Alice Orr's Blog, page 4
April 24, 2024
Your Writer’s Journal is a Sacred Space
Your Writer’s Journal is a Sacred Space. I have spent the past months in personal crisis. The habits of a lifetime keep me writing – journaling to be exact. Almost daily entries emerge from a fog of shock. I capture my experience in emotionally immediate form.
A Writer’s Response to Trauma. The heart is broken. A civilian might choose to hold that wound private. A writer recognizes storytelling fodder wherever she finds it. Heartbreak is first-class fodder. Intense. Powerful. Dramatic. A storyteller writes it down.
Everything is Right-Now and Raw. The blows strike hard. They numb the spirit. But they do not stop the movement of the writer’s hand across the page. The right-now pain of it. The emotions. A writer relentlessly records these painful feelings. As vividly as she can.
Everything is Reverenced. Respect must be paid and care taken. The writer may choose a seemingly incongruous tone. Affecting light heartedness or a sardonic pose. Still we tiptoe around her. She tiptoes around herself. Gives herself the safest possible space.
Everything is Material. The story must be reverenced. This is a deep-soul exercise. The storytelling must be reverenced too. This is a deep-imagination exercise. Occupy the shattered heart with collecting details. Preserve those details on the page for future use.
You Need a Writer’s Journal. If you do not have one – go to your favorite 99-cent store or online shop asap. Notebooks are everywhere. Find the version meant for you. You will recognize her when you see her. The journal notebook that inspires you to write. Fill her pages with whatever you must write. Your Writer’s Journal is a Sacred Space.
These Pages Belong to You. Fill them for your private use if that is what you want to do. They are the repository of your experience. They are the proper vessel for the fresh blood of your feelings. They are that safest possible place you must have when you need it.
These Pages Belong to Your Characters. If or when you decide to make a story of your experience. If or when you decide to transform trauma into a tale you are ready to tell. Into characters that breathe and bleed. Here they are waiting – in your writer’s journal.
These Pages are a Beginning. However deeply you have delved into the events and emotions of your experience – there is more to discover about the fictional people you create from real life. Your Writer’s Journal is the perfect place to explore this territory.
Ask Your Character about Herself. What do I not yet know about you? Before this trauma happened to you and after? You can tell me anything. What are your secrets and deepest feelings? What hidden truths deserve to find the light? Record her answers – in her voice.
Ask the Same Questions of Yourself. What have I not yet told myself? What secrets have I kept – even from myself? What feelings have I not yet allowed myself to feel? Be gentle and loving with yourself. Free your heart to speak. Your Writer’s Journal is a Sacred Space.
You possess storytelling magic. Keep on writing whatever may occur.
AliceOrr. http://www.aliceorrbooks.com. Teacher. Storyteller. Former Editor and Literary Agent. Author of 15 novels, 2 novellas, a memoir, and No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript that Sells. Blogging here for writers. “What A Character! How to Create Characters that Live and Breathe on the Page.”
Alice’s Memoir is titled Lifted to the Light: A Story of Struggle and Kindness. At the beating heart of this moving story a woman struggles. All her life, she has taken care of herself. Now she faces an adversary too formidable to battle alone. Available HERE.
Praise for Lifted to the Light: A Story of Struggle and Kindness. “I was lifted. I highly recommend this book as a can’t-put-down roadmap for anyone.” “Outstanding read. Very, very well written.” “Honest, funny, and consoling.” “Ms. Orr is a fine, sensitive author and woman. I have read other books by her and am glad didn’t miss this one.”
All of Alice’s Books are available HERE.
Ask Alice Your Crucial Questions. What are you most eager to know about how to discover the strongest story characters you have in you? Ask your questions in the Comments section at the end of this post. Alice will answer.
http://facebook.com/aliceorrwriter/
http://twitter.com/AliceOrrBooks/
http://goodreads.com/aliceorr/
http://pinterest.com/aliceorrwriter/
The post Your Writer’s Journal is a Sacred Space appeared first on Alice Orr Books.
February 6, 2024
Write Characters Your Readers Fall in Love With
Write Characters Your Readers Fall in Love With. Happy Valentine’s Time. This is the month of love. The month to be in love yourself. The month to guide others toward love. Especially the month to make your readers fall in love with the hero character of your story.
My Name is Alice and I have a Mission. My mission is to help you write the story agents and editors and readers look for. The story that stars The Best Hero You Can Possibly Imagine. This blog is all about how to create that hero. Don’t forget our heroes are gender neutral.
Make Us Care to the Max about your Hero. Caring ties your reader emotionally to your hero’s fate. We hope for only good things to happen to her. When you have that hope-hook planted in our reader psyches – what’s next? Now you must frustrate us by frustrating our hope and hers. The course of this frustration – your hero’s frustration – is the plot of your story.
