'd seen part one of the movie, prepared to set the stage for him a little if needed.

"No," he said. "I haven't seen any of the movies."

I froze. "None of them? And you haven't read the books, either?"

"Not a one."

The previews were starting. I leaned closer and said, "Okay. Harry Potter is with the good guys. The bad guys want to kill everybody. It's good versus evil." It was all I had time to tell him.

He nodded. "Got it!"

Amazingly, although obviously he missed a lot of references and the whole wand thing at the end might have been confusing, he was able to really enjoy the movie and not be totally lost. Because it did boil down to a suspenseful question of whether the good guys were going to beat the bad guys. A familiar scene whether you're talking about Macbeth or Lord of the Flies or an episode of Law and Order.

The nice thing about writing traditional mysteries is that the theme is very basic and understandable. I can quickly summarize my books: someone rubs people the wrong way. This person is killed. A sleuth investigates and learns who did it.

But all books should be able to be fairly easily summed up. This is important for pitching a book in person or writing a query letter. It's also important if you're writing sales copy for a self-published book. Because readers usually want a book that sounds like something they can understand.

Looking at the New York Times' bestseller list right now, there are super-short descriptions of each novel. Some of them are better than others:

PORTRAIT OF A SPY, by Daniel Silva. (HarperCollins.) To stop a network of death, an international operative must reach into his violent past.

NOW YOU SEE HER, by James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge. Nina Bloom, who years ago changed her identity to save her life, is forced to confront the past and the killer she thought she had escaped.

THE CONFESSION, by John Grisham. (Knopf Doubleday.) A criminal wants to save an innocent man on death row, but he must convince the authorities he's telling the truth.

Can you sum up your story super-briefly? How have you boiled it down to just the bare bones?

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Published on August 04, 2011 21:01

August 3, 2011

Looking at the Big Picture When We Revise

coffeebythewindow1945Hi everyone!

Today is my day on A Good Blog is Hard to Find. I'm posting about scenes that don't work and my approach for diagnosing the problem and finding a cure. Hope you'll join me!

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Published on August 03, 2011 21:03

August 2, 2011

Do I still want an agent? by Dorte H. Jakobsen

cosy-knave-cover-test-12Hope you'll welcome my friend, Dorte Jakobsen, here today. Dorte has a brand-new release, The Cosy Knave, her first novel (I'm about 1/3 of the way through, and it's a delight.) Welcome, Dorte!

It will hardly come as a surprise for any of Elizabeth´s readers that I found the inspiration for this guest post via one of her own links. Elizabeth, your blog is an invaluable source for the aspiring writer! And thank you for inviting me; it is a pleasure and an honour to be here.

In January I took the first, tiny step towards becoming a self-published author by sending out a collection of thirteen flash fiction stories. At that time I really believed I would continue searching for an agent for my humorous novel, "The Cosy Knave". And I did send off a handful of queries to various agencies in the spring, but without much success.

I know that some of you will think ´a handful is not many´, and you are right, of course, but one of the things I have learnt is that I absolutely, totally loathe writing queries. And the power of British & American agents and publishers also bothers me. Hardly any Danish writer uses an agent, and no matter which serious publisher we send manuscripts to, they will at least send us a standard rejection before or later. No one celebrates rejections, but at least you know where you stand. And honestly, how much would it cost the agent to send back a short ´no thank you´? (Some of them do, but it seems to be the minority).

So I don´t know exactly what happened when, but in April I sent off two queries and received this auto-reply:

"I have received your query/submission. You will not hear from me again unless I want to see more of your work. If you haven't received another email from me within 8 weeks, assume that I do not wish to read more of your work at this time."

And somehow my eyes fixed on those ´8 weeks´, and I made up my mind I had written my last queries (certainly for "The Cosy Knave", possibly for ever).

Well, the eight weeks are history, and on the first of August I published my first full-length novel via Amazon and Smashwords. Now the big question is: do I still want an agent?

Honestly, I am not so sure. It would be nice to have a traditional publisher who would print and distribute paper books for me, someone who could add weight and credibility to the upstart from tiny Denmark, plus an experienced editor I could discuss certain manuscript points with, but an agent? Someone who could take 15 % of my income for doing things I have struggled hard to learn over the last six months? I have already learnt that though I prefer Smashwords in some ways, I definitely need Amazon (well, their customers that is). I have learnt the power of offering short stories and flash fiction cheaply or for free, getting some reviews in return. I have also learnt a lot about the generosity of blog friends, and which social media that seem to suit me. I can recommend Facebook and Goodreads, I am not quite so sure I really feel at home on Twitter yet.

If my debut novel turns out to be a total flop, I may reconsider the agent question (though it will probably be next to impossible to get one in that case), but on the whole I really like being my own master. I listen to the excellent advice I get from friends and fellow writers, but basically I can do exactly what I like whenever I want to. So even though an agent might land me more money in the long term, I am probably too stubborn to give up my independence now. And 15 % - forget it!

Dorte H. JakobsenDorte Jakobsen is a Danish teacher who lives in the beautiful region of Thy. In her spare time she reads and writes crime fiction. The Cosy Knave released August 1. You can find Dorte on her blog, and on Facebook.

