Just a short quick post to let you all know The Last Daughter, my romantic suspense, is FREE today through Friday. I hope you’ll all download it whether you read it or not. Here’s the link:
Blog Talk Radio anyone?
Today is IWSG day–the first Wednesday of each month. IWSG stands for Insecure Writers Support Group and was founded by Alex J. Cavanaugh. You can follow other IWSG members here and on twitter using the hashtag #IWSG.
Our purpose is to share and encourage. Writers can express doubts and concerns without fear of appearing foolish or weak. Those who have been through the fire can offer assistance and guidance. It’s a safe haven for insecure writers of all kinds! Join us!
The past few weeks have been a whirl wind of activity. Standing face to face and eye to eye and toe to toe with promotion and social media has been a real learning experience. I’ll be the first to admit, I’m not good at it. The experts tell us to establish relationships on Facebook and Twitter. To say witty things that get attention and make people laugh. Things that make people want to respond. That’s hard. I’m okay with people I know–I can be funny. With friends, my jokes come across as just that–jokes–not rude or hateful sarcasm. How do you distinguish between sounding funny on social media and sounding mean? That has to be an art.
Yesterday I did an interview on Blog Talk Radio promoting my short story, If You Believe, which will release by Helping Hands Press tomorrow, I think. It was one of the scariest things I’ve ever done. I felt as if I was using words for the very first time. I can’t imagine how I sounded–wait! I CAN imagine! I’m a Texan who has lived in Louisiana for the past 30 years. You probably know how I sound now too. Remind me not to do radio interviews again–and tack TV onto that too. I don’t think fast enough for either. I’m not a ‘small-talk’ person. In fact, I’m incredibly shy. I think it would have been better if I’d been able to look into the face of my interviewer. A friendly face is encouraging. Right?
Anyway… that’s where I am. Learning how to promote and talk about my books and stories and … I don’t like it very much.
If you want to hear my blog talk interview, you can go to the link below. My mind went blank a time or two. I’m sure you’ll be able to tell. Thank goodness my host was good at covering my silence.
Every Day is a Saturday
Since hubby retired I’ve lost all track of time. All my summer TV shows have ended. Once Upon A Time starts again next Sunday. Can’t wait! Hey, did any of you catch the first episode of Sleepy Hollow? Wow! It grabbed me. I don’t remember Irving’s Ichabod Crane being so cute. Tonight I’ll be enthralled in the second episode. Will you be watching it?
I watch Duck Dynasty periodically–always good for a laugh and a few life lessons. I know of some Louisiana people that are insulted by them, but really, this bunch could be from anywhere. I’m originally from East Texas and I have family members that look, sound and act just like the Duck Dynasty bunch. Come to think of it, I sound a little like them too.
I’m once again wrapped up in Project Runway–the only reality show I’m dedicated to. Odd since I can barely sew on a button much less create something one could actually wear. My mother almost put me up for adoption during my Home Economics sewing project.
Without my TV shows, I never know if it’s a Tuesday, Wednesday or a Thursday. Truthfully, every day feels like a Saturday. Nothing feels real since we left Oklahoma.
And as you know I haven’t blogged.
I suppose all bloggers need a break now and then. Unfortunately, a break can turn into a very long time. I loved my blogging habit. I think I started in 2006 or early 2007. Now, I’m in non-blogging mode. Time to get back on track.
This weekend daughter invited her dad to see the LSU-Auburn game with her. They left around noon and got back to Lafayette around 1:00 A.M.
While they were doing their thing, I met with a couple of very dear writer friends. When we lived in New Iberia, I’d drive into Lafayette to visit Barbara and Ro. We were all members of the Writer’s Guild of Acadiana. That was 27 years ago. After we moved away, the three of us still visited each other, entered contests and went to conferences together. We all eventually got published one after another–books, short stories or poems. Barbara sold ten Silhouette Romances before she quit writing. Ro published poetry and short pieces and ghost-wrote a nonfiction book. Her novel Hero’s Welcome is available now and I can guarantee it’s a wonderful read–about the POWs in Louisiana. She studied under Ernest Gaines and her novel–prepublished–won all kinds of awards. I’ve read it several times but I can still remember my very first reading, and how excited I was that it was so wonderful. You know how you feel when you get hold of a really good book. I read Hero’s Welcome straight through without putting it down.
When hubby, daughter and I moved to Luling, Louisiana, we added another writer friend to our circle: Barbara Colley, author of several romances, a Women’s Fiction/saga and the Maid for Murder series set in New Orleans.
I love these friends. I wish we could go back to the way it used to be–meeting every week, keeping each other motivated, encouraging each other. Sad to say nothing stays the same. Believe it or not, I think I’d like it if things were always the same… as long as ‘same’ was good.
