Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Balancing Public and Private Space: Rebecca West Part 2

After surveying several pieces of West's work, I am struck by her outspoken views on women, men and society. They seem to point to the struggle of women having lives outside of the home and the double standard that often dictates the station a woman will have in her community. 

These themes are still relevant today and resonate with women who, even in today's world are fighting for fair wages, the right to vote, securing rights to their own bodies and extending themselves beyond the roles of wife and mother. 

As I pondered her words, her construction of plot, the layout of her paragraphs and the formation of her sentences, it was impossible not to ask the question: Have we, and women, in particular, made significant progress in the struggle to merge our private and public spaces? This question seemed to present itself over and over again as I read her work. This repeated theme in her fiction and even in reviews she wrote of other literature was often a struggle to answer this very question. 

The following quotes are from West's The Judge. 

 But the eastern sky was inflamed with such a livid scarlet dawn as she had never seen before, and the full tide was milk streaked with blood, and the sails of the barges that rode there were as rags that had been used to staunch wounds.

Words: Through out the book Maude finds comfort in looking out at the sea, but this particular day, one in which she endured the abuse of others with name calling and stone throwing, she finds no comfort. West uses jolting descriptive words to convey Maude's internal pain from ridicule.

     "Why didn't you tell me in your letters how beautiful she was?" she demanded.
     He answered mildly, "Didn't I?"
     "No, you didn't," she told him curtly. "You said you said you thought her pretty. Thought her pretty, indeed, with that hair and that wonderful Scotch little face!"
     She caught her breath in irritation at the expression on his face, the uneasy movement from side to side of his eyes which warred with the smile on his lips. Why, when he thought of his love, need he have an air as if he listened to two voices and was distressed by the effort to follow their diverse musics?

Sentences: West's sentences are made up of words and phrases that have clarity, cadence and important information about her characters. If I were to remove a phrase, the meaning wouldn't be the same. 

      In this passage, Maude, Harry's mother is faced with the fact that her treatment toward her son has left him conflicted. She spent his life playing the victim of a harsh male world, creating an unnatural connection between them. His need to protect his mother and meet all her needs, has tied him up emotionally to the point he feels disloyal if he loves another. 

    See how that one sentence packs an emotional punch; the way Maude can see, in the movement of Harry's eyes and the false smile on his lips, the internal war she is responsible for. 

Paragraphs:  With the advent of digital books, I'm finding it difficult to see patterns and wonder if how we write will evolve also. Usually breaks in paragraphs are very individual to writers. 

     In the Judge, which I read as a digital version, I often felt that a paragraph should have been divided differently. When I listened along on my Audible.com version, I could tell that the reader often paused mid-paragraph. When I compared to the digital version, I could see clearly why the reader felt the need for a pause since the subject changed. 

     I would need to compare an original version to be sure, but my feeling is West had a tendency to write long sentences and large paragraphs. Which surprises me because understanding West often requires one to read between the lines. A rhetorical pause is often indicated by spacing, as is pace. 

The Evolution of White Space

     Are our paragraphs changing as digital becomes more prevalent? Will writers need to adapt to this change by inventing new conventions to create meaning and emphasis? Will the function of white space in literature change or become obsolete? 

When looking at books from the previous century, many of them appear dense compared to our book designs of the last century. White space serves an important function in poetry and literature and the question is: Will it remain important?  

 Photo: Bloomberg News
“The modern world has far too little understanding of the art of keeping young. Its notion of progress has been to pile one thing on top of another, without caring if each thing was crushed in turn, People forgot that the human soul can enjoy a thing most when there is time to think about it and be thankful for it. And by crowding things together they lost the sense of surprise; and surprise is the
 secret of joy.” —G.K. Chesterton

What does this tell us about white space? Are we losing our white spaces? 

Friday, November 22, 2013

Author Interview: Dorine White


About The Book: Ordinary tween life turns upside down when Ancient Egypt intrudes on modern middle school life. Twelve year old Sara Guadalupe Bogus reads about adventures, but unexpectedly is drawn into one when a mystical emerald ring that once belonged to Cleopatra becomes stuck on her finger.A series of burglaries spook Sara’s small Ohio hometown. Concluding that the root of all the crimes is the emerald ring, Sara realizes it’s up to her and her friends, Heidi and African exchange student Kainu, to save the town and protect Cleopatra’s legacy. Filled with magic, the ring thrusts Sara into a world filled with nightmares, allows her to shape shift into an Egyptian cat and battle assassins.

Today Dorine White is here for her blog tour for her debut middle grade fantasy, The Emerald Ring.

1) Why do you write for children? I like children's books because they are so full of whimsy. Children are at an age where they can imagine anything is real. I am able to weave in great fantasy and unlikely adventures into my stories.


2) Tell us a little bit about yourself and how you became a writer. Well, I am a stay at home mom of 6 awesome kids. The oldest is a senior and the youngest is in pre-school. I have always loved writing and was the editor-in-chief of my high school newspaper. Writing books just seemed to come naturally and it was something that I didn't mind spending time on. Of course, it is a little hard to find time to write, so I tend to do it in spurts.

3) What was the inspiration for The Emerald Ring? My love of culture and fantasy. I studied Humanities in college and like to mix fun history with adventure.

4) Tell us about your process. I'm one of those weird writers who doesn't write everyday. I think it's adult ADD or something lol. I write in spurts, filling up pages and then setting it aside for awhile.

5) What does a typical writing day look like? I have no typical writing day. It's mostly finding time at night after the kids have done their homework.

6) Where is your favorite place to write? I have a desktop in the living room. It's easiest for me to write there so that I can keep an eye on the kids at the same time.

7) What did or do you find most challenging in creating the story and/or getting it published? What do you wish you would have known? The most challenging thing is the amount of time it takes to get published. It took me over 8 years.

