Riley Adams's Blog, page 211
February 28, 2011
Repeating Elements
I don't know if y'all subscribe to Writer's Digest, but this past month's issue (the February one, pictured left) is especially good, I thought. There was a nice article in the issue called "25 Ways to Improve Your Writing in 30 Minutes a Day."
The article touches on things like sentence structure, pace, flow, and imagery. One subject I found particularly interesting was the section on unity.
Writer Jack Heffron pointed out the usefulness of selective repetition. He said:
"A detail or remark or even just a unique word mentioned early in your piece can be echoed later, creating a sense of wholeness through the reader's recognition of the previous mention." That recognitions also imbues the repeated element with a resonance… The reader enjoys a satisfying sense of progression, of having moved from one literary moment to another."
This is something that I've enjoyed playing around with, but always in terms of subplot. I usually have a subplot that crops up in an innocuous (and frequently humorous) way in my mystery. Then I tie in the subplot to the main plot at the end of the book. I've always really liked the feeling of completeness that it gives to a book.
I've never thought about it, but there are other subtle ways to use this device, too (and I think 'subtle' is key here.) It could be used with setting, imagery, a triggered memory or simply an unusual choice of words.
I've always used it for more of a humorous effect and that pleasant sort of tying-up-loose-ends feeling. But it could be used to evoke a variety of responses from readers…still with that satisfying 'wrapped up' feeling of unity.
Is selective repetition/unity an element that you've used in your writing before? As a reader, is it something you usually notice?
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The WKB newsletter that Mike Fleming and I are putting together is set to launch later this week. We've got a great interview with freelance editor Jason Black and links to February's most popular writing articles. If you'd like to get on our email list for the newsletter, please sign up here: http://bit.ly/gx7hg1.
February 27, 2011
Being Open to Ideas—Whenever they Strike
I think most writers are almost overwhelmed by ideas. The problem is usually too many ideas or getting ideas for new books when they're not finished with the old one.
That's they way it is for me, too. But I've noticed that the ideas are striking at different times than they used to.
I used to always get fantastic ideas when I was out running errands. I had a notebook in the car at all times, just in case, and index cards in my pocketbook for those times when I was actually shopping when they struck.
I think what's happened is that I'm now really focused on the errands and getting them knocked out as quickly as possible. So I have less time when my mind is wandering.
Apparently my brain is just dying for opportunities to flood my mind with these ideas that have been collecting. So lately, the floodgates have been opening while I'm falling asleep, while I'm sleeping, and as I'm waking up.
So I've adjusted. There's a book light and a pencil and a notebook on my bedside table. My husband is probably wishing that my ideas would start coming during errand time again.
A couple of nights ago I had an idea that did more than wake me up and make me jot it down in my handy-dandy notebook. This one was the answer to a plot problem I had. This idea completely launched me up out of the bed and downstairs to the computer. It was the idea that completely fixed a plot hole.
So what I'm gathering from all this is that I'm putting up some barriers to the flow of ideas just because my busyness isn't making me as receptive to them. So these ideas are all popping out when I'm trying to sleep.
My plan is to tune in more to the daydreaming, idea-generating side of me and less to my to-do list or whatever it is that's putting up walls.
How do you ensure you're receptive to getting ideas?
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Couple of quick notes:
First of all, Margot Kinberg is sponsoring "Do the Write Thing" for the victims of the devastating New Zealand earthquake that struck a week ago. She's holding a raffle to help raise money for the relief effort. For more information, please visit Margot's blog.
Secondly, the WKB newsletter that Mike Fleming and I are putting together is set to launch later this week. We've got a great interview with freelance editor Jason Black and links to February's most popular writing articles. If you'd like to get on our email list for the newsletter, please sign up here: http://bit.ly/gx7hg1.
February 26, 2011
Twitterific

![Terry3_thumb[1]](https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/hostedimages/1380447585i/1701687.png)
I'm delighted that now we have an efficient method of locating resources on writing topics when you need them—via the Writer's Knowledge Base search engine and software engineer and writer Mike Fleming's ingenuity. The links I tweet (which are writers' blogs, agents' and editors' blogs) all are added to the engine to make it easier for you to access the information you're looking for.
