Thursday, July 30, 2009

Research Bonanza or "Did you know that . . ."


. . . Virginia Hall, the most dangerous Allied agent in France, had a wooden leg she named Cuthbert? She hid rolls of microfilm inside it.

. . . the Gestapo used forms of torture known as the "Jesus halo" and the "Tibetan Prayer Mill"?

. . . that German POWs were imprisoned in camps throughout the United States? As it turned out, not all the prisoners were native Germans, but were from other Eastern Europe countries that Germany had conquered. And not all the Germans were Nazis.

. . . the entire German spy network in England was actually under British control?

I could go on and on with the intriguing info I've uncovered while researching Twirl, my work-in-progress. In fact, the German POW camps in the U.S. and the British control of German spies are important to the novel's plot.

My research methods, I confess, are hit-and-miss right now. I started with my public library, pulling out books on World War II and espionage. I browsed on amazon.com and in Barnes and Noble. As I read, I write down page numbers and take notes on important dates, specific facts, and interesting nuggets in a spiral notebook.

Through the novel-writing process, I review the notes I've taken, continue reading additional resources, and look up specific information online. As the characters and plot have taken on a life of their own (this really does happen), it's easier for me to see what I still need to research and, as I'm reading, be more selective about the notes I'm taking.

The research and the writing go hand-in-hand and, I hope, will turn my work-in-progress into an intriquing story grounded in history.

What are your researching hints and tips? Whether you write fiction or nonfiction, we'd love to know.

Johnnie

Monday, July 27, 2009

Word Lovers and Inventors

As word connoisseurs, don’t you just love the thrill of discovering new words? The fun of saying a new creation that tickles our tongues, the pleasure of hearing an innovative cadence and then the smile as you see an old word used in a fresh imaginative style. What fun!

The newest edition of the Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary has added about 100 new words that largely reflect changing trends in our culture. As writers, awareness of trends is another important skill.

Here are some of the newest designs in our word showcase:

Dead-cat bounce - [from the facetious notion that even a dead cat would bounce slightly if dropped from a sufficient height]: a brief and insignificant recovery (as of stock prices) after a steep decline
Killer app - a computer application of such great value or popularity that it assures the success of the technology with which it is associated; broadly: a feature or component that in itself makes something worth having
Locavore – one who eats foods grown locally
Frenemy – someone who acts like a friend but is really an enemy,
Waterboarding – an interrogation technique use to mimic drowning
Vlogs – a blog that contains video material
Webisode – a TV show that can be viewed at a web site
Flashmob – a group of people summoned by email or text message to a designated location at a specified time to perform an action before dispersing.

Mark Twain and William Shakespeare were experts inventing new words. Over the 20th century some 90,000 new words were added to the Oxford English Dictionary. Okay, fellow wordsmiths, let’s have some fun stretching our creative muscles.

Take a word that has been around for awhile and use it in a new updated way. For example, the words "sock puppet" has been around for years but has taken on a new meaning: People using fake IDs on social networking sites

See a trend and describe it. I twittered my day away.

Play with sounds, letters in a word. A parrot inhabiting in the South Seas lives in parrotdice.

Merge two words for a new meaning (smoke and fog = smog or the very popular one this year: stacation) or use a noun as a verb i.e. we now google something on the internet.

Add a new ending with a ness, able, ish, or ation. Last week’s vacation was a cruisation.

Abbreviations: Apparently, "identification" was too long for many speakers, so it was reduced to its first two letters, "I" and "D" But those initials now form the basis of a new derivational constellation: "Where are your ID-s?"

Now it is your turn!

Jeanie

Sunday, July 26, 2009

We Have A Winner!!

Drum roll, please. The winner is; COMMENT NUMBER ONE from Sheila Deeth!

Sheila, I asked my husband to pick a number from one to one. And he picked number one. You win! So please contact me with your email, or if you are friends with one of the other kindred hearts, they can send me your email/address and I will be happy to get the book in the mail to you.

