Writer Unboxed - The "Connect Kitty" Approves
AAC can't help but deliver the best bloggish content that will inspire writers to new leaps of imagination. This one is mostly new releases, bestsellers, literary fiction historical fiction, mysteries, popular non-fiction, memoirs and biographies.
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Today I am delighted to present a conversation with our very own Tessa Barbosa, whose riveting debut novel THE MOONLIGHT BLADE came out yesterday. Tessa is a regular contributor here at Writer Unboxed, as well as a dear friend. We “met” maybe a decade ago through blogging, and bonded over our hyphenate identities and how that impacts our lives and our work. We’ve gone through many milestones in parallel over the years — from writing (and scrapping) manuscripts, to becoming mothers, to querying and being on submission… She is a gem of a person and a heck of a writer, and I’m over the moon that so many readers are about to discover her! Let’s find out more about Tessa’s bo…
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From Critters, the 1986 New Line Cinema movie.. I tend to pay attention to serendipity. So when I had two clients run into problems with well-meaning but misguided critiques within a week of each other, I figured I’d found my article for this month. Of course, I edit for a living, so it’s hard for me to say anything about amateur editors without sounding a little self-serving. I do appreciate the efforts and, generally, the skills that amateur critiquers – critters – bring to the table. Professional editing is expensive, and not all writers are ready to make that kind of investment in their craft. I get that. But . . . Most amateur editors are writers themselves – …
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As novelists, we work hard on our stories, and as a consequence, we usually fall in love with them a little. I think that’s one of the reasons it can be hard to see the glaring issues in those stories from our reader’s point of view. One of the most common ways that I see otherwise excellent manuscripts go astray is in the ways that the characters actually make decisions or take actions (or in the ways that these things are communicated to the reader). These are issues with the story logic, and they can hide in plain sight in your novel. Before I get to some of these nuances, though, let’s revisit the most basic thing, as far as this side of your novel goes, and it’s …
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Lie With me, the new title from Writer Unboxed contributor Gwen Hernadez, releases this coming Tuesday, and we’re delighted to help her celebrate the occasion. The latest in a series Gwen started in 2010, this edition is centered on a group of found family, but formed by—and mostly around—women. In spite of the women-centered cast, Gwen tells us, “At the same time, I wanted to write a story for one of the characters who’s been in all of my previous books, Jason Chin.” Gwen was raised in the Army and Navy, and married an Air Force engineer, so it’s natural that her Men of Steele series features military heroes and heroines who must overcome danger to find true love. Lie W…
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Photo: Alessandro Lucioni Please welcome author Julie Gerstenblatt to WU today for a uniquely fun post on fashion and authors! Julie holds a doctorate in Curriculum and Instruction from Teachers College, Columbia University. Her essays have appeared in The Huffington Post, Kveller, Cognoscenti, and Grown & Flown, among others. When not writing, Julie is a college essay coach, as well as a producer and on-air host for A Mighty Blaze, which has grown into a leading resource for author interviews. A native New Yorker, Julie now lives in coastal Rhode Island with her family and one very smart shichon poo. Daughter of Nantucket, which released on March 14th, is her fi…
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Today’s long-form interview of long-time contributor Heather Webb was conducted by our newest contributor here at Writer Unboxed: Emilie-Noelle Provost. Emilie-Noelle’s own debut novel, The River is Everywhere, released just this past week! Thank you, Emilie-Noelle and Heather! We’re excited to share this interview today with Heather Webb, the bestselling author of nine historical novels. Her latest book, Strangers in the Night, a fictional retelling of Frank Sinatra and Ava Gardner’s famous love story, will be released on March 21. “Heather Webb has set a new standard in historical fiction by writing a story that was so engaging that I forgot I was reading a book and …
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Trained by reading hundreds of submissions, editors and agents often make their read/not-read decision on the first page. In a customarily formatted book manuscript with chapters starting about 1/3 of the way down the page (double-spaced, 1-inch margins, 12-point type), there are 16 or 17 lines on the first page. Here’s the question: Would you pay good money to read the rest of the chapter? With 50 chapters in a book that costs $15, each chapter would be “worth” 30 cents. So, before you read the excerpt, take 30 cents from your pocket or purse. When you’re done, decide what to do with those three dimes or the quarter and a nickel. It’s not much, but think of paying 30 …
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Welcome to a new edition of Desmond’s Drops! This month, enjoy three drops focused on one topic–pacing–each packed with great examples. Point of View First Person: Pros and Cons Perspective Email subscribers, please click directly to writerunboxed.com to view, or visit all of Demond’s Drops on YouTube. Look for more of Desmond’s Drops in May! Have your own bit of wisdom to share? Drop it in comments. [url={url}]View the full article[/url]
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I would very much appreciate someone stepping into my brain and giving it a thorough scrubbing. Dust out the cobwebs of old thoughts, repair the broken neural pathways, maybe give my self-confidence a nice polish while they’re at it. At the very least, they could hold me upside down and give me a good shake so that all the loose nuts and bolts inside my head might fall out. When my mind feels cluttered, I find it difficult to be creative. Meditation, yoga, and similar activities are great for this, particularly for maintenance—and would probably be even better if I actually stuck to doing them regularly—but sometimes, it feels helpful to go through a Big Refresh, or the …
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Writers of all genres, editors, agents, publishers, reviewers, and PR folk: The genre label “women’s fiction” is at a cross-roads. If you’d like to share your thoughts about the genre and label via a 10-minute online survey, the research group hired by WFWA to help explore those issues would very much appreciate it. As incentive, those who participate are eligible for a gift card raffle. The survey: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/58F5R8H Feel free to share this post and/or link with other writers and industry folk. Many thanks. [url={url}]View the full article[/url]
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February was an incredibly busy news month for books, audiobooks, bookstores, and publishers, but AI and its potential impact on authors and publishing was in the forefront. Where AI stops nobody knows