The bumps along the way

 

 

My earliest memory of writing I have is, I’m 7 years old lying in my bed (the top bunch) and writing a poem with a red crayola marker, but the oldest manuscript I have is from 7 years later. I was 14, and in the story I made the lead character 16 because it seemed like such a glamorous age.

Over the years I’ve written a lot of things, poems, manuscripts, movie scripts, songs and thousands of blog posts, and – for me – every step has been a learning process. At times I feel overwhelmed, thinking that everyone must have it easier than me. Other times I feel like I hit the nail on the head and life is perfect in the realm of writing, but it changes from moment to moment. What keeps me going on those bad days are what I have learned so far.

My biggest lesson learned is patience.

So you wrote a book and now you think you should have an agent and be published and go on book tour, get your movie deal, buy a Porsche, move to NYC, London or L.A. (maybe have a place in all 3?) and be down with it. You’ve book yourself on Letterman, and Conan, and lets not forget all the local shows, morning shows, radio shows – you’re in the big leagues now – you think as you hit save on your manuscript and bounce downstairs to tell your spouse s/he can quit their job. For now,  you are rich.

This is where patience comes into play – and honesty.

Now its time to take a week off. Pamper yourself with long walks, conversation with friends who thought your computer ate you, and go on a date with someone you love.  THEN, you get to start your first edit.

 

See – these are my (new) rules:

  1. Write novel
  2. Edit novel
  3. Find Beta Readers to Read Novel (with questions for them to answer to help you understand what they really think about your work)
  4. Re-edit novel
  5. Write synopsis (1-2 pages)
  6. Write query (1 page)
  7. Go over manuscript one more time to be sure you don’t have any silly errors like “on” instead of “one” (optional)
  8. Begin your query process
  9. Buy pint of ice cream, eat in one sitting. Buy more. (optional)
  10. Lock self in office with phone, email and any other way potential agents can contact you (optional)
  11. Never sleep (optional)
  12. Meditate to stop the paranoid voices clamoring on in your brain (optional)

My old rules went like this:

  1. Write novel
  2. Have friend read it (for 6 months and never give them questions to answer, if they finish it that is.)
  3. Edit.
  4. Edit.
  5. Edit.
  6. Blindly submit
  7. Freak because you don’t have synopsis
  8. Tweet about how you’re freaking
  9. Blog about you you’re freaking
  10. Facebook about how you’re freaking
  11. Edit.
  12. Edit.
  13. Edit.
  14. Send out more submissions
  15. Start new WIP
  16. Give up
  17. Renew Hope
  18. Give up again

So you can plainly see why I decided to make these changes.

If you are worried about a Beta Reader ripping your WIP apart, don’t be – that’s what you want them to do so you can get better, to become a stronger writer. We get attached to our WIP’s and to our lovely characters. We want to spend hours and hours with them so we put in scenes the story doesn’t need, and suddenly we’re stalking the (fake) people we love, while dumbing down our work in the process.

My biggest lesson learn is the Beta Reader.

If you don’t have one, ask around on FB or Twitter – or ask me. If I have time I’ll be sure to help, BUT make sure you have questions, because “Well, what do you think?” won’t cut it. What do you want your readers to get out of your novel? Once you figure that out, go from there. And if you’re still not sure – go here to find a template of questions you can ask.

Do all of this BEFORE you try to find an agent, and do this even if you want to self publish. Beta readers will help you target the audience you’re looking to find, so that, maybe, one day you WILL be on Conan talking yourself up.

But then remember… patience. All things worth having takes time – just like your writing and submitting. So be patient with yourself and remind yourself why you write – why you love it – why it’s the air in your lung. And smile 🙂

Keep on Truckin’

 

And that’s what I have been doing, trucking along and writing as often as I can, and it’s has been wonderful! I’m nearly 40 pages into my new WIP, and couldn’t be happier, I’ll admit, it’s very “first draft” but what else could it be but that? I look forward to finishing up so I can begin my 2nd draft and then let people read it. I can’t believe how night and day I feel as I write. Don’t get me wrong, I loved the last book, but I don’t think I was “in” love with it, not like this piece.

Isn’t it funny how attached we become and how disconnected at times? Writing is like anything, it can life you up or drag you down, the secret is figuring out what works and then running with it.

Happy days of writing ahead! I can’t wait to share what I come up with.

Back to writing!

 

 

 

Practice! Practice! Practice!

This is exactly what I look like when I sit down to work on some prose. Yes, this image is perfection. (and a lie.) I tried to find an image that was accurate, but couldn’t… (which I’m totally fine with.)

I began a new work in progress (WIP) this past week, after ditching my last “new” WIP a few days earlier. The one I used to ditch my last work all together, ok, not “ditch” but step back from and take a break in order to gain perspective. Sounds better when you put it like that… But I’m now excited for this new project, mostly because it is NOTHING like the last one(s) at all.