What are you guys doing? Finishing up manuscripts? Blogging daily? Have you sold anything? Let me hear from you.
MEET PAULA MOWERY
I was lurking on one of my writer’s loops the other day and “saw” Paula Mowery talking about deep point of view. That subject always fascinates me so I asked her to be a guest blogger. Paula is also an acquisitions editor for Prism Book Group so she knows what she’s talking about. You can take a look at her editor bio at www.prismbookgroup.com.
I know you’ll enjoy and learn from her post.
DPOV Basics
by Paula Mowery
Through my experience of writing and having books published as well as editing for my acquired authors, I have developed some basic things to look for in terms of deep point of view. POV essentially refers to the character the reader is experiencing the story through at a given time. This perspective can be deepen or honed to allow the reader to connect even more strongly with the POV character. To have the reader feel as though she/he is experiencing what the character is experiencing is what the writer wants to achieve. This is the goal of DPOV.
Here is a mental checklist I use when revising my work or someone else’s:
1. Check for head-hopping. The writer must remain in the same POV
until indicating in some way that they will be changing (insert a wingding or start a new chapter). Please don’t make your reader dizzy by hopping from the thoughts of one character to another. When in a certain POV, write only what that character would do, say, think, observe.
2. Only write what the POV character can sense. The POV character shouldn’t give a physical description of herself/himself. For example: Her cheeks reddened. The POV character can’t see this.
Better: Heat rushed up her neck and into her cheeks.
3. Get rid of telling words and just say it. Even in a POV character’s internal thoughts, she/he wouldn’t think the words thought, felt.
For example: She thought he might be tired. He supposed she needed time to herself.
Better: He might be tired. She needed time to herself.
4. Show in order of occurrence.
For example: She shuddered after the knock at the door and wondered at answering.
Better: A knock on the door jolted her. She shuddered. Was it safe to answer?
5. How would the POV character really be thinking? Would the character use internal questions?
For example: He wondered if he should open the door.
Better: Should he open the door?
6. Show emotion; don’t name it.
For example: She was mad.
Better: She gritted her teeth and clenched her fists.
DPOV is a skill in progress. Keep working to give the reader that close-up experience with your POV character.
Some resources that have helped me personally are The Emotion Thesaurus by Ackerman and Puglisi and Rivet Your Readers With Deep Point of View by Jill Elizabeth Nelson.
Her new book releases Sept. 13th and is called Be The Blessing.
IWSG: HAPPY ANNIVERSARY!
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| JOIN HERE |
Today (Wednesday) is IWSG day and it’s the two year anniversary! Founder Alex Cavanaugh has a really big announcement today, something that will take this group to the next level so you might want to skip on over there to learn what it is. IWSG is over three hundred strong. I haven’t been a member for the entire two years, but I’ve loved and benefited from the months I’ve been involved. Thanks, Alex, for having a giving heart and a heart for all writers.
If you’d like to sign up for the Insecure Writer’s Support Group so you can learn from and encourage others, just click on Join Here beneath the IWSG badge. But read my post first!
I collect writer’s groups like I collect newspaper clippings, books, magazines and the other treasures that clutter my house. Just can’t seem to pass up an interesting something. I still think about the hour glass sand timer I spotted in Target in Yukon, OK, and didn’t purchase. It was an interesting something. I still want it. I keep wondering how many pages I could type in three or five minutes. Yeah, I have a timer … but not an hour glass timer.
Guess you’ve pegged me as a procrastinating hoarder. Yep, that’s me. I love, love, love collecting all sorts of little treasures … and groups… and classes. And they take up my time.
Recently I’ve joined the new Women’s Fiction Writers Association. I’ve learned a lot from their discussions on the temporary yahoo site. I have two WF novels in need of revision and the WFWA group will be teaching a course later this month on what to do with the middle of the book. That’s usually my downfall–the middle. So in 2014, I want to devote some time to these two books and their middles.
I also belong to Romance Writers of America and several of the RWA chapters; Sisters In Crime and its chapter called Guppies, and some unknown free sites that I hardly visit anymore. At the end of the year, I plan to weed out a lot of these groups. They distract me.
I’ve always been distracted in my writing–only focusing and concentrating when I absolutely have a deadline. If I don’t have a deadline, I may outline a novel one day then start playing around with short stories for Woman’s World the next day, instead of starting chapter one of the novel I outlined the day before.
So…am I A.D.D. or something? Or just unfocused? Or lazy? Why can’t I focus on mysteries or romance or women’s fiction? We all know successful writers don’t hop, skip and jump from one genre to another, never mastering any of them.