10 ways to find people to follow on Twitter: http://bit.ly/gCCYoV @emlynchand
Writing Theory -- The Monomyth: http://bit.ly/hfeAsU
Why do professional writers shy away from social media? http://bit.ly/ero31d via @BookMD
Writers Tips for Successful Radio Interviews: http://bit.ly/hGSFqe @Working_Writer
Creativity tweets of the week: http://bit.ly/hAMHg8
20 steps for building a Facebook Author Page and getting people to "like" it: http://bit.ly/fgN07J @emlynchand
The Art of Repetition: http://bit.ly/dOd64D
Tips for writing your query: http://bit.ly/e6ptTo
Dealing with the passage of time in a series: http://bit.ly/eKbiRM @mkinberg
Create a foil: http://bit.ly/hGwWMx
Thoughts on outlining novels and stories: http://bit.ly/eIHaFG
Things Could Be Worse: 12 Dystopian Novels: http://huff.to/fWbyQ4
Delegate Your Way To Writing Success: http://bit.ly/gEsOC5
Working (and Writing) Effectively With the On/Off Principle: http://bit.ly/gZr0Zq
The Vampire Issue: Or, why Vamps Don't Have to Suck: http://bit.ly/gwt7Yl
Promote a Book with Twitter: 10 Strategies for Authors: http://bit.ly/ijUumo
You Might Be Under Deadline If…: http://bit.ly/iapHpB @jamigold
The waiting game: http://bit.ly/ehWbiw
How To Write A Query Letter: http://bit.ly/h3Tsdd @bubblecow
Integrating research into our fiction: http://bit.ly/hPtiXC
9 Tips for Amplified Creativity: http://bit.ly/gihwFB
Over 6000 links to help #writers find resources: http://bit.ly/dYRayA
Writing in layers: http://bit.ly/dQuyTD
6 Techniques for Using Music to Help Our Muse: http://bit.ly/dIiB12 @jamigold
6 Reasons You Will Never Be A Writer: http://bit.ly/h4kS8t @StoryADayMay
Anyone Should Blog? 3 Types of Blogs and 3 Ways to Handle Them: http://bit.ly/f1ruSb
Spectrum surfing--trying out new genres: http://bit.ly/ewveQc @AraTrask
The One Surprise Rule: http://bit.ly/ewoxPG @Thecozychicks
An Education in Book Reviews: http://bit.ly/eA2PJf
Why Alpha Male Writers Became Extinct (Wall St. Journal): http://on.wsj.com/eHn4n4
Best Articles This Week for Writers 2/25/11: http://bit.ly/gxATij @4kidlit
How to get your script read: http://bit.ly/fgMto2
Google introduces e-books to Android market: http://bit.ly/f1qmGF
What Creates Good Writing: Instinct vs. Skill: http://bit.ly/f6ZSYt
The tricky balancing act of red herrings for the crime writer: http://bit.ly/gmPBL6 @mkinberg
The writer's role in submissions and negotiations: http://bit.ly/ejXU3L
Positive Self-Talk--Examples: http://bit.ly/gXTk8i @joanswan
The Book Is Dead. Long Live The Publishing Industry! http://huff.to/hjhuMb
Protect Yourself from Writing's Physical Hazards: http://bit.ly/hqr7gl
How To Entice An Agent In 25 Words Or Fewer: http://bit.ly/hk4GHI
Poetry and literature in Kensington Gardens - interactive (Guardian): http://bit.ly/ib5zSn
A Writer Muses on Marketing and Sales: http://bit.ly/gRnOtL
Giving Your Character Choices: http://bit.ly/fjNPRk
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Scallops over a bed of Creamed Spinach http://bit.ly/dKI1KA @CleoCoyle
Directory for Plot Series: http://bit.ly/dWXmFB
Does Your Fiction Have A Comfort Zone? http://bit.ly/eayUVd
Ideas for earning money as a writer: http://bit.ly/f6tDN2
Dos and Don'ts of writing conferences: http://bit.ly/fxbfGR
Starting a New Manuscript (Having a Template): http://bit.ly/fqyqlF
Are your characters frozen in time or aging through your series? http://bit.ly/hYrsCP
Do the Write Thing: Earthquake Relief & Donations: http://bit.ly/hfE6el @janetrudolph @mkinberg
Writing race in YA: http://bit.ly/eN8tTn
Writer's Digest hosts free webinar tomorrow (2-25) on what the Borders bankruptcy means for writers: http://bit.ly/epwAJV
5 Surprising Things One Writer Has Learned Since Selling her Manuscript: http://bit.ly/gET0w3
Questions to ask editors at conferences: http://bit.ly/g9OROR
The Loneliness of Self-Publishing: http://bit.ly/dKztqd
Protagonists need to be proactive: http://bit.ly/fPhidl
Cliches for Aspiring Writers: http://bit.ly/fUSE3K
SFF and the Classical Past—Odysseys: http://bit.ly/hHnhHE
Plot Arcs & The Query: http://bit.ly/f1pWIX
The Unreal, and Why We Love It: Recognition--http://bit.ly/gCqfba
3 Types of Character Arcs: Choose the Best for Your Novel: http://bit.ly/ee0kTZ
Revising a Short Story: http://bit.ly/iivRVt
An editor with setting writing tips: http://bit.ly/hYb6QL
Traits of a good crime fiction character: http://bit.ly/hDX7Xo
10 Ways to Improve Your "Likability Quotient": http://bit.ly/grRgXL
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Mystery Lovers Kitchen: I ADORE SOUP http://bit.ly/gzBZGd @CleoCoyle
How to Use LinkedIn With Twitter for Better Networking: http://bit.ly/fE0xJS
Is The First Book We Write Usually Garbage? http://bit.ly/dVF2aJ
Changing a Location Can Mean Everything: http://bit.ly/hcaTNV
Barnes & Noble Opens Doors for Self-Published Writers: http://bit.ly/eTFjqU
A writer who survived the New Zealand earthquake posts an update from his phone: http://bit.ly/e8gMoh @ajackwriting
Track Changes – A Critique Group Lifesaver: http://bit.ly/emavdS
Writing Every Day vs. Binge Writing: http://bit.ly/hTSrm6
If you are an author, everything is your fault: http://bit.ly/hQUTny
Adults are just as creative as children: http://bit.ly/iiILl1
Why you should — or maybe shouldn't — be blogging: http://bit.ly/exi7Ho
When the words don't flow: http://bit.ly/hbn1DH
An agent says, "When to keep your trap shut? Almost always.": http://bit.ly/hMXY8D
How to Leave Meaningful Blog Comments: http://bit.ly/hGHnvq
Developmental Stages of a Short Story 101: http://bit.ly/htyebw
Going Neuro: Writing for Brains: http://bit.ly/eQ6cKg
First chapters: http://bit.ly/eLfLJW
Researching the Historical Novel: http://bit.ly/fgzka4
Size Can Matter: Novels vs Short Stories: http://bit.ly/e1ptIf
Authors catch fire with self-published e-books (USA Today): http://usat.ly/eOc0li
An editor reviews the Sony Daily Edition eReader: http://bit.ly/eFIrn9 @martyhalpern
