Elizabeth Spann Craig's Blog, page 183
January 29, 2012
Promoting a Pen Name
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
I wrote a post on January 10th about the benefits of being a novelist...one being that you can write whatever you want to write, under different names. It's a fantastic way to get the opportunity to experiment with other genres or styles while not disappointing readers who might be accustomed to particular types of books.
The downside is actually promoting those different names.
This post is for those of you who write under two names—but want to link your pen name to your real name (in case you have readers who want to take the leap to another genre or series with you.)
There are some things that I've done that seem to work well for linking two names:
Having both names as my Blogger profile (I comment on my own blog and others' blogs as Elizabeth Spann Craig/Riley Adams)
Email signature: My email signature includes the two names that I write under.
Facebook: I make sure that both names are on my Facebook page.
Website: The fact that I write under two names is prominent on the home page.
Amazon Central author page: This is probably one of the most important places to include both names.
More painful, time-wise, for pen name promo:
Having a separate Facebook page for the pen name. Which I do have. It doesn't get updated often, but readers sometimes contact me there.
A separate Twitter profile for the pen name: It didn't take long to give this idea up.
Separate Goodreads account: I'm bad to keep up with Goodreads, even with my real name.
Something to try for promoting your pen name:
Be on a rotation for a group blog—as your pen name. This is something I did for several years (as a once-a-week blogger on a food blog for my culinary mystery), although lately I've run out of time even for that. But, if you can spare the time, being a regular on a group blog that focuses on the genre you're writing can be a way to reach new readers.
Do you use a pen name or have you thought about using one? How have you promoted it?
January 28, 2012
Twitterific
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
Below are the writing-related links I tweeted last week.
The Writer's Knowledge Base search engine, designed by software engineer and writer Mike Fleming, makes all these links (now over 12,000) searchable.
Sign up for the free monthly WKB newsletter for the web's best links and interviews:http://bit.ly/gx7hg1 .
Story structure: the 1st plot point: http://bit.ly/xIbywR @rebeccaberto
7 Lessons For Writers From Leonardo Da Vinci: http://bit.ly/AxytcE @thecreativepenn
20 things you need to know before you self-publish: http://bit.ly/wdwh3E @guardian
Round out your characters with contradictions: http://bit.ly/wylldQ @dirtywhitecandy
Make an Image become a Symbol: http://bit.ly/ysA1qY
Will an agent ever recommend self-pub? http://bit.ly/AwlgbQ @rachellegardner
Tips for finding your writing voice: http://bit.ly/scghYa @rebeccaberto
Starting Off a Book in Unfamiliar Territory: http://bit.ly/wigsI2 @janice_hardy
Tell a story only you can tell: http://bit.ly/wmTONh @bookemdonna
3 tests for the opening scene of a romance: http://bit.ly/ygeayA @teresamedeiros
Balancing reason with our love for writing: http://bit.ly/xDfCGT @WomenWriters
7 Negative Prefixes: http://bit.ly/zpuNU5 @writing_tips
How 1 writer learned to write: http://bit.ly/A2bfR9 @KMWeiland
12 Twitter Tips for Writers: http://bit.ly/y1uoOa @ajackwriting
When Book Publicists Go Too Far: http://bit.ly/xdpfly @pubperspectives
Author Blogging 101: Video Interview Tools & Tips: http://bit.ly/wx5fyI @JFBookman
The Value of Ambition: http://bit.ly/AzhMai
Getting back in the writing groove: http://bit.ly/yZUG40 @pepperbasham
Motivation and characterization: http://bit.ly/Aro0un @Dragonmuse
How to Keep Up Your Writing When You're Sick: http://bit.ly/Awvmnb @writeitsideways
Why Isn't Literary Fiction Getting More Attention? http://bit.ly/zDbMip @AprilLineWriter for @Janefriedman
Basic manuscript formatting: http://bit.ly/A7tIqy @behlerpublish
89 Book Marketing Ideas: http://bit.ly/wQShjI @Caitlin Muir
Word Count For Writers: To Count or Not to Count: http://bit.ly/AkG0tV @epubworld for @thecreativepenn
As demand for e-books soars, libraries struggle to stock their virtual shelves: http://bit.ly/wsnN6X @passivevoiceblg
Don't present written proposals to agents at conferences: http://bit.ly/zvt79Q @bookendsjessica
Breakdown of the story structure of a middle grade mystery: http://bit.ly/wKa2La @laurapauling
Can Critique Groups Do More Harm than Good? http://bit.ly/xpwwCP @KristenLambTX
A show, don't tell example in dialogue: http://bit.ly/zZJBHs
The first thing you do when you sit down at the computer: http://bit.ly/wxDaCK
Yes, You Do Need a Theme: http://bit.ly/xGZXP3 @LiveWriteThrive
Tips for lending realism to the paranormal: http://bit.ly/wDYUJ8 @lisagailgreen
Writing means many types of beginnings for writers: http://bit.ly/zYYaG3 @eMergentPublish
The Joys of Rewriting: http://bit.ly/xp04yJ @mooderino
Why Use Past Tense? http://bit.ly/wL6TDZ @ava_jae
When to use modifiers: http://bit.ly/z01Gd6 @theresastevens
The difference between sequence and scene: http://bit.ly/wm8KXZ @AlexSokoloff
The Power of Creative Storytelling: http://bit.ly/AajgRL @maxdubinsky for @jeffgoins
Book Cover Design and the Problem of Symbolism: http://bit.ly/yC5GCs @JFFriedman
Getting Through the Editing Process: http://bit.ly/xatvmi @Sarafurlong
Determining if your book is a "hot" property for agents & publishers: http://bit.ly/wyYcgE @rachellegardner
5 Confused Word Pairs: http://bit.ly/AnMvxA @writing_tips
The new author pitch: Show, don't sell: http://bit.ly/zO2Qen
Getting the most from your book's sell sheets: http://bit.ly/yVF5lX @BryanThomasS
Tips for introducing characters: http://bit.ly/z4FgE8 @Janice_Hardy
3 Ways to Use Pinterest for Book Publicity: http://bit.ly/zhnw1o @booksparkspr
1 Important Way for Authors to Get Discovered by Readers: http://bit.ly/xbRu5A @JodyHedlund
10 Tips for a Successful Author Talk: http://bit.ly/A3OB3g @janice_hardy
Getting started with Triberr: http://bit.ly/zfGt7H @JHansenWrites
What Sort of Goals Do You Need? 10 Questions to Ask: http://bit.ly/ybLu8z @CherylRWrites
The Rhythms of Work vs The Rhythms of Creative Labor: http://bit.ly/wNpacN @jkglei
Trying to make your fantasy unique? Try making a twist: http://bit.ly/zQZ1dl @JulietteWade
Themes and Story Premise in Novel Writing: http://bit.ly/wfBh1A