Circumstances Block your Hero. She is not allowed to get what she needs. She confronts circumstances that are physically and emotionally scary. As creator of this story’s world you must become a bit of a villain. Put your hero into Trouble and Danger. Force her onto a Roller Coaster Ride. Put your readers on this thrill ride with her.
Up the Emotional Stakes by Introducing Loss. Make your hero suffer a loss – or the real possibility of a loss very soon. Something she truly cares about is in jeopardy or gone. Life as she knew it is or could be tragically diminished. She must make up for the loss or prevent it.
Only your Hero can Prevent this Tragedy. The outcome of your entire story depends on the lightning bolt of boldness that makes her – and you – heroic. So wonderfully heroic that your readers are irresistibly drawn to her and to your story. This is how to Write Characters Your Readers Fall in Love With.
This Irresistible Character makes Your Story Irresistible. This hero and what happens to her – and what happens because of her bold actions – make your story Intense and Dramatic and Powerful. And that is what makes your plot a Page Turner with agent-editor-reader Appeal. A page turner must be Intense – Dramatic – Powerful.
Let’s Look at Your Specific Character in Your Specific Story. What intense dramatic powerful things happen to her? How can you make these occurrences more so? What is at stake for her in your story? What does she have to lose? How can you raise those stakes higher? How can you make the threat of loss even greater – even more excruciating for both your hero and your readers? What could thrust your hero into deeper and deeper trouble?
What Does Your Hero Do? You create conflicted and difficult and dangerous – maybe even life threatening – circumstances in your story situation. Despite the looming catastrophe all of that can inflict upon your hero – she struggles to do the right thing. Is she a Superhero? Not unless that is the genre you are writing.
Why Does Your Hero Struggle so Hard to Do the Right Thing? Because she is Decent – Decent – Decent. That decency is her Internal Motivation. The dire circumstances of your story – the elements that make your story Intense/Dramatic/Powerful – are her External Motivation.
Congratulations – A Toast To You. You Have Done It! You made your belovable and beloved hero’s life impossible. Then you made it worse. You placed her in the path of devastating loss. You forced her through extreme adversity to become her very best self. This is somewhat sadistic of course. But it is also how to Write Characters Your Readers Fall in Love With.
You possess storytelling magic. Keep on writing whatever may occur. Alice Orr http://www.aliceorrbooks.com
Teacher. Storyteller. Former Editor and Literary Agent. Author of 14 novels, 2 novellas, a memoir, and No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript that Sells. Alice blogs for writers at http://www.aliceorrbooks.com. Featuring “What A Character!” Find out how to create characters that live and breathe on your pages.
Alice’s novel A Year of Summer Shadows – Riverton Road Romantic Suspense Series Book 2 – has a hero you will fall in love with and is available HERE.
Praise for A Year of Summer Shadows: “Alice keeps you wanting to read faster, then when you finish the last page, you want more.” “Orr’s characters come alive on the page.” “A Year of Summer Shadows has moved up to one of my favorite books.”
All of Alice’s Books are HERE.
Ask Alice Your Crucial Questions. What are you most eager to know about how to discover the strongest story characters you have in you? Ask your questions in the Comments section at the end of this post. Alice will answer.
http://facebook.com/aliceorrwriter/
http://twitter.com/AliceOrrBooks/
http://goodreads.com/aliceorr/
http://pinterest.com/aliceorrwriter/
The post Write Characters Your Readers Fall in Love With appeared first on Alice Orr Books.
January 10, 2024
Writer’s Life Resolutions – What A Character!
Writer’s Life Resolutions – What A Character! Let’s start with simple and easy. Resolve to write something. This series of posts is about creating characters. Resolve to write something about characters. Let’s start with specifics. Resolve to Create A Character.
Resolve to Create a Character with Lots of Story Potential. When your reader experiences this creation of yours she is bound to think – What A Character! Why? Because this character lights a fire under your story. This character makes things happen in your story situation.
Resolve to Create a Character who Makes Things Happen. How does your character happen to make things happen? An event occurs at the opening of your story. An event with possible disastrous consequences. Your character sees all of this or learns about it somehow.
Resolve to Create a Character with Inner Conflict from the Start. She recognizes the disastrous possibilities. Trouble is brewing. She can avoid that trouble by remaining uninvolved. The wise choice might be to walk away. But somebody must do something.
Resolve to Create a Character who Must Make a Choice. She is faced with a dilemma. There is a clear path for her to escape. All she has to do is nothing. All she has to do is decide that this situation is not her problem. Or – that it is nonetheless her concern. She must choose.
Resolve to Create a Character who Takes a Bold Leap. This trouble could run very deep. She decides to hold her nose and jump in anyway. Why does she do this? Her motivations may be many and various. She is your creation. The possibilities are as limitless as your imagination. And your Writer’s Life Resolutions – What A Character!