Hooking the Reader and Never Letting Go: http://bit.ly/eUTZm3
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Margarita Pie http://bit.ly/fJYvI4 @CleoCoyle
Exploring the wonder of the genre with a space opera author: http://bit.ly/hEqW4P
Tweet from your phone--even if you don't have an internet-enabled phone: http://bit.ly/e4O51i
Promotional Cargo Cults: http://bit.ly/ewjHbZ
A Writer's Dress Code? http://bit.ly/hOMr9x @authorterryo
When Should Authors Show Off Their Book Covers? http://bit.ly/h2jms2
Tips for pitching your book: http://bit.ly/gi1YUx
10 Signs of a Typical Writing Day: http://bit.ly/fzEPlb @elspethwrites
How to Grow Your Reader Community with an Author Blog: http://bit.ly/hKMabw @thecreativepenn
10 Resources to Help You Write a Great Short Story: http://bit.ly/h5CZLn
World building in short stories: http://bit.ly/enqQOu
Coping with rejection: http://bit.ly/epAFkj
5 tips for squashing self-doubt demons: http://bit.ly/dXFgSN @tawnafenske
Tips to keep those modifiers from dangling: http://bit.ly/f0DGBt
Slush behind the scenes: http://bit.ly/fjVhVT
Point of View, Whose Head Should I Be In? http://bit.ly/g6aLf4
Changing times: Changing book design: http://bit.ly/gz6jom
How accurately labeling your genre can help get you published: http://bit.ly/dTcjcl
4 Absurdly Effective Steps to Take Before Asking to Guest Post: http://bit.ly/gFH4Aa
How to improve your writing in 5 minutes or fewer: http://bit.ly/ebcKIK
Building Reader Rapport through Characters' Emotions: http://bit.ly/gA4ZYX
A lesson in teaching writing (Guardian): http://bit.ly/dEI6XB
Romance Novel Tropes: Cliches We Love and Hate: http://bit.ly/fs3R0X
Five (Easy) 5-Minute Marketing Ideas for the Unmotivated and/or Lazy Author: http://tinyurl.com/6977axt
When authors met book bloggers for lunch (Guardian): http://bit.ly/gMXoWQ
8 New Facebook Page Changes: What You Need to Know: http://bit.ly/fb5KcE
Mixing Past and Present Tense: http://bit.ly/hPBIwj
How To Write The Perfect Sentence: http://bit.ly/h560uu
What Can Literary Criticism Do For You? http://bit.ly/hOHQM7 @amwriting
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Oprah's Oatmeal Muffins and The Zero Fat Muffin Experiment by Cleo Coyle http://bit.ly/gJdEH4 @CleoCoyle
Too Many Books: http://bit.ly/gY2uMy
Pacing your novel: http://bit.ly/frg2gQ
I Was Told to Like You: Marriage of Convenience Plots: http://bit.ly/etwN3F
Why It's Called The Slush Pile: http://bit.ly/hybujC
Feeling Sleepy? 5 Quick Energy Tips For Writers: http://bit.ly/gCqgBv @ajackwriting
Why writers make reluctant revolutionaries (Guardian): http://bit.ly/gk4EVH
Promote Yourself, Not Your Book: http://bit.ly/fraY6P
Thoughts on writing description: http://bit.ly/dYKZXE
Character Believability Using POV: http://bit.ly/dQryDQ
Examining Trends vs. Style in Children's Books: http://bit.ly/eqkFY8
Writing dialogue--how people really talk on the page: http://bit.ly/fl84KU
Introspection--how much is too much? http://bit.ly/eqQBKS
How To Clearly Communicate the Essence Of Your Book To Agents And Publishers: http://bit.ly/h5zOH1 @bubblecow
Exposition: A Little Crazy Goes A Long Way: http://bit.ly/dEXDLH
Modern writer survival skills: http://bit.ly/eekqqb
Book bloggers can help sell your book: Tips for authors: http://bit.ly/dLH0Sx
Network & increase blog traffic with a blog challenge: http://bit.ly/fw7S61 or blogfest: http://bit.ly/ekLTsO @AlexJCavanaugh @hartjohnson
Don't Speak: On Writers and Angst and How to Deal: http://bit.ly/hSsvZA
What Does Your Email Say About You? http://bit.ly/gXQJrL @PStoltey
Mastering characters' inner narrative: http://bit.ly/gjFvc7
I Do: Tips for Co-blogging with Your Spouse: http://bit.ly/f1zv25
What "Home" Means - to Your Characters and your Story: http://bit.ly/hbz9po
Keeping Dialogue Real: http://bit.ly/eAo39i
Has Facebook Peaked? http://bit.ly/i8KXZI @annerallen
Writing Conference Preparation: http://bit.ly/hCNWeS
A writing contest for unpublished writers: http://dld.bz/MEvh @jhansenwrites
It's Horrible, Stupid, and I Hate It: Coping With Criticism: http://bit.ly/eE5G2y
The Gift of Story: http://bit.ly/ibLYr6 @DazyDayWriter
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Hearty Crockpot Bean Soup http://bit.ly/dFHLyo @CleoCoyle
Seeing is Believing: The Romantic Heroine's Journey: http://bit.ly/hUlpis
30+ Visually Attracted Creative Resumes: http://bit.ly/gEV2DX
Playing by the Rules (of Magic): http://bit.ly/h6vKig
Let your MC succeed while they're failing – the power of reward: http://bit.ly/hhO5k2 @dirtywhitecandy
5 ways to write an atrocious blog post: http://bit.ly/hJ6QtV @jammer0501
What We Say When We Don't Speak. Or, Five Ways To Put a Sock In It: http://bit.ly/h6O14P
10 of the best: fictional poets (Guardian): http://bit.ly/fACsOg
POV confusion? Helpful links: http://bit.ly/hJZD8n
5 Writing Mantras That Bear Repeating: http://bit.ly/eb9d2q
7 Solutions for Sentences with Problematic Parallels: http://bit.ly/gdDJYv
A SF author with a letter to beginning writers: http://bit.ly/hBrLMY
Enter the Extraordinary Heroine: Are We Ready For Her Yet? http://bit.ly/ea72aa
The decline and fall of the fantasy novel: http://bit.ly/hjzctB
10 Tips To Help You Become A Better Writer: http://bit.ly/emOZeY
Looking on the Write Side: Turning Off Your Inner Editor: http://bit.ly/gKHMhK
Getting Your Work Out in the World: The Mechanics: http://bit.ly/fvd6v6
Using Twitter to Market Your Book: http://bit.ly/ftjBNA
The wonder of yes: http://bit.ly/funcAG
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Please Welcome Guest Blogger Misa Ramirez! http://bit.ly/hvxdMm @CleoCoyle
Becoming A Writer: http://bit.ly/g2maDI
Fertilize Confusion to Thrive During Creative & Life Challenges: http://bit.ly/e6CtyN
February 25, 2011
Finding the Root Cause of a Productivity Problem
I did our taxes this week, which is cause for tremendous celebration for me.
