Archive for the 'writer’s resources' Category



25
Jul
07

There’s intimate and then there’s intimate

I got the following e-mail from Deatri King-Bey, one of the hard-working women putting togther the Slam Jam in Chicago.

Romance Slam Jam 2008 Conference registration is OPEN!

Come mix and mingle with your favorite authors of Black romance.

The readers said they’d like additional opportunities to hang out with their favorite authors of Black romance and the committee heard you. At RSJ 2008, we are adding Intimate Sessions with the author of the hour.

INTIMATE SESSIONS
Intimate Sessions are your opportunity to have a more personal setting to hang out with your favorite author(s). These sessions will be conducted in a Presidential Suite and light hors d’oeuvre will be served. Intimate Sessions are limited to ten attendees for each author of the hour.

We are doing first come first serve with the Intimate Sessions for people who have registered for the conference. So register early. To give as many people as possible the chance to attend an Intimate Session, we can only allow one Intimate Session per attendee until the slots are full.

Intimate Session Authors:
Alice Wootson, AlTonya Washington, Beverly Jenkins, Deirdre Savoy, Donna Hill, Evelyn Palfrey, Gloria Mallette, Gwyneth Bolton, Gwynne Forster, Kim Louise, Marilyn Tyner, Mary B. Morrison, Seressia Glass, Shelia Goss, Wayne Jordan

See you at Romance Slam Jam 2008!

Spread the word!

If you haven’t been before, please consider attending.

25
Jul
07

Just What the Editor Ordered


For those interested in the craft (writing not witch), Scarletta Press is coming out with the New Writer’s Handbook 2007. The volume is edited by Phillip Martin with a preface by Erica Jong. I found this out by tooling over to Paperback Writer’s blog. As one of the contributors, she’s privy to promo for the new volume which reads like this:

The New Writer’s Handbook 2007 is the inaugural edition of a new annual collection of articles to refresh and upgrade any writer’s skills, with advice on craft and career development. It offers an eclectic mix of expert how-tos, short pieces on creativity, marketing, and professional issues, and other insights on being a successful writer today.

Sound like something you can use? To quote Billy Crystal, (read to yourself in a gruff voice) I knew that you could.

13
Jul
07

Everbody Plays the Fool Sometimes . . .


The title refers not only to one of my favorite songs but the name of the proposal I’m currently working on. The operative word here is sometime, not every time. You’ve got to have a few wits in your head and a few brain cells on the ball.

Pity poor RWA then, that always seems to be putting it’s foot in its own mouth. This time–the new definition of what constitutes a vanity publisher. According to Booksquare:

. . .publishers whose primary means of offering books for sale is through a publisher-generated Web site;

Booksquare is quoting here and I’m not sure where from, but all I can say is Huh?

That automatically exes out all e-publishers who, shock of shocks, sell their books from their sites. Some authors from some of these houses earn more than houses publishing paper and ink books. Yet somehow e-publishers are vanity presses? Go figure.

Why can’t RWA get its head out of the e-sand and realize that the changes they are a comin’? It’s a new millennium with new media, new forms of delivery, perhaps new kinds of content. Anytime you can have reading material on your phone, it’s time to upgrade the level of technological and innovative savvy of an organization, not retreat to the Stone Age of intolerance.

Unfortunately for romance writers it seems that RWA leadership would rather see the organization remain a dinosaur rather than embrace the new days to come.

09
Jul
07

Blog Me

Still a little too bummed to do much creative writing, so I’ve been around the ‘net Martha, reading what other folks have to say.

I like what Dara Girard writes about readers at Access Romance.

Elizabeth Mahon posits that Mercury in Retrograde is kicking her ass. Hey, girl, mine, too. Like Liz, I’m a Scorpio. Sting, sting.

Dear Author has an interview with agent Jane Dystel of Dystel and Goderich.

And one final gruesome stop over at Murderati led me to find out how much my cadaver would be worth. Thanks for the quiz, Pari, but is $4,600 good or not?