The Role of Google+ in Marketing: Get Googled: http://bit.ly/xeBGoh @candacemountain
The road to epub--Smashwords, KDP, PubIt: http://bit.ly/AbbEZA
Starting out our day with outgoing instead of incoming: http://bit.ly/wBm0gA
Self-Pubbed Author Beware: http://bit.ly/zpqJXW @jakonrath
Tips for writing tension--complex protagonists & escalating conflict: http://bit.ly/y1fksG @JodieRennerEd
Writing Nonfiction: Using Quotations: http://bit.ly/Akb6Gz @KarenCV
Forcing yourself to write a "big idea" instead of the scale that suits your story: http://bit.ly/yUl2UH @sarahahoyt
10 ways to boost your freelance writing income in 2012: http://bit.ly/zKEbRy @michellerafter
Fuel Your Critique Group With Google+: http://bit.ly/AbQrb7 @authormedia
Why Reader Taste Differs from Publisher Taste: http://bit.ly/z2f7ID @jennybent
Reader Reviews and What Not To Do: http://bit.ly/yKDk4g @WendySMarcus
How to prepare for a writers conference: http://bit.ly/zP3xxg @Bob_Mayer
Myers-Briggs: A Tool for Authors: http://bit.ly/AfsiId @FaeRowen
10 tips for writers to keep procrastination at bay: http://bit.ly/xe6Asl @TaliaVance
A report on a free ebook experiment: http://bit.ly/w37Jug @TheresaStevens
Tips for sifting through feedback: http://bit.ly/AvMrzx @WriteAngleBlog
Digital Rights Showdown: HarperCollins v. Open Road: http://bit.ly/Aru8cs @VictoriaStrauss
Correct use of apostrophes: http://bit.ly/xrUJCO @authorterryo
Bookish things for book lovers: http://bit.ly/Am1Uq4 @LitMusings
3 elements of a book title that sells: http://bit.ly/z7Caq7 @beth_barany
Creative Thinking Comes Before Creative Writing: http://bit.ly/x9XyM2 @bob_brooke
Do You Hold E-Rights to Your Traditionally Published Book? http://bit.ly/yLobG1 @PassiveVoiceBlg
Why Amazon's Plagiarism Problem Is More Than A Public Relations Issue: http://bit.ly/z0hoqS @jeffjohnroberts
Description in Fantasy: Finding the Sweet Spot: http://bit.ly/wj1XT6 @AmyJRoseDavis
Poking Dead Scenes With A Stick: http://bit.ly/xjxdnP @Janice_Hardy
How deep is your POV? http://bit.ly/AA0Bd4 @JoannaShupe
Reasons your book isn't selling: http://bit.ly/AaYrAa @DavidGaughran
10 ways to cut costs from your freelance business: http://bit.ly/ymCY1H @michellerafter
Harry Potter and the 3 Types of Heroes: http://bit.ly/wIvUCe @write_practice
Explaining "genre in the mainstream:" http://bit.ly/yLFFox @tordotcom
How to Write a Publishable Memoir: 12 Do's and Don'ts: http://bit.ly/zcL7wF @annerallen
A look at Harlequin contracts: http://bit.ly/w9m3hD @PassiveVoiceBlg
Why playing safe in publishing is riskier than ever: http://bit.ly/xge9zX @dirtywhitecandy
What is Copyright and What Does it Do? http://bit.ly/wxmcpK @DiyMFA
5 Ways Bad Reviews Can Help You: http://bit.ly/wRG0bh @AJackWriting
6 Signs of Description Misuse: http://bit.ly/xa4qnG @LyndaRYoung
2012 tax tips for US writers and publishers: http://bit.ly/x4zbGl @GLeeBurgett
How Unemployment Inspired an Interactive Book: http://bit.ly/wOdl0H @GalleyCat
The value of publicity: http://bit.ly/ACq2aW @JAKonrath
How to Clean Your Blog's Junk Drawer: http://bit.ly/xTbMMl @pushingsocial
12 Evocative Words That Include "Ae": http://bit.ly/x647kl @writing_tips
Remember what really matters..and write: http://bit.ly/wChfbI @amysorrells
Fact-checking matters with fiction, too: http://bit.ly/ArvgoU @JodieRennerEd
Interesting roundup of Digital Book World, esp.the gulf btw. writers & the publishing industry: http://bit.ly/ysf9pP @Porter_Anderson
How to Make Your Book Play Out Like a Movie: http://bit.ly/zXDWFY @JodyHedlund
Book Sales Aren't Everything: http://bit.ly/xAsAkI @selfpubreview
Writing your book's final sequence: http://bit.ly/w3XSol @katepaulk
Found Object Stories: Think Like a Writer: http://bit.ly/zgPrQO
4 Writing Routines You Can Live With: http://bit.ly/yN6BMP @writeitsideways
Worldbuilding--Setting up alternate social parameters: http://bit.ly/ydguht @JulietteWade
Blog Topics: Original or Commonplace? http://bit.ly/xE2HRU @cherylrwrites
Han Solo, Scarlett O'Hara, and Your Characters: What Makes Them Compelling? http://bit.ly/ywO5e7 @KMWeiland for @write_practice
Why our voice and the rhythm of our writing is important: http://bit.ly/xcRnyr @janice_hardy
10 Questions for Publishing CEOs: http://bit.ly/xUdESG @DonLinn
Querying a publisher after you've fired your agent: http://bit.ly/Aw3YFd @bookendsjessica
Authors, Bloggers, and When the Internet Feels Like A Low-Budget Horror Movie: http://bit.ly/w9ThEW @BooksAreMyBFs
How to Remove the OCD from Your Blogging: http://bit.ly/yjbmeI @KrissyBrady for @catseyewriter
How to Add Goodreads to Your Facebook Timeline: http://bit.ly/yLK735 @GalleyCat
The importance of keeping in touch with our readers: http://bit.ly/w8lXne @GoblinWriter
The Skinny on Social Networking: http://bit.ly/xnwVL3 @writersdigest
Read. Write. Repeat: http://bit.ly/wBdFMh @SusanMayWriter
Line editing in action: http://bit.ly/z29PvS @theresastevens
What a teething toy taught 1 writer about branding: http://bit.ly/xi5PKe @Lit_Gal
The Uncertainty Principle: how do writers know if they're any good? http://bit.ly/wyHIDb
The myth of the bestseller: http://bit.ly/Abq5ay @JAKonrath
Publishers Less Optimistic About Digital Books This Year: http://bit.ly/yslZVW @GalleyCat
5 Tips For Social Media Promotion Success: http://bit.ly/y7KWWy @BryanThomasS
Writing for Life: 5 Practical Goals For Writers: http://bit.ly/xx5tRu @thecreativepenn
Coincidence Destroys the Suspension of Disbelief: http://bit.ly/yj6BHn @noveleditor
Coincidence Destroys the Suspension of Disbelief: http://bit.ly/yj6BHn @noveleditor
Lies that Can Poison Our Writing Career: http://bit.ly/zklggd @KristenLambTX
Adverbs: They're Really Not All Bad: http://bit.ly/vZieKi @janice_hardy
97 Ideas for Building a Valuable Platform: http://bit.ly/waUEuL @chrisbrogan
Writers: How to Avoid Stagnation: http://bit.ly/xPF3JX
Strip down your writing: http://bit.ly/AfpN0p
3 ways to alleviate self-doubt: http://bit.ly/zH8q8x @turndog_million for @JaneFriedman
3 ways to alleviate self-doubt: http://bit.ly/zH8q8x @turndog_million for @JaneFriedman
Is KDP Select Salvation or Damnation for Indie Authors? http://bit.ly/A89Dp6 @craftycmc
How Computer Games Can Help You With Your Plotting: http://bit.ly/xEgChK @janice_hardy
Agatha Christie on writing: http://bit.ly/zT2CzB @becke_martin
January 26, 2012
Writing to Done
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
My husband, God bless him, is a perfectionist.