Doing taxes is a real grind, especially sifting through all the bits of paper and receipts that I keep over the course of the year. Since my writing income puts me in the self-employed category, the tax rate on my income is higher (bleh).
I write off as many of my expenses as possible and keep all my writing-related and promo-related receipts in an envelope. The envelope is bulging by the end of the year…and then comes the fun part of sorting through it all.
Each year, I take the tax time opportunity to also go through all the non-writing-related papers I've collected—statements, invoices, etc. that fill the desk. I file some and shred others. It's a very time-consuming process that I've struggled with for years…just because of the shear volume of paper that we've got.
Yesterday, while I was shredding the umpteenth statement, I had a sudden brainstorm. I didn't need these statements—clearly. It was a nightmare to shred or file them all. Why not just contact all the various institutions and ask them to discontinue their mailings? Why not just get whatever information I needed online?
The reason I've been stuck with that time-consuming chore for the last ten years is because I never thought about the root cause of the problem…the unwanted paper.
On the same wavelength, I've noticed the last few weeks that my mornings have been less-productive than usual. Instead of really taking a minute to figure out why, I just kept on trying to make up my lost time later in the day.
After I figured out my paper conundrum, though, I started thinking about what had changed in my schedule to cause such a disruption to my writing in the mornings. I realized it was the number of Twitter messages and emails that I was getting…and the fact that I was responding to them first thing in the morning instead of getting my work done. I never used to check messages first thing in the morning, but somehow I'd fallen into that trap recently.
So now I put off checking and responding to messages until later in the morning—and it seems to be working out a lot better for me.
It's amazing how I can just blindly stumble along with a problem before I make time to figure out what's actually causing it. And addressing the root cause always seems to work.
Is there anything keeping you from being productive?
February 24, 2011
Integrating Our Research
As I mentioned a couple of weeks ago, I'm working on a new mystery series for Penguin/NAL…a series set in the South that involves a quilting guild.
I've probably never mentioned my quilting expertise before…because it's non-existent. :)
Quilting is the perfect topic for me to research, though, because I've always been interested in quilting as an art form and as a way to tell stories.
Recently, I've been immersed in quilting books and magazines, talked to quilters, visited quilt shops, and watched videos on quilting.
I know way more information about quilting than needs to go into the book.
Sometimes I read books and feel like the author was trying to convey all of what he'd learned about a topic to the reader, resulting in an information dump.
This could be a setting dump, a character skill dump, a forensics investigation dump, etc. It takes lots of different forms, but it's rarely fun to read. It makes me feel like the writer is showing off…although they're probably just trying to include all the information they dug up during the long hours of research.
So what I'm trying to do with my quilting research is integrate it naturally into the story in bits and pieces.
I'm finding different ways to do this. Some of the integration is as simple as letting individual preference of quilt styles indicate the different personalities of the characters.
Some of the research figures into the detail and history of a quilt that's an important prop in the mystery.
Some of the research integrates into setting detail as I describe the environments where the ladies quilt together (bees, guild meetings)—and where one plots murder. :)
I'm writing a murder mystery—not a how-to book on quilting. So the quilting research is there to add flavor to the novel instead of overwhelming it.
I'm looking at the research a lot like I look at character worksheets and questionnaires—I don't need to use all the information I find out about my character. The information is just there for me to develop a well-rounded character. Similarly, the research is there for me to develop a textured book.
How do you integrate your research naturally into your novel?
February 23, 2011
Your Characters—Frozen in Time, or Aging During Your Series?
Sometimes I'd like to be my protagonist. Time moves at a much slower pace for them than it does for the rest of us.
Margot Kinberg had a thought-provoking post on her Confessions of a Mystery Novelist blog the other day about the passage of time in series writing. In one interesting example, Margot points out that Agatha Christie had Tommy and Tuppence age in real time in one series while Miss Marple really doesn't seem to age at all in her series. Christie wrote Miss Marple books for almost 40 years and Miss Marple would have had to have been well over 100 if she aged at the rate that you and I do.
I write two series with protagonists in their 60s. I also write Myrtle Clover, who is an octogenarian. I've decided that, while time passes (the murders in the series are not happening back to back in real time from book to book), its passage is a lot slower than ours.
This suits me fine because I like to cultivate a slower-paced, cozier feel anyway. My characters grow—but in talent and character…not in terms of age.
