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Jessica Ferguson

Author, Writing Coach, Speaker

G is for … G Words

April 8, 2016 By Jessica Ferguson 6 Comments

GG words are giving me fits tonight. I can’t think of one G word I want to write about. I know there are great G words in the dictionary–generosity, genuine, goals and gumption–but none of them make me want to write 300 words. So let me play around …

Goals is a nice word. I’m sure we all have them. I hope we all have the gumption to finish our goals, and that we discover our genuine writer’s voice while we’re doing it. In case you didn’t know, the more we write, the stronger our writing voice becomes.

Generosity is a beautiful word. I pray we’re always filled with generosity toward others—even if they aren’t generous with us. And that will happen when we least expect it:

  • At a conference we might run into a favorite author who turns out to be full of herself. What a disappointment!
  • We may get a contest entry back with a hateful comment. That happened to me with my first published book.
  • At our very own Saturday writer’s meeting, we might be insulted by one of the officers or snubbed by a non-giving writer we’ve critiqued several times.

Put those kind of things out of your mind immediately because they won’t do YOU any good to hang on to them. We have to stay focused on our own goals and dreams and not let anything or anyone knock us off track.

Here’s something that will do you some good.

For years I’ve followed The Seekers, a blog where all the contributors are extremely generous with their knowledge. Familiar with them?

Do yourself a favor, sign up to follow The Seekers. Reading their daily posts (and commenting) will give you opportunities to win prizes, but more importantly, you’ll hang out with published authors who will share and instruct and encourage you on a daily basis. These writers are the real deal—genuine and generous and gushing with wisdom when it comes to writing and publishing.

Their archives will give you an excellent A to Z education, but two recent posts are among my favorites.

Dreaded Revisions by Tina Radcliffe shows how Tina breaks down the revision process, and All About Fiction Proposals by Jill Kemerer will make certain you have all the necessary ingredients in your own proposal.

I may as well add another favorite and fun post–another G word–Gifts. Take a look. Bet you didn’t know there are so many wonderful things out there for writers. 🙂

I hope you’ll share the name/link of a generous blog you follow. Thanks!

Filed Under: A to Z 2016 Tagged With: Fiction Proposals, revisions, The Seekers, writing and publishing

Light at the End of This Writing Tunnel

February 15, 2012 By Jessica Ferguson Leave a Comment

When A Bad Guy Forever won the mystery/suspense/thriller category of the 2011-2012 Phoenix Rattler contest last week, believe me, it was a badly needed shot of encouragement. Sort of like those B-12 shots my mother used to give my old granny. Those shots kept her kicking for a good number of years. I’m hoping and praying to stay kicking long enough to get this manuscript revised and circulating.

For the past three days, I’ve been working nonstop. The first thirty-six hours, I read with pen in hand making notes where things didn’t make sense or where I needed more dialogue or internal thought. I haven’t read my manuscript in its entirety since I “finished” it the first time. Won’t tell you how long that’s been! My score sheets from the contest are invaluable. Much of what the two finalist judges said helped identify problem areas. It’s amazing how different “professional eyes” (should I say an editor’s eyes?) are from our own.
I’ve lived in fear that the rewrites I’ve been involved in during the past year were creating an unfixable mess. I’m tickled silly to say that’s not the case at all. I feel more positive and encouraged than ever! The thing didn’t read half bad. Oh, there are glitches and holes and a few problems, but they’re all fixable. FIXABLE! Hooraaaay!

Now I’m taking the notes I’ve written on the hard copy and I’m rewriting. The only thing that’s truly scaring me is how much I’m doing away with. Entire scenes are being discarded but they don’t work so they have to be dumped. I’m almost half-way through the book. Once I’m finished, I’ll pass it on to mystery writer Barbara Colley and let her mark it up. She’s excellent at spotting holes and asking questions that have to be answered. After fixing what she says is broken, hopefully, I’ll have a marketable manuscript. Do you think I should have more than one reader? Seriously now, cut me some slack. But do you?

I’m still having a few problems adding description and a sense of setting. Why is that giving me fits? I have to make a conscious effort to do it when it seems, at least to me, a lot of that should just appear naturally, then be tweaked. It dawned on me today that maybe in the future, I should plan my setting in detail before I ever start writing. What do you think?

Teach me something about setting and description and revision. My book is set in Louisiana. Am I just making sense of place difficult because I’m not really from Louisiana? Now that’s a thought.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: A Bad Guy Forever, revisions, sense of place, The Phoenix Rattler

Projects for 2012

January 16, 2012 By Jessica Ferguson Leave a Comment

We’re 16 days into 2012. What have you accomplished?

I turned in my article on Louisiana author Christa Allan. It will be in the March issue of Southern Writers Magazine.

I’ve put my novel away–the one I completed and marketed to Christian publishers. I took it apart and tried to rewrite it for the secular market. It’s the one that was a finalist at Killer Nashville. Rewriting–a complete rewrite–is difficult. I lost my vision for the book. Well, actually, I didn’t lose my vision, I just lost myself. I thought I could pull out the faith elements and rewrite, but it didn’t work that way. The minute I took their faith from my characters, their Christian reasoning, praying, their Christian World View, they became different people, and then I saw the pages being gobbled up and disappearing and well … I need to step back from it for awhile. Get to know these new characters. I need to do a story board or something, gain better control of the timeline. Anyway, it’s constantly on my mind. I hear my characters conversing, I jot down things they say and do. Hopefully, I’ll get back to it soon.

In the mean time, I’d love to pursue obsessive-compulsive organizational habits. I think being organized makes a huge difference in whether one is successful or not–no matter what they attempt. On the whole, I’m not an organized person, but if you give me one project at a time, I’m organized. Make sense? Baby steps, baby steps.

I’ve started two new projects. I’m super excited about both. I’ve been thinking about a nonfiction book for about a year and making notes. I’ve finally started outlining it. Since a lot of interviewing will have to take place, I’m devising some powerful (yes, they have to be powerful!) questions for my subjects. I’ve never written a NF book. I need to learn exactly how much I should write before I query. I understand one doesn’t have to write the entire book before they can query or even sell. The research has been fun. So if any of you have experience pulling together a NF book, any thing you can share will be appreciated.

I’m also working on a novella. No market in site–just something I have to write. Oddly enough, this started out in my mind as a NF book, and then it hit me that I should write the same story but from a fictional character’s POV; a fictional character who is a composite of many characters. I’m handwriting it. At some point, I’ll start typing, I’m sure, so I’m waiting for that pull to the laptop. Right now, the intimacy of writing by hand is keeping me excited about the story. I’ve even been waking in the middle of the night because scenes invade my sleep. Don’t you love it when you’re that excited/obsessed about a subject? At this point, it’s from the male point of view. While I write, I’m very conscious of POV–trying to put myself in his/her/its place and look out at the world. I’m thinking about revising it to an androgynous point of view to make the subject matter more universal. I’ll decide about that once I start revising. Could be that from the male POV would be the more perfect love story but I want to use the POV that makes it a more powerful story. Your thoughts?

So now that you know what I’m doing, what’s on your plate? New projects or finishing up old ones? Anything you’re super excited about? Obsessed with? Worried about? Scared to attempt? Details!

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Adrogynous point of view, NonFiction, novella, revisions

Reality Faith.
Reality Fiction.

"As for us, we cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard.”
Acts 4:20

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