8) What is the best writing advice you have ever received? Write what you love.

9) Are you working on a new project? Can you tell us about it? Yes, I am working on a YA fantasy novel that involves an evil tyrant and his flesh eating griffin.

10) What advice would you give others that write for children? Read! I find that people sometimes try to write for children, but rarely ever read the children's books that are out there. Read what you write.
Connect with Dorine: 

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

A Pen Of Strength

Women Writer Posts Button photo 777eba51-6f1f-4edb-adf5-d33eadee465e_zps537b27a3.jpg
This is the first of a series of posts on women writers. As a woman writer, I labor, as do most who write, to define my place in the world. Part of that journey involves finding one's truth, one's voice. After pouring over classic literature, the majority of whom are white men, I have come to the conclusion that my study has been terribly limited. This narrow focus, I believe, has filled my mind with the words of men, as beautiful and precise as they may be, they do not reflect the female sensitivities and have served to cloak my voice. The hope is this focused study of women writers will help me dig below the chatter and find a more authentic voice. I invite you to join my journey and hope you'll join the conversation.  

E. O. Hoppe/The Mansell Collection
This month I've been reading Rebecca West, a London-born journalist, reviewer, essayist and novelist. Her work spanned over almost seventy years. Of her work George Bernard Shaw said, "Rebecca West could handle a pen as brilliantly as ever I could and much more savagely." West was already a feminist at seventeen and participated actively in the suffrage movement. By the time she reached her twenties she was writing for several well known publications, including the New Yorker.

"I myself have never been able to find out what feminism is; I only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a doormat or a prostitute." —West

I can't help but think that this is what Shaw had in mind when he characterized her writing as "savage." Things haven't changed so much when you realize that women who express opinion or disagreement are often marginalized by others as being "bitchy" or unpleasant. 


National Portrait Gallery
In thinking about my own voice, I realize that my training to be pleasant, created a need to please those around me. If one is going to speak truth, speak from the heart, from that deepest place within oneself, wondering how a particular sentence is going to effect others can put a stranglehold on the process of writing. 

"Voice is the articulation of all perceptions in verbal expression, written or oral, including the so-called nonverbal which we want to get into writing too. Voice is the expression of the whole person, an extension of speech, an extension of the body."John Schultz via The Writer's Workout by Christina Katz

As I have been reading West, it apparent that her strongest desire was always to write so that her meaning was clear, concise and expressed to the reader her unique thought on a particular subject. 

What do you think about the effect culture has had on the female voice? Have we progressed? 

Here is a bibliography of my reading :

West, Rebecca. The Essential Rebecca West: Collected Prose. Pittsburgh: Pearhouse Press, 2010.

West, Rebecca. Family Memories. New York: Viking, 1987.

Weldon, Fay. Rebecca West. Fay Weldon. New York: Penguin Viking, 1985.

West, Rebecca. The Judge. New York: George H. Doran Company, 1922.

West, Rebecca. 1900. New York: The Viking Press, 1982.

West, Rebecca. The Birds Fall Down. New York: Viking, 1966. 


Monday, April 1, 2013

MMGM: Blud and Magick by Preston Norton

Date Published: January 8, 2013
ISBN: 1462110886
Genre: Fiction, fantasy, paranormal
Themes: Good and evil, magic, friends

Publisher: Cedar Fort Publishing 

About The Book: Born from the ashes of the most fierce and powerful entity in all of Trivaesia, Darla was sent to grow up in the outside world with no knowledge of where she came from. When she finds herself wielding new power, she must decide which part of her will rule her heart—the evil from which she was born or the good by which she was raised. —Goodreads

First Line: Amid the flurry of wind-driven snow, the foreboding silhouette of Hazirrez Tower loomed past the foothills.

One Great Line: “As long as we know what’s in our hearts, it doesn’t matter what the world thinks of us.” (249)

What Others Are Saying: This book will for sure be a new and magical read for any paranormal lover. It kept me enthralled all the way till the end and I can't wait to read more. The more you read this book the more you learn about the paranormal world you find yourself in. I didn't want to put it down and had to know what happened next.Paranormal Reads

Towards the end I felt like I was missing something. The writing seemed to jump from scene to scene without detail and I found myself trying to reread that last page wondering how the heck I got here. It was only a few places, but I felt like the ending, while exciting and COMPLETELY unpredictable (which is wonderful) felt somewhat rushed. —My Life With Books

Other Bloggers Weigh In:

What I Thought: The premise is definitely what attracted me to the book, good rising out of evil, pretty compelling stuff. I wanted to see how Norton was going to flesh this out. He did an awesome job creating characters and a believable world. That said, I felt the narrative suffered from a common problem when world building. How much backstory does the reader need for the plot to move forward? There were a few times I felt bogged down in extemporaneous details, ones that are imperative for the writer but not the reader. While Norton uses dialogue to present these details, it often felt like an information dump. Even so, I found the read full of surprising twists and turns. I'm looking forward to reading more from this writer. 

My Analysis:
1.POV: Third person limited omniscience: Darla
2. 264 pages
3. The Hook: Baby girl is born from the ashes of the most powerful evil warlord.
4. Inciting event: Attack of the shadow risers.
5. Plot and Pace: Pace sometimes gets bogged down in description, a common challenge when world building.
6. Voice: Norton's voice was engaging and appropriate for the story he is telling.

About The Author: Preston Norton


Who: He was born in California, raised in Texas, and is currently a student at Brigham Young University – Idaho, seeking a degree in English Education. He enjoys sushi, rock concerts, and scary movies.


