Attention romance writers!

Just thought I should point out something that EVERY aspiring romance author should be checking out. Gabrielle Luthy’s Web site is a treasure chest of places with information on how to start plugging your women’s fiction/romance novel.

The site is deeply layered with:

  • Indexes
  • Articles
  • Contact information
  • Resources on promoting your book
  • How to handle media engagements
  • Putting together a press kit

Sir Stirling Rehm (yes, that's what my birth certificate says so hush up)

There are literally hundreds, (nay, thousands!) of rabbit holes to dive into and, quite frankly, the site is super impressive. I’ve already buried my “How to” marketing books and writer’s market books in the back yard. This site will be more than plenty . . .assuming I’m writing a romance novel. Don’t judge! A schnauzer can write romance like it’s nobody’s  business!

My favorite page on her site was the “For Writers” page. There were 213 articles categorized under “Creativity and Inspiration.” I’m pretty maxed out on both of those things, but I just wasted the whole morning perusing a good chunk of that list.

So, if the thought of writing women’s fiction or romance ever crossed your mind, this Web site should be your first stop. If you do check it out, be sure to come back and comment on what you found to be most helpful. Share the knowledge, people!

PSU’s Book Publishing Program and Ooligan Press

By Ian VanWyhe

First, a little history. After I graduated with a degree in English, I attended the Denver Publishing Institute (DPI), a wonderful month-long seminar that provided an in-depth overview of the publishing industry, with many guest speakers from various general trade, academic, and textbook publishers around the country. There was also some hands-on work, but not as much as I had hoped.

After that, I came home to Portland, and proceeded to not find a job for around a year. Despite my willingness to bankroll my own moves, publishers in other cities weren’t interested in hiring out-of-towners, I couldn’t afford to move to another city without a job lined up, and there simply weren’t any opportunities in Portland. As I made contact with Portland publishers, particularly the founders of Ink and Paper Group (http://inkandpapergroup.com/), I learned the reason for this: the Portland State University publishing program. Though I hadn’t originally planned on attending graduate school, I talked to the head of the program, Dennis Stovall, who was patient and helpful, decided to apply to the program, and got in.

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Metaphors Help Make Memorable Characters

 

By Elizabeth Lyon

In my work with writers over the years, I’ve come to believe that mastering plotting is far easier than mastering characterization. Creating depth of character means, for the writer, diving into the mostly uncharted waters of the psyche, the soul, and the spirit.

Recently, I led one of my three critique groups on a guided tour of these waters. I gave the assignment of discovering and developing a metaphor for the protagonist or other point-of-view characters. One of my dictionaries defines metaphor as: “A figure of speech in which a term is transferred from the object it ordinarily designates to an object it may designate only by implicit comparison or analogy.” The dictionary goes on to give the example, “the evening of my life.” We use metaphors in daily speech all of the time. Don’t believe me? Dog days. Buried under a mountain of paperwork. (more…)

Microsoft Word’s Format Painter

 

by Cheri Lasota


Format Painter is a time-saving tool I only recently discovered while working with Microsoft Excel spreadsheets. This handy button allows you to copy the formatting from one place to another. In Microsoft Excel, you can copy formulas, fonts, you name it. Microsoft Word works the same way. It works like copying and pasting; the difference is that it doesn’t change your actual numbers and text, it simply copies the formatting of the section you highlight.

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Track Changes

By Cheri Lasota

Microsoft Word’s Track Changes is fast becoming the editing method of choice for many editors and writers. It has a lot of features, some limitations, and occasionally some jaw-dropping glitches that make you want to pour gasoline on your computer and light it on fire. (Whoa! is that just me?)

For writers who cannot afford to run off a copy of their 350-page masterpiece everytime somebody wants to read it, Track Changes is a viable choice. It also works for editors working with clients who live in another town, state, or country. In short, sometimes you need to use it, and knowing how to make the most of it will increase your speed and accuracy when editing.

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—Viva la Em Dash—

By Cheri Lasota

Ever heard of an em dash? I thought not. I hadn’t heard of it until a few years ago, when I finally delved into the subject after much confusion on what a hyphen and dash actually look like. According to the Chicago Manual of Style, “Hyphens and the various dashes all have their specific appearance … and uses.”