Resolve to Create a Character who Takes a Bold Leap for Noble Reasons. This is one storytelling possibility. Your character understands that her life will be complicated by this choice. She jumps in anyway simply because it is the right thing to do. P.S. Most readers will love her for doing so.
Resolve to Create a Character who Continues to Make Things Happen. She decides to act. She chooses a risky path. You as storyteller – and the genre you are writing – determine the extent and the specifics of that risk. Your character’s decision to act causes the story to begin.
Resolve to Create a Character with Inner Conflict throughout Your Story. Your character has indeed catapulted into trouble. Obstacles arise one after another and must be overcome. Barriers must be surmounted. She is repeatedly tempted to turn tail and run for safety.
Resolve to Create a Character who Remains Bold when she No Longer Feels Bold. She struggles. Then she is forced to struggle some more. The odds are great. It looks like she will be defeated. She is all but certain she will be defeated. She keeps on struggling anyway. Maybe she has a helpmate – maybe not.
Resolve to Create a Character whose Fate Determines how Your Story Ends. As storyteller you decide how all of this turns out. Some heroes are defeated. Some heroes triumph. P.S. Most readers love the latter. We love Writer’s Life Resolutions – What A Character!
You possess storytelling magic. Keep on writing whatever may occur. Alice Orr http://www.aliceorrbooks.com
Teacher. Storyteller. Former Editor and Literary Agent. Author of 14 novels, 2 novellas, a memoir, and No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript that Sells. Alice blogs for writers at http://www.aliceorrbooks.com. Featuring “What A Character!” Find out how to create characters that live and breathe on your pages.
A Year of Summer Shadows – Riverton Road Romantic Suspense Series Book 2 – has a hero who keeps her writer’s resolutions and is a available HERE.
Praise for A Year of Summer Shadows: “Alice keeps you wanting to read faster, then when you finish the last page, you want more.” “Orr’s characters come alive on the page.” “A Year of Summer Shadows has moved up to one of my favorite books.”
All of Alice’s Books are HERE.
Ask Alice Your Crucial Questions. What are you most eager to know about how to discover the strongest story characters you have in you? Ask your questions in the Comments section at the end of this post. Alice will answer.
http://facebook.com/aliceorrwriter/
http://twitter.com/AliceOrrBooks/
http://goodreads.com/aliceorr/
http://pinterest.com/aliceorrwriter/
The post Writer’s Life Resolutions – What A Character! appeared first on Alice Orr Books.
December 27, 2023
Holidays Gift a Writer with Characters
Holidays Gift a Writer with Characters. One of my favorite holiday family movies is Home for the Holidays with Holly Hunter and a host of other talented actors. Still – family dynamics star the show for me. Whether blood-related or circumstance-related they come together with a bang.
At the Center of Every Family Story is a Family Character. Even among a gaggle of outrageous outliers one individual outdistances the rest. In Home for the Holidays Aunt Glady – played brilliantly by Geraldine Chaplin – is that standout for me. Because her character serves the storytelling so well.
A Bit of Misdirection Cannot Hoit. Chris Radant’s short story. W.D. Richter’s screenplay. Jodie Foster’s direction. All conspire to disguise Aunt Glady as anything but the center of the dynamic. She is not even onstage until well into the action among a houseful of scene stealers whom we are already deeply involved with by the time she appears.
Eccentricity is Accentuated. One look at Glady and we recognize the stock goofy secondary we find in many family comedies. Or so we think. From tamoshanter askew atop her head to… are her stockings really rolled down? She is costumed strictly for side laughs. Or so we think.
The Suspense Sort-of-Silently Builds. Glady indulges in more than just holiday spirits. She dithers from goofy to giddy. But there is so much else going on. Family melodrama from every seat occupant at the table. We are misdirected yet again. Holidays Gift a Writer with Characters.
Then She Blows Everything Apart. At the nearly offscreen edge of the gathering Glady pulls the pin on one of the most potent plot exploders ever. The emotionally charged secret from the past. And this secret has to do with sex! Let the showstopping shrapnel fall where it may.
No More Details until You Supply Your Own. Dip into the memory bank and withdraw family holidays from your own history. Or get-togethers where you were a guest rather than family. Those offer a degree of objectivity. You can take it all in without being taken in yourself.
Pick a Participant – Any Participant. As long as they have story revelation potential. Like Glady. Not necessarily center stage at first. Unique in one or several ways but not necessarily shocking at first. Not necessarily explosive at first. But they can get there.
Build a Story Around this Person-turned-Character. From unobtrusive entrance to knock-your-rolled-socks-off climactic moment. Brainstorm the gradual climb toward catastrophe. What could happen? To THIS person? Do not edit yourself. Worry about believability later.