Writing Advice: Being a writer seems like a never-ending cycle of writing, editing, and submitting manuscripts for the inevitable rejection letter. My advice is to never stop doing one of those three things. Never. Life as a writer is almost like standing on the down escalator. If you aren’t constantly moving up it, you will inevitably move down.”  — Cedar Fort Publishing

Looking for some other great middle grade reviews?? Check out the other MMGM posters listed in my sidebar!!




Next Week: 
No Ordinary Excuse by Michelle Adams

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

One, Two, Three Foolproof Plan For Writers

This is so exciting I can't keep still!!
     I've been writing fulltime for 3 years. Before my writing was squeezed  between taking kids here and there, laundry and working...most of you know what I mean. What I've learned during this time isn't earth shattering, there is no secret code, no switch to turn on, and definitely no road map. 

     The experts will tell you their foolproof ways to become a successful writer. Books are in the triple digits that claim to reveal the "right" way to write and how to be a successful writer. Publishers have made billions $$$ on writers searching for the secret of success. And believe me, I've read them. Most of them are incredibly inspiring. All of them give you an array of things to try, and try them, I did. Like all writers have my favorites, the ones that resonated the strongest for me. I'm not going to talk about them today. Today, I'm going to give you the truth, plain and simple. Here it is...wait for it...forget what you've heard, trash what you've read and ignore all the charts and programs you've tried. They don't work. The sun comes up, rain or shine, cold or hot, clear sky or stormy. You must show up, plant your butt in the chair and write. 

     That's it! No frills or huge epiphanies, it's that simple. I've heard and read, again from authors I highly regard, that if you aren't writing, if you don't write everyday than you should choose a different career. I disagree. I believe most writers often find sitting in the chair the hardest thing they do. It's that first sentence that refuses to be written that makes us crazy. 


Sleeping like a baby!
The cure? There isn't one. Get to the chair, sit at your computer with paper and pen and begin and tomorrow, do it again, and then again. Even if you only write ten words, you have succeeded. Celebrate that! Reward yourself. You do that enough and it becomes a habit, just like brushing your teeth. At the end of the day you'll lay your head on the pillow and realize until you write something, you won't be sleeping.

What kind of things get you to "put your butt in the chair?"


Friday, January 25, 2013

Giveaway!! Autobiographical Fiction: Real Life at its Heart

Today you're in for a special treat! Katherine Schlick Noe is here to answer questions about her book, her writing and how authorship fits into her busy schedule.

1) Why did you choose to write a memoir for children?
Many readers have wondered about the line between fiction and memoir in Something to Hold! I describe the book as fiction that is "inspired by" my own life. Like Deborah Wiles'Countdown and Jack Gantos' Newbery-winning Dead End in Norvelt, my book is nestled into the genre of autobiographical fiction. Kitty, her family, and her friend Pinky are all based on my family and a long-time friend from Warm Springs. But I wasn't as brave as Kitty becomes, nor as aware as she is of the prejudice and hardship that affect her classmates. Some of the events are based on real life, yet at its heart, the story is fiction.

I lived at Warm Springs when I was Kitty's age. Like hers, my dad was a forester with the Bureau of Indian Affairs and my brothers and I were also among the few non-Indian students at the same school where she goes. Unlike Kitty, I always felt welcomed and accepted and made many friends. All my life, other non-Indians have asked me, "What was it like living on Indian reservations when you're not Native?" And like all of the complex questions in our lives, there are many answers and none is simple. I started writing as a way to figure out some answers for myself. I started writing little episodes based on memories from Warm Springs: A stern teacher who read the Bible to us every day; late-night calls on two-way radio in the hallway outside my bedroom that alerted my dad to sudden forest fires; an art project gone terribly wrong because of a razor blade. And then a story of longing, belonging, and learning to stand up for justice slowly began to appear.
 


2) Tell us a little bit about yourself and how you became a writer.
I became a writer in the fourth grade at Warm Springs. I still have the first page of my first novel, Danger at Fort Bloodstone. I spent a lot of time living inside my own head, making up stories, thinking about people and the crazy things they do. I  wrote all the way through high school and college and then wrote poetry for a long time once I started teaching. I've been a teacher for over 35 years, which heavily influences my writing. I am driven by this "mission question": How can we help children and young people learn to live with courage and hope in an imperfect world? I now work with beginning teachers at Seattle University, and everything I do is grounded in that question. And it's also at the center of Something to Hold and certainly every other book that I will write.

3) The voice is very authentic, yet the work has a literary quality. How did you go about balancing that?
Wow -- thank you! That is the kind of writing that I love to read. It's what I so admire in other authors' work, particularly Deborah Wiles and Gary Schmidt. And it's how I want to be able to write. Getting Something to Hold from my head to the page was a long journey. It took me 14 years from the first episode until publication! And I am so fortunate to have worked with an exceptional editor who pushed me hard to learn the craft. She worked with me for four years, over many revisions before she was willing to offer a contract. And in that time, I threw myself into learning everything I could. So I'd say that balance didn't come easily, but I was highly motivated to learn how to write a book that I would most want to read. See my review of Something To Hold here.

4) Tell us about your process. Pantser or Plotter?
Since this is my first novel, I wish I could say that I have a "process." The journey was one of constant surprises, obstacles, and discoveries. I liken it to walking backward through snow -- I couldn't see where I was going, just where I'd been. It wasn't pretty, but it worked. In my new project (more about that below), I'm on the first draft, and I'm trying something new. I had a chunk of time in August, so set a goal of writing 1000 new words a day. They didn't have to be good words -- just keep going. Some days it took two hours; some days a lot longer. But I stopped right when I got just over the limit. By the end of the month, I'd written about 28,000 words! I'm hoping that this project will take far less time than the first.
 
