Archive for the ‘Writing’ Category

Quick Tip: Simple Market Research

Monday, March 1st, 2010

I keep track of important information about novels I read on 3 x 5 cards, which double as bookmarks.  On one side of each card, I write the title, author, publisher, copyright date, number of pages/chapters and the type of novel. 

On the other side, I make notes about the story, POV, organization of chapters, etc.  I also record the name of any agent or editor mentioned by the author.  When I enter the information in my computer, I have a “personal” marketing guide to potential publishers for my novel.

Quick Tip: ‘Google’ Your Character

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

Putting a “face on your characters can make them easier to describe and write about. Some writers cut pictures from magazine or catalogs. You can also find pictures of people on the Internet. If your character is non-human, you can likely find a suitable image to represent him/her/it. 

Google is one of the most popular search engines, so much so that “Googling” has become synonymous with “searching the Internet.” Here’s how to “Google” your character:

On the main Google search page select “images”, then type your character’s name in the search bar. Review the results and select the picture that best reflects how you imagine your character. Print out two copies. Put one copy in the folder you’ve made for that character. Tape the second copy over your desk so you can see your character when you are writing about him or her.

You can also “Google” your setting by using a keyword such as castle, hillside, river, autumn trees, etc.

Pitch your story at MuseCon 2010

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

The 2009 Muse Online Writers Conference concluded two days ago and my head is still spinning from all the great workshops. There was a workshop on “how to” just about anything a writer would need to know about.  At least twelve publishers were also represented. And the seven-day event didn’t cost me a dime. No registration fee. No transportation costs. No hotel bill. :)

A first this year was “pitch sessions” with a number of reputable publishers. These were real-time individual chats and quite a few of them resulted in the author being asked to submit at least a partial manuscript.  Pretty impressive for any writers conference. The “pitch sessions” were so well received that conference coordinator Lea Schizas is already working to set them up again for MuseCon 2010.

The dates for next year’s conference are October 11-17, 2010. It’s essential that you register before the August 1, 2010 cut-off. You can register now by going here.

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Theme and Premise: What’s the difference?

Thursday, June 14th, 2007

A writer’s group that I belong to did an activity regarding premise. Each member posted the premise of their current WIP. It was no easy task for most of us. Our group leader cited a number of writers and gave us a detailed explanation of premise. Alas, I either had a blonde moment – or a senior one. Several of them. Strung together. For the life of me, I couldn’t get the concept of premise.

So I drudged up my trusty dictionary and various books on the writing craft, looking for something to help me “get it.” Here’s what I came up with.

Theme and premise, while closely related, are not the same. Let’s look at definitions from The American Heritage Dictionary:

Theme: an implicit or recurrent idea

Premise:  a propositiion on which an argument is based or from which a conclusion is drawn.

In fiction, theme is generally defined as a universal concept that readers identify with. In No More Rejections: 50 Secrets to Writing a Manuscript That Sells, author and former literary agenty Alice Orr provides a generic list of some dramatic themes:

  • Betrayal
  • Deceit
  • Guilt
  • Loss
  • Obsession
  • Revenge
  • Envy
  • Sacrifice
  • Greed
  • Privation
  • Cruelty
  • Duty
  • Heroism
  • Disgrace
  • Love
  • Cowardice
  • Hatred
  • Redemption

Author  and literary agent Donald Maass says novels are moral, and reader gravitate to novels that validate their values. He says that within the broad dramatic themes lie some explames of moral universal themes:

  • Crime doesn’t pay
  • Love conquers all
  • Beauty is in the eye of the beholder
  • Two wrongs don’t make a right
  • Change is inevitable
  • Hope springs eternal
  • Money is the root of all evil

Orr cautions that approaching your story “from the head” makes it difficult to find the emotional truth. She says theme should emerge from story. So if you don’t have an identifiable theme when you start your novel, don’t worry about it. It’s okay to have only the idea that you want to write a “revenge” story or a “love” story when you first begin thinking about your novel.

Premise, on the other hand, is an argument – a specific point of view – that the writer sets out to “prove.” In the novel, the writer determines a “truth” and sets out to convince the reader using various devices, including setting and actions/attitudes of the characters. Premise isn’t necessarily moral, but it is created from the writer’s passion, something the writer feels needs to be said about something.

For instance, let’s say the universal theme is “love conquers all.”  The writer might put forth the argument that “premarital sex leads to divorce.” The premise in this case appears to challenge the validity of the theme. Which can make for some very interesting conflicts for the characters.

Premise arises out of your story idea. It is a product of “what-iffing.” In Writing the Breakout Novel, Maass lists the key components of a “breakout” premise:

  1. Plausibility.
  2. Inherent conflict.
  3. Originality.
  4. Gut emotional appeal.

Author James N. Frey explains premise this way in How to Write A Damn Good Novel: “The premise of a story is simply a statement of what happens to the characters as a result of the core conflict of the story.”

So let’s say you’re writing a science fiction novel with the broad theme of “duty.” And in the course of “what-iffing” you decide that your story will be about an astronaut who is extraordinarily devoted to his job. But you want a twist to creat conflict. Your story premise might be: “Going into space leads to annihilation by aliens.” The astronaut determined to do his duty – consequences and conflicts arising from that determination put into action – resulting in the ultimate disaster for both the individual and the planet. That might not be a “breakout” premise, but you get the idea.