The Cosy Knave is priced at $3.99, but if you buy at Smashwords and use this coupon code: PN22N, you get a 25% discount. A synopsis: The vicious attacks begin when the prodigal son of Knavesborough returns to the sleepy village after forty years in Argentina with fame and fortune. No wonder that spiteful Rose Walnut-Whip is killed, but when the violence escalates, Constable Penrose knows he needs help from his fiancée, librarian Rhapsody Gershwin.

"The Cosy Knave" is available on Smashwords.com, Amazon.com
and Diesel ebooks.

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Published on August 02, 2011 21:01

August 1, 2011

Google+

g-plus-icon-96x96As someone who tries really hard to go with the flow, I've gone ahead and signed up on Google+ (Google's foray into Facebook-style social media.) I'm Elizabeth S Craig there.

I know…we've all got social media fatigue. At first it just exhausted me even thinking about building up a brand on another platform. And I wondered how well I could keep up with it. And I wondered if I was getting overexposed.

The good news is that Google+ is a good application for those of us who are tired of doing this. It's fairly intuitive. Friends are easy to find and make and group together. It's a friendly place. There seem to be a lot of publishing professionals there. If you've ever been on Facebook, this will seem like a piece of cake.

It's easy to start there, because half of us already have a Google profile, anyway. I have one from Blogger and my Gmail account. All I had to do was brush up my profile and I was set to go.

So far, I also haven't seen the gotcha mentality that has frustrated me with Facebook. I felt Facebook was run by little kids who were determined to make me interact in ways that didn't make me comfortable. In the past, Facebook has—to me, personally—shared my cell phone number on my info page when I'd hidden it, turned on chat when I'd disabled it, changed all my privacy settings several times when they automatically updated my account…the list goes on. I haven't yet seen these types of shenanigans at Google+. So far, it seems like Facebook for grownups.

One thing I like about Google+ is the way that I can share updates with certain types of people. As y'all know, I share writing links to help connect writers with resources. Writers love this! My readers and librarian friends aren't so enthused. On Google+, I have my friends divided into different groups (or circles)—I have one for writers, one for readers, one for librarians. When I have a writing link to share, I can easily choose to only share it to writers. That makes me feel like I'm not getting on everyone's nerves.

Google will make sure that our Google+ page ranks pretty high in their search engine for searches of our name….another reason I jumped onboard.

If you're new to Google+, feel free to go to my profile and raid my friend list. It's mostly writers. And check out Debbie Ohi's list of literary types on Google +. Fill out your profile and make an update of some kind, or comment on someone else's. It's easy to start out…and, actually, it's new to everybody. Still a couple of bugs for Google to work out (I think their mobile app is a little clumsy), but the community there seems solid. Here are some how-to links for Google+: How to Use Google Plus , Google Plus for Writers, Debbie Ohi's great post on Google Plus,

Have you gotten on Google+? If you like, share your profile link and we can be friends there. :) If you're on it, what do you think?

Hope you'll come back tomorrow when I host my mystery writing friend Dorte Jakobsen. She'll be answering the question, "Do I still want an agent?"

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Published on August 01, 2011 21:03

July 31, 2011

Illustrating a Point

RIMG0463Our family took a short vacation during my blogging break and tried to escape the blistering heat by visiting the mountains.

We stayed in a town with a reputation for quirkiness. And quirkiness is something that our metro area of Charlotte, North Carolina, isn't known for (Charlotte, a banking town, is fairly staid.) I thought I should give the kids a heads-up that we weren't in Charlotte anymore.

We were sitting outside a vegan restaurant with an organic garden eating unusual food that I couldn't pronounce. "What's interesting about this town," I said, "are the people. They're pretty quirky. It's a very artsy town."

"You're an artist," said my son.

"Well, yeessss….but not like these folks."

"Because you don't have tattoos and piercings and pink hair?" he asked.

"I guess. But also because these people act a little offbeat, too."

"What's offbeat?" asked my daughter, squinting.

I was floundering, not sure how to express the ways the town we were in was cool, interesting, and different when a man on a motorcycle puttered by. He wore an eye-catching, splashy, sparkly outfit. His motorcycle pulled a trailer carrying chicken coops full of squawking chickens.

"Oh! Got it," said my son, watching the man go by.

Which is exactly why showing is so much more effective than telling. (It's also why I wish I could paint!)

How do you show instead of tell?

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Published on July 31, 2011 21:01

July 30, 2011

Twitterific

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I'm back! I missed everybody! Hope everyone has had a good last week and a half. :) I'll start back with a double-edition of Twitterific—below are all my tweets from the last two weeks.

Hope you'll enter this month's WKB giveaway for a chance to win Donald Maass' excellent Writing the Breakout Novel, from our friends at Writer's Digest. Enter the drawing by signing up for the WKB newsletter.