5) What does a typical writing day look like?
Unfortunately, I have yet to have a typical day. I am writing in my head most of the time (yes, SU teacher candidates -- even when I'm with you!). I like having long expanses of time to write, but like everyone with an absorbing day job, I don't get that often. Right now, I'm trying out a shorter daily goal -- 500 words, which is about a page and a half -- to see if I can get a pace going.

6) Where is your favorite place to write?
My home office, which looks out on my Queen Anne alley, one neighbor's happily-quacking duck family, and another neighbor's huge pine tree.

7) What did or do you find most challenging in creating the story and getting it published? What do you wish you would have known?
The greatest challenge was in crafting the story, because though I'd tried a novel in the fourth grade, I really had no idea what I was doing. I was extraordinarily lucky to have an editor who was willing to read a draft -- and willing to keep reading and responding ("It's not there yet, but if you want to revise, I'll read it again") until I was able to send her something she wanted to publish. The challenge was the time that it took (7 years total), but I knew that I had a golden opportunity to learn from her, and I wasn't going to waste it. All you need is a great story and dogged persistence.

8) What is the best writing advice you have ever received?
Write short chapters. It's really concrete, but it had a tremendous influence on me. My chapters are all about 5 to 8 pages long. Teachers tell me that their less-comfortable readers will tackle a book if the chapters are short.
9) Are you working on a new project? Can you tell us about it?
My next story started as a hazy image that was stuck in my head for months: A girl, about 15, leans against the railing on the Monorail platform at the Seattle Center. I can't see her face. She never gets on the train and she never talks to anyone. I didn't know her story, but I knew right away that something was terribly wrong. I was at a writing conference and sat down with my computer -- and this girl just started talking. She kept talking through the week and all through the long drive back to Seattle. I had to pull off the freeway to jot down what she was saying because she'd finally decided to tell me her story. Glory's life is one long string of disasters -- but she taps into a well of grit and creativity, and deals with them in surprising ways.




Katherine also runs the Literature Circles Resource Center 
"I developed the Literature Circles Resource Center as an educational service to teachers in elementary grades through middle school. The purpose of this site is to provide in-depth information and resources on literature circles. The site evolved from a classroom action research project in which I spent one day a week in each of six classrooms in the Seattle area -- grades 1 through 6 -- learning with and from teachers and students as they tried out literature circles for the first time. The research project led to the book, Getting Started with Literature Circles (1999), co-authored with Nancy J. Johnson of Western Washington University in Bellingham. The site also presents information specific to middle school from the book, Literature Circles in Middle School: One Teacher's Journey(2003), co-authored with Bonnie Campbell Hill and Janine A. King. Both books are published by Christopher-Gordon Publishers, Inc."—LCRC
10) What advice would you give others that write for children?
Join the Society of Children's Book Writers & Illustrators -- we have an awesome chapter in Western Washington! Go to their monthly meetings and the annual conference. Learn everything you can from other writers who are extraordinarily willing to help you. Read widely in the genre you want to write. One of the most helpful things I did early on was to "dissect" middle grade novels that I had loved as a reader to find out how they were constructed. That's where I learned about the power of short chapters.

Bonus Question: Tell us one thing about yourself that would surprise us.
I've always wanted to be a back-up singer for Bruce Springsteen!


I'd like to thank Katherine for taking time away from her busy schedule to share her ideas and let us get to know her a little bit better! Okay, now for the giveaway...

Katherine said she's decided to try a shorter daily writing goal, what is it?  Answer the question and you could win a signed copy of her book Something To Hold. Enter before midnight on January 31st. Winner will be announced on February 1st.

Giveaway extended...to February 14th! 

Thursday, December 27, 2012

PNWA Book Doctor Interview: Secrets Revealed

Jason Black
I'd like to introduce author Jason Black and PNWA's own book doctor. I reviewed his latest middle grade book, Pebblehoof on MMGM a few weeks ago. You can see the review here. I was so glad that Jason agreed to an interview here on the blog. Welcome Jason! And now for our first question:
  
1) Why do you write for children?
You know, people ask me that a lot. I sometimes wish I had a deep, philosophical answer, but I don't. I never set out to be a children's author--and indeed, have written in genres all over the map--but somehow, I've ended up writing several books for kids of various ages. I'm not quite sure how that happened, but there you go.
  
That said, for each book there are specific reasons why I wrote it for younger audiences. I've written three novels as gifts for specific children, and therefore, needed to write something that was accessible to that kid. I have a fourth title in the works that is YA because that was the most natural audience for the subject matter.
  
However, having done it several times now, I have to say I really enjoy
writing for kids. My list of to-be-written books is still all over the map,
but you can bet Pebblehoof isn't the last youth title you'll see from me.

  
 2) Tell us a little bit about yourself and how you became a writer. 
Oh, my least favorite question ever! I'm such a boring subject. :) I'm a technical writer in the software industry by day, freelance developmental
editor by night (hey, everybody needs a secret identity), novelist when I can
squeeze it in, and father of two book-loving children who are occasionally
willing to test-drive manuscripts for me.
Like many writers, I tried my hand at fiction when I was a teenager. Although the kind and supportive adults in my life praised my efforts, to me they were abject failures and best forgotten. I couldn't understand how real writers did it. I would think of ideas for stories, which in my head were grand, epic
affairs. Then when I'd write them, I'd be done after about three pages, and I had no idea where the grand, epic-ness had gone. I figured I just didn't have the magical knack of sustaining a story for hundreds of pages like the published writers did. What followed was two tragically lost decades of not writing fiction at all. That's one of the biggest regrets of my life. I can't get that time back.
Then in 2005, a co-worker at my day job talked me into trying National NovelWriting Month. I was skeptical, but for some reason or other I said yes. I decided to novelize the events of a role playing game I had run with some friends several years prior. Laugh if you will, but thirty days later--and utterly astonished--I held a 100,000 word manuscript in my hands. 
That month of literary abandon, as NaNoWriMo calls it, was easily the single greatest time of creative joy and liberation I've ever had. I was hooked, and haven't looked back since. But don't ask me what changed during those two fallow decades. To this day, I haven't the slightest idea why I can do now what was so impossible in my youth.
  