Pick a Genre – Any Genre. Your character may grace a comic scenario like Home for the Holidays where the only casualties are red faces and uncomfortable explanations. Or your plot product may be bodies in the back yard. Possibilities reach as far as your imagination.
A Concluding Cautionary. Deepen your character’s disguise. You began with reality but you must end with fiction. Unidentifiable fiction. Change details. Appearance. Job. Habits. Even gender. Consult your inner surreptitious Santa. Holidays Gift a Writer with Characters.
You possess storytelling magic. Keep on writing whatever may occur. http://www.aliceorrbooks.com
Ask Alice Your Crucial Questions. What are you most eager to know about how to discover the strongest story characters you have in you? Ask your questions in the Comments section at the end of this post. Alice will answer.
Alice Orr. Teacher. Storyteller. Former Editor and Literary Agent. Author of 14 novels, 2 novellas, a memoir, and No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript that Sells. She blogs for Writers at http://www.aliceorrbooks.com.
Celebrate the Season with Alice’s holiday novel A Vacancy at the Inn – Riverton Road Romantic Suspense Series Book 3. Available HERE.
Praise for A Vacancy at the Inn. “Grabbed me right away and swept me up in the lives of Bethany and Luke.” “Undercurrents of suspense move the story along at an irresistible pace.” “The Miller family is rife with personality quirks, an authentic touch that demonstrates Alice Orr’s skill as a writer.” “I never want an Alice Orr book to end.”
All of Alice’s Books are available HERE .
http://facebook.com/aliceorrwriter/
http://twitter.com/AliceOrrBooks/
http://goodreads.com/aliceorr/
http://pinterest.com/aliceorrwriter/
The post Holidays Gift a Writer with Characters appeared first on Alice Orr Books.
December 12, 2023
Ebenezer Scrooge – What A Character!
Ebenezer Scrooge – What A Character! Scrooge is the writer’s ideal holiday gift. He comes with the kind of bountiful writing that unwraps straight into your creative heart. That is why Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol is one of the best known and most popular stories in the world. Ebenezer teaches us how to get a dusting of that magic on our own storytelling shoes.
Ebenezer Scrooge has a Universal Theme. He is a holiday sparkling example of “How the Mighty Have Fallen.” Many of us create such characters ourselves. Dickens – the master storyteller – shows us how and why to move even deeper. Past a character’s downfall and on to “How the Mighty Have Fallen then Been Dragged Back Up Again.”
Ebenezer Scrooge is All About Redemption. In fact his story is one of Dramatic redemption because of the depth of the depravity pit into which he has plunged himself. His personal brand of human depravity has to do with compassion. He doesn’t seem to have any.
Ebenezer Scrooge Appears to Be Irredeemable. His perpetually scowling face. His heartless behavior. How scornfully he regards the caring world as a humbug. All are keys to his reader appeal. The more seemingly impossible the character’s redemption – the more dramatic the story. And drama – plus power and intensity – is the wellspring of storytelling success.
Ebenezer Scrooge is the Poster Boy for the Character We Love to Hate. Deep-down mean. Unrepentant. He betrays his beloved sister by disowning her son. He abandons his devoted fiance. He all but freezes his hardworking clerk out of their threadbare counting house. Nonetheless Dickens creates a believable protagonist – not a cartoon. Ebenezer Scrooge – What A Character!
Ebenezer Scrooge is Old Buddies with a Ghost. Not a happy and harmless Casper type ghost. A chain-clanking – shrieking – terrifying horror named Jacob Marley. Dead set – pun intended – on rattling Ebenezer out of his complacency into awareness of the doom he inevitably faces.
Ebenezer Scrooge Must Change. This is his story goal. It is also his problem – his inner conflict. He does not want to change. He is absolutely committed to his bad old ways. Dickens must dredge up some mega-dramatic story twist to reach Ebenezer’s darkly damaged soul and tell a powerful tale.
Ebenezer Scrooge is Haunted. A Christmas Carol is a redemption story but it is also a ghost story. Our heartless hero is forced by phantasms to witness himself. His past retreat from human feeling. His present coldness. How he affects other people and his world. The dire consequences ahead for him. Meanwhile the ghosts guide Ebenezer through fear to remorse and his own humanity.
Ebenezer Scrooge Rackets Us Relentlessly Forward. We tumble through tumultuous adventures at a whirlwind pace. We barrel toward a foreboding future – the vision of an untended grave. We race to keep up. All the way to the redemption of our formerly fallen hero. The perfect storytelling payoff.
Ebenezer Scrooge Does Not Disappoint. He gives us story satisfaction to the max. Joy so unrepressed it transforms his stony face into laughing eyes and a glorious grin. Generous deeds. Goodness and light. Life celebrated in every direction for everyone – including us. To which I say. Ebenezer Scrooge – What A Character! Thank you Mr. Dickens and “God Bless Us Every One.”