$4605.00The Cadaver Calculator – Find out how much your body is worth.

How much $ would you get?

04
May
07

Tony and Tina Get Harried

Ah, the romance community. We can never go too long before some flapdoodle over something or other has us all abuzz. Let’s start with RT. My good friend Gwynne Forster came back from the convention (where she won a Lifetime Achievement award from the magazine) a bit disgruntled by the book signing portion of the event. Wasn’t there, but can’t say I blame her, especially since another sister author Seressia Glass remarks on the same phenomenon.

Then there’s the business over on the-blog-that-shall-not-be-named over what Kathryn Falk of RT may or may not have said. Frankly, I couldn’t wade through all that stuff. Or the speculation on various blogs. My personal take is that Ms. Falk has been around long enough and done enough for this industry that if she (or even someone pretending to be her) wants to ramble on a bit, so what? To me, it’s like telling your beloved yet longwinded aunt to shut up at the dinner table. The urge might be there sometimes, but in my family at least, such behavior is likely to get you smacked.

But the wackiest contretemps of the week has to go to Tony Catanzaro and Smartfemalepersons (I’m trimming those three words from my vocabulary). It seems Tony, whose abilicious self is featured on Sexy Beast II took exception to some (maybenotso) good-natured ribbing from the femalepersonery over some less than fortunate remarks he made on an infomercial. It seems neither he, nor his wife Tina appreciated the funnin’ and came back with a few cute quips of their own–something about throwing people into trunks and carting them off to nefarious places.

Well, that is if you actually believe that the Tony and Tina posting on SFP from an IP in Kentucky are the same Tony and Tina that purportedly live in New York. . .

Which brings me to what I find funniest about this mess. When you live in the Big Apple, the names Tony and Tina in conjunction conjure up the off-Broadway show that’s about a couple and their wedding. I saw this show during a blizzard a few years back where we had to walk–with the “bridal party” –in the snow from the crazy wedding ceremony to the even more bizarre reception where I happened to stumble on the cast doing ersatz cocaine in the ladies room. How same would you be if you had to get married every night (twice on Sundays)? Maybe we should all cut each other a little slack.

29
Apr
07

Maybe it’s just me, but . . .

Okay, it’s been a little while since I had to do an agent search and even longer than that since I was a new author with no clue just a sase sending out my manuscript, but . . . it never occurred to me that writer’s getting a rejection would receive a letter back without their name on it. Huh? you say. I know, I don’t think that made sense exactly, so I’ll be specific.

The other day, an aspiring writer friend of mine got back her first two rejections from agents–one was via e-mail and one a regular snail mail letter. The snail mail letter was addressed to Dear Author.

My first thought was, you’ve got to be kidding me. As much trouble as writers go through to get the agent’s name right, to send only what the agent wants to see how he or she wants to see it, don’t they deserve better than to have their work declined by saying basically “hey you, no thanks”? Harsh!

I know agents are busy and must devote their time to the clients whose work actually makes money for them. I not suggesting the abolition of the form letter, but, Jeez, couldn’t there be a spot to scrawl the authors name on the top of the page, or a mail merge thingie whereby a name could be easily inserted or how about leaving off the salutation entirely?

Such is the life of a writer, I suppose. As my grandmother would say, let that be the worst thing that happens to you. I wish you the same.

20
Apr
07

Writing Workshop Reminder

Time is winding down for registration, so I thought I’d give you a reminder buzz. Here’s the full skinny on the writing course:

Spring into Writing Workshop is now accepting students!!!

National bestselling, award winning author Deirdre Savoy will be facilitating this month-long workshop set to begin the week of April 30th. This workshop is designed to cover writing basics with an eye to finishing/revising that one of a kind novel:

Course syllabus:

April 30: Theme, premise and conflict: The basics of novel structure.
May 7: Characterization and plot: cast your novel/plan your story.
May 14: Getting over the hump: how to keep tension and drama building throughout your story.
May 21: Finishing up: tying up loose ends/finding the just-right ending.