Happy reading, hope you enjoy,

Karen

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Yikes No Comments! Sticks and Stones

Just a reminder our book giveaway is up this weekend! This book is so easy to read and you can pick it up for a quick snippet or read the whole thing. It just puts you in a good, serving attitude.

So please leave a comment, I know someone will enjoy this one.

Waiting and ready to mail out,

Karen

Monday, July 20, 2009

Sticks and Stones-Book Give Away


Sticks and Stones is an easy, uplifting read with constructive ideas for improving our words, actions and life. Author Ace Collins begins with small steps and walks the reader into tackling bigger challenges with each chapter.



Throughout the book real life stories give a poingant meaning and reinforce these truths. Ace brings back the Golden Rule.


I would recommend this book to learn or brush up on becoming a more thoughtful and loving person. "Live that sermon before you tell it," he writes.





Ace Collings other books include, Stories Behind the Best-Loved of Christmas, Stories Behind the Great Traditions of Christmas, and Lassie: A Dog's Life.




If you would like to enter our random drawing for this book, just leave your comment and email. The winner will be announced Saturday the 25th. So don't delay. Good luck to all.




Words can make or break a spirit,



Karen

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Rediscoveries



In the last month, I’ve made a few “rediscoveries” about writing – things I had discovered before but were stuck in the recesses of my mind. Two major deadlines last month brought those lessons to the forefront for me again. As every minute was consumed with writing last month, I was reminded that:

Writing is a very solitary activity.


Just ask my family. My poor, neglected, hungry family. I was squirreled away researching and writing furiously while they foraged for peanut butter. Well, perhaps it wasn’t that bad, but it wasn’t business as usual around here. You see, they love to eat and I do enjoy cooking for them, but I had a couple of deadlines, so everything else was pretty much on the back burner, or on no burner at all. But they were very patient, perhaps because they too saw an end in sight. They brought in pizza, took me out a few times when I could be extracted from the cave, and even fixed their own “meals.” (Quotation marks are intentional there.) When I finished my master’s thesis and book manuscript, my husband exclaimed, “I have my wife back!”

On a more serious note, writing does require a degree of seclusion. The writer needs time and quiet to concentrate – time away from the demands of daily life and even from the electronic umbilical cord. Sometimes email and the internet can be the biggest distraction, and unplugging can be more fruitful than you can imagine. And time? It’s amazing what time can do for your writing. You work one day and think about your writing as you get ready for bed, then by noon the next day, the ideas have “percolated.” The creative juices flow and stew, and amazing concoctions result when you stir a little time into the mix.

Writing is a lot of “hurry up and wait.”

You’ll recognize the “hurry up” syndrome from my description of deadlines above, but the waiting continues even after a project is done. If you’ve submitted a query letter or a book proposal, you know about the “wait” part, but it doesn’t stop there. In fact, looking back over the odyssey that is my book, I can identify a number of waiting rest stops.

Once my agent sent out my proposal, I waited for him to hear from editors. A number politely declined, but after one expressed interest, I waited again to receive a contract. Wisely, my agent said, to me, “Think months, not days,” and that helped. Once I received and returned my signed contract, in my case I waited for time to finish the manuscript. As a teacher and a master’s degree candidate, I knew there were “miles to go before I” could actually write! Once my writing time came, “hurry up” time was next as I completed my book manuscript, but now, once again…I wait. My agent says next there will be rewrites and edits and it may be awhile before I hear from my publisher, so I find myself set on waiting mode once again.

What’s the bottom line here?

Have patience with your craft. It can’t be accomplished in a noisy room full of people, and it can’t be done overnight. And remember: good things come to those who wait. Give yourself a healthy dose of quiet, time, and patience and see what you discover.