I had some pictures that I'd wanted to hang on one of our walls. They're nice botanical prints.
The problem was that there were six of them. It wasn't really a problem, except that it meant that my husband wanted to devote a lot of time into getting the pictures hung. You know—measuring the wire on the back of the prints, cutting out tissue paper replicas of the pictures to arrange on the wall, carefully marking up the wall with pencil, using a tape measure to create a grid on the wall…
This is not to say that this is the wrong way to hang pictures. No, it's the right way. Except that it requires a lot of time—and my husband has very little free time. And I don't have the patience to hang pictures that way.
My botanical prints sat neatly stacked on the floor for many months…until a few weeks ago when my husband left town for a trip.
While he was gone, I grabbed the hammer, eyeballed the pictures and the spot I wanted them in, and started putting nails in the wall. Ten minutes later, the prints were hung. I think they look pretty good.
Now…are there a bunch of holes in the wall under my pictures where I had to rehang crooked prints? Absolutely. There are also a few holes in the walls between the pictures. Can you tell, looking at the wall, that there are a bunch of little holes in it? Not unless you get really, really close. The overall effect is very nice.
The important thing is just to finish. We shouldn't let perfectionism keep us from ever finishing a book because we want to get the story or the diction or the voice perfect. If we finish our book, then we can fix any problems or mistakes.
I do know a lot of writers who like to edit as they go and work really well that way. I'd just add that if you do write that way and it's not going particularly well, consider taking the time to reevaluate your process and see if a different approach might work better for you.
How do you put perfectionism behind you during your first draft?
January 24, 2012
Outgoing vs. Incoming
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
First a special note—yesterday marked the first anniversary of the Writer's Knowledge Base search engine. The WKB is the free, searchable archive, developed by Mike Fleming, for all the writing-related links I share. Hope you'll try it for information on writing a novel, querying an agent or publisher, or promoting your book.
I think a lot about ways to be more productive. We all have only a certain number of hours in our day and a certain number of things we need to accomplish in those hours.
I have a really tight schedule up until summer and I've been grabbing my writing time when I can find it.
I'm an early riser. In the past, I've tried to go straight to my computer in the morning and get some writing done….first thing.
I knew I was supposed to do this. I knew it helped me get my writing goals met for the day. I knew it made me start off the day on the right foot—with a win.
But I didn't really think about the underlying reasons I was doing it. And because I didn't, it meant that I didn't ascribe the importance to the task that I should have.
Over the holidays, I got into a different sort of habit. I still got up before dawn, but I was checking my calendar, checking my emails, and checking online activity: had the blog I'd scheduled posted correctly? Did I have any messages in my Twitter DM folder that I should read?
Those are things that do need to be done. Do they need to be done at 4:45 a.m., though? No. I really don't even need to check my calendar before 5 a.m.—what could I possibly be needed for at that hour, anyway?
Seth Godin had an excellent post a couple of weeks ago. He asked what was the first thing we do at the computer each morning. He suggested it was "checking our incoming." But he reminded us that, if we're artists, that:
"the first thing you do should be to lay tracks to accomplish your goals, not to hear how others have reacted/responded….to what happened yesterday."
In other words, we should be focused on our outgoing, not our incoming. Start out our day creating something new.
After reading Godin's post, I decided to start writing first each day again. This time, instead of feeling like it was just a chore to knock off my long list, I felt like I had more of a sense of purpose to my writing. I was creating something, moving forward, not looking back at what I might have missed in the last eight hours since I'd last checked my emails or other messages.
And it felt good. In fact, I was more inspired and felt more purposeful.
Have you ever thought about changing your morning routine? Or considered writing before checking in with social media?
January 22, 2012
Lending Realism to the Paranormal—by Lisa Gail Green
by Lisa Gail Green, @LisaGailGreen
Lending realism to paranormal. It sounds like an oxymoron, doesn't it? But allowing your readers to suspend their disbelief is vital if you're writing in this genre or any other type of speculative fiction. Think of Harry Potter for a moment. What was it about an entire society of witches and wizards complete with schools, government and other fantastical creatures that allowed us to read on while hoping for an owl of our own?
I've broken down five features I believe are imperative to creating "realistic" paranormal.
1. The details.
It's the small things that matter. If I buy into a world I want to be able to taste the food, feel the textures, hear the sounds – not just for the major things, but for the everyday bits as well. How does a werewolf shave? Does he laugh at the silliness of it?
2. The characters must be human.
I don't mean literally. Your MC can be an alien with three heads for all I know. What I mean is that inside, the thoughts and feelings should be familiar to the reader. We have to be able to connect on a visceral level. So as long as we have that internal connection, the character will be much easier to accept.
3. The world must be complete in the author's mind.
If you don't understand your world, neither will your reader. You have to know how everything works and fits together if you want to have a hope of conveying it to others. Don't gloss over parts you are having trouble with, make sure you have a reason and that it all fits together, otherwise fix it.
4. There must be no discrepancies.
If your vampire can't see himself in a mirror, you better have a very good reason why the girl see's him coming at the end through a reflection in the water. Make sure if there's a rule, you carry through to the end. If your MC saves the day because of some hidden power, please build up to that reveal, so it feels natural and not like something you came up with to get yourself out of a corner you've written yourself into!
5. The rules must be based on universal truths.
I'm going to assume the laws of gravity apply unless otherwise stated. And even if you don't reveal every last thing, you will find it helps to have a solid reason as to why things are the way they are. The logic will translate onto the page.
What do you think? Have I missed any key elements?
Lisa Gail Green writes paranormal and fantasy. Her newest publication is IDENTITY CRISIS in the anthology GODS OF JUSTICE.