Each week, a lecture and assignment will be posted. Completion and posting of assigned work for peer review is not mandatory but advised if students want to get the most from the class.

Who should take this course:

–first time authors just getting started
–writers close to completing that first novel
–any author interested in taking their writing to new levels

How to register: Apply for group membership here. You will receive a student questionnaire and told how to make payment. Once tuition is received, you will be added to the group.

Tuition: $40. for members/$50 for non-members (plus processing fee of $2.00).

Hope to see you in class!!!

19
Apr
07

. . . and what I forgot

I must be getting old. Every once in a while I do a google of my name just to see if it has started turning up at porno sites again (I kid you not, thanks to an article on my website about writing sizzling love scenes). I stumbled onto the website, which has been redone in my fave color (I’ll give you three hints and two don’t count). There I found an article I’d written for the magazine that I didn’t even remember. Re-reading it I thought, damn I’m good. Hope you will too. Let me know if you check it out.

02
Apr
07

Spring into Writing Workshop is now accepting students!!!

Yes, I, national bestselling, award winning author Deirdre Savoy will be facilitating this month-long workshop set to begin the week of April 30th. This workshop is designed to cover writing basics with an eye to finishing/revising that one of a kind novel. I call this a thematic workshop, one designed to see if all your story elements mesh. For a preview go here.

Course syllabus:

April 30: Theme, premise and conflict: The basics of novel structure.

May 7: Characterization and plot: cast your novel/plan your story.

May 14: Getting over the hump: how to keep tension and drama building throughout your story.

May 21: Finishing up: tying up loose ends/finding the just-right ending.

Each week, a lecture and assignment will be posted. Completion and posting of assigned work for peer review is not mandatory but advised if students want to get the most from the class.

Who should take this course:
–first time authors just getting started
–writers close to completing that first novel
–any author interested in taking their writing to new levels

How to register:

Apply for group membership here. You will receive a student questionnaire and told how to make payment. Once tuition is received, you will be added to the group.

Tuition:
$40. for members/$50 for non-members (plus processing fee of $2.00).

BONUS: FREE SYNOPSIS CRITIQUE FOR THE FIRST FIVE STUDENTS TO COMPLETE REGISTRATION!!!

Hope to see you in class!

19
Feb
07

Stake it! (No, this isn’t about Will and Grace)

I found this article floating around the net and found it valuable. I’m not sure where it started out, but I do give attribution, so what the hay. If you find the information valuable, please check out the author’s website and find out what other goodies she might have over there.

Ten Tips For Raising the Stakes in Your Fiction

Dr. Maxine Thompson
http://www.maxinethompson.com
http://www.maxineshow.com

_____

When I work with new writers as a literary coach or a story editor, I find that their stories often lack tension. In real life, we don’t care fo rtension, but in fiction, it is necessary to keep the reader turning pages. As the first reader, if the story doesn’t hold my interest, how will it hold the general public’s interest? New fiction writers’ stories tend to ramble on for page after page with little action taking place. So I often ask myself, how can the writer raise the stakes for this character? These are just some of the ideas I came up with as a way to raise the stakes and give your characters seemingly insurmountable obstacles.

Give your character’s quirks, if you want to raise the stakes in your
fiction. Have your character be the outsider, at odds with his environment and a threat, where people isolate or attack him, such as in Toni Morrison’s Beloved. After escaping from slavery, in an act of desperation, Sethe slashed her baby’s throat, rather than see the child go back to bondage. Although later, she was released from jail, the community threw up an implacable wall of scorn and disgust towards Sethe and her surviving children. In the end, though, Sethe realizes her need for community.

Janie, the protagonist, in Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, is also an outsider. She is ostracized because she married a younger man. Often, I feel like an outsider and it struck me. Most writing is penned by artists who feel like outsiders. Women of other races have felt same sense of being different, judging from the misfits in Carson McCullers’ novel, The Heart is a Lonely Hunter.

As an African American woman, I can identify with feeling like an outsider. I know how it feels to be on the fringes of society. I know the double whammy scourge of both racism and sexism.