Laura

Saturday, July 11, 2009

BEGINNERS' VOCABULARY


Years ago (and I do mean years) when I first began to think about submitting my writing for publication, I learned about writers’ guidelines. When you first start, everything is new isn’t it? After I realized that each magazine and publisher have different guidelines, I began to study them quite seriously. And then it happened. A new vocabulary presented in words and letters that had very little meaning to me. Because I hope we have some beginning or hopeful writers in our audience, it seemed a good idea to share what I have learned in the past few years. (Perhaps I am the only one who didn’t know this, but I doubt it.)

S.A.S.E. my first puzzle (I was very young) Self-addressed stamped envelope

QUERY FIRST… Don’t send your complete manuscript. Send a query letter. Many examples of these can be found on-line. Kindred Heart Writers have an article about this in the side column. Just click on kindred heart writers specials in the sidebar.

SIDEBAR A short, often boxed auxiliary piece of information that is printed alongside a longer article and that typically presents additional, contrasting, information. Often will be a list or suggestions about article. Many magazines want/insist on a sidebar .

HOOK is really just what it sounds like. Your first sentence or at least your first paragraph must catch your reader (particularly if it is the acquisitions editor).

ACQUISITIONS EDITOR This editor is obviously the one in charge of acquiring manuscripts. KNOW THIS EDITOR’S NAME when you send your query letter. Meet these people at conferences.


SIMULTANEOUS SUBMISSION Fairly self-explanatory, but this is where it begins to get technical. You start to read words like First Rights. You may submit this to as many editors as you wish at the same time, but make sure to indicate that you have done this.

FIRST RIGHTS You sign a form that indicates that this is the first time this material has been published. Once it has been published it then can be re-sold, but always as a reprint. This is a market I am “looking into” right now. Sally Stuart has several listed.

POV I know it is obvious, but remember I was young. Of course, it indicates point of view. And if point of view is hard for you, I suggest you call your “old” high-school literature teacher.

PLATFORM Many editors ask about your “platform.” See Christina Katz definition and discussion in Thursday’s interview below.

BOOK PROPOSAL I am going to reveal how dreadfully naïve about publishing I was when I went to my first writer’s conference. Dan Penwell read some of my devotions and said “You need to go home and write a book proposal.” I must confess I responded “I have no idea what a book proposal is.” He smiled. (Such a nice man) A book proposal is much more complicated than it sounds, but if you intend to write non-fiction, it is absolutely necessary. (Well most of the time) If you want to see a sample copy of a book proposal, there are many on-line or I will be glad to share ideas with you.

WIP Work in progress. I always have a folder on my desktop to save those article/devotions I am currently working on.

MC Main Character…I know you may feel I am insulting your intelligence. Forgive me. I did NOT know what this meant in my first reading.

Please note: These are in no particular order of importance. Just as I happened to remember those I have learned. I know I have forgotten more than I have remembered so why not share with me and our readers those acronyms or terminologies that have puzzled you along your writing journey.
Postscript: While I was writing this, I learned a new one.
SMS means social media services like Twitter, Brightkite

ALWAYS LEARNING
Clella

Thursday, July 9, 2009

An Interview with Christina Katz

An Interview with Christina Katz
Author of Get Known Before the Book Deal, Use Your Personal Strengths to Grow an Author Platform & Writer Mama, How to Raise a Writing Career Alongside Your Kids

Christina Katz is the author of Get Known Before the Book Deal, Use Your Personal Strengths to Grow an Author Platform (Writer’s Digest Books). She started her platform “for fun” seven years ago and ended up on “Good Morning America.” Christina teaches e-courses on platform development and writing nonfiction for publication. Her students are published in national magazines and land agents and book deals. Christina has been encouraging reluctant platform builders via her e-zines for five years, has written hundreds of articles for national, regional, and online publications, and is a monthly columnist for the Willamette Writer. A popular speaker at writing conferences, writing programs, libraries, and bookstores, she hosts the Northwest Author Series in Wilsonville, Oregon. She is also the author of Writer Mama, How to Raise a Writing Career Alongside Your Kids (Writer’s Digest Books).


Q: What is a platform?