There are three types that fiction writers generally use:

-        the hyphen: used in compound words, in URLS, and to separate telephone numbers, etc.
–     the en dash: used to connect numbers such as dates, times, verses, sports scores, etc. 
—       the em dash: used to set off an explanatory element or to indicate a sudden break in thought or sentence structure.

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Language Redux: How one writer’s trip to South Korea became a study in learning from scratch

 

by Kristin Thiel

There are lots of wishes we as writers make: to be published, to make more money, to find the perfect pen, to type faster, to wake from a dream with a whole and perfect story ready to be written. My brain continues to generate more even after I stop typing here. As a writer, I can’t help it: wishes are the stuff of stories, and words are the only way I know how to express them.So what would it be like if we could escape language? If we could be like babies again; if language was learned out of necessity and not design; if an R carried no sound, no context, but only shape—if we even noticed that? To escape, to re-know language as the mysterious, aesthetic, magical thing we no longer recognize because we have mastery over it. (more…)

Critiques: How to be a thorough reviewer

 

By Maria Zannini

What’s the best way to become a better writer? Get thee to a critique group, then roll up your sleeves and review everything you can get your hands on.

While I’ve learned a lot from the many astute reviews I’ve received from my critique partners, I’ve learned even more by reviewing them. There’s something about the process that forces you not only to analyze the work you’re reading, but also how it applies to the work you’re writing.

Here are the things I consider as I review: (more…)

The Like-Minded, the Fellow Afflicted

 

By Cheri Lasota


“Men with secrets tend to be drawn to each other, not because they want to share what they know, but because they need the company of the like-minded, the fellow-afflicted.”

—Don DeLillo

All writing groups are unique because their members are unique in what they write, how they communicate, and most of all in how they critique each other’s work. The dynamics in one group may inspire and energize you while another may shatter your writing dreams forever.

Yet writing groups are a must for every writer. They teach us to receive constructive criticism with openness and grace. They help us learn how to critique the work of others. They help us grow as writers in a way we never could working alone. (more…)

Here’s to a new way to pitch

 

At a conference two years ago, I got lost and ended up at my group pitch very late and very hysterical. When it came time for my pitch, the agent assured me there was nothing to worry about and broke the ice with me in a discussion about one of our mutually favorite books, The Secret Life of Bees. I was incredibly grateful. This calmed me down enough to discuss the synopsis of my own novel without hyperventilating.

It’s a cliché to say it this way, but “agents are people too.” They get nervous when meeting strangers, just like the rest of us. If you shift the focus from yourself, you may end up accomplishing what a pitch session is designed to do—help you and the agent decided whether you’d work well together.

It’s a different approach. Most of the time, writers come in, blurt out their story for ten minutes, and leave no time for questions or conversation. The submission package—specifically the query letter and first few pages of the book—is where the real selling begins. But that comes later. First things first, try pitching as if the story is not the most important thing.

When you first sit down with the agent, focus on making her comfortable with you. Say hi, ask her how she is doing today, and whether she has attended this conference before. Take a deep breath, give her time to reply. Express an interest in her personally by asking a few questions about books she’s represented or her favorite genres. Pay close attention to her answers. These may help guide you in writing a query letter if she requests to see more.

After a natural pause, you can then begin to give her the stats of your novel: the genre, the word count, the setting, and the (working) title. Practice a one-line tagline. (Here’s the one I used for my first novel: Two lovers are caught in the throes of a myth that’s threatened to separate them forever.)

Now you might want to ask her what more she wants to know about your story. Try to anticipate what questions she might ask and think of your answers ahead of time. If she doesn’t have any questions, then you can launch into your pitch at this point. Regardless, when you finally get to your pitch, try honing it down to two minutes. Throw in a quick sketch of your main character and what his or her main story goal is. Don’t forget to include some of the major events that make your plot shine. Above all, be sure to share what element(s) of your novel make it stand out from the pack. Does your novel have an unusual or exotic setting? Is your character larger-than-life or incredibly empathetic? Does your plot make your readers’ mouths water in anticipation?

Find a way to tell the agent what makes your story special without using any adjectives or disclaimers or wild claims. What I mean is, telling an agent that your story is “edge-of-your-seat thrilling beyond your wildest dreams” might get you in a heap of trouble. How can you truly be sure your book can live up to your hype?

If you are pitching this year at any conferences, I wish you the very best of success. Don’t forget to relax and have fun. Remember, she’s only one agent. If you don’t get a request for a partial or full, there are hundreds of others you can query later.