I'm being vague about the passage of time in my books, primarily because of my characters' more advanced ages. But there are plenty of writers with young protagonists who stop time…Nancy Drew has stayed 18 for the past 80 years or so (well, she was 16, briefly, at the very start of the series.) Clearly, having Nancy age was going to put her in the category of 'grownup' to many of her elementary-school age readers.
Sue Grafton's Kinsey Millhone still lives in the 1980s. Grafton's first book of the series, A is for Alibi, was written and set in 1982. Her last book, U is for Undertow, which released in 2009, is set in 1988. Time does pass…but very slowly.
Then there are writers who have let their characters age over the course of a series—which sometimes results in the end of a series. The Little Colonel books come to mind (she married and that was it), and the Little House on the Prairie books where Laura grows up and marries (resulting in the end of the series.) Because really, how far do young readers want to stretch from the familiar? Reading about married life when you're ten years old can be something of a bummer.
So here are the possibilities, as I see them, for passage of time and character age:
Follow real time fairly exactly (so, if you put out a novel a year, then your character will age each year in real time)
Freeze time completely.
Slow down time in a vague way (my current approach)
Slow down time…dramatically (à la Sue Grafton.)
Speed time forward temporarily. Maybe you've frozen time for a couple of books or more and now your next book is set five years out from when your last one ended.
Any other thoughts on how to wrangle space and time in a series? Which approach do you take when you write…or which do you like reading?
February 22, 2011
Adults are Creative, Too
I've always said, and believed it to be true, that I've never been more creative than when I was 9 years old.
My whole 4th grade year just crackled with creativity. I wrote every day, sneaked writing in during math time (no wonder my math grades were horrid), thought about what I was going to write when I got home from school, and invited children over to play and instead forced them to write stories with me.
But—I'm creative now, surely. I wrote three books last year, so how could I think I've not been creative? Except—I'm more methodical about it, and a lot more measured with my approach. Does that make me less creative?
Still, though, some days I feel like something is missing that used to be there.
There was an article I came across last week that made me realize what was missing. The article was by Jeffrey Davis on Psychology Today in a post titled "Think Like a 47-Year-Old to Boost Your Creativity."
I think it's wonder that's sometimes missing from my creative process.
Davis said that 19th century poet Charles Baudelaire once stated, "Genius is the capacity to retrieve childhood at will." But Davis noted:
But…highly creative people are not retrieving childhood - which includes, remember, all of its muddled-ness and meanness and necessary dependency and utter self-centeredness. These adults are retrieving wonder - which is what Baudelaire meant. When we say that "Genius is the capacity to retrieve wonder at will," then we're not nostalgically trying to bring back some "lost child" or "find our inner child." We are supremely present with who and how we are.
Davis says that studies have found the adult brain to be superior in many ways to a young brain. And he says that we can not only purposefully embrace wonder, but that our "knowledge and experience can enrich" it.
So looking at the world with fresh eyes is important to creativity. The wonder of the world is what helps fuel our imaginations. We might have to work harder to feel the wonder, but we can definitely do it.
How do you fuel your imagination and keep the wonder alive?
February 21, 2011
What a Cozy Mystery Is and Thoughts on Genre Writing
I had an 'oops-moment' the other day when someone emailed me and asked me to explain what a cozy mystery was.
This is what happens when you get so close to your subject that you don't adequately explain it.
Cozies are subgenres of the mystery genre. Mystery, actually, is a genre with many subgenres. Cozies are basically traditional mysteries featuring an amateur sleuth. The reader receives the same clues as the sleuth and solves the case alongside her. These mysteries are frequently humorous, character-focused, often (not always) set in small-towns, and are part of a series. You'll never find explicit descriptions of violence, dark themes, or much profanity in a cozy mystery.
When I talk about what I write, I'm always very specific (which is probably why I don't even think twice when I use the term 'cozy' anymore.) The reason is that when I interact with people in the industry, they'll ask me different questions based on my answer to "What do you write?" If I say I write cozies, another mystery writer might ask what my hook is (I write a Southern culinary mystery series and a Southern quilting mystery series.) If I said I was a police procedural writer, they might ask where I'd found my forensics research. If I said I wrote thrillers, they might ask if I wrote at all from the killer's POV.
If I say I write mysteries, it just doesn't explain much about what I'm actually writing. So I'm usually more specific.
Sometimes I get dinged for being specific. I remember a conversation with an aspiring author I had once. He asked what I wrote. "Traditional mysteries," I answered. "What do you write?"
He gave a bit of a smirk and said, "What I write can't easily be defined or pigeonholed."
I just smiled back, but what I was thinking was, "Well, that's a problem."
Because agents, editors, publishers—they have only so many hours in their day, like the rest of us. It sure does help to be able to quickly categorize a manuscript.
And, honestly, the more narrowly you're able to make that categorization, the better. So maybe you haven't just written a children's book. Maybe it's actually YA. Maybe it's not just YA—it's dystopian YA. If you can accurately pinpoint what you're writing, you'll know where to direct your queries to agents or editors (because they're usually fairly specific as to genres they're looking for). And they'll read your query and know what specific elements they're looking for when they read your manuscript—because the elements will be fairly common to that genre.
So, taking cozy mysteries as an example. Any agent or editor worth his or her salt is going to know that a cozy mystery is probably going to be around 75,000 words, won't have much profanity, won't have explicit descriptions of the dead body, will have an amateur investigating, and will frequently have some sort of a hook—it will be a culinary cozy, or a gardening cozy, or a crafting cozy. These are things they will be looking for as they read.
If an agent, in particular, gets something across her desk that's not easily defined—well, what's she going to do with it? How is she going to sell it to an editor—who is looking for something specific to appeal to a particular reader base.