Here are ten more tips for raising the stakes in your fiction. This will produce both suspense and tension, which will compel your reader to stay up all night reading your book.

1. Put your character on the edge. The best fiction, films, and plays do this. (Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Who’s Afraid of the Virginia Woolf?, Set It Off.)

2. Set a timetable. The characters only have one week or one day to save their kidnapped child’s life in exchange for a million dollar ransom.

3. Put danger of loss of some kind in the character’s life. Example: One student opened her novel with a child twirling in the mirror. I said change the point of view and let the mother wake up and not find her child in bed. That definitely would raise the stakes.

4. Life is hard. Show it, but in the end, be kind to your characters.

5. Love all your characters, the good, the bad, the ugly. This shows in the respect you give a character.

6. Turn the juice up on your characters, like in the movie, Forrest Gump, (starring Tom Hanks.) I loved the scene where Forrest’s friend, Lt. Dan (played by actor Gary Sinese), Vietnam vet/amputee, climbed up high on their boat’s sail mast, lightning and thunder swirling about him. He cursed God for how he had lost his legs in Vietnam, and to paraphrase, he asked God, “Is that all you got? Give me more.” (Sinese’s sensitive portrayal of a once invincible soldier reduced to a pathetic self-pitying specter of his former strength brought him the Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor.)

Likewise, go for the jugular vein in your characters. Let it rip. Now here is the paradox. Be kind in the end, yet at the same time, you should not resolve the character’s problems for them. Allow the characters to solve their own problems. It is all right if your story has an unhappy ending. But don’t be too kind to the characters along the way, when it comes to piling on the complications and problems. That means you’ve identified too closely with them.

7. If your character has cancer, double this whammy up by having her husband leave her, after she has her breast removed.

8. Sandbag the main character when he’s down, and paint him up into a corner, where there doesn’t appear to be any way out.

9. Use secrets to up the ante. A ghost, by definition, is something which haunts. When people have family secrets they are like ghosts. Writers can’t mine family secrets enough for story ideas, and I do this in both of my novels, The Ebony Tree and No Pockets in a Shroud. A family can be very clannish and protective of its secrets. But you know what? Every family has secrets. Every family is somewhat dysfunctional. Another secret could be that your character hit, possibly killed a person or a child, in a hit-and-run car accident and never reported it. This will haunt the person’s conscience.

10. Have your character have to choose between two negative outcomes. Critical choice is important in a work of fiction. (Should you pull the plug on a child in a coma, or let the child live on indefinitely with no quality of life?)

Dr. Maxine E. Thompson is the owner of Black Butterfly Press, Maxine Thompson’s Literary Services, Thompson Literary Agency and www.maxineshow.com. She hosts Internet radio shows on www.artisfirst.com and on www.maxineshow.com. She hosted on Voiceamerica.com from 3/02 to 12/06 and is currently taking a break. She is the author of eight titles, The EbonyTree, No Pockets in a Shroud, A Place Called Home, The Hush Hush Secrets of Writing Fiction That Sells, How to Publish, Market and Promote your Book Via Ebook Publishing, The Hush Hush Secrets of How To Create a Life You Love, Anthology, SECRET LOVERS, (with novella, Second Chances,) and Summer of Salvation. SECRET LOVERS made the Black Expression’s Book Club Bestselling list on 7-8-06 (after a 6-6-06 release date.)A new anthology, All in the Family, (Summer of Salvation) is due out in April 2007l Another new anthology, Never Knew Love Like This Before,(her novella, Katrina Blues,) is due out in June 2007.





Get into your most comfortable reading chair, take off your shoes, turn off the phone and let Ms. Savoy's incredible talent take you away. --Debra Ross, Romance in Color

A skewed sense of humor has kept me sane through 10+ years of teaching and almost as many writing. I invite you to come in and look around. Leave a comment if you like. My goal is to leave you with a smile on your face and a few new thoughts to mull over. If you like the blog, please tell your friends. If not, tell your enemies.

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