CK: Long story short: Your platform communicates your expertise to others, and it works all the time so you don’t have to. Your platform includes your Web presence, any public speaking you do, the classes you teach, the media contacts you’ve established, the articles you’ve published, and any other means you currently have for making your name and your future books known to a viable readership. If others already recognize your expertise on a given topic or for a specific audience or both, then that is your platform.

A platform-strong writer is a writer with influence. Get Known explains in plain English, without buzzwords, how any writer can stand out from the crowd of other writers and get the book deal. The book clears an easy-to-follow path through a formerly confusing forest of ideas so any writer can do the necessary platform development they need to do.


Q: Why is platform development important for writers today?

CK: Learning about and working on a solid platform plan gives writers an edge. Agents and editors have known this for years and have been looking for platform-strong writers and getting them book deals. But from the writer’s point-of-view, there has not been enough information on platform development to help unprepared writers put their best platform forward.

Now suddenly, there is a flood of information on platform, not all necessarily comprehensive, useful or well organized for folks who don’t have a platform yet. Writers can promote themselves in a gradual, grounded manner without feeling like they are selling out. I do it, I teach other writers to do it, I write about it on an ongoing basis, and I encourage all writers to heed the trend. And hopefully, I communicate how in a practical, step-by-step manner that can serve any writer. Because ultimately, before you actively begin promoting yourself, platform development is an inside job requiring concentration, thoughtfulness and a consideration of personal values.


Q: How did you come to write Get Known Before the Book Deal?

CK: I already had a lot of momentum going when I got the deal for a very specific audience. I wrote a column on the topic for the Willamette Writer’s newsletter. Then I started speaking on platform. When I gave my presentation, “Get Known Before the Book Deal,” at the Writer’s Digest/BEA Writer’s Conference in May 2007, Phil Sexton, one of my publisher’s sales guys, saw it and suggested making the concept into a book. Coincidentally, I was trying to come up with an idea for my second book at that time and had just struck out with what I thought were my three best ideas. My editor, Jane Friedman agreed with Phil. That was two votes from people sitting on the pub board. They converted the others with the help of my proposal, and Get Known got the green light.

Q: Why was a book on platform development needed?

CK: Writers often underestimate how important platform is and they often don’t leverage the platform they already have enough. At every conference I presented, I took polls and found that about 50 percent of attendees expressed a desire for a clearer understanding of platform. Some were completely in the dark about it, even though they were attending a conference in hopes of landing a book deal. Since book deals are granted based largely on the impressiveness of a writer’s platform, I noticed a communication gap that needed to be addressed.

My intention was that Get Known would be the book every writer would want to read before attending a writer’s conference, and that it would increase any writer’s chances of landing a book deal whether they pitched in-person or by query. As I wrote the book, I saw online how this type of information was being offered as “insider secrets” at outrageous prices. No one should have to pay thousands of dollars for the information they can find in my book for the price of a paperback! Seriously. You can even ask your library to order it and read it for free.


Q: What is the key idea behind Get Known Before the Book Deal?

CK: Getting known doesn’t take a lot of money, but it does take an in-depth understanding of platform, and then the investment of time, skills and consistent effort to build one. Marketing experience and technological expertise are also not necessary. I show how to avoid the biggest time and money-waster, which is not understanding who your platform is for and why – and hopefully save writers from the confusion and inertia that can result from either information overload or not taking the big picture into account before they jump into writing for traditional publication.

Often writers with weak platforms are over-confident that they can impress agents and editors, while others with decent platforms are under-confident or aren’t stressing their platform-strength enough. Writers have to wear so many hats these days, we can use all the help we can get. Platform development is a muscle, and the more you use it, the stronger it gets. Anyone can do it, but most don’t or won’t because they either don’t understand what is being asked for, or they haven’t overcome their own resistance to the idea. Get Known offers a concrete plan that can help any writer make gains in the rapidly changing and increasingly competitive publishing landscape.


Q: What is the structure of the book and why did you choose it?