I think, also, that it's easier to get your foot in the door if you're writing genre fiction. There are tons of readers out there for any given popular genre—fantasy, SF, romance, mystery. These are dedicated readers who will read each month's new releases in their favorite genre (my son is one of these. I just print out the new releases in his favorite genre each month and head to the bookstore.) So you've already got a reader base. This helps because, above all, you want to sell books to stay on the shelves.
What genre (or subgenre) are you writing or reading?
February 20, 2011
Promote Yourself, Not Your Book
One of the best bits of advice I picked up last week was this gem from the Gatekeepers Post: author publicity makes better sense than book publicity.
It's something I think I've tried to do—promote my name(s) as opposed to individual titles—but I've never really thought about the why behind what I was doing.
As the article mentioned, books do have a fairly short shelf life in bookstores (online, obviously, longer.)
Also, titles and series change. Just as I've got you remembering that I've got a book out that's titled Delicious and Suspicious, Finger Lickin' Dead's gets ready to launch.
I don't know about you, but I've only got so much room in my head for titles. Especially if an author is particularly productive. I'll definitely remember an author's name and I'll be able to recognize a book's cover art. A title? Probably not.
So I put my name out there. It's on Facebook, it's on Twitter. It's on my blog. And I have my covers right up there with me—they're splashed on my Twitter background, are uploaded on Facebook, and are in my sidebar. I visit blogs and my name and comment stays behind to show I was there. And I try very hard not to talk about my book. I mean—it's obvious I have a book or two. If someone is interested, they'll check them out.
Promoting a book can get obnoxious. There are many, many books that I feel have been over-promoted and overexposed by publishers, authors and PR people. It really lessens my desire to read the books. It's a shame, because what I was usually interested in was the author. And the author obviously didn't get it and shoved the book's title down our collective throats, instead.
Which will ultimately be around the longest—us or a particular title? Unless we're as unfortunate as Stieg Larsson, we're the ones who'll be out there writing long after the books are gathering dust.
The nice thing about promoting our name is that it also gives our books exposure. I've gone into the bookstore many times and asked for "the latest Elizabeth George" or "the new M.C. Beaton" or "the last release from Deborah Crombie." I don't even remember the title of the book I'm looking for. But I sure remember the authors.
I'm definitely promoting my next release...in the short term. But my long-term strategy is basically author branding (although I do hate that term.)
Do you find that authors' names are easier to remember than their titles (if the books are regular releases and not a really hyped title…e.g. Da Vinci Code, etc.)?
February 19, 2011
Twitterific
Here are writing links that I've posted to Twitter for the past week.
I'm delighted that now we have an efficient method of locating resources on writing topics when you need them—via the Writer's Knowledge Base search engine and software engineer and writer Mike Fleming's ingenuity. The links I tweet (which are writers' blogs, agents' and editors' blogs) all are added to the engine to make it easier for you to access the information you're looking for.
Addressing social issues in mysteries--without being preachy: http://bit.ly/fh9nbJ @mkinberg
Getting in the mood to create: http://bit.ly/eD6Pbk
The answer is in the work: http://bit.ly/fNH4vY
Need help pacing your story? http://bit.ly/gbXFZH
The Whole Story: Plotting Multibook Goals: http://bit.ly/hIh6g6
The Missing Link–NaNoEDMo: http://bit.ly/fTvkRx
A screenwriter answers industry-related questions: http://bit.ly/hTvKwn
Memo to Publishers: 8 Things NOT to Say: http://bit.ly/ibPPPC
An agent on why assistants should be respected: http://bit.ly/ffRUwj
The 3 Integral Components of a Story's Beginning: http://bit.ly/fi924u
Does agent location matter? (Should you query agents in other countries?): http://bit.ly/g243yw
10 Ways to Piss Off Your Readers So They Never Become a Customer: http://bit.ly/f8VFA2
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: GINGER CAKE http://bit.ly/hg5z4K @CleoCoyle
Konrath with numbers to encourage self-pubbing: http://bit.ly/efxnFG via @evil_avatar
11 Tips To Help Make Writing Easier: http://bit.ly/gd3Qkr
OMG! You can totally see her double spaces (on the double-space controversy): http://bit.ly/fEyjkK
How to use your blog to market your writing: http://bit.ly/hOTZDr
5 Ways Authors Alienate Readers on Social Media Sites: http://bit.ly/gcrbdE
Using Fear To Create A Dystopian World: http://bit.ly/eGljfm
Charles Dickens – Three Principles of Writing: http://bit.ly/hBTSp2
Need help with scene transitions? http://bit.ly/fivggV
Prologues: Not as Evil as You Think: http://bit.ly/gZnJDM
A writing checklist: http://bit.ly/gyLEuT
How to Make the Most of Procrastination: http://bit.ly/goAZPx