“Success is not final. Failure is not fatal. It is the courage to continue that counts.” Winston Churchill. “You possess storytelling magic. Keep on writing whatever may occur.” Alice Orr http://www.aliceorrbooks.com
Ask Alice Your Crucial Questions. What are you most eager to know about how to discover the strongest story characters you have in you? Ask your questions in the Comments section at the end of this post. Alice will answer.
Alice Orr. Teacher. Storyteller. Former Editor and Literary Agent. Author of 14 novels, 2 novellas, a memoir, and No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript that Sells. She blogs for Writers at http://www.aliceorrbooks.com.
Celebrate the Season with Alice’s holiday novel A Vacancy at the Inn – Riverton Road Romantic Suspense Series Book 3. Available HERE.
Praise for A Vacancy at the Inn. “Grabbed me right away and swept me up in the lives of Bethany and Luke.” “Undercurrents of suspense move the story along at an irresistible pace.” “The Miller family is rife with personality quirks, an authentic touch that demonstrates Alice Orr’s skill as a writer.” “I never want an Alice Orr book to end.”
All of Alice’s Books are available HERE .
http://facebook.com/aliceorrwriter/
http://twitter.com/AliceOrrBooks/
http://goodreads.com/aliceorr/
http://pinterest.com/aliceorrwriter/
The post Ebenezer Scrooge – What A Character! appeared first on Alice Orr Books.
October 18, 2023
What A Character! How to Succeed as a Writer of Stories
What A Character! Publishing success for the Storyteller – especially the Commercial Fiction Storyteller – is all about the characters you create. And how much you can make your readers care – deep in their beating hearts – about the characters you create.
Are You Working on a Novel Now? If so – do you have a single main character? A specific character who is your hero? Most successful stories have one main character hero who gives your story focus. Agent-Editor-Reader interest is best captured by a single strong hero. By hero I mean a character who is gender variable – male or female or nonbinary or whatever.
Have You Named your Hero? You should name your main character up front – at the beginning of your story’s creation. Naming gives your character substance. Naming your character makes her more real for you. If you have not yet named your character – do so as immediately as you can. A strong hero requires a name.
Why is a Strong Hero So Important? Because of what happens when we read about a strong hero’s joys. Because of what happens when we see her hopes and dreams and determination in action. Because of what happens when we witness her admirable qualities in practice.
We Understand that She will have Something Important to Lose in this Story. We do not want her to lose this important thing. Why? Because her strong portrayal leads us to identify with her. We are tied to her – as one human to another. In her strength we see the strength we strive to possess in ourselves.
Identifying with Your Strong Hero Makes Us Care about Her. Specifically – we care about what happens to her. Why? Because she is who we hope to be. She is who we are on our very best days. Her fate could be our fate if we lived her story. And – What a Story! that is.
Why is this Caring So Important? Because when we care about your character and what she wants – we have become emotionally involved in your story. We have an emotional stake in what happens in your story. Especially in what happens to your main character – your hero.
Our Caring – Our Emotional Involvement – has Hooked Us into Your Story. Making your reader care is the most powerful story hook you could ever create. And the more we care – the more solidly your story hook is set in us.
Your Job as Storyteller is to Create a Character We Care About. A character we care about not just a little but a lot. A character we care about Intensely. That is the first and most important step you must take if your goal is to write the most Intense and Dramatic and Powerful story you have in you. And what better goal could a storyteller possibly have?
My Job is to Guide you toward that Electrifying Story. Which is why I will follow this post with many more about this very topic. Why? Because I believe there is nothing more crucial to your writing success than having readers say about your hero – and each of her companions – What a Character!
Alice Orr Says – You Possess Storytelling Magic. Keep on Writing Whatever May Occur. http://www.aliceorrbooks.com
Ask Alice Your Crucial Questions. What are you most eager to know about discovering the strongest story characters you have in you? Ask your question in the Comments section at the end of this post.
Alice Orr has published 14 novels, 3 novellas and a memoir so far. She wrote her nonfiction book No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript that Sells as a gift to the writers’ community she loves. Her novel – A Year of Summer Shadows – Riverton Road Romantic Suspense Series Book 2 – is available HERE.
Praise for A Year of Summer Shadows: “Alice keeps you wanting to read faster, then when you finish the last page, you want more.” “Orr’s characters come alive on the page.” “A Year of Summer Shadows has moved up to one of my favorite books.”
All of Alice’s Books are HERE .
http://facebook.com/aliceorrwriter/
http://twitter.com/AliceOrrBooks/
http://goodreads.com/aliceorr/
http://pinterest.com/aliceorrwriter/
The post What A Character! How to Succeed as a Writer of Stories appeared first on Alice Orr Books.
