January 9, 2016

Face Your Fears!


Issue #17 October 2015

Launching Your Book

Last year I entered my novel, A Long Winter’s Night, in the 22nd Annual Writer’s Digest Self-Published Book Awards. I was discouraged to not even receive an honorable mention, however, I did receive many suggestions for improvements and encouraging notes about my skills and future as a writer. So, during the summer, I used those suggestions to edit and rewrite my novel. My sisters/editors, God bless them, told me that those changes have made an incredible difference in the entire story. With my confidence restored, I took an online workshop about launching your book with Kimberley Grabas of Your Writer Platform and Joel Friedlander of The Book Designer. They later sent out a fabulous and informative Book Launch Toolkit that included several blank worksheets and an instruction booklet. What hit me in the instructions is the importance of have an established writer’s platform whether you self-publish or go through traditional publishers and agents. Apparently, you can have a good book launch without a writer’s platform. However, if you want to truly “make it” as an author, you HAVE to have that platform in place.
I’ve decided to try to publish my trilogy via an agent, who will have greater knowledge than me about the ins and outs of writing contracts. So I took a step back and made a new TO-DO list, which started with writing the synopsis and sending it out to agents. Cold sweat immediately popped out all over my body and my mind went blank.

Synopsis Terrors

I think we can agree that we all love writing. It’s the one thing that everyone reading this blog has in common. We either currently write our hearts out, trying to publish our work, or we want to take all those pent up emotions and scribble them across the screen. It’s the whole reason we’ve gone to the trouble to set and monitor our goals, which I hope you’ve mastered. Whether you’ve already completed that first novel using the marvelous tool of self-discipline or you’re just beginning it, we all have to face the terror of writing a synopsis for our book. Agents need them. Publishers want them. Writers shutter at the thought of writing them. However, just as writing flash fiction is excellent practice for compressing our writing, so condensing our book to a one page synopsis is an excellent way to learn how to write the back blub for your book. So take three deep, even breaths, then exhale, because here we go!
First of all, don’t try to jump into writing your synopsis without first planning your route. That means research and read about HOW to create a synopsis. There are literally thousands of suggestion out there, so you need to be careful to select credible sources.
My search took me to two good sources:  Jane Friedman and Glen C. Strathy. Jane Friedman impressed me because, not only has she been in the publishing industry for 15 years, but she also has “expertise in digital media and the future of authorship.” Plus she’s a guest speaker at book fairs and conferences around the world. When I read Glen’s profile, I learned that he is already an accomplished freelance business writer. He also has several awards for independent publishing and on for being a book reviewer. So I chose Jane and Glen’s as references for two reason: 1) for their experience and 2) for their readability.
Now I had to take the second step: read and study what they had to say about the synopsis. Jane’s article is specifically about “How to Write a Synopsis” and it referenced Glen’s article named “How to Write a Book Now.” The specific reference was about the eight basic plot element, which I thought I knew. However, I was surprised by the new terminology in Glen’s article (i.e. story goal instead of plot, consequences if the goal isn’t reached and requirements to achieve the goal). Glen looks at a story from a more practical standpoint or actual motivation for the characters. While Jane’s article is clean and to the point with bulleted items for what to include and what mistakes to delete.
The third step is obviously to practice writing the synopsis according to their instructions. Don’t be discouraged if you don’t get it right the first time. My first attempt resulted in an overly detailed 26-page synopsis. Unusable, of course. My second attempt was better. It turned out to be four pages. Still too long. Now I need to go back to the articles, reread and actually use Glen’s suggestion of using 5” by 8” cards to organize the eight elements of fiction. I’ll let you know how that turns out. The main point is the old “never give up, never surrender.” The only real reason to fail is if you quit trying. Which reminds me of a story my mother-in-law told me. Ma is a terrific artist who used to give private art lessons when her children were young. Apparently, a young woman came to her wanting to learn how to do fashion drawing for newspapers and magazines. After several lessons, Ma was saddened to see that woman had no talent for drawing. She tried to gently dissuade the young woman from a goal that seemed unattainable. However, the young woman was determined. She practiced continuously, continued her lessons with Ma, and studied the techniques of the current fashion illustrators. I shouldn’t have to tell you the ending of this story, but I will. The young women became a fashion illustrator for the Chicago Tribune. Does this exemplify our adapted motto or what? So even during those inevitable times of discouragement, remember to “never give up, never surrender.”

Writing Challenge #16: Dialogue Delight

Last quarter, I challenged you to enter the Bartleby Snopes Contest, which was writing a story composed entirely of dialogue WITHOUT using “he said/she said” tags we’re used to using. I hope some of you accepted that challenge. Even though it sounded like a lot of fun, I was too tied up with other writing to do it. Let’s hope we all do better with the next challenge.

Writing Challenge #17: Write From What You Know

We have a couple of options for this writing challenge. Notice in our list below that October 15, 2015 is the deadline to submit a story for the RROFIHE TROPHY. You could take something from personal experience and fictionalize it. We also have the topics for CHICKEN SOUP for the remainder of the year. The next deadline is October 30, 2015. These are virtually flash fiction pieces, so give it a shot. Remember to use the plot graph to keep yourself on track.

Still haven’t gotten my author website back, so we’re taking a sabbatical from our writers’ group, Contributors’ Corner, until further notice. But don’t let that stop you from writing!

If you’re not receiving your copy of The Prodigal Writer, please contact me. Or if you’d like to start receiving copies of our newsletter, you can contact me, too. Just click my name below to send an email.

Until next quarter, live well, love fully and write with all your heart!





Venues for Writing

I still don’t have gotten this list on Google Docs yet. Please accept my apology.


Contests

If you still aren’t receiving Hope Clark’s Funds for Writers, here are upcoming opportunities:

RROFIHE TROPHY
Genre: Literary Fiction
Word Count: 3,500 to 5,000
Compensation: $500, trophy, announcement and publication on anderbo.com
Deadline: October 15, 2015
Special Instructions: story previously unpublished and author previously unpublished on Anderbol; email submissions only. Please read their instructions.


Magazines

CHICKEN SOUP            
Genre: Real Stories that are Uplifting
Word Count: 1,200 or less
Compensation: $200
Deadlines:
October 30, 2015:
The Joy of Less
Alzheimer’s and Dementias Family Caregiving
November 30, 2015:
Angels and Miracles
Military Families
The Spirit of America
AE SCIFI
Genre: Science Fiction
Word Count:  500-3,000
Compensation: $0.07 per word
Deadline:
Special Instructions:  E-mail submissions only; Subject Line:  “INT Sub: ‘Story Title’ (word count, words); Cover Letter; Include your name, byline (if different); Brief Bio (50 words)

AE welcomes submissions from both established and emerging authors. We publish exclusively science fiction, though our interpretation of the genre can be quite inclusive. We are not soliciting poetry or screenplays at this time.

THE THREEPENNY REVIEW
Genre:
Critical Article
Stories or Memoirs
Table Talk
Poetry
Word Count:
1,200-2,500
4,000 or less
1,000
100 lines or less
Compensation:
$400
$400
$200
$200
Deadline:
Open Reading January through June
NOTE:
No submissions are read or accepted between July and December.
No simultaneous submissions. No previously published submissions.
Submit ONLY one story or article or five poems.
Responds within two months.

The Threepenny Review is a quarterly, international magazine which buys first serial rights in our print and digital editions, and the copyright then reverts to the author immediately upon publication.




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