Think of premise as a one-line summary of precisely what you, the writer, are saying in your novel.

Doing or believing X leads to Y

No explanations of the who or why; save the details for your novel.  

Giving back by judging a novel writing contest

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

I’m busy reviewing entries in a novel writing contest.  It’s a privilege to be able to give back some of what I’ve learned about writing over the years. I tend to write more out of gut instinct regarding what works and what doesn’t, so providing feedback challenges me to be clear and specific. Writers often enter contests to get feedback on their work, and with the hefty price tag of $25 per entry in many cases, they have a right to expect a bit more than “This doesn’t work.”  There needs to be a “because.”  We preach about “show not tell” in writing a novel, but that can also apply to giving feedback in contests.  At least that my two cents. 

Let’s step outside

Thursday, March 8th, 2007

You know that saying “You can’t see the forest for the trees”? It applies to writing. Sometimes (well, in my case, maybe a lot of times)we writers think we know how to do something and it turns out that we just thought we knew what we were doing. LOL

Case in point: I rewrote a scene from one of my WIPs and cut it down considerably. It was the Heroine/Hero’s first meeting so I bobbed and weaved from her POV to his and back again. Hey, that’s supposed to be a romance genre technique, right? I successfully stayed in each character’s POV, but with my tunnel vision I missed the big picture until it was pointed out by another writer.

My scene had a “ping-pong match” feel to it because I wasn’t staying in one character’s POV long enough. A paragraph for her, two for him, three for her, another one for him. I wasn’t letting the poor reader have enough time with either character to get to know him/her. Which will translate to the reader not being able to bond, identify with, and care about those characters. My bad.

The lesson in this is to periodically step outside your own view of your work and welcome feedback from other writers.

Too much reading and not much writing

Sunday, February 25th, 2007

Writers are encouraged to be voracious readers, but I don’t think the original intent of that advice was to read email lists.  I’m subscribed to 22 email lists (as of today) and several of those lists generate over 50 messages per day. Now who has time—really—to read all that chatter?

 The key thing should be to evaluate each list and determine it’s “cost-benefit” rating.  

  • How will it benefit my writing craft?
  • How will it benefit my writing career?
  • Is it a resource that I need for my current WIP? Can I find the information elsewhere?

Just answering those questions makes going no mail an easy decision on more than half of my lists.  I can even put my resource lists on no mail until I actually need to ask questions or do research. (Getting organized for research is grist for another post.) That just leaves the announcement lists (sporadic posts), and my RWA chapter lists.  Hurrah!! There’s hope for me yet.

Thoughts on theme

Wednesday, February 7th, 2007

I tend to write with an eye toward an underlying theme of redemption. I don’t deliberately set out to do that; it just seems to develop that way when I begin creating my characters. Somehow each character’s “wound” requires some form of redemption.  Heaven help me not to analyze it! Any time I start analyzing what I’m writing or why I’m writing it…well, let’s just say that the work is soon abandoned. I never hear “why are you doing that?” as anything other than a demand for explanation and justification. LOL

For a helpful article on theme and premise, check out Vicki Hinze’s writers library. That woman is amazing!

Write in the here and now

Monday, January 22nd, 2007

I can’t believe how much time I’ve spent writing backstory, all the while thinking I was writing my novel.  Ya’ll know what backstory is: all those fascinating details about what happened to your characters before the story starts, how they got to be who they are and where they are at the time of the story’s opening.  Yes, yes, that is all very important information that you, the writer, needs to know. 

However, the reader doesn’t give a hunting dog’s left rear paw about it. The reader wants the story to start in the here and now.  Don’t tell me about the Hero’s tragic childhood, moans Reader, show me the kind of trouble he’s in right now.  Don’t bore the reader with details of the long train ride to Where It Happens; set her down right smack in the middle of T-R-O-U-B-L-E.  As you flesh out the story, subtly add information that will help the reader understand the character’s fears and motivations. 

Don’t stop writing backstory for your characters. The writer needs to know far more about the characters than the reader does. Just be aware that backstory is not story. Story is what is happening to the characters in the here and now of your novel.

Hearing voices

Sunday, January 14th, 2007

Making characters distinctly different from each other is not always easy, especially when you are writing from the POV of several characters. I just finished a novel by one of my favorite authors and throughout the entire book I was very conscious of how each character “sounded” in my head.  Each character seemed to have the same type of smart-alecky, sarcastic self-talk, and also used the same swear words. Perhaps it was just me – I love smart-mouthed characters like Bruce Willis in the “Die Hard” movies.  Or maybe after writing a number of books with the same characters, the author herself can no longer “hear” distinct voices.

In any case, it was a reminder for me to pay attention to not only dialogue, but to my characters’ internal attitudes, their self-talk, when I’m writing from deep POV.  I think we tend to think of the spoken word when we write character dialogue, but I’m learning dialogue is much richer than that. Adding action tags, rather than “he said”, paints a more dramatic picture and conveys more about the character. The writer can show nervousness, for instance, by having a character twist a strand of their hair or drum their fingers on a table. (Yes, cliches, but they work!). The dialogue itself might appear mundane, but the actions belie the words.