CK: Writer Mama was written in small, easy-to-digest chunks so busy new moms could stick it in a diaper bag and read it in the nooks and crannies of the day. Get Known is a bit more prosaic, especially in the early chapters. Most of the platform books already out there were only for authors, not writers or aspiring authors. To make platform evolution easy to comprehend, I had to dial the concepts back to the beginning and talk about what it’s like to try and find your place in the world as an author way before you’ve signed a contract, even before you’ve written a book proposal. No one had done that before in a book for writers. I felt writers needed a context in which to chart a course towards platform development that would not be completely overwhelming.

Introducing platform concepts to writers gives them the key information they need to succeed at pitching an agent either via query or in-person, making this a good book for a writer to read before writing a book proposal. Get Known has three sections: section one is mostly stories and cautionary tales, section two has a lot of to-do lists any writer should be able to use, and section three is how to articulate your platform clearly and concisely so you won’t waste a single minute wondering if you are on the right track.


Q: At the front of Get Known, you discuss four phases of the authoring process. What are they?

CK: First comes the platform development and building phase. Second comes the book proposal development phase (or if you are writing fiction, the book-writing phase). Third, comes the actual writing of the book (for fiction writers this is likely the re-writing of the book). And finally, once the book is published, comes the book marketing and promoting phase.

Many first-time authors scramble once they get a book deal if they haven’t done a thorough job on the platform development phase. Writers who already have a platform have influence with a fan base, and they can leverage that influence no matter what kind of book they write. Writing a book is a lot easier if you are not struggling to find readers for the book at the same time. Again, agents and editors have known this for a long time.


Q: What are some common platform mistakes writers make?

CK: Here are a few:

They don’t spend time clarifying who they are to others.
They don’t zoom in specifically on what they offer.
They confuse socializing with platform development.
They think about themselves too much and their audience not enough.
They don’t precisely articulate all they offer so others get it immediately.
They don’t create a plan before they jump online.
They undervalue the platform they already have.
They are overconfident and think they have a solid platform when they have only made a beginning.
They become exhausted from trying to figure out platform as they go.
They pay for “insider secrets” instead of trusting their own instincts.
They blog like crazy for six months and then look at their bank accounts and abandon the process as going nowhere.

I’ll stop there. Suffice it to say that many writers promise publishers they have the ability to make readers seek out and purchase their book. But when it comes time to demonstrate this ability, they can’t deliver.

My mission is to empower writers to be 100 percent responsible for their writing career success and stop looking to others to do their promotional work for them. Get Known shows writers of every stripe how to become the writer who can not only land a book deal, but also influence future readers to plunk down ten or twenty bucks to purchase their book. It all starts with a little preparation and planning. The rest unfolds from there.


Q: What are three things my readers can do today to get started building their platforms?

CK: Don't start building your platform until you have clarity and focus. Otherwise you will likely just waste your precious time spinning your wheels. Or worse, fritter away your time with online distractions (and trust me, there are plenty!).

But once you know what your expertise is and what you are doing with it and for whom, then consider these three steps:

Start an e-mail list: Who are the people who like to hear about your writing success? Why not start a list in your address book with them and keep adding to it as time goes by. You can start by sending out simple regular announcements of good things that happen—just be sure to get permission. One way to get permission is to send an announcement about your work out to everyone you know and tell them that they can unsubscribe if they don’t want to be receive future messages from you on the topic. I strongly recommend that all writers read Permission Marketing by Seth Godin.

Create a simple website: Although social networking is fun, a proper writer’s website is not a Facebook or a Myspace page; it’s not even a blog. So save the detailed descriptions of your quirks and faves for the social networking you will do after you’ve built yourself a solid website to publicize your genuine writing credentials (creds) across the ethers while you are sleeping. And if you don’t have any genuine writing creds yet, getting some is an important first step. The step-by-step instructions are in Get Known.