July 17, 2023
Write Whenever Wherever
Write Whenever Wherever. A day in the life of a writer can be a frenzied time. There are these things called deadlines. Do you know why they are called deadlines? Because guess what an author will be if she misses one.
How Can We Possibly Get Everything Done? Marketing. Social media. Keeping up with email. And, oh yes, I almost forgot. Writing. As publishing writers we are concerned about productivity on the page. How many words must you write today to be on track toward your deadline? Whether that deadline is set by an agent or an editor or yourself.
This is Not a New Problem for Me. When I first became a book editor – back in a previous incarnation – I was still under contract with my own publisher and had a tight deadline to fulfill. The publisher I worked for and the publisher I wrote for were pulling me hard in two different directions. I was in the middle about to lose my mind.
Then Something Wonderful Happened. I was speaking on a conference panel with Nora Roberts. Always an amazing experience. She was the queen of productivity then just like she is the queen of productivity now. So I had a wild thought. Maybe she could help me with my own productivity dilemma.
I Found Nora in the Hotel Lobby and Explained My Predicament. She settled into a comfortable sofa and invited me to do the same. This was our first meeting. She did not know me but she listened patiently all the same. Then she gave me the simple yet profound advice that carried me through the deadline I was facing then and many more since.
“You have to Learn to Write Wherever You Are,” she said. I had always confined my writing to orderly places and set blocks of time. Nora freed me from that. I also always carried 5×8 inch index cards with me everywhere. From that moment in the hotel lobby on I used them for writing – any time any place I had minutes to spare I would Write Whenever Wherever.
Modes of Transportation became Favorite Writing Spaces. Subway cars. Taxis. Airplanes. I hunched over my index cards and wrote furiously. Between subway stops. On my way to meetings. In airport lounges. Nobody ever interrupted me. Probably because I looked a bit intense and maybe a bit insane too. I didn’t care. I needed to make my deadlines. And I did.
I Never Forgot Nora Roberts’ Wise Advice. I write a lot online now. Magazine articles and columns. These blog posts. They all have deadlines and my days are still packed with other obligations as well. Fortunately I have this author paragon’s voice to remind me. “You have to write wherever you are.” I pass my version of that voice on to you. At deadline time or any time. Write Whenever Wherever.
Alice Orr Says – You Possess Storytelling Magic. Keep on Writing Whatever May Occur. http://www.aliceorrbooks.com.
Ask Alice Your Crucial Questions. What are you most eager to know – in your writing work and in your writer’s life? Ask your question in the Comments section at the end of this post.
Alice Orr has published 14 novels, 3 novellas and a memoir so far. She wrote her nonfiction book No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript that Sells as a gift to the writers’ community she loves. Her novel – A Year of Summer Shadows – Riverton Road Romantic Suspense Series Book 2 – is available HERE.
Praise for A Year of Summer Shadows: “Alice keeps you wanting to read faster, then when you finish the last page, you want more.” “Orr’s characters come alive on the page.” “A Year of Summer Shadows has moved up to one of my favorite books.”
All of Alice’s Books are HERE.
http://facebook.com/aliceorrwriter/
http://twitter.com/AliceOrrBooks/
http://goodreads.com/aliceorr/
http://pinterest.com/aliceorrwriter/
The post Write Whenever Wherever appeared first on Alice Orr Books.
July 5, 2023
Writers’ Independence Day
Writers’ Independence Day. It happened at a conference. I was there to present a workshop called The Art of Agent Stalking. Nothing Independent Publishing about it. Traditional Pub all the way. I had been watching the Indie movement but as a curious onlooker. Nothing more.
Before I Reached the Conference Hotel my Attitude Began to Change. The airport shuttle van was packed with authors talking about Indie Publishing. Some wanted to know more. Some were thinking of making the leap. Some had leapt and shared their experiences.
Those Stories Captured my Attention. I was most impressed by the enthusiasm. I had been an editor/agent/published author/workshop presenter for many years. I had never heard published authors – beyond the first euphoric blush of their careers – so positively excited about publishing. By the time we reached the conference hotel I understood why.
These Authors had Retrieved their Writer Selfhood. They were no longer controlled and manipulated by others. They owned their work. They owned their decision-making. They owned their careers. And they not only felt empowered – they were overjoyed.
At that Conference I also Learned about the Downside of Indie Life. I learned that along with total control of your publishing life comes total responsibility for it. The buck stops with the Indie author and often the other kind of buck – the green one – doesn’t stop with her anywhere often enough. This was the truth of choosing a Writers’ Independence Day.
That Point about Money Must be Emphasized. 2011 to 2015 or so was the golden age of Indie Pub. Big careers and fortunes were made. The results of undertaking an Indie career since then have mostly been less than fabulous. An Indie Pubbed author must work very hard and be very savvy if she hopes to make a living at it. Here is some of what she/you must do.