Lisa is an active participant on
EnchantedInkpot.com
as well as
ChildrensPublishing.blogspot.com
. You can find Lisa most often on her own blog at
paranormalpointofview.blogspot.com
or Twitter as @LisaGailGreen. She would most definitely have a werewolf for a pet if she weren't allergic.
January 21, 2012
Twitterific

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
Below are the writing-related links I tweeted last week.
The Writer's Knowledge Base search engine, designed by software engineer and writer Mike Fleming, makes all these links (now over 12,000) searchable.
Sign up for the free monthly WKB newsletter for the web's best links and interviews:http://bit.ly/gx7hg1 .
Different approaches to naming characters: http://bit.ly/A5vLkK @kirstenhubbard
How Barnes & Noble Can Take a Bite Out of Amazon: http://bit.ly/Am4STf @JosephJEsposito for @scholarlykitchn
How "Literary" and "Entrepreneur" Are Becoming Intertwined: http://bit.ly/zNU4E6 @biblioracle for @janefriedman
The symbiosis linking SF and mainstream: http://bit.ly/zhyS5w
A look at social media tool Triberr: http://bit.ly/wNnfhu @Jhansenwrites
A Singularly Unpopular View of Adverbs: http://bit.ly/wN4rLf @KeithCronin
Writing daily when you have a day job (written for bloggers, works for novelists): http://bit.ly/wUVh7f @PushingSocial
Your dialogue can do more: http://bit.ly/xcV9DS @JulietteWade
5 Ways to Draw Readers Into Your Articles: http://bit.ly/yFyHmg
Publishing house procedure for consideration of a manuscript: http://bit.ly/A5cPdH @bookendsjessica
Using Either, Neither, Or, and Nor Correctly: http://bit.ly/xMDu9d @write_practice
You can write daily: http://bit.ly/zyhBkZ @eMergentPublish
Dealing with deadlines: http://bit.ly/wUaDQm @rachellegardner
10 Tips on Guest Blogging and Blog Tours: http://bit.ly/wFacwh @pstoltey
Evaluating a new publisher? Give yourself the gift of time: http://bit.ly/w1qA3V @behlerpublish
Creative forced association: http://bit.ly/wzavUO @changingminds for @SiriusPress
4 Ways to Recycle Dusty Manuscripts: http://bit.ly/x3gkIp @JulieMusil
Thoughts on second books: http://bit.ly/wM40zc @KALongshore
6 Simple Ways to Reboot Your Writing Routine: http://bit.ly/yP0wrF @BrianKlems
Some truths about publishing aren't true anymore: http://bit.ly/xVhae5 @PassiveVoiceBlg
8 Effective Ways To Harness Creativity: http://bit.ly/zM8lfX
Some stories just aren't yours to tell: http://bit.ly/yeRIVz @sarahahoyt
How to Avoid 10 Common Conference Mistakes That Most Writers Make: http://bit.ly/zJyV2y @BrianAKlems
All the links I shared on Twitter last week: http://bit.ly/xAkL10
Selling & Managing Audio Rights: http://bit.ly/xE0aPd @SaraMegibow
Query letter template: http://bit.ly/A7g22v @BubbleCow
Pinning down what makes a book high concept: http://bit.ly/yv6VFR @4kidlit
When agents pitch to editors: http://bit.ly/yv6VFR @rachellegardner
Punctuation in Fiction—Are There Prohibitions? http://bit.ly/yNfbqz @noveleditor
Punishing the Peccadillo: http://bit.ly/xviN5X @behlerpublish
20 Economical Book Marketing Techniques: http://bit.ly/wac61d @selfpubreview
Creating Profitable and Successful Blogs: http://bit.ly/wqAQqP @problogger
Forging Stories: Exploring the Metaphor: http://bit.ly/wfYBOc
How subplots are useful for writers: http://bit.ly/wHgA2i @Mommy_Authors
Twitter: Top 5 Ways to Find Your Tribe: http://bit.ly/yT2Fa1 @JFBookman
Repurposing Blogs as Books for 'Immediacy': http://bit.ly/Ah0s3y @pubperspectives
You must ship: http://bit.ly/z1NLK6 @JeffGoins
How To Pick and Choose a Writers Conference: http://bit.ly/yLA27Q @Bob_Mayer
How to Be a Better Blogger, Part 1: http://bit.ly/xpqLgI @SarahForgrave
7 things to consider when trying to find readers for your ebook: http://bit.ly/AERXsE @SuspenseAuthors
Why should never be a chore: http://bit.ly/yI741X @eMergentPublish
Do You Hold E-Rights to Your Traditionally Published Book? http://bit.ly/zPTj0A @JaneFriedman
12 Ways to Help Your Friends' Pre-Release Promotion Efforts: http://bit.ly/ArngG3 @KeliGwyn
Learning tension from hoaxes of the past--part of the Designing from the Bones series from @GeneLempp: http://bit.ly/xa7CIa
6 Steps to Getting Started With Google+: http://bit.ly/y99FSp @smexaminer
An agent reminds us that trends started years before: http://bit.ly/z59QSM @greyhausagency
2 Surefire Symptoms of a Static Character: http://bit.ly/zhc3Ai @KMWeiland
5 productivity tips for writers: http://bit.ly/yuP2PR @MsAnnAguirre
What Is Your Online Avatar Saying About You? http://bit.ly/xRRj2D @catseyewriter
The Counter-Intuitive Benefits of Small Time Blocks: http://bit.ly/AyMB1U @RealLifeE
Culture-building through Holidays: http://bit.ly/xbUi2G @AmyJRoseDavis
New Fight Breaks Out Over Digital Rights to Old Books: http://bit.ly/xR9yYx @PassiveVoiceBlg
Character vs. Plot vs. Language: http://bit.ly/ymnPdS @BookishWallace
Short Stories as Marketing Tools: http://bit.ly/xfaNkZ @howtowriteshop
Blog Trolls–How to Spot Them & What To Do: http://bit.ly/xdfQWM @KristenLambTX
How to Write a Novel Based on a True Story: http://bit.ly/xkBA5U @HarlowCoban
The Business of Character Engagement: http://bit.ly/wjGyBa @jhansenwrites
Tips for setting up a blog tour: http://bit.ly/z2kM17 @spunkonastick
Responsible Reviewing: http://bit.ly/yZLnvi @authorterryo
Tips for eliminating echoes in our writing: http://bit.ly/zeudv4
Examining our ideas to ensure they're genuinely original: http://bit.ly/ApfPNh @SarahAHoyt
Staying True to Your Characters: http://bit.ly/zUJtqo @AnnetteLyon
Konrath's successful last 3 weeks with epub: http://bit.ly/wNLzZH @jakonrath
Worldbuilding--how romantic partners meet, expectations for relationships, etc.: http://bit.ly/zHx763 @JulietteWade
Freelance Life: The Right Tools: http://bit.ly/x48tiv @writertank
Guest Blogging Etiquette 101: http://bit.ly/ykJtEL @roniloren