Order Here!
3) What was the inspiration for Pebblehoof?

Pebblehoof was written as a gift for my niece. And I'll tell you, for any writer looking for inspiration, nothing beats writing for a _specific_audience. Pick one individual child, and write for her. In my case, my niece loves horses. And I mean, she really, really loves horses. So naturally, I had to write a horse book. Since it's for my niece, I wanted it to have a strong, female protagonist of a similar age.
  
With those two requirements, I started thinking about plots and settings. There were basically two. I could do something set in the modern day, about dressage or show-jumping or something like that. Or, I could do something historical, in an age when horses were as common as cars are now.
      
Of the two, dressage made me yawn straight away. Apologies to those who do
love dressage, it's just not even a little bit my thing. Historical, however,
opens up some great stuff. Like the American West during the homestead era, when the land was wild, the law was basically nonexistent, and the
opportunities for a strong female protagonist to get into some dandy
adventures with her horse were much more readily available.

  
 4) Tell us about your process.
  
Well, I guess I already started answering that, so I'll just continue. Boiled
down to a three-word philosophy, it would be “always increase specificity.” [Step 1]* I start with whatever vague inklings of a story happen to come to me, and from there refine that idea into something that is ever more specific. For Pebblehoof, I was starting with "girl and a horse in the wild west." That's nice, but is far too vague to work with. So, piece by piece, I evaluated
options for making it specific.

[Step 2]* Take the protagonist. Since the book is for my niece, I made the protagonist two years older than my niece was going to be by the time the book was in
print. The rule of thumb I've been told for middle-grade and YA fiction is that kids like to read about protagonists who are a little bit older than themselves. Next, as much as possible I want my niece to identify with the protagonist, so I named my protagonist Maria because that's phonetically similar to--but not a dead-on ringer for--my niece's name. I gave the protagonist a family structure that mirror's my niece's family: a mother,
father, and younger sister. I gave them similar names to my sister, my brother-in-law, and my other niece too. My family is of German extraction, so I made the protagonist's family into German immigrants. 
[Step 3] Now we're starting to get specific, and to a point where research can help.
America's German population largely came over in the mid-19th century, as a result of civil war in Germany. That fixed the time period pretty specifically, at least as far as when Maria's parents would have come to
America.  
More research: what was going on in America during those years? Obviously, lots of stuff. The question of slavery, predominantly, but I wasn't interested in writing a story with a heavy, moralistic, social-studies kind of message. There’s a place for books like those, it just wasn’t what I wanted to write. I also found that the Homestead Act was passed in that same time period. Ah ha, said I, that's a perfect fit for the needs of an immigrant family looking to
start a new life in a free land.
  
So you see how this works: [Step 4] I look at the parts of my premise or plot which are too vague, then I do research and brainstorm until something strikes me as a good fit for what I'm after.
  
In like fashion, I found a specific location for the story (the Platte River
area around Columbus, Nebraska), discovered and invented various plot elements and turning points in the story, and learned tons of great historical details that provide the color and texture for the story. That same process even gave me the story's central conflict involving the Transcontinental Railroad.
* Red Added.
  
 5) Pebblehoof is an incredible historical fiction and it is clear you did extensive research. Can you share anything you learned about research:how-to strategies, determining what to use and when, and ultimately—how to know you've done enough?
  
I think I've answered most of that already. I'll just add that the process. I've described works incredibly well for historical fiction, but (research) also works great for other types of fiction as well. The only difference is that what constitutes "research" may differ.  
My research was the traditional kind, because if I'm going to write a
historical novel I want it to be actually historical. And if I'm going to
write for kids, I want them to learn something along the way. Not to hit them
over the head with the history, or require that they learn dozens of names,
dates, and significant places just to track the story. I just want the story
to be as close to something that could have happened as possible, while still
telling the story I want to tell.
  
But, if my niece were a space buff and I had instead chosen to write her a
futuristic sci-fi piece set on Mars or something, my “research" would have
involved a lot more "imagining stuff to fill in the gaps" rather than looking
things up in books and on the internet.

The sources may vary, but the process remains the same: do whatever you need to do to turn _vague_ ideas into _specific_ story elements. To that extent, the way you know when you've done enough is when the elements have become specific enough you can actually write about them.
  
Knowing what to leave out is important, too. This is a tough one for a lot of writers, because we are so easily enraptured with the cool stuff we discover while researching. We naturally want to share it all. But not everything we
discover necessarily belongs in the story. There's all sorts of historical detail about the Transcontinental Railroad, for example, which didn't make it into the book. It wasn't germane to the specific plot Maria was involved with. To add it would have been a digression. It would have killed the pacing.
  
You can get away with adding more of that stuff in literary genres. But for
children's literature, you _have_ to keep the plot moving. It is very, very
easy to lose kids' interest if the story bogs down. For children's lit,
knowing what to leave out is absolutely critical.


6) What does a typical writing day look like?
Hah. I wish I had typical writing days. Reality is that the demands of a day
job and freelancing leave me with precious little time to actually write my own stuff. I carve out November for novel-writing (sorry, clients!), but that's about all I get so I have to make the most of it.
Research, fortunately, is something that can be done in odd moments. I spend
September and October doing that, turning my initial vague idea into a
fully-developed scene list, with everything in order, all the plot issues work
out, and scene-by-scene notes of what's supposed to happen. That way, when
November comes, I can make the most out of the two to three writing hours I
can squeeze into an evening after the kids are in bed.
  