The Psychology of Character: http://bit.ly/hFvDhd
The Pros and Cons of Freelance Writing Online: http://bit.ly/hdYrmf
8 Tips for Dealing Calmly with Criticism: http://bit.ly/idWRoK
Think kids are more creative? Think again. Think Like a 47-Year-Old to Boost Your Creativity: http://bit.ly/i7yNvO
The power of the short sentence: http://bit.ly/dSZGAf
Best Articles This Week for Writers 2/18/2011: http://bit.ly/dSy1TV @4kidlit
How to Help Google Find Your Site: http://bit.ly/fqpVbO
Science Fiction vs. Science Fantasy: http://bit.ly/hUSzVO
10 Tips for Effective Book Covers: http://bit.ly/hyxL68
Don't lose your reader--use basic dialogue tags: http://bit.ly/eIY2Yj
Author Publicity Makes Better Sense than Book Publicity: http://bit.ly/e9VQe3
Your Author Photo: Posing Tips: http://bit.ly/f4Hudu
Scientists Date Unreadable Manuscript: http://bit.ly/h0Dxri
On Moral (Fantasy) Fiction: http://bit.ly/hkYp2T
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Chocolate Chip Cheesecake http://bit.ly/fzv2nu @CleoCoyle
Why Twitter freaks one writer out: http://bit.ly/eYaH95
Modern Heroic Fantasy: Vibrant and Diverse or Bankrupt and Nihilistic? http://bit.ly/fivaFa
SFF and the Classical Past, Part 3—Heroic Romans: http://bit.ly/haDuCX
Author John Scalzi's perspective on Borders and what it means to writers' pocketbooks: http://bit.ly/hKNMVO
14 helpful writing links: http://bit.ly/gYFpt0 @matthewschulz
5 Ways a Character's Job Affects Your Story: http://bit.ly/dH3H74
One Writer's World-Building Tools: http://bit.ly/exo8m0 @SINCnational
The Care And Feeding of a Writer - Perseverance: http://bit.ly/f9W9EA
What's popular on the WKB search engine today? http://bit.ly/g9fTqf
Screenwriters: How To Have a Successful Staffing and Development Season: http://bit.ly/i5Bk9N
A Bankrupt Borders Makes Everyone Poorer, Especially Authors: http://aol.it/exuY5E
Making It Your Business: Setting Goals: http://bit.ly/ggnnpQ
Building our protagonist: http://bit.ly/hpg7BQ
A screenwriter answers "What show should I spec?": http://bit.ly/hmMn9i
How to Break Up With Your Writing: http://bit.ly/eKtysP
What Julie and Julia Can Teach Us About Writing With Gusto: http://bit.ly/h0z9DF
Seven Tips to Grow Your Mailing List: http://bit.ly/e3mGhq
Oh no! Melodrama! -- Avoiding the Reader Eye Roll: http://bit.ly/eeGTC6
Countdown of Ways to Keep a Novel Pacey: http://bit.ly/fbQ7eM
5 Traits Of Common Writing Scams: http://bit.ly/fmSoqW @ajackwriting
No Pain, No Gain: Killing Your Darlings: http://bit.ly/gaAOQf
Blog Tours For Authors: The 5 Commandments Of Blog Tourists: http://bit.ly/hsjqFU @thecreativepenn
When Overriding-Control-Disorder Meets Writing: http://bit.ly/hFfxni
How to Beat the Fear of Being a One-Book Wonder: http://bit.ly/eazKuS
Worldbuilding: How description reveals the focus of your narrator: http://bit.ly/hXRa4a @JulietteWade
5 Things Publishers Need to Know About Mobile Apps: http://bit.ly/eXK5Nl
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Cheddar Corn Muffins http://bit.ly/ejRYRs @CleoCoyle
The Bankrupt Nihilism of Our Fallen Fantasists: http://bit.ly/hgKFCR
Writers and Unrealistic Goals: http://bit.ly/hblWMK
Zombies Rule, Vampires Drool: http://bit.ly/htKGXC
(In)Flexibility and the Writing Process: http://bit.ly/idIsIU @bluemaven
7 Pep Talk Points About Writing: http://bit.ly/ezMUn6
Ideas for finding more time to read: http://bit.ly/eHuAxe
An agent explains ISBNs: http://bit.ly/hPE7f2
5 Things To Do In Your First 3 Paragraphs: http://bit.ly/h7lIUS
Too many great links to bookmark? Try searching my tweets: http://bit.ly/dYRayA
How to Meaningfully Grow Traffic to Your Site/Blog: http://bit.ly/fSmEcz @janefriedman
Character motivations versus plot motivations: http://bit.ly/ekGZVP
A screenwriter asks, "Does Having an Agent Allow You to Live Outside L.A.?" The answer: http://bit.ly/eg5XZw
The full list of Borders stores to be closed (via Publishers Weekly): http://bit.ly/fELOT3
3 Strategies for Snaring the Senses: http://bit.ly/dPRC0y
Enough! Four cover tropes that should be retired: http://bit.ly/eb88ha
Scenes–what they are and how to write them: http://bit.ly/e2gxeE
Dialogue tips: http://bit.ly/fmaY0A
E-Publishing: Choices and Pitfalls: http://bit.ly/eEoSro @authorterryo
What one writer learned from screenwriting: http://dld.bz/NhWm
The Black Moment—When is it Dark Enough? http://bit.ly/gTwrnp @joanswan
Capitalization after colons: http://bit.ly/eVbM4j
Phrase Frequency Counter for Writers: http://dld.bz/NdUk @galleycat
How to Crush Clichés: Nix 'em or Fix 'em: http://dld.bz/NdUc
Borders Pulls the Trigger on Chapter 11: http://bit.ly/hUD8cw (PW)
Tax advice for writers: http://dld.bz/NdTz and http://dld.bz/NdTH
The 3 Integral Components of a Story's Beginning: http://dld.bz/NdNg
5 Reasons You Might Be Hearing No: http://dld.bz/NdNd
An agent on the reasons behind the length of book production: http://dld.bz/NdMS
An agent answers 10 quick questions: http://dld.bz/NdTR
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Creamy Corn Soup http://bit.ly/f89AQR @CleoCoyle
Personality types on Twitter--avoid being a 'Debbie Downer': http://dld.bz/NdMs
A Twitter round-up listing new agents and agent advice: http://dld.bz/NdFj @HeatherMcCorkle
Self-Editing Part 2: Writing Style: http://dld.bz/NdEW