Publishers Rearranging the Deck Chairs on the Titanic: http://bit.ly/xSejs9 @PassiveVoiceBlg
Why 1 authors isn't fond of writing groups: http://bit.ly/x3NtNv @mykecole
What Makes a Great First Sentence? http://bit.ly/yAsO48 @Ava_Jae
1 writer's experiences during the past decade of publishing: http://bit.ly/y75VYG @marilynpeake
For the Resolute at New Year's: Promises, Process, and Progress: http://bit.ly/ApBYCL @SarahAveryBooks
6 reasons to write flawed characters: http://bit.ly/yDWdUw @LyndaRYoung
Writing tension--giving readers something to worry about: http://bit.ly/xWChv1 @JodieRennerEd
Should Authors Add a Paypal Donation Button to Their Sites? http://bit.ly/y7a3Qe @GoblinWriter
The Question You Should Ask Before You Ask "What if?" http://bit.ly/zMOcsX @storyfix
An Interview with editor Alan Rinzler: http://bit.ly/A3FOgY @CAMorganti
Types of rights for writers: http://bit.ly/zjVwiq @querytracker
You Are Exactly Where You Need To Be: http://bit.ly/w5XpaS @AKathrynTrombly
A post on horror writer R.L. Stine: http://bit.ly/AasgWZ @writersdigest
BookStoreMarketing.net: Beware Spam PR Services: http://bit.ly/ACFHbF @victoriastrauss
How cliches can actually be useful: http://bit.ly/z5Jf2k @storykim
Songwriters : 6 Traits of A Badly Written Song: http://bit.ly/wcCxM1 @usasong
Songwriters : The Dos and Don'ts of Co-Writing: http://bit.ly/y4NY5e @edusongwriter
Tips for writing emotion: http://bit.ly/xRvCy1 @katepaulk
11 ways to make a memorable impression at a writers' conference: http://bit.ly/x4LGaj @kirklandatlarge
How to make good writing great: http://bit.ly/AyOSQG @jammer0501
Writing fighting--12 things writers should know: http://bit.ly/zwAQ62 @ajackwriting
Why your book needs a sell sheet and how to make one: http://bit.ly/ADTzFh @BryanThomasS
Sensory Tips for the Distracted Writer: http://bit.ly/ACJGl3 @ThereseWalsh
How Writing Groups Can Work for You: http://bit.ly/zXpsSA @2KoP for @writeitsideways
How Tightly Do You Control Your Blog? http://bit.ly/y24ZLB @jamigold
Usage tips of common tech terms in our writing: http://bit.ly/y0I8pk @writing_tips
What writers really need: http://bit.ly/z53coo @billycoffey for @rachellegardner
5 Writing Prompts to Overcome Writer's Block: http://bit.ly/xK54go @write_practice
What NOT to do With Your Press Release: http://bit.ly/zePHnk @FriesenPress
Crime fiction--when suspects get off on the wrong foot with investigators: http://bit.ly/zcXOBf @mkinberg
Calendars for organizing writing and life: http://bit.ly/AwxB3f
Social media is not direct sales: http://bit.ly/A7N0G0 @KristenLambTX
5 Literary Devices to Make You a Better Writer: http://bit.ly/w2D3zm @nickdaws
Top 5 Miscast Literary Roles: http://bit.ly/AlObOw @NewDorkReview
Does EPub Change the 32-Page Illustrated Picture Book? http://bit.ly/wUTCLw
9 ways to make an idea your own: http://bit.ly/xzGkMN @sarahahoyt
7 Blog Mistakes That Drive Readers Nuts: http://bit.ly/wtL55P @pushingsocial
Walls on the Path to Publication: a Necessity or a Nuisance? http://bit.ly/xDzkKN @JodyHedlund
Categorizing your book: http://bit.ly/w48eWz @Bookendsjessica
5 hidden elements that help us effectively tell our stories: http://bit.ly/yvd7km
10 Ways To Get More Email Subscribers For Your Blog: http://bit.ly/xnP3To @problogger
A sf/f writer experiments in literary thinking: http://bit.ly/Ap8TIu @JulietteWade
Investing in Your Own Future: http://bit.ly/yoawdC @deanwesleysmith
How much promotion is too much? http://bit.ly/wfSMWr @nicolamorgan
Print and eBook Covers, a Matter of Resolution: http://bit.ly/wuM0PE @JFBookman
10 Resolutions for Self-Publishers in 2012: http://bit.ly/yLOLWI @pubperspectives
3 Ways to Handle Time in a Novel: http://bit.ly/zn8RLF
Magic systems: http://bit.ly/yrk3mw
2 tricky areas for writers--dialogue and description: http://bit.ly/wgOKyR
CreateSpace Ins and Outs: http://bit.ly/yriUmJ @Desertwriter
Live coverage of cons #wdc12 (today/Fri.) and #dbw12 (Mon.) & #dbwsum (Mon.) by @Porter_Anderson with roundup here: PorterAnderson.com
Editors under marketing's thumb, poorly digitized trad. titles, scarcity as a biz model, Apple gossip: http://bit.ly/yDFjur @Porter_Anderson
Writing on the Ether's @Porter_Anderson features @SheilaB01 @namenick @lizcastro @JulieBertagna @jeffjohnroberts : http://bit.ly/yDFjur
When Loved Ones Don't Love Your Book: http://bit.ly/zEyRXb @wckdwriter
Making writing goals using the S.M.A.R.T. method: http://bit.ly/zpjEf2 @ArtMktgMentor
"Write What You Know" Doesn't Mean What You Think It Does: http://bit.ly/z9xCpo @fuelyourwriting
Put Your Reader in Your POV Character's Skin: http://bit.ly/yi1gI2 @jhansenwrites
Editing out 'as': http://bit.ly/yJLdop
The Pros and Cons of Comparing Yourself to Other Writers: http://bit.ly/w3T9yC @KMWeiland
Ebooks Outsell Print For Majority Of Titles On USA Today Bestseller List: http://bit.ly/zvBFcK @laurahazardowen
How to maintain a creative, healthy perspective: http://bit.ly/yLxbmv @tannerc
Know The Business *Before* You Get Too Far In: http://bit.ly/z87fU7 @greyhausagency
Authors, Bad Reviews, and Bad Reactions: http://bit.ly/xVr0Yu @CassandraNeace
Pandora's box about to be reopened: Who owns erights to old books? http://bit.ly/xTOZBW @PassiveVoiceBlg
Women and Men, and Cover Art: http://bit.ly/xJWsmN @ocelott @jimchines
Why Use Present Tense? http://bit.ly/wfVf95 @Ava_Jae
10 Ways to Improve Your Writing While Thinking Like a Comedy Writer: http://bit.ly/Aw0ifq @lajfun
What mystery writers should know about the brain: http://bit.ly/AjJhgR @JungleReds
Places to find writers online: http://bit.ly/zvY6jc
January 19, 2012
Finding Writers Online
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
[image error]If you're a new writer or have recently decided to spend more time writing, you might be looking for other writers online.