During November, my typical writing day looks like this: Wake up. Feed the
kids and get them dressed. Shower while my wife takes them to school. Go to
work. Write boring stuff about software. Come home. Eat dinner. Do baths and story time for the kids. Sit down at the computer. Grab the next scene
description out of my notes. Write what it says. Do the dishes, and go to bed.

Not exactly the Ernest Hemmingway model of adventure, seaside vistas, and
mojitos at the Havana Club, is it?

6) Where is your favorite place to write?

Typically, my home office. But anywhere quiet will do. Someone once said that the greatest asset you have is time. Someone smarter said no, the greatest asset you have is _uninterrupted concentration_. In my life, just about the only place I can find uninterrupted concentration is at home, after the kids are in bed.
  
7) What did or do you find most challenging in creating the story and getting it published? What do you wish you would have known?

Probably the hardest thing in Pebblehoof was in creating a story in which
Maria could be the strong, female protagonist I wanted to give to my niece.
Although it is a story about a girl and the horse who is her only friend in
the world, I didn't want it to become a "super horse saves the day!" kind of
story. I needed Maria to matter to the story. But just the same, I needed
Pebblehoof to matter to the story, too. It wouldn't be much of a
girl-and-her-horse story if the horse was just an afterthought, or was
irrelevant to the way the story unfolded.
What I needed to do was build the plot around what Pebblehoof _enables_ Maria to do that she wouldn't otherwise be able to. That was the key. It was about finding ways that Maria could save the day, but only because she had
Pebblehoof.
Beyond that, the most challenging elements of publication for me are the fact that I have no visual design skills at all, which means I'm basically helpless when it comes to book covers and interior book design. Fortunately, I was able to hook up with an excellent photoshop artist on the NaNoWriMo message boards who created the cover for me. Also fortunately, I found a kindly publisher who happens to have amazing book design skills and was willing to trade publication services for developmental editing services. All of which is good, because as I said, the book was a gift, so I was committed to publishing it with or without help from traditional publishing.The book as a whole turned out really beautiful, and I’m delighted with it.
  
The one thing I wish I’d have been more cognizant of ahead of time was how long to plan for copy editing. I didn’t leave enough time, and didn’t have a copy editor lined up far enough in advance, so that part of the process turned
out to be a stressful, last-minute scramble.
  
8) What is the best writing advice you have ever received?
  
Easy: "Show, don't tell." The person who told me that never explained what it
meant, but somehow it made sense to me anyway. These days, because I do
developmental editing for other writers and constantly find myself having to
explain what "show, don't tell" really means, I have a very clear
understanding of the concept and how it serves as the single, bedrock, guiding
principle for all narrative writing.
  
I know that sounds like a hyperbole, but I mean it quite literally. Explaining
why is probably a whole other interview, though.

9) Are you working on a new project? Can you tell us about it?

I am! This year's NaNoWriMo just finished up, and I'm pretty excited about
this rough, first draft I just wrote. It is middle-grade book for my other
niece, and will be coming out for her birthday in September, 2013. (Writers,
beware! While it's great to write for a specific, one-kid audience, there is a
potential drawback: having done it for one niece, I'm now on the hook to do it
for her sister and for my own kids as well. Still, there are worse problems to
have.)
  
This one is about a beaver in the far north of Ontario, on the run from the
fur trapper pursuing her for her rare black pelt. I'm reading it to my kids
right now, to see what they think and learn whether I need to fix anything.
I'm not sure what they think of it yet, but so far I'm quite pleased with how
the book came out.
  
10) What advice would you give others that write for children?
  
Respect your audience, both for their strengths and their limitations. Maxim Gorky said, "You must write for children in the same way you do for adults, only better." I do my best to take that to heart.
  
For me, that means two things. First, it means is recognizing that children
are every bit as smart as you or me. There is never a need to "dumb down" a story just because you're writing it for kids. Just focus on telling the
_best_ story you can. Don't worry about making it simple. Pebblehoof is by no
means a simple story; Maria's and her parents have a pretty complex dynamic
(hey! just like in real life!). Similarly, the family as a whole has a
shifting, love/hate relationship with the railroad and the railroad baron who
is the book's central nemesis.

Second, it means to recognize that kids don't yet have the reading skill
grownups do. And why should they? You and I have been at this whole reading thing for decades. Kids have only been doing it for as little as a year or two, depending on the particular age you're writing for. This has a bearing on how you write the story. (But note, it doesn't mean you dumb down the language. Quite the opposite, actually, as the early literacy years also coincide with kids' period of most rapid language acquisition. To dumb down the language of your writing is to do them a disservice by eliminating their opportunity to experience new words in context and figure out what they mean.)
  
What it does mean is that for a kid to read two pages of story, say,
represents a significant investment of time and effort. That's not an easy
thing for them, and you'd darn well better respect their work. They'd better
get some payoff out of it, which means that the story had better _move_ within those pages. If you give the kid two solid pages of beautiful, poetic,
evocative, Pulitzer-worthy landscape description in which nothing happens, you
haven't respected their work and you shouldn't be surprised if the kid decides
your book is boring. Adult readers might happily stick with you for those two
pages. But then, for the same amount of effort the kid put in, the adult might
well read 20 pages instead of 2. For kids, there's a very different ratio of
work to reward than for adults. I said earlier that pace was critical for
children's literature, and this is why. If you're going to write for kids,
keep that story moving!

Thanks so much for stopping by Jason. I hope you all enjoyed the interview as much as I did. Be sure to check out his editing services on his website here. 

I'm going to take a few weeks off to plan for the new year. Join me on January 14th for my first middle grade book review of 2013!

