Denis Ledoux's Blog, page 6

February 1, 2024

Be a Better Memoir Writer with Deliberate Practice



We all wear many hats as we go through our days. In my case, I am a writer, a memoirist, a teacher, a memoir coach, a memoir editor, a co-author, a book publisher, and finally, a small business person. I wear those hats with pride and, I hope, some accomplishment.

Beyond these, I wear other hats as all of you do also. One is that of an athlete of sorts: there has been swimming, jogging, and weight lifting. In this post, want to focus on how I worked on my physical conditioning through d...

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Published on February 01, 2024 03:00

January 30, 2024

So You Wonder How Memoir Editing Works



You ask how memoir editing works. This is an important and reasonable question.

In this post, I will take you through a typical process. (The process explained here is one an inexperienced writer would take. An experienced writer can expect to shorten the process.)

How Memoir Editing Works

When I begin the memoir editing process with clients, I tell them that proper editing generally requires three “read-throughs.” Unless the manuscript is already at a high level of organization and poli...

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Published on January 30, 2024 04:00

January 25, 2024

What Is Developmental Editing and Why You Need It for Your Self-Published Memoir








What is developmental editing and do you need it? If the big New York publishing houses NEVER publish a manuscript without extensive editing, why would you as a self-publisher?





A professional memoir editor can quickly and effectively help you tweak your lifestory so that you get to say more clearly and dynamically what you have been trying to say. You can’t write your best memoir without developmental editing—it’s game-changing.





Editors come in many stripes: some ...

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Published on January 25, 2024 04:00

January 18, 2024

Similes and Metaphors: A Deeper Emotional Dive



Since memoirs appeal to the heart rather than to the mind of the reader—one might say, it is developmentally important to create a reading experience that addresses the reader’s emotions. One effective way of doing this is to use images. The images I want to present today are similes and metaphors.

While we’ve all studied these in high school and/or college, I have new thoughts this week as to how they apply to memoir writing.

A simile is a comparison that uses like or as.

When you say,...

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Published on January 18, 2024 07:25

January 16, 2024

Your writing is your work–Schedule first your time for writing



To make time for writing, you have to be serious about the principle that your writing is your work. You must act on it and take it as seriously as your paying job.

This is low-hanging fruit for time management: honor your writing schedule!

You do not show up at your work when you feel like it—nor do you write only when the feeling comes over you!

If you are working as a nurse or a therapist or a business office administrator or whatnot, you do not show up at your work when you feel like...

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Published on January 16, 2024 04:00

January 11, 2024

Setting Writing Goals That Work For You: Better Time Management




I have a goal for this post. I want to help you to develop and articulate your writing goals for the next three months—that is, 90 days. You can start your three months today, at the beginning of the next week or at the first day of the next month, but don’t put off setting writing goals. It is a prime tim management skill.





Three months is taken from the business model which uses quarters—three months—to implement plans. It is a useful way to set goals for three months. Three mo...

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Published on January 11, 2024 04:00

January 9, 2024

Regular Writing for Great Results



Success is built on daily habits. As has been bandied about and attributed to many different speakers, it is said that “you go to the office every day for 20 years, and before you know it, you are an overnight success.”

Well, we can apply that ‘overnight success’ insight to writing a memoir. Write every day for a year or two, and before you know it, you have a book.

“But, how do I find the time?” you ask.

“Well, you already have the time,” I reply.

In this video, I discuss building good ...

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Published on January 09, 2024 03:00

January 4, 2024

Shaping Your Plot Line Is Important



You want your memoir to be interesting and meaningful, but what should you include in your storyline to make it interesting and meaningful? In short, ways of shaping your plot line.

 “Interesting” and “meaningful” doesn’t happen by itself. You have to make it happen.

How do you structure the increase in tension so necessary in a plot so as to lead to a climax, a turning point, and an ending?

Your storyline is a significant contributor to creating an “interesting and meaningful” memoir.

I...

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Published on January 04, 2024 08:51

January 2, 2024

Use Time Wisely to Write Your Memoir



Here, I share two ideas about how to use time wisely to write your memoir. Time has many permutations and I would like to take you on a coaching journey. We’ll make a couple of stops to help you hone your ability to use time wisely. I hope you enjoy reading these ideas and let them inform your writing.

1. My first stop is with clock time and how we relate to that. Writing requires a commitment of time.

Have you wondered what distinguishes one writer who perseveres and completes a memoir ...

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Published on January 02, 2024 05:05

December 14, 2023

When Writers Lose Interest,
 It Might Actually Be Healthy



It’s common for a writer to find that she has written much about a period of her life that is now uninteresting to her. Though she wrote with enthusiasm, intending to include this material in her memoir, it doesn’t seem to merit inclusion now. She may be despondent. “I worked so hard! Now I want to leave this out! Is this going to happen with everything I write?” Why do writers lose interest in parts of their memoir.

I’ve heard clients express this frustration and I’ve also experience...

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Published on December 14, 2023 08:59