Blog when it makes sense: Blogging can be great for writers assuming three things: 1) You have ample material to draw on and time to blog regularly. 2) You take the time to determine your appropriate audience, topic and your specific slant (or take) on your topic for your specific audience. 3) You don’t plan on starting a blog, blogging like mad for six weeks, and then disappearing from the face of the blogosphere without a trace. Preparation can prevent this common pitfall from happening to you.

Don’t forget that platform development and building takes time. Once you are ready to get started, just do a little every day and you’ll be amazed what you can accomplish over time.

Thank you Christina for joining the Kindred Heart Writers today!

Monday, July 6, 2009

Milestones and Memories

Do you remember Laura's imaginary boxes? She wrote, "I organize my life into boxes … and then I live out of them, opening only one box at a time.And I find that, for me, this works – especially with the writing life. If I can compartmentalize and prioritize, it’s easier not to get overwhelmed. The trick is in being disciplined enough to stay out of the boxes you don’t need to peek into yet" ("The Writing Life in a Box" posted March 19, 2009).

Good news: Laura recently opened, closed, and shelved (at least temporarily) two major boxes within days of each other. Her "Thesis Box" contains her completed master's thesis on Spenser's The Faerie Queen with all the required departmental signatures and approvals. It won't be long before she'll receive that master's degree which has consumed so much of her time and energy the last couple of years.

The second box contains Laura's completed manuscript, And Then I Had Boys, written especially for moms of multiple sons. As the red-headed mom of four red-headed boys (and the wife of a red-headed husband), Laura draws on her personal parenting experiences to provide wisdom and insights in a friendly, conversational style. The manuscript is now with the publisher and we're all eager to know it's publishing date.

So, congrats to Laura for sticking with two major projects simultaneously and showing the rest of us that her imaginary box system really does work!

On a completely different topic -- I'm writing this from a small rural Midwest community more than a thousand miles from my Sunland home. My daughter and her husband allowed me the joyous blessing of being with them when their first baby emerged into the world on Thursday, June 25th at 6:27 p.m. Kaydi-Paris Alexandria weighed 6 lbs. 6 oz. and was 19 inches long. A week and a half later, she is as adorable as ever. This is one of our first photos of the little sweetheart.

Whatever your box may be, get it open, get it done, get it closed!

But take time out for memory-making miracles*

Johnnie

Thursday, July 2, 2009

4th of July Trivia for Writers

I love trivia.
I love holidays.
So, of course, I love holiday trivia.

Writers’ brains collect enough information to fill a storehouse packed with fun facts that add details to light up the reader’s imagination, paint a story’s settings in a lively and vivid manner and is useful to impress friends at a party.

Enjoy the following 4th of July information:

The first Independence Day was celebrated in Philadelphia not on the July 4th, but on July 8 1776.

John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, both signers of the Declaration of Independence, died on July 4th, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the event.

America’s birthday is also celebrated in Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and England. In Denmark, where people listen to songs and speeches about the friendship between the United States and Denmark, the celebration is known as ‘Rebildfest.’

Up until Henry Ford and his millions of cars came along, the Fourth of July was traditionally the most miserable day of the year for horses, tormented by all the noise and by the boys and girls who threw firecrackers at them.

The word ‘patriotism’ comes from the Latin patria, which means ‘homeland’ or ‘fatherland.’

The Statue of Liberty is a 151-foot statue (including the torch) of a woman with a 4½-foot nose and a 3-foot mouth. In her left hand she holds a book, upon which is written ‘July 4, 1776.’

'The Star Spangled Banner' was written by Frances Scott Key and was originally set to the tune of an English drinking song.

July 4th was not a federal legal holiday until 1941.

The origin of Uncle Sam probably began in 1812, when Samuel Wilson was a meat packer who provided meat to the US Army. The meat shipments were stamped with the initials, U.S. Someone joked that the initials stood for "Uncle Sam". This joke eventually led to the idea of Uncle Sam symbolizing the United States government.

Take a moment over this holiday weekend to say a prayer of thanks for this wonderful country.
Happy Birthday, U.S.A.

Jeanie