Produce a First Class Story. Create a showstopper. Make it the very best storytelling you have in you. Then run it past fresh eyes – fresh and talented eyes. Which means you need a strong editor who will see the flaws you have inevitably missed. Which brings me to…
Put Together a First Class Team. Hire that first-class editor I mentioned. Do not try to mastermind your words alone. Then a good cover and book designer. Next an expert at publishing platform placement. These folks usually perform uploading etc. to the platform(s) as well. Do these operations yourself ONLY if you have topnotch skills. IMO it takes a Team.
Construct a First Class Post-Pub Plan. Start gathering your mailing list the day you are born. Adopt an online presence by puberty. These are only slight exaggerations. The internet is the highway via which you reach and grow your readership. School yourself in everything social media. Find an Indie marketing success story and follow her example. Mine is Kayelle Allen.
Back to Me and the Conference Hotel. By the time I took the van back to the airport I had made a decision. I longed to be fully in charge of my own work life. I had that experience as a literary agent. I wanted it as an author also. One Indie memoir (below) and five Indie novels later I occasionally question my publishing choice. Usually when the money issue arises.
I Don’t Make as Many Green Bucks as in my Traditional Pub Years. I probably never will. Still I am content with what I do and how free I am to go about doing it. I might change my mind. I am free to do so. But – for me for now – I celebrate my Writers’ Independence Day.
Alice Orr Says – You Possess Storytelling Magic. Keep on Writing Whatever May Occur. http://www.aliceorrbooks.com.
Ask Alice Your Crucial Questions. What are you most eager to know – in your writing work and in your writer’s life? Ask your question in the Comments section at the end of this post.
Alice Orr has published 14 novels, 3 novellas and a memoir so far. She wrote her nonfiction book No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript that Sells as a gift to the writers’ community she loves. Her Indie Pubbed novel – A Year of Summer Shadows – Riverton Road Romantic Suspense Series Book 2 – is available HERE.
Praise for A Year of Summer Shadows: “Alice keeps you wanting to read faster, then when you finish the last page, you want more.” “Orr’s characters come alive on the page.” “A Year of Summer Shadows has moved up to one of my favorite books.”
All of Alice’s Books are HERE.
http://facebook.com/aliceorrwriter/
http://twitter.com/AliceOrrBooks/
http://goodreads.com/aliceorr/
http://pinterest.com/aliceorrwriter/
The post Writers’ Independence Day appeared first on Alice Orr Books.
June 21, 2023
Summertime and the Writing Ain’t Easy
Summertime and the Writing Ain’t Easy. Your hero may be rich and her lover good lookin’ but your drive to tell their story has driven to the beach to play. These lazy hazy crazy days of summer took hold of your heart and sent your head to another season. Still all that is writerly in you has definitely not been lost. Much that is easy remains among the blades of clover grass and goodies in your picnic basket to keep your author mojo summer hummin’ along.
It’s Easy to Remember Why You Love to Write. I love to write because of my characters. Discovering them is an into-body experience for me. At first I’m inside them falling deeper as I grow to know them better. The further I fall the more besotted I become. Then the process reverses and they begin to reside in me – through my thoughts and heart and into my body. Sounds like love and sex. Maybe that’s why I enjoy it so much. Why do you love to write?
It’s Easy to Be Inspired. The secret is to sense yourself up. Look around. Colors. Shapes. Movement. All exploding everywhere. Listen in. Past your own noisy thoughts and urges to take control. Allow the sounds of life – including dialog snatches – to tumble and flow into you. Breathe deep the scents of the season. From a new peach to storm ozone in the air. Taste the sweet and the spice. Touch it all and let it touch you. Soon you will forget that it’s Summertime and the Writing Ain’t Easy.
It’s Easy to Immerse Yourself. Dive deep into the pool/pond/ocean of experience. Any experience. Let go of your personal gravity – whatever holds you down or back. Prepare to be mesmerized. Seek your meditative center beneath and beyond the difficulties and frustrations of the day-to-day. Be taken over and transported like a child clasped by the hand and led through a world that unfurls into a sunny glade where every step is magic.
It’s Easy to Capture It All. Always write down the important things in life. And your savored summertime is very important. Not necessarily as a story or novel just yet unless you can’t stop yourself. Otherwise notes on a card will do – as long as you always carry those cards with you except when swimming. They will save you from the following huge writer mistake. You have an idea so super you can hardly believe such great fortune has befallen you. So super you know you will never forget it. Then you do.
Warm Weather Discipline may not be Easy but Many other Things are. Especially when you carry yourself along at a lazy lighthearted lope. All you need do is this. Remember why writing is your adoration and adore it. Sense up your sexy self to be inspired. Immerse your soul in depths of magnificent mystery and float away on a current of calm. Note the necessity and joy of capturing it all in a few adoring, mysterious, magnificent words you shall not lose. Because it may be Summertime and the Writing Ain’t Easy – but loving your writer self is.