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

MMGM: Dead End In Norvelt by Jack Gantos [Audio Version]



About the Book: Dead End in Norvelt is the winner of the 2012 Newbery Medal for the year's best contribution to children's literature and the Scott O'Dell Award for Historical Fiction! 
Melding the entirely true and the wildly fictional, Dead End in Norvelt is a novel about an incredible two months for a kid named Jack Gantos, whose plans for vacation excitement are shot down when he is "grounded for life" by his feuding parents, and whose nose spews bad blood at every little shock he gets. But plenty of excitement (and shocks) are coming Jack's way once his mom loans him out to help a feisty old neighbor with a most unusual chore—typewriting obituaries filled with stories about the people who founded his utopian town. As one obituary leads to another, Jack is launched on a strange adventure involving molten wax, Eleanor Roosevelt, twisted promises, a homemade airplane, Girl Scout cookies, a man on a trike, a dancing plague, voices from the past, Hells Angels . . . and possibly murder. Endlessly surprising, this sly, sharp-edged narrative is the author at his very best, making readers laugh out loud at the most unexpected things in a dead-funny depiction of growing up in a slightly off-kilter place where the past is present, the present is confusing, and the future is completely up in the air.
First Line: School was finally out and I was standing on a picnic table in our backyard getting ready for a great summer vacation when my mother walked up to me and ruined it.
  
One Great Line: “...who proved that you don't have to do what your parents want, or what your boyfriend wants, for you to be happy. You just have to be yourself, for there is no love greater than self love”

What Others Are Saying: “This is a brilliant book, full of history, mystery, and laughs. It reminded me of my small-town childhood, although my small town was never as delightfully weird as Norvelt.” —Dave Barry

“A bit of autobiography works its way into all of Gantos’s work, but he one-ups himself in this wildly entertaining meld of truth and fiction by naming the main character… Jack Gantos.” —Publishers Weekly, Starred Review

Awards:Newbery Medal (2012), Scott O'Dell Award (2012), Boston Author's Club Young Reader Award Nominee (2012)

What I Thought: The minute I heard Jack Gantos reading his own story I was hooked. It is always interesting to listen to an author read their own work. The descriptions were colorful and incredibly visceral. "...still dazed and bleeding and completely motionless, except for the steady drops of blood ticking off seconds against the dry summer grass."(320) is just one of the lines that bring you to the front and center stage of action. Gantos is adept in presenting bits and pieces of history in snappy, immediately interesting blurbs that foster interest in further research. His voice drips off the page but hearing it gave a certain edge to this semi-autobiographical tale. A great read-aloud with many points that inspire discussion.

About The Author: Jack Gantos
Website


Who: "Jack was born in Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania, and grew up in the nearby town of Norvelt. He remembers playing a lot of “pass the chalk” in Mrs. Neiderheizer’s class in first grade. He was in the Bluebird reading group, which he later found out was for the slow readers. To this day he’d rather be called a Bluebird than a slow reader. His favorite game at that time was playing his clothes were on fire and rolling down a hill to save himself.

When he was seven, his family moved to Barbados. He attended British schools, where there was much emphasis on reading and writing. Students were friendly but fiercely competitive, and the teachers made learning a lot of fun. By fifth grade he had managed to learn 90 percent of what he knows to this very day." —Jack Gantos Website
When: "The seeds for Jack’s writing career were planted in sixth grade, when he read his sister’s diary and decided he could write better than she could. He begged his mother for a diary and began to collect anecdotes he overheard at school, mostly from standing outside the teachers’ lounge and listening to their lunchtime conversations. Later, he incorporated many of these anecdotes into stories." —Jack Gantos Website

Jack Gantos' desk, with journals at the ready.   
Why: Talking about his sister, Gantos says, "When she left the house I did read her diary. It was an awful, unethical thing to do, but I was compelled. I read it, and it wasn’t terribly interesting to me. I’m not trying to run my sister down, but it seemed to me that she was missing all the good stuff of life—the juicy stuff. Here we were moving from western Pennsylvania to Cape Hatteras to Barbados to St. Lucia to Miami—you know, there was a lot going on! We were bouncing from one neighborhood to another and they all were filled with crazy characters who did the wildest things—but none of that stuff made the diary."I thought, "That’s really peculiar, because the world I’m living with and in is really interesting.” So I got my little red diary and got started." —Jack Gantos Website

Be sure to check out the other MMGM posters listed in my sidebar.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Ten Lies Writers Tell Themselves About Social Media

Special Report By Socia Malaise

By now we all know that social media is an inevitable part of the marketing toolbox. Many of us have scrambled over the last couple of years to get on top of it, only to find that soon as we figured out one network, another one sprouted. How do we choose? How much time should I spend on any one social network? What's the best way to learn about a network? These are just a few of the questions that seem to circle endlessly in our minds. I'm not addressing those today. My focus is about finding a balance and sifting through the messages we tell ourselves or that circulate in the blogosphere. 

Social media is a major time-suck. We all know it. We all acknowledge it. Then why do we find ourselves trading precious writing time for a tweet or status? Because we tell ourselves that we are marketing. That learning how to effectively use these marketing tools is worth the time we spend jumping on an off the networks. There are some crafty time thieves and cons out there that writers, hungry for recognition and validation, sacrifice valuable craft-conditioning hours of writing time. We forget that success comes after tirelessly writing our brains out. That like an athlete to be good you have to practice at least as much as the rest. To be the best requires writing more than the rest.

Here are ten things that writers tell themselves to rationalize time away from the blank page.

The Thieves Steal Time

1. If I don't have a huge following before my book comes out, it will fail.

We are in a different time, with POD and E-books your book never goes out of print which gives you the opportunity to build an audience. Brick and mortar book outlets, while they still have limited space and often choose only the most successful and high profile books, independent outlets are not as constrained by arbitrary numbers. Many are willing to help authors out by providing books by local authors, directly from the author. A great website can be constructed in a relatively short time once you have a book deal or a completed product.