Plugging into the online writing community can be very helpful for writers. Finding support and encouragement is probably the main reason, with accessing resources a close second.
I've recently been asked by a few newer writers where to find other writers online. There's not one main watering hole. Here are some of the places writers hang out online:
Twitter: There are tons of writers on Twitter. If you put #amwriting or #writetips or #writechat into the search box on your home page, you'll find writers. Or go to my followers. Almost all of them are writers.
Blogs: Blogs are great places to connect with other writers (find active blogs to follow, then branch out and follow folks in their blog rolls.) There are plenty of writing blogs in my sidebar to get you started.
Forums: Absolute Write , Writers Net, and Writing Forums, among others, connect writers with each other and with resources and information.
There are also Yahoo Groups that operate on an email loop (or you can choose to visit the group's board). Just go to http://groups.yahoo.com/ and search for "writing" or the genre of your choice.
Facebook: Writers are all over Facebook. What I'd recommend is finding a blogging writer who has a Facebook account, friend them, then go to their followers' list. You're sure to find other writers there to friend….then repeat the process.
National organizations (USA): The Authors Guild is the oldest of the organizations for published authors. There are also many groups that are genre-specific: SCBWI (Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators), RWA (Romance Writers of America), MWA (Mystery Writers of America), ITW (International Thriller Writers), HWA (Horror Writers Association), Sisters in Crime, etc.
There are also local writing organizations. Some writers find it very rewarding to connect with other writers in person and exchange ideas about writing, publishing, and marketing. If you're looking for an in-person group, it's worth the few minutes to pop over to Meetup.com and type in 'critique group' and your location to see if there are groups in your area.
Writers conferences are a good, if frequently costly, way to meet other writers. Or you can participate in a free online writing conference like The Muse Online or challenges like the annual National Novel Writing Month and make writing friends there.
There are probably gobs of other places that I'm not mentioning here. Where are some of your favorite places to hang out with writers?
January 17, 2012
Calendars for Organizing Writing and Life
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
I'm always interested in finding new ways to get organized and take more control over my day.
Although I've been busier than ever with my writing and family life, my productivity has improved in all the different areas I'm juggling---home, as well as writing.
I'm pretty sure it's because of my calendar.
The last time (April 2011) I wrote on this topic, I was still using a variety of different calendars—a wall calendar, a day-planner style calendar, and an online calendar.
A few months ago, I started using Google Calendar for almost everything. Lists of things to do, grocery lists, remembering the dog's heart-worm pill...and now blog post ideas (as a sort of informal editorial calendar.) I've even put my supper plan on my calendar for each day--it reminds me to take whatever the meat is out of the freezer the night before to defrost in the fridge overnight.
There are tons of calendar apps out there, but the point is to have something that you can easily change, update, and carry with you. It doesn't have to be Google. When someone asks me now if I can drive children home from play practice/driver's ed/elementary school, I take a look at my phone. Because Lord knows I can't remember what I'm doing from one day to the next.
I also took this a step farther with my writing...with some excellent results so far. I've mentioned that I hate outlines, but I do love knowing what I'm planning on writing the next day. With my schedule, I need to hop right into the book when I find 15 free minutes. If I use those 15 minutes trying to figure out what scene I need to pick up with, and what I'm trying to accomplish, the writing time is quickly over without my doing any actual writing. So now I jot a line or two on my calendar to remind myself where I want to go with my story the next time I pick it up. If that 10 minutes of time happens to be while I'm waiting for my son to walk out of his high school, then I have my plan for the writing day with me on my phone…and I start right in.
Another nice thing is that this calendar is on a cloud. I can access it from anywhere. If I lose my phone or drop my phone in the sink or something, I can still recover my calendar. If I'm traveling, my calendar is accessible and able to be updated.
One other note--I'm trying an experiment with my calendar....working on more than 1 project at a time. I have two books due at nearly the same time this year, and I've never before been able to work on more than one book at a time. But if I'm being this organized and if I plan the next day's writing for both books, I'm curious to see if it will work better. I'll report back on the experiment later.
How are you staying organized and juggling all the things you need to do? Are you a calendar-user, too? What other tools do you use?
January 15, 2012
Eliminating Echoes in Our Writing
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
I recently got my copyedited manuscript back for the first Southern quilting mystery, which is releasing in June.
I was very surprised at the lack of mark-ups on the manuscript. It was probably the cleanest doc I've ever gotten back…I barely had any corrections at all when it came to continuity errors (usually my big problem), accidentally left-out words, or typos.
Except for one major thing.
I had the most echoes I'd ever seen.
Editors (at least mine at Penguin), refer to repeated words as echoes. Echoes haven't usually been an issue for me. And this manuscript was full of them.
I think it might be due to the number of times I picked up and put down the document while writing it. I had a full schedule at the time and wrote in very small chunks of time. That approach worked well, in terms of getting the book written. But, since I make a point of not reading what I wrote the previous day, this meant that sometimes I reused words that I'd just written (that I guess were fresh in my mind from the day before.)
An example from the first page of my manuscript: I reference a wild looking woman at the protagonist's front door. Five lines later: I describe the woman's wildly colored, mismatched clothes.
Some other repeated words: disastrous and disaster (4 lines apart), quickly (4 lines apart), chilled and chill (10 lines apart), honestly (2 lines apart), normally (2 lines apart), running late and run by (in the same line)….yes, the list goes on!
Amazingly, neither my agent nor my senior editor noticed the echoes in a read-though…but they were reading for content in those passes. Which just goes to show that copyeditors are worth their salt—and that we all can miss echoes unless we're making special passes for them.
On the upside—they're extremely easy to fix. I'd corrected the entire manuscript and returned it to my editor in just about 30 minutes. But I felt sorry for the poor copyeditor.
I've caught my own echoes before—that's why I've never had a book returned to me with so many. These are the ways I've found them (and I use the same method to locate other errors):
Read aloud: You can either read your book aloud to yourself or load the manuscript on your e-reader and have the device read aloud to you.
Read in a different font: This drives me nuts after a while, but if I only plan on editing a chapter, I'll put the one chapter in a different font. It makes the words look different and gives me a little distance from the document.
Use beta readers: Sometimes my betas will find these types of errors.
Make a special pass: This is my plan for my next manuscript. I'm going to make a special pass through the document, looking especially for echoes.