The Second Golden Rule of Writing: http://dld.bz/NdER
What we say when we don't speak. Or 5 ways to put a sock in it: http://dld.bz/NdEM
Wait—Who Said That? Keeping Your Speakers Straight: http://dld.bz/NdEz
Is your book's setting ho-hum? http://dld.bz/KNYg
How to Impress Blog Visitors Before they Start to Read: http://dld.bz/MTwD
Laying clues to your character's personality: http://dld.bz/Nd9w
Making Your Characters a Character: http://dld.bz/MTwg
10 misconceptions about public libraries: http://dld.bz/MTwd
Don't Go It Alone: Relationship-building for Bloggers: http://dld.bz/MPHF
Is the future of physical book publishing the same as the future of reading and writing? http://dld.bz/MPHq
5 Lessons for Mixing Past and Present Tense: http://dld.bz/MPFU
A writer on the importance of networking: http://dld.bz/MPFx
10 Ways to Embarrass Your Character: http://dld.bz/MPFh
Are You Ready to Freelance? A Quiz to Find Out: http://dld.bz/MPFb
Writing What You Don't Know: http://dld.bz/MPEr
Head-hopping and a POV review: http://dld.bz/MPEm
An Agent Answers: Question from a Writer - What about older writers? http://dld.bz/MPDF
2010 State of the Computer Book Market, Post 2 - The Categories: http://dld.bz/MPGa
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: A Classic French Dessert: Chocolate Pots de Crème from Cleo Coyle http://bit.ly/eJHxMh @CleoCoyle
4 Steps to Podcasting Success: http://dld.bz/MPCm
Love Your Novel: Just Don't Let it Take Over Your Life: http://dld.bz/MPCc
The Dangers of Dating a Writer: http://dld.bz/MPBJ
Love letters--to our manuscript: http://dld.bz/MSkY @elspethwrites
For Valentine's Day: 10 Sexy Innuendos From Great Literature: http://dld.bz/MMvm
6 exotic places to meet your manuscript: http://dld.bz/MPAa
For a monthly recap of the most popular tweets and searches on the Writer's Knowledge Base, sign up for our newsletter: http://dld.bz/MNU9
A screenwriter with a screenwriting bible: http://dld.bz/MMwu
Descriptive Passages, Part III: Action: http://dld.bz/MMuj
14 ways to love what your manuscript loves: http://dld.bz/MTx5
How did the search engine for writers come about? http://dld.bz/MMup
The Best Way to Make Time for Passion Projects: http://dld.bz/MMuf
Tips for Writers: How To Use Social Media: http://dld.bz/MMsZ
The lost art of editing (Guardian): http://dld.bz/MMsU
Starting Your First Blog? 29 Tips, Tutorials and Resources for New Bloggers: http://dld.bz/MMsE
One arrow to shoot at a target? An agent responds: http://dld.bz/MCd5
What makes writers special: A valentine from an editor: http://dld.bz/MAu7
Borders expected to file bankruptcy this week--and an examination of what led to its demise (including bar codes): http://dld.bz/MPBe
8 Signs Your Writing Is Stuck in a Rut - and Why You Should Care: http://dld.bz/MCdg
Writing the Natural Way: Drawing on What Your Know: http://dld.bz/MCde
Turn your screenplay into a novel: http://dld.bz/MCc7
For Valentine's Day--The 10 best love stories - in pictures (Guardian): http://dld.bz/MAu9
Advice on Online Presence from Publishing Experts: http://dld.bz/M797
A Love Letter to Writers' Spouses: http://dld.bz/M78G
10 Websites For Writers: http://dld.bz/MMw2 @ajackwriting
You know you're a book blogger when... http://dld.bz/M78t
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Last Minute No Panic Valentine Treat http://bit.ly/erIZGy @CleoCoyle
The E-Book Royalty Mess: An Interim Fix: http://dld.bz/M78n
Tips for dealing with hand and wrist pain from writing: http://dld.bz/M78g
That elusive voice: http://dld.bz/M77T
Twitterific--the week in tweets: http://dld.bz/MEe2
Writing sex--the 'why?' : http://dld.bz/M77J
Best tweets for writers (week ending 2-11): http://dld.bz/MDzC @janefriedman
Ready to query but don't know where to start? http://dld.bz/KNZk
Is Your Writing a Fling, or the Real Thing? http://dld.bz/M779
The Four Essential Stages of Writing: http://dld.bz/M77s
Making Your Writing Exciting At the Sentence Level: http://dld.bz/M76F via @SouthernBella03
Get the big picture of your novel: http://dld.bz/M767
The Rules of SciFi: http://dld.bz/M76r
7 Habits of Serious Writers: http://dld.bz/M75Z
17 Reasons Why Entertainment Weekly Is Wrong About Romantic Comedy: http://dld.bz/M75N
Tool for Writing Longhand: http://dld.bz/M75t @CherylRWrites
Great Openings in Kid/YA Lit: http://dld.bz/KVqQ
Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Please welcome guest blogger Vicki Delany - ta dah! http://bit.ly/dX1X9w @CleoCoyle
Roles That Bind: Roleplaying Games and the Fantasy Genre: http://dld.bz/M78H
Writing Inspiration, Beating Blocks And How To Manage Your Time With K.M.Weiland: http://dld.bz/M5xC
The Essence Of your Book and The Unexpected Value Of Twitter: http://dld.bz/M7Pn @ajackwriting
One song to the tune of another – dos and don'ts of mash-ups and juxtaposition: http://dld.bz/M5xP @dirtywhitecandy
Character checklist: http://dld.bz/M75e @SouthernBella03
Beyond the most common fiction mistakes: http://dld.bz/M5wU @victoriamixon
You Know You're A Writer When…12 reasons: http://dld.bz/M7ye @JulieeJohnsonn
How a Blogging Platform Can Aid Novelists - And Other Questions Answered: http://dld.bz/M5wJ @thecreativepenn
How similar are you to your protagonist? http://dld.bz/M5w4