Finger Lickin' Dead released June 7th. Hope you'll consider it if you enjoy mysteries, or know someone who does.Download it on Kindle: http://amzn.to/kh7MAp Mass market paperback: http://amzn.to/lfUE2N ($6.99)

Re-querying: http://bit.ly/oylg9i

Ten Tools for Author Success: #3, Build Your Platforms: http://bit.ly/mShfRa

10 Reasons Writers Might Drink: http://bit.ly/q8uoKi @elspethwrites

"The Help" – A Happy Ending? (A story deconstruction): http://bit.ly/qQvaqo

Voice tips from the pros: http://bit.ly/o2GAk3 @AngelaAckerman

Foyles Bookstore, 105-Yrs-Young, Seeks Partner for Long Walks, Fun, Int'l Expansion: http://bit.ly/piokD2

We Retreat To Advance: http://bit.ly/qe9pkn

Finding balance while juggling life: http://bit.ly/pnTg87

To Hyphenate or Not To Hyphenate? http://bit.ly/mVvSoj @authorterryo

Business Writing: What Is It Exactly? http://bit.ly/p3RngW

Letting Go to Help Our Book-Babies Grow: http://bit.ly/pWoCpe @WriteAngleBlog

How 1 writer makes a living writing online: http://bit.ly/niLQ07

For writing quotes and inspiration: Advice to Writers: http://bit.ly/kaOOvq @AdviceToWriters

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The Death of Print, Part Whatever:

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Published on July 30, 2011 21:01

July 20, 2011

A Short Break

blog10_thumb52Hi everyone! This is the time of year when I take a short blogcation in order to catch up with family, host guests, etc. I'm also spending some time revising that book that I wrote five years ago. I also have some pass pages to proof and a new book to start (May deadline, but may as well get cracking!)


I'm going to leave you with links to some of my most popular posts on the blog, courtesy of Google Analytics. :) I'll be back in a week and a half.



Writing Worksheets and Other Tools

Tips for Restless Writers


Choosing Our Story


Making a Transition


Answering a Few Questions about the Search Engine


Promote Yourself, Not Your Book


See you soon!

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Published on July 20, 2011 21:01

July 19, 2011

A Story Within a Story by Cricket McRae

Thanks for hosting me here at Mystery Writing is Murder, Elizabeth!



My recently released Home Crafting Mystery, Wined and Died, is the fifth in the series. All of my contemporary cozies feature colonial home crafts as the backdrop to the murder mystery, and in this one, it's mead making.


Once I decide on the home craft, the rest of the story comes out of that. Then the subplots emerge as a matter of course. In Wined and Died, Sophie Mae Ambrose and her husband are caring for their housemate's precocious twelve-year-old daughter, Erin Bly. Her subplot does more than flavor the rest of the story. It starts the whole thing, cycles throughout, and ends the book as well.


See, Erin is writing a novel.


I'm not sure how that happened, but when it cropped up in Chapter One, I went with it. It fit with her character, offered opportunities for both conflict and humor, allowed her to be involved in the amateur investigation more than usual, drove Sophie Mae batty, and in the end her jottings afforded a piece of critical information at the right time.


Throughout Wined and Died she follows everyone, writing down what they say and making notes, all the while trying to decide what she's going to write her book about. Sophie Mae gives her plenty of terrible writing advice because Sophie Mae hasn't a clue about how to write a novel.


At the end of the story, I felt Erin needed to share what she had decided to write about, and that meant coming up with a short synopsis that could reasonably be connected to what the reader had just experienced in Wined and Died.


What fun! I sat down, tuned into my inner twelve-year-old, and drew a right-brain-inspired chart full of free associations from events and random details in the book. A YA fantasy plot gradually emerged. It showed how Erin might have creatively interpreted the various scribblings in her notebook, though to literal-minded Sophie Mae the youngster's story has nothing to do with any of their recent adventures.


Mise en abyme is the French term for self-reflexive embeddings in artwork. It refers to the idea of two mirrors facing each other and can be visual, written, or--as in Hamlet--the famous play within a play. I didn't really think about how I was using this age-old device, only that it functioned well. And I sure wasn't thinking about actually writing a YA novel. But now that thought is fluttering at the back of my mind as the result of working out that mystery subplot.


Writers get ideas from everywhere, it seems. Have you ever gotten a different story idea from a story you're writing?

Wined and Died_1In honor of the recent release of Wined and Died, you can enter to win a FREE Author Website ($900 value!) from the creative folks at Bizango Websites for Writers until July 29, 2011. For more details and information on how to enter, please visit my blog at www.hearthcricket.com. For more information about me or the Home Crafting Mystery Series, check out www.cricketmcrae.com.


A former resident of the Pacific Northwest where her novels are set, Cricket McRae has always dabbled in the kind of practical home crafts that were once necessary to everyday life. The magical chemistry of making soap, the satisfaction of canning garden produce, and the sensuout side of fiber arts like spinning an knitting are just a few of the reasons these activities have fascinated her since childhood. As a girl she was as much a fan of Nancy Drew as of Laura Ingalls Wilder, so it's no surprise that her contemporary cozy series features a soap maker with a nose for investigation. For more information about Cricket or the Home Crafting Mystery Series, check out http://www.cricketmcrae.com/ .


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Thanks so much for your post today, Cricket! You've got me looking forward to trying a story-within-a-story, myself! Looks tricky...but fun. :)

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Published on July 19, 2011 21:01