How do you find errors like echoes in your drafts?
January 14, 2012
Twitterific
Below are the writing-related links I tweeted last week.
The Writer's Knowledge Base search engine, designed by software engineer and writer Mike Fleming, makes all these links (now over 12,000) searchable.
Sign up for the free monthly WKB newsletter for the web's best links and interviews:http://bit.ly/gx7hg1 .
Ways to judge whether your character is likeable enough for readers: http://bit.ly/A7fc0A @lisagailgreen
Surviving the Publishing Industry's Looking Glass: http://bit.ly/ABKZro @writerboyESPN
Do you have a marketing plan? http://bit.ly/yr66Yl @robeagar
10 Types of Hypercorrection: http://bit.ly/wNsR76 @writing_tips
Making Friends Without Making Them Feel Used: http://bit.ly/zlg5Mg @JodyHedlund
Your Top 12 Author Marketing Moves for 2012: http://bit.ly/Apz3G6 @writersdigest
Do You Know Your Characters? Do You Know Yourself? http://bit.ly/xuuwAu @curiosityquills
G is for Gerund: http://bit.ly/zMhAjH
6 Ways to Create Writing Goals That Stick: http://bit.ly/zBy8cQ @msheatherwebb for @krissybrady
Building emotional cues into scenes: http://bit.ly/wO6O4C @JulieWuAuthor @BTMargins
Your Top 12 Author Marketing Moves for 2012: http://bit.ly/Apz3G6 @robeagar for @writersdigest
J.K. Rowling's Writing Process in Her Own Words, part 2: http://bit.ly/wAhxoA @shelleysouza for @HP4Writers
Being The Evil Overlord: http://bit.ly/yCJ51M @katepaulk for @sarahahoyt
How to create mood: http://bit.ly/wO5PxU
The 7 Components of Book Marketing Strategy: http://bit.ly/wJyYVF @JenniferAFusco
The Difference Between Dreaming and Starting: http://bit.ly/y9GRes @jeffgoins
An Agent on Why The Writing Process Trumps Everything: http://bit.ly/ApZ76j @greyhausagency
The drive to write: http://bit.ly/xOIit4 @kalayna
How to Catch More Life in Your Writing: http://bit.ly/AwWax7 @write_practice
Revision: A Fine Line Between Polish And Overkill: http://bit.ly/zZ9uKD
All my tweets from the past week: http://bit.ly/ADefRm
Goal setting for writers: http://bit.ly/xN8lba @eMergentPublish
Why perfect endings rankle: http://bit.ly/w5bSkr @SolomonAnna for @BTMargins
Why books make the best movies: http://bit.ly/xT6Bin
75 Synonyms for "Talk": http://bit.ly/wikVpf @writing_tips
Playbook For Self-Promo: http://bit.ly/zIvrhK @bigblackcat97 for @WriteAngleBlog
Is Your Website Hurting Your Writing? http://bit.ly/xdzvGq @menwithpens for @thecreativepenn
Are readers really ready for the self-published author? http://bit.ly/ABbKWW @tonyakappes11
Writers--Will Work for Cheap: http://bit.ly/xPwbA5 @KristineRusch
When promo gets pushy: http://bit.ly/x5M8or @blurbisaverb
Genrefication: Romance, the Novel, and Literary Fiction: http://bit.ly/yWAfDX @JustBethanne
Giving our characters epiphanies: http://bit.ly/xSdi1H
Thoughts on setting writing goals: http://bit.ly/wagTru @/andrewgreybooks
Crime fiction--creating ordinary people for readers to pull for: http://bit.ly/xWx5Uw @mkinberg
An Authors' Guide to the Almighty 3% Rule: http://bit.ly/AcinQw @TweetTheBook
Approaching Success or Avoiding Failure? http://bit.ly/xHyYU2 @WriteNowCoach
4 Ways To Develop Your Authentic Voice For Book Marketing Success: http://bit.ly/wgEhnt @Beth_Barany
Using small questions to get past a block with your manuscript: http://bit.ly/wvuje5 @SusanSquires
Using data to develop a social media strategy: http://bit.ly/wTK4bf @andrewphelps
9 Villains in Literature & Film--& Making Your Own Better: http://bit.ly/y1Ffcr @joebunting
Making Backstory Work for You: http://bit.ly/xSlkv4 @janice_hardy
Your YA Protagonist–Some Dos and Don'ts: http://bit.ly/wFvt0j @Kristi_Cook
What stillness reveals: http://bit.ly/AwqPXc @OllinMorales
For the disorganized writer: How to tackle clutter: http://bit.ly/xistZ7 @zen_habits
How to Find Your Inner Sadist: http://bit.ly/yRpH7O @Ava_Jae
Just because they offered you a contract doesn't mean you need to take it: http://bit.ly/xwEsfP @behlerpublish
Why You Should Add E-mail Subscription Service to Your Blog: http://bit.ly/wnRoC6 @JaneFriedman
When authors are swallowed whole by their books: http://bit.ly/wWOxR1 @FebruaryGrace
Finding time to blog *and* write: http://bit.ly/Amg1gL @dirtywhitecandy
The author/reviewer relationship: http://bit.ly/zFFOOl @YAHighway
How to generate a year's worth of content in an hour: http://bit.ly/ygz6JJ @viperchill
5 Ways to Bring Your Blog into the Spotlight: http://bit.ly/yYMkXT @youngprepro
Don't Drown Your Reader in Explanations: http://bit.ly/x8hecT @KMWeiland
Commenting On Reviews: A Different Type of Author Intrusion: http://bit.ly/z67817
How Images Improve Blog Traffic: http://bit.ly/zrVW6y @robertleebrewer
Weekend Writing -Writing as a Second Job: http://bit.ly/A8mxGs @camillelaguire
Possible Problems and Obstacles for Superheroes to Face Besides Supervillains: http://bit.ly/A6yNNe
The New World of Publishing: Writer vs. Author: http://bit.ly/A8crBJ @deanwesleysmith
Pros and Cons of Multiple First Person: http://bit.ly/xRBn8i @Janice_Hardy
Story structure--set-up: http://bit.ly/wcpzOx @rebeccaberto
Your new writing blog: avoid these faux-pas: http://bit.ly/y8fATp @dirtywhitecandy
Use a Rewrite to Add What Your Story Lacks: http://bit.ly/w1g5jE @noveleditor
12 Ways To Give Your Career A Jump Start For 2012: http://bit.ly/xUzbMJ @lilywolf
How to Develop a Successful Multi-Author Blog: http://bit.ly/yOFu4v @smexaminer
The Loneliness of the Icelandic Translator: http://bit.ly/xLtcvS @oliviasnaije for @pubperspectives
What Costco can teach us about writing: http://bit.ly/z2IxR5 @JulieMusil
How to Buy eBooks from an Indie Bookstore: http://bit.ly/zvRYV5 @galleycat
Lord of the Rings: The Revised Edition: http://bit.ly/AfJz7T @ChrisDolley
How to Make Chapters for a Novel Manuscript in Microsoft Word 2010: http://bit.ly/xHTeg1
Hooks, Loglines, and Pitches: What Every Writer Needs to Know: http://bit.ly/zQF8Z7 @AnneRAllen
Revive Your Creativity by… Not Being Creative: http://bit.ly/w2Ys7A @misfitsmascara
Blogging (or writing) with kids--9 tips: http://bit.ly/zlQKtn @WritingH
Why Bequeathing Your Intellectual Property is Crucial: http://bit.ly/wsvyvQ @DebraPurdyKong
Unleashing creativity begins with a timeline of your past: http://bit.ly/AxuGlb @tobywneal
Technical Aspects of Creating A Nontraditional Ebook: http://bit.ly/yyMumV @indieauthor for @thecreativepenn
Tips for preparing your doc for epublishing: http://bit.ly/wSPl2K
1 writer on what she likes about romantic suspense: http://bit.ly/wSPl2K
10 New Year Resolutions For Writers (that might actually stick): http://bit.ly/x3f84x @ajackwriting
Stabilizing Influence: http://bit.ly/xK0luH @Ravenrequiem13
An agent's tips for aspiring memoir writers: http://bit.ly/Ajfpap @rachellegardner
3 Secrets to e-Book Cover Design Success: http://bit.ly/xmoHlX @jfbookman
Literary Devices to Help Writers Who've Lost the Plot: http://bit.ly/yo66Wi
The Mirage of Fixity — Selling an Idea Before Understanding the Concept: http://bit.ly/zEr7QE @scholarlykitchn
6 Dos and Don'ts for Busy Parents Who Blog: http://bit.ly/z8Ijy8 @writeitsideways
Getting The Most From A Critique: http://bit.ly/Anbf1d @marcykennedy
A Tested Social Media Success Formula: Talk as Yourself, Not about Yourself: http://bit.ly/AALRCB @danzarrella @copyblogger
Worldbuilding with Horses: Preindustrial Revolution: http://bit.ly/z9RsUc @dancinghorse
Stop Waiting to Be Picked: http://bit.ly/w9TIYs @JeffGoins
35 Genres and Other Varieties of Fiction: http://bit.ly/w7rHN6 @writing_tips
Which League Are You Playing In? http://bit.ly/wP4op7 @bob_brooke
Reasons to give writing poetry a go: http://bit.ly/yccQ85 @eMergentPublish
How Not To Mutilate A Foreign Language: http://bit.ly/zCMH8B @StinaLL
5 things 1 writer wishes she'd known before she sold her manuscript: http://bit.ly/z85mIz @PBRWriter
When is your manuscript ready to be sent out: http://bit.ly/w1Z5E6 @lisagailgreen
10 signs you're not in the writing zone: http://bit.ly/yVNPYg @elspethwrites
Tips for better book openings: http://bit.ly/wxAQXo @anasleuth
Tips for writing dialogue tags: http://bit.ly/wiwFUq
Approaching agents who rejected you...after you've gotten an offer from a publisher: http://bit.ly/wmniWF @bookendsjessica
5 Narrative Mistakes You Can Fix Right Now: http://bit.ly/wut7Hy @EliseRome for @RoniLoren
Tips for creating effective characters: http://bit.ly/yLYc2t
Making a living writing--1 writer's story: http://bit.ly/wngwmt @MeredithEfken for @HowToWriteShop
Show Editors & Agents How You Meet Their Guidelines: http://bit.ly/z9irTQ @greyhausagency
Knowing Where to Start Your Novel: http://bit.ly/xa6zwU @Janice_Hardy
Why the internet is a trap - and how 1 writer deals with it: http://bit.ly/xJoEFu @JulietteWade
How to mine your childhood for story gems and more: http://bit.ly/AcYp23 @CAMorganti
Subtext: What is this Story Really About? http://bit.ly/xAfj1C
Story ideas--what they are, what they're not: http://bit.ly/xzrNcB @SarahAHoyt
Apple v. Amazon,libraries & piracy, authors & e-rights--& more top ind. news from @Porter_Anderson for @JaneFriedman: http://bit.ly/y9VFI0
Top Ten Made-Up Literary Couples: http://bit.ly/yhSbiU @deadwhiteguys
Author Rex Pickett on Surviving Rejection: http://bit.ly/xMLCIz @GalleyCat
Advice for authors from social media guru Seth Godin: http://bit.ly/yc0Xqr @passivevoiceblg
Proper Nouns vs. Pronouns: http://bit.ly/zDEzmA @KeliGwyn
A Model for Crowdsourced Publishing: http://bit.ly/wnMGRm @mightyscoo for @JaneFriedman
Thoughts on staying motivated when writing that first novel: http://bit.ly/zb3Ljn @KatieGanshert
Build Your Author Brand in 5 Easy Steps: http://bit.ly/yuCGR5 @scribblinghappy
How to Explore Your Characters' Motivations: http://bit.ly/yK7Ix1 @write_practice
How to Make Sense of Critiques: http://bit.ly/AbAxu5 @DiyMia
An Industry for Arts Graduates Who Can Count: http://bit.ly/xD8n9S @PassiveVoiceBlg
Writing on the Ether's @Porter_Anderson features: @johnemcintyre @DonLinn @lizcastro @michellelegro @naypinya : http://bit.ly/y9VFI0
Daily writing vs. weekday writing: http://bit.ly/wDH9nP @camillelaguire
Finding a good balance for crime fiction endings: http://bit.ly/wzDWe3 @mkinberg
Tips for moving forward with your manuscript after getting stuck: http://bit.ly/x6AWUj @alanorloff
Vocabulary has to be true to our POV character (and familiar to our target reader): http://bit.ly/yxdmXP @authorterryo
An Author's Guide to NetGalley: http://bit.ly/zvWdVQ
What Star Wars "A New Hope" Can Teach Us About In Medias Res: http://bit.ly/z2pzfV @KristenLambTX
Fewer copy editors means embarrassing errors in newspapers: http://bsun.md/z60zzA @johnemcintyre
The Same River Twice: On Rewriting Your Past: http://bit.ly/yvZe3C
10 Ways Writing Fiction is Like Performing for a Camera: http://bit.ly/wcye8l @victoriamixon
Are New Tablets Slowing The Growth Of E-Readers? http://bit.ly/zmnrJ7 @laurahazardowen
5 Things You Have To Think About Before You Self Publish: http://bit.ly/Alu1Y1 @Ajackwriting
7 Tools for Tracking Ebook Sales: http://bit.ly/xmmY03 @PYOEbooks
Games Agents Play: http://bit.ly/xSKcL2