Whenever I begin a new project I like to take a minute to reflect on the mechanics of setting up a writing life – a reminder of what I need to do if I really want results. I found this one more recently than the old “what to do to have a spectacular writing career” lists I’ve looked at, and have to say I’m adopting this list as my own:

1. Write so many pages a day, no matter what—first draft or polished

2. Work through to the end as fast as possible

3. Revise this draft at least five more times

4. Read it aloud to someone else or to yourself

5. Print out all drafts and edit on paper, not on the computer screen

6. Check spelling and grammar carefully but also make sure key points make sense—that you are consistent throughout the book on key plot points, names, methods of murder, timelines

7. Follow standard manuscript format margins and double spacing

8. Save the final manuscript on a disk

9. Prepare a final outline of the entire book—to send along with the sample chapters

As you may have guessed from the “methods of murder” comment, I swiped this from a “How to write a mystery novel” post that can be read HERE, but the basis is the same for whatever genre you write. If you want to be successful at it,  you have to do it and do it often. You need to obsess about it and then you need to obsess about it all over again.

Writing is a passion, but it can be difficult at times. My motto is, and has always been – Never give up! Never surrender! And that means it’s time to stop playing around on here, and get to it! My goal is 1500 words a day. Can I do it? We shall see…

Passion and imaginary friends


Life can be interesting out there, but it really is so much more interesting inside my head. The places, the battles, the people and their baggage – a world of my very own where what I say goes, and what isn’t fun about that? It’s a vacation to a far off land or a new world never before seen with all the right/wrong things and all the best/worst people. Ah, writing is the breath in my lungs.

I sit, on days, for hours, pouring over the oddest little things until I find a source that never seems to leave me. The people, especially, haunt me at the oddest times. There are moments when I’m at the market and I see a piece of fruit that makes me think of one character, or maybe I’m people watching and I see another walk by. These characters, these people, burrow into my brain and my being until they are my newest best friends that I can not live without.

Has this happened to you? Passion for all your make-believe friends?

Alas, maybe it IS just me, but I’m okay with that, because never a moment will there be that I am all alone. Never a moment will there be that I can not fly to another world with them. Yes, that’s why the world inside my head is so wonderful, because of the passion, because of the drive and because of the dragons.

Seriously. They’re the bomb.

Sophie’s choice (of writing…)

I have spent the last 2 years working on the same WIP. I’ve written, rewritten, and rewritten some more. After that I took the 400+ page book and split the it into two, bringing it down the 50k-80k words, a respectable word count for a young adult novel, and after that it was rewritten again, but here I am, getting nowhere. Happy form letters, generic form letter – silence! No one wants it, no matter how much I love it.

I believe in the story, but I know that I need to rethink the direction and to do that properly it was take time. So, I finally made the decision to move on. I know it is for the best and as I rationalize why I was doing what I was doing it  left me with one question…

How do you know that it is time to let go of one piece  and start another?

I wish I could say I have an answer, but I don’t. I’m looking at it is like every other hard decision I’ve made in my life. I’m relying on my gut to tell me it’s time to move on, and to let go. I know that if I stay it will only be out of love (which I really do), but by doing that I’m risking running myself into the ground, and taking the story with me. I fear I will grow to hate this story I love, and I don’t want that.

While I dive into a new WIP filled with new ideas, characters, themes, a whole new world I find myself growing excited, but I do  hope that one day I’ll be able to return and fix things and get her where she needs to be.

That’s the problem with writing. Everything you create is a child of your imagination, and no one wants to leave their child behind.

When you start asking if it’s time to let things go, it probably is, but even with that knowledge it doesn’t make it less of heart wrenching choice. My very own personal Sophie’s choice…

It’s not karma, it’s just a process.

Everyone likes to remind me that J.K. Rowling received 12 rejections prior to finding an agent to represent her and (the now juggernaut) Harry Potter series. It has become one of those things I smile and nod through. I know the intentions are good, the people are being supportive and encouraging, which is sweet and wonderful. But the longer I write and querying, the less I  speak of my rejections. This silence make life easier, plus its a wonderful excuse to make brownies at 10 o’clock at night on a Tuesday.

But that doesn’t mean the rejection still don’t still. They do.

Above is an image of a rejection letter addressed to Andy Warhol, infamous artist and socialite. It is a letter like many others I have seen, read, and used to encourage myself on low days and my friends and family are right – one day I will find success. While the sane side of my brain understands and comprehends that it’s a lot of work, the emotional and artistic side is thrown into a tizzy of “woe is me” and “can’t they see my genius?” all of which morph into something I like to call the Karma Effect.

Obviously I’m being punished for some past indiscretion. Yes, that’s it. Blame the universe!

I’ve heard it all before: From “I must have done something wrong.” to “They don’t know what they’re talking about.” Massively bi-polar reactions to the same event, but I know it’s not karma and know they do know what they’re talking about. Maybe I’ll get more than 12 rejections (which is very, very, very, very common) and maybe I’ll have to write more than one book (which is also very, very, very common) but blaming the gods won’t get me any closer to the prize I want – only writing will.

In the end it is a process, like anything else, and you’re going to have to be willing to work REALLY hard to make it work. But the funny thing about passion and doing something you love, is that it never feels like work – it feels like love. That’s what it is, isn’t it?

It’s the process of expressing our love of writing. What are a few pesky rejection letters? They are the paving stones to the fabulous writing life you’ve wanted, allow them to lead the way – not block it.

Now… I have to go write.