2. If you don't post 3-4 times daily on Facebook and Twitter your time is wasted.

I don't know about you but the quickest way to get off my Twitter feed or Facebook is to post useless information, repeatedly during the day. How many times do I need to see a great quote, know what your doing or how many pages you wrote today. As I've said before, if you're not building genuine relationships with your readers they will tire of your endless dribble.

3. In order to build my list of followers I need to return the favor by join and thoughtfully comment on as many blogs as I can each week.

Newsflash: Just because someone follows your blog doesn't mean they are visiting it everyday. Do you visit every blog you've ever joined? The stats that matter are the views per day, per week and ultimately per month. If that number is steadily growing it doesn't matter how many "friend followers" or how many blogs you follow. The idea is to gain exposure, find new viewers by having quality writing and real content. The more your blog comes up in searches is the best way to gain viewers that requires good labels and timely information.

4. I'll just check my email really quick in case there is something important I need to attend to.

Back in the day of home phones and snail mail people knew that they would have a waiting period before they received a response. I'm not advocating a return to the good old days. I am anxious for writers to realize that as long as they are checking their email once a day and responding with an acknowledgment of receipt, your not in danger of missing the "book deal". Unless you are in retail and sales you're not going to lose out. Check your email once-a-day, preferably after your most productive writing time is over. I check mine when I'm watching television with my husband or waiting for an appointment.


5. I'll read a few blogs for inspiration or information for the project I'm working on. 

Sometimes this can't be avoided, if you need particular piece of information for an article on a specific subject. I've found that by keeping a research list next to my computer I can limit my time on the internet by doing research in a scheduled amount of time. If I get to a place where I need specific facts I write it down, leave a highlighted marker in the project I'm working on and come back to it during the revision. Since I already found the information during my research time I just have to plug it in so it keeps me off the internet, even during revision.

The Cons Disguise Wasted Time

6. Agents and publishers won't even consider taking on an author that doesn't have an active social network presence.
I've seen this on the internet and even in conferences. I have a couple of ways to dispel this misinformation. First, it doesn't matter how "connected" you are if your product sucks, it won't matter. At the same time, if you have a quality product that truly hits the mark, building an audience will happen. Second, There are so many ways to get your book self-published, ebooks and POD means that your book won't go out of print. Building an audience can't really happen until you actually have product to sell.

7. Learn All You Need To Know About...Webinars
OK. Yes, I've been the victim of this con, usually put out by professional marketers to find customers for their PR firm. The seminars sometimes even cost with the enticement that what they are going to share secrets during the webinar. Secrets that will totally improve your visibility over night and increase your followers by 50%. Yada, yada, yada. These are in reality infomercials for their services and usually contain information that you already knew or how their system or "secrets" will improve your business success. By the time you get to the end, they feed just enough information to intrigue you to by their ebook, sign-up for a more intense webinar or buy their product. These "free" programs can bleed out hours of precious writing time with nothing really to show for it. Be careful!

8. Participating in Twitter Chats Are Great Places To Network

If you haven't participated in one before, I suggest you indulge yourself just for the experience. I find them ineffectual and repetitive. I've even tried just busting through a transcript to see if that was any more interesting, but got bored. For one, how much can you discuss when you are limited by the number of characters? Often the subjects are pretty general and the responses consist of one liners—entertaining perhaps, but not useful. They are repetitive because everyone retweets each others comments so you can look at a string of tweets that basically say the same thing. In my experience, it's usually the same people that participate and they already have relationships. Inserting a few comments here and there isn't worth the time spent. Every once in a while there is a new voice, but rarely. I have found it much more useful to run a subject search and find someone that interests me, start to follow them and communicate directly to develop a real dialogue. This usually takes on the form of email because we want to have real conversations.

9. Buying followers can quickly boost your presence.

Again, numbers of followers are misleading and getting obsessed with the rising numbers distracts you from the whole purpose you began in the first place. To sell books. If your rising numbers are not increasing your book sales then what's the point?Think of it like this. You have a store and you sell one product. You spend all of your time and money to increase who knows about your product. At first you may sell a few. After the initial purchases everyone that wanted one has bought it. Why would those customers come back to your store? What is their incentive to return? Successful businesses continue to produce quality products and better products. Write, and they will come. Give your audience a reason to return.

9. I need to stay on top of the trends, the movers and shakers in the industry.

We often fool ourselves into thinking that we're going to miss something important if we're not monitoring every outlet. So we sign up for multiple online newsletters and updates that cram our in-box. More information than you could ever cover so you create folders and they pile up. You have every intention to read them. When you do click on them they're chock full of links to even more information. There is no shortage of informational and interesting free content and you will never be able to digest it all. You have to get selective. The best way to stay on top of trends and whats happening in publishing is to subscribe to a few industry magazines (Publishers Weekly, Writer, etc.) and join a few professional organizations to attend their conferences and workshops(SCWI, PNWA, etc.).

10. Joining multiple forums and groups means more exposure.

These can be fun and I have met some incredibly interesting people. Unfortunately, they can be addicting and pretty soon your being bombarded with updates or spending precious writing time hopping from one to the other to see what so and so is talking about or responding to a comment. If talking in forums is something you enjoy, go for it, but don't fool yourself into thinking you are doing anything more than socializing. Do it after writing work for the day is done.

I'm not sure if any of you have been the victim of the thieves and cons, but I have. I wanted to share them with you. Butt in the chair with no internet. It always comes down to that, doesn't it.


Happy Writing,
                         Socia


See My Interview On I Am A Reader, Not A Writer Check It Out Here.

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