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Have you finished anything? Short stories are an excellent way for a young (or debut) author to find an audience.
You need to get something finished at least in first draft, and then decide which genres you like best, and which seem to be most popular right now.
In Romance, one agent was recently looking for stories with sentient plants. Futuristics and Fantasies are very popular at the moment. Mysteries and Thrillers are always in season. Regencies are out of favor again.
Best wishes,
Rowena Cherry
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The second best habit is read and write daily.
Your genre will make itself known. Might be your own genre, a cross of two or ten others. I'm a firm believer in making your own game, carving your own niche. It's a tougher route, but after you're successful, you're free.
Mari


I know one author who absolutely refuses to share the pen name she uses for erotica. All because she doesn't want it to influence her other work (which is also a pen name). You won't find her real name anywhere either.
I'll keep trying to get that erotica name outta her though. I want to read her stuff! LOL
Christie
Author of the Alex & Fiona series

I write and publish under my own name, M.L. Bushman, but I also write and publish under Kris Karrel.
The former gets all my books that may have what some would call overriding spiritual themes, although these themes don't conform to traditional religion but rather my different views of the Cosmos.
The latter gets my racier stuff, the more graphic love scenes, the heavier violence, and no spiritual themes in sight.
This is not to say that in either line I spare the reader any--I don't--it's just that I don't want devotees of one type of book picking up another without first being aware that there is a marked difference between the two.
All my books share a couple of elements, however: There's always a paranormal aspect to the story and you'll always find a cowboy somewhere in the cast.

dana mentink
www.danamentink.com
stop by for a monthly contest
yay im joining, Tale_of_lost_ink!!!

I have been working on a story for 7 years (not done, after heavily criticizing too much) and still have a burning question.
Though, before I ask, I should fill you in. My chapters or bits are told in the character's point of view. I heavily try to deepen and mark what their personality so the whole book isn't the same type.
My question would be: what would be appropriate personalities?
I used these to start out with -
Funny/Comical
Strict/ always in the clouds
Caring
Smart, as of speaking they use some old english
Based off me
Very, very evil.
And, sorry of the questions, what would be good roles? I know a lot of major stories have a betrayer, a leader, a wise person, a young warrior/main, the helper that seems so pitiful, and the smart-guy and so on.

After reading your post, I think you're analyzing too much. Sit down before a blank screen or take a blank piece of paper and write. No rules, yours or anyone else's, no plot, nothing but an idea. And then write. Let your hair down. Forget formulas, forget what someone else insists are all the elements of a good story--blow off every bit of teaching or advise you've ever heard and just write.
Don't analyze the story until you've reached THE END. The object here is merely to get from the beginning to the end.
The first rule of writing is that there are no rules. The caveat to that rule is everything in moderation. If you write a story with only one character in it, how are you going to satisfy that list you've got there? Answer is, you probably won't. In my opinion, if you try to write by any formula, you're going to suck all the fun out of the process for you and suck all the life out of the story for your readers.
Isn't life itself interesting because you never really know what's going to happen one minute, hour or day to the next? It should be that way for you when writing, and for the reader setting down with your story.
Believe me, if there was any kind of formula or list of required elements that guaranteed a good book at the end, we'd all be churning them out, and we'd all be bored silly.
Just write, see what characters show up in your stories of their own accord and what mischief they get into, what evils they confront, what truths they learn, what worlds they conquer entirely on their own. If you let it, this storytelling is an amazing process, guaranteed to teach you a thing or two about yourself along the way.
Just write freely and well. And see what happens.
Mari

I think what you're trying for is Character Description and Backstory. That's an excellent place to begin; defining personality/behaviour and then configuring internal and external conflicts.
Write the Backstory first: Who, What, When, Where, Why. You'll find the next step, Character Description will flow more easily. A very basic example might be: Timid young woman with bubbling, hidden anger resulting from childhood abuse.
Seldom is a character black and white, and the complexities will add depth to the characters. For example, the above protag is revealed through shy behaviour (showing) and your knowledge of her history allows for consistent internal conflict with believable motivation until the resolution.
Roles as you describe them, are archetypes used primarily in Fantasy and Mythology constructs, typically for screenwriting.
Plotting and planning are invaluable for not only creating a cohesive tale with the internal/external conflicts but also the synopsis that must accompany any submission to a publisher.
Good luck!


Now, go write something...LOL
Mari


If you're truly meant to be a writer, you'll finish the one you're on, just to get to the new one.
I have around twenty openings like that stashed. I'm just finishing my sixteenth novel.
Mari


I also don't know how to get my work out there for other people to read. I have written A LOT of short stories over the years ranging from all sorts of topics. I have a booklet I carry around everywhere I go so that when I hear a really neat idea or come-up with something I think may be neat in a story, I write it dow.
Should I start posting some of those short stories in places? And should I worry about people possibly taking my work?

You will never learn as much about your own writing, and seeing the problems in your own writing, as you will helping others with theirs.
Everyone has trouble seeing what's wrong with their own writing, but if, and only if, you can acquire the skill of objectivity, of treating your work as if it belonged to someone else, you can go far in seeing and fixing your own work. This requires you to be ruthless, however, to know your darlings and murder them at the press of the delete key. Most writers cannot do this.
After you've revised, revised, revised, start pitching your stories to every market and contest you can find. I wouldn't necessarily give them away for free, but just starting out, it's not a bad idea to give a couple away just to get your work out there and get some feedback. No one is going to steal your work. A rejection slip is feedback, even a form rejection. For some writers, the rejection slip is a validation of their worst insecurities, a reinforcement of everything negative they feel about themselves, of every doubt they have about their work. It's the glass half-empty. This attitude is also an indication that the writer's skin is not thick enough for this business, the belief in one's self and one's work not nearly strong enough to survive.
For others, though, the rejection slip is a challenge, a reason to work even harder, to do better, to move on and write more and learn more, if only to prove to the world what the writer has known all along--I am worth something, my work is worth something, worthy of publication. To believe in yourself, to achieve against all odds, to persevere--these are the writers that eventually make it, mainly because they never took rejection personally and nothing swayed the faith in one's self.
Hope this helps some.
Mari

i started writing this book a while ago which i grew attached to dearly. though, i knew it wasnt that juicy of a story. boy and Girl are friends, boy moves away, girl starts to like boy, girl runs away to find boy. Yet, i still love it. I got to page 112 when i crashed. I was busy for a few days and didnt have a chance to write. When i came back i had completely burned out. not only that, i had a MUCH better story idea inspired by a dream a few days before. So i dumped my old story and began writing scenes for the new story. ive been working on this new story for a few months now, and i want to make sure i dont drop out on this one like before. Any advice for a new and confused writer???


I wouldn't worry about makeout scenes or my mother reading them later, when the book is finished. After you finish, you have tons of revision to do, so chances are she may not see them for a very long time.
Finish first, worry later.
Mari

Good luck to you!

Mary - i added the book you suggested to my to-read list. thanks again both of you!
Books mentioned in this topic
The Writer's Idea Workshop: How to Make Your Good Ideas Great (other topics)Knight's Fork (other topics)
heres the link:
http://www.setbb.com/l2w/