Alice Orr Says – You Possess Storytelling Magic. Keep on Writing Whatever May Occur. http://www.aliceorrbooks.com.
Ask Alice Your Crucial Questions. What are you most eager to know – in your writing work and in your writer’s life? Ask your question in the Comments section at the end of this post.
Alice Orr has published 14 novels, 3 novellas and a memoir so far. She wrote her nonfiction book No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript that Sells as a gift to the writers’ community she loves. Her hot novel for this hot season – A Year of Summer Shadows – Riverton Road Romantic Suspense Series Book 2 – is available HERE.
Praise for A Year of Summer Shadows: “Alice keeps you wanting to read faster, then when you finish the last page, you want more.” “Orr’s characters come alive on the page.” “A Year of Summer Shadows has moved up to one of my favorite books.”
All of Alice’s Books are HERE.
http://facebook.com/aliceorrwriter/
http://twitter.com/AliceOrrBooks/
http://goodreads.com/aliceorr/
http://pinterest.com/aliceorrwriter/
The post Summertime and the Writing Ain’t Easy appeared first on Alice Orr Books.
January 4, 2023
Writer’s Life Resolution Time
Writer’s Life Resolution Time. One Christmas my grandkids gave me a very special gift. A mug with these words on it. “Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you’ve imagined.” I had coveted that mug from the moment I saw it on a bookstore shelf.
I Used to Haunt Bookstores. Especially bookstores with a café. I clocked many contented hours at their small tables. I wrote No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript that Sells at a bookstore café and worked on many other titles in similar surroundings.
I No Longer Haunt Bookstores. Many are now out of business. The survivor nearest me has no café. They cannot afford to devote floor space to anything other than sales items. Besides, the pandemic got me into the habit of buying my books online and doing my work at home.
Things Change. We begin this new year in different circumstances than those we may have enjoyed in the past. Some of us lament these changes. None of us can benefit from focusing on their loss. That way of thinking is a drag-down against what we need most – to forge forward with the confidence and enthusiasm my precious mug is meant to inspire.
New Inspiration Needed. I love holiday movies. A writer friend suggested Jingle Jangle: A Christmas Journey on Netflix. There I discovered another inspiring quotation that rings true to me right now. “The magic isn’t just in what you’ve lost. It’s in what you still have.”
We Still Have Our Selves. My mom said “You always take on more than you can chew.” So true of many of us. We mercilessly burden our already overtaxed shoulders. We must resolve to be gentle with our selves. We deserve a break today and every day.
We Still Have Our Good Sense. When I am sensible about my life – and especially about my work – I make a plan and write it down. We need that now. A plan. In writing. With lots of specifics. A plan for going confidently into this good year at Writer’s Life Resolution Time.
We Still Have Our Dreams. What do you want to accomplish? Gentle expectations for the next 3 months only. Brainstorm. Do not brain-strain. Write down everything that comes to mind. Be as specific as you can. Concrete goals you can realistically achieve.
We Still Have Our Good Judgement. Continue in rapid-response mode. To each item on the above list add 3 specific actions you might take to make that accomplishment happen. Do not edit or judge. Simply whale away with the brainstorming. No harpoons allowed.
We Still Have Our Priorities. Star the 3 goal categories that excite you most. Follow your gut. Still fast-tracking. Rate the stars in order of which ones brighten your imagination most. Now you have it. A plan for your next 3 months. Probably longer. A map to the direction of your dreams.
We Still Have Our Future. What Comes Next? Whether you realize it or not you have made a bold move toward living the life you’ve imagined. Let us all resolve to do exactly that from now on in our Writer’s Life Resolution Time.
Alice Orr Says – You Possess Storytelling Magic. Keep on Writing Whatever May Occur. http://www.aliceorrbooks.com.
Ask Alice Your Crucial Questions. What are you most eager to know – in your writing work and in your writer’s life? Ask your question in the Comments section at the end of this post.
Alice Orr has published 14 novels, 3 novellas and a memoir so far. She wrote her nonfiction book No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript that Sells as a gift to the writers’ community she loves. Her novel – A Year of Summer Shadows – Riverton Road Romantic Suspense Series Book 2 – is a available HERE.
Praise for A Year of Summer Shadows: “Alice keeps you wanting to read faster, then when you finish the last page, you want more.” “Orr’s characters come alive on the page.” “A Year of Summer Shadows has moved up to one of my favorite books.”
All of Alice’s Books are HERE.
http://facebook.com/aliceorrwriter/
http://twitter.com/AliceOrrBooks/
http://goodreads.com/aliceorr/
http://pinterest.com/aliceorrwriter/
The post Writer’s Life Resolution Time appeared first on Alice Orr Books.


