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message 51:
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Melissa
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Sep 08, 2015 09:10PM

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Melissa wrote: "Yes I am, Prior Lake ;)"
Cool! I'm in St. Paul. Do you do any writer's groups? I just joined one and attended my first meeting tonight. It was... good, bad, weird, and overall probably helpful. People are all of those things in general, so I don't know what I expected. :)
Cool! I'm in St. Paul. Do you do any writer's groups? I just joined one and attended my first meeting tonight. It was... good, bad, weird, and overall probably helpful. People are all of those things in general, so I don't know what I expected. :)


Still... I'm stoked

I am Amanda Orneck, author of the short story "Birth Pains" in the Winter's Eye anthology, and the writer of Shadow of the Owl on Inkshares.
John Robin was kind enough to invite me to this group, and I think it's awesome that the Inkshares writers have a place to congregate and collaborate.

And...
Welcome Melissa! I remember ordering your book, the 1100+ page behemoth it is! That's truly heroic writing.
And...
Hi Amanda! I just grabbed a copy of your book now!
Good luck with the crowdfunding, ladies!

Still... I'm stoked"
Awesome! Preorder incoming in 3...2...1....

Melissa wrote: "Funny! I was thinking of asking you the same thing the other day. Actually it was the second thing I thought of. Nope, make that the third. The first was that I loved your little promo video. The s..."
The group I joined is here:
http://www.meetup.com/MinnSpec/
That's the big umbrella group. There are smaller ones for different areas of town, so I bet there's one closer to you. I attended the East St Paul one last night.
It was weird because the group was clearly well-established and it really felt like they thought I didn't belong there at first. Maybe because I didn't look like I fit in... nerds and geeks can be just as mean and exclusive as anyone. (It might have been my social anxiety talking though.)
The first half consisted of reading from a writing textbook and repeating old trite pieces of writing advice as though they're gospel... I think you can write whatever the hell you want, as long as you know what you're doing.
"Avoid lengthy description and meandering narrative!" Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell has been absurdly successful, sooo... people like different things.
"No adverbs!" Screw you, one of my characters used MOSTLY adverbs. It's part of his voice and I love him.
"Show, don't tell!" Sometimes telling is what works in a scene!
(I am a rather belligerent person when it comes to pat, simplistic answers.)
The critiques portion seemed pretty helpful, though. I'll go back just for that.
The group I joined is here:
http://www.meetup.com/MinnSpec/
That's the big umbrella group. There are smaller ones for different areas of town, so I bet there's one closer to you. I attended the East St Paul one last night.
It was weird because the group was clearly well-established and it really felt like they thought I didn't belong there at first. Maybe because I didn't look like I fit in... nerds and geeks can be just as mean and exclusive as anyone. (It might have been my social anxiety talking though.)
The first half consisted of reading from a writing textbook and repeating old trite pieces of writing advice as though they're gospel... I think you can write whatever the hell you want, as long as you know what you're doing.
"Avoid lengthy description and meandering narrative!" Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell has been absurdly successful, sooo... people like different things.
"No adverbs!" Screw you, one of my characters used MOSTLY adverbs. It's part of his voice and I love him.
"Show, don't tell!" Sometimes telling is what works in a scene!
(I am a rather belligerent person when it comes to pat, simplistic answers.)
The critiques portion seemed pretty helpful, though. I'll go back just for that.

http://www.helpingwritersbecomeauthor...

I'm Eric Landreneau, author of "Beneath White Clouds" on Inkshares, and accidental entrant to the Nerdist contest.
I also have a big fat fantasy full of shamanism and magitek which I self-published: "BREAK! A Tale of Cursed Blood."
Other recent achievements: I have a story in the forthcoming anthology "Women in Practical Armor," and I was almost on time for work today. Almost. Just got a little distracted on twitter. and facebook. and wordpress. And then the cat... ugh, you know how it is.
Anyway, Ihave reasonably good representations of myself here, and on inkshares, and at ericlandreneau.wordpress.com
Glad to join the party!

For anyone else looking for his book, it's here:
https://www.inkshares.com/projects/be...

I start with a favorite quote from Gogol Bordello:
"Uncover rules of life,
And how to break them well"
It's good to spend some time thinking about these rules as you come across them, try to understand what important point is trying to be made. But then it is especially important to take that info and make an informed choice that fits your writing style. And think about the rules you hear as you read, too - see when and where these rules are broken, and if that effects you or not. Sometimes it'll detract from the story, sometimes it won't.
I can see the drive behind the "no prologue" thing. It's a push to get writers to skip laying the foundation and get right into writing the events of the story - the action. I can see that, I can jive with that, but my first novel still has a big fat prologue with absolutely no human characters, and I stand by it. Granted, it's a minimum of summary, a maximum of direct action, and the characters are principal villains, which gets me to this:
Not a rule, just how I try to do it. "Show, don't tell" is very important, especially in the beginning of a story. If the story starts out with lots of directly-described worldbuilding, direct characterization and fat paragraphs of summarized backstory, it'll probably only be interesting to the author. I encourage all to strive to reveal their characters' characters, the setting and background through characters' words and actions as much as possible. Especially at the beginning. Deeper into the story, once your readers are hooked, you can relax a bit, stretch out into some long-winded internal monologues or a few long paragraphs of background info.
That might be what the "no prologue" person was really trying to get at - lead with action, with people we can care about doing and saying stuff that we can imagine.
Not to say that "telling" won't sell. I've seen plenty of books published, on bookshelves and bestseller lists from major, established authors, that are just piles of longwinded summarization and backstory. 4 pages of "telling" backstory with every new character. Made me want to vomit in my hands, but someone's buying them.
Penultimate point: stay true to you, because WTF do I or anyone know? Write it the right way for you. Who cares if it'll sell or not? If we were writing to make money, we'd all be writing code, not prose.

For anyone else looking for his book, it's here:
https://www.inkshares.com/projects/be..."
awwwww, Daaaaave!
THAT guy's awesome!

For anyone with an e-reader of any sort:
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view...
Use the coupon code JA52C and see what happens.

We need more books like that. I don't know about you, but as a fantasy ready, there's nothing more exciting than getting about 200-300 pages into a rich fantasy book that I don't want to put down and knowing there's still 600+ pages of excitement ahead of me!

Eric wrote: "I BRING PRESENTS!
For anyone with an e-reader of any sort:
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view...
Use the coupon code JA52C and see what happens."


I've been an avid fan of sci-fi and fantasy for most of my life For more than twenty five years I’ve been writing stories. I've had the seed of my first novel (To Kill a King) in my head since I started writng; with a lot of extra plot and world development ready to pour into further writing - enough to write several different series as well as short stories.

We need more books like that. I don't know about you, but as a fantasy ready, there's nothing more exciting t..."
I like a thick tome, that in a pinch can be used as a melee weapon. Longer books allow for more character growth and depth, and slow burning plot lines. Mine's not quite 900 pages, but I think 650 has a pretty nice weight.

Darn, we need a like button here! Just love this, Jae. Hmm...at the rate this group is growing, we might end up migrating to our own Inkshares author promotion forum. (Hint hint)

::hides current prologue chapters I'm working on::
What.... is this rule?

Prologues can be a tricky business. One camp believes that they are unnecessary and that you should jump straight in to the story. The other feels that they can be integral to the plot or the world, setting up what is going on before the the protagonist steps onto his journey.
Me, I love prologues.


Your book should be long enough to tell your story. No less and certainly no more. If you have a 300 page story but you bloat it up to 900 because that's what you see other authors do or you feel that the thicker the book the more legitimate your effort then you're setting yourself up for some might pacing problems. Or entire storylines that serve no purpose to your narrative (looking at you Dance of Dragons).
You'll notice that 'story first' is something I fall back on a lot.

I never understood "kill all your darlings" until my third edit. Reading every line, making sure it serves the purpose of the story. That's the thing about prologues and page counts. If they serve the story you are telling, and are relevant to what is going on, then you're golden.
Then there's Proust.


So in goes the prologue to really hook people and then return to chronological order with chapter 1.
Also Hi Jodhan! Welcome to the herd!

Completely agree with J-F: story first. I'm proud that my next book is going to be 1/3 the length of my first. But if it had needed to be bigger, so be it. I prefer brevity and fast action, but sometimes a good long tale is really satisfying.
Dave wrote: "Free is awesome. So very awesome. <3
Eric wrote: "I BRING PRESENTS!
For anyone with an e-reader of any sort:
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view...
Use the coupon code JA52C and see what..."


So in goes the prologue to really hook people..."
Dave wrote: "I wrote my prologue precisely because an industry veteran thought my novel didn't start off with the kick it needed, but it's where it had to start.
So in goes the prologue to really hook people..."
Hi back Dave. The heard is the word.I love my prologue, and have enjoyed many a good prologue in my day... but there were a few that did nothing for the book.

John Robin invited me here, so if I break anything, you can blame him ;-) The book I have listed in Inkshares is called The Devil You Know and can be found here:
https://www.inkshares.com/projects/th...
I've written books in two other series, but they are geared more toward teenage readers. Devil is aimed at an adult audience, so I thought I'd try some different things to get the word out there for it. I'm hoping to have the first draft done in the next month or two. It's at about 55K words right now. I have a stack of followers that I need to catch up on and plan to tackle that this weekend. Anyway, glad to meet everyone and please feel free to ask questions or just say "Hi" if you want!

I'm Liam, and my project was Rockets: http://www.inkshares.com/projects/roc...
I was a participant in the previous Inkshares contest, for Sword & Laser, but didn't make the top 10. I had been one of the earlier featured pieces that Inkshares promoted for the contest, but my own crowdfunding efforts were lackluster to say the least.
So if anyone would like to talk about the ups and downs, from someone who's been through it, I'm around.


https://www.inkshares.com/projects/to...

Thanks to John R. for inviting me to the group. I'm the author of "The Elements: Descension". Very excited to be here and pick everyone's brains. Together, we can do this.
Lauren wrote: "Side note: I'm seeing a lot of Minnesotans on here. Me too! Located in Saint Paul."
ST PAUL REPRESENT
At this point we could do a meet-up at FallCon or something!
ST PAUL REPRESENT
At this point we could do a meet-up at FallCon or something!

My name is Jordan and I am the author of Jadenel. I only heard of Inkshares when this whole Nerdist contest started, so I decided to give it a chance. However, the book I entered is still in the drafting stages of a full on rewrite. I've been hoping that doing this would push me through the college overload I'm currently experiencing and force me to write through it. Happy to report that it's working thanks to all the twitter support I've been getting. I feel like a complete idiot not trying to reach out earlier than this to join such an amazing group of people. I'll just blame it on being 21 and leave it at that!
And thank you John for putting this together, or at least bringing my attention over here!

Credit goes to Joe Terzieva for putting this group together -- totally a great idea and I'm thrilled at what's happening here!

The main project I've got on Inkshares at the moment is actually a satire about the privatisation of the British health care system. As you may have gathered, this is not fantasy. (It's not even that fantastical!).
But I also have a fantasy novel that I have put up more recently, and which I hope to concentrate on at some point in the future, which is a story about stories, lots of interlinked stories, and what happens when the walls between these stories begin to thin and break down, when the characters start to realise they are fictional... Hmm, that sounds a bit pretentious. It's not as serious as all that. I mean, there's, like, dragons and talking fish and stuff like that in it, too.
I'm a doctor working in primary care in the UK. I had a dark fantasy novel published by Necro a couple of years ago, and a few short stories published here and there.
Nice to meet you all :-)

I'm Alex Bittner author of Daughter of the Mara, currently in the Nerdist contest. I had never heard of Inkshares before this contest and was about to start reaching out to agents/publishers with my book but this is way more fun. I'm loving this community so far. You guys are awesome. Also, a bit of self-promotion: if you haven't checked out my book you can find it here https://www.inkshares.com/projects/da...

I'm excited to be chatting with other authors. Professionally, I work as an editor and copyeditor, so any technical questions are welcomed. I like to talk sentence structure, so hit me up if you have any questions. (Twitter: @TheKaterTot).



John Robin invited me, and I'm excited to be here. I know a bit about stories, but nothing about promotion. I hope to learn a lot from you folks!
Sam wrote: "I can't believe I didn't know about this group! I'm Sam Pearson, author of The Otherworld Club. For a short time, I had the honor of being the highest-ranking coverless book in the Nerdist contest...."
Sam I'm SORRY I didn't tell you about this group! I might've preordered your book before it existed; I can't remember. I'm glad you're here!
And I'm glad everyone else is here, too! This is a great forum.
Sam I'm SORRY I didn't tell you about this group! I might've preordered your book before it existed; I can't remember. I'm glad you're here!
And I'm glad everyone else is here, too! This is a great forum.
Books mentioned in this topic
Dead by Morning (other topics)Silverwood (other topics)