Tell me, do you have trouble focusing? What do you do to keep yourself on track? What carrot do you dangle? Has the Internet done this to us? Or do I just need professional help? Am I a sicko?
Please share your tips for staying on track because “like sands of the hour glass, these are the days of our lives.”
Book Release – TODAY!
Today my book is up on Amazon. I didn’t schedule any blog tours, and in fact, I haven’t even announced it on Facebook yet. I have trouble promoting myself. Maybe I should pretend this book belongs to someone else. I can always sing someone else’s praises.
If you haven’t read Alex Cavanaugh’s guest post on maintaining momentum, scroll down to the previous post and read it. My problem is … I don’t have a lot of momentum to maintain!
So I’m telling my followers here … if you purchase The Last Daughter, I hope you’ll review it on Amazon, tweet about it, talk about it on GoodReads. Even if you don’t like it, I hope you’ll review it. It’s the silence that’s the killer–not the bad reviews.
This is an exciting day. Very different from holding a print book in my hands, but fun just the same. Celebrate with me.
MEET ALEX J. CAVANAUGH
Alex Cavanaugh is one of my writing heroes. He is founder of the Insecure Writers Support Group, and almost every blog I visit, I see an encouraging comment from him. He does a great job of promoting others too. During the month of September, Alex starts a challenging blog tour promoting his new book, and he’ll participate in his first twitter party. Get dates and details HERE. Alex knows his blog subject well; he maintains momentum!
Maintaining Author Momentum
I slowed down while writing and ventured online just a little bit less, but I never ground to a halt. Hey, it took me a year to build that momentum! If I lost it, I’d have to do it all over again. I was determined that wouldn’t happen. (I’m ambitiously lazy.)MEET ANNA CASTLE
I first met Anna Castle in my Sisters In Crime/Guppy writing group and couldn’t resist asking her to prepare a guest blog for me. She’s an interesting person, as you’ll find out when you read this post. Anna recently retired from managing a digital archive at the University of Texas at Austin. Writing is now her full time job. Isn’t Anna Castle a great name? We’ll be seeing on it her book covers soon! Visit her website to learn more about her books.
My to-be-published-someday-soon Francis Bacon mystery series is set in Elizabethan England. I can’t travel back in time and London has changed a tad since 1585, but many wonderful old buildings have been preserved. Museums are full of intriguing furniture, tools and other things my characters might have used. Places like Kentwell Hall (http://www.kentwell.co.uk/) host Tudor-themed events where costumed re-enactors engage in traditional tasks. I found a character at Kentwell.
I do a lot of walking, a major pastime in the UK. The cities may have changed, but parts of the landscape would still be familiar to my characters. I love the English countryside and trust me, it is all kinds of different from Texas, where I live. They have rain: lots of it. They have these soft, cool breezes drifting out from under dark thickets. In Texas, thickets are full of snakes and rarely cool or soft. Descriptions from my favorite British authors make more sense now that I’ve walked where they walked when they were writing. Christopher Marlowe might have walked up this very road on his way from Canterbury to Cambridge. How cool is that?
One of the characters in my current WIP, set in Victorian London, finds herself obliged to burglarize some Mayfair houses and country estates. (Her intentions are honorable, I assure you!) My problem was getting her and her crew in and out with the goods undetected. Crime fiction lends a whole new perspective to touring the stately home! Grieving Elmore Leonard
Dreading the Read-Through? Me too!
Here’s the banner advertising The Twelve Days of Christmas. Things are moving so fast with the production of this book, these stories, I’m nervous. My deadline is Sept. 1 and the release of my single story is Oct. 1. I just finished it today… well, the first draft. Tomorrow I’ll read it in its entirety to see if it makes sense. If it doesn’t .. panic time!
I don’t know how writers deal with multiple deadlines. Or multiple deadlines with multiple publishers. Juggling stories and dates, characters, plotlines and settings … oh my! I don’t care how many white boards or excel sheets they have–it has to be mind-boggling and nerve wracking! What if a story won’t come? What if an author finds a major, MAJOR plot hole that changes/prevents what she’d originally planned, promised in the original pitch?
Can you tell I’m dreading reading my 8000 word story, expecting the worst? I’ve made my list of things I know I’ll have to add and flesh out. That’ll up the word count some. I’ll read a hard copy with pen in hand. After I do the final revision, I’ll send it to a reader/freelance editor who’ll do her part.
When you do a final read-through of a project, how do you approach it? What do you look for? Do you have a weakness when it comes to writing short fiction–with characterization, plotting, conflict?
Or maybe I should ask … when you read a short story, what ruins it for you, what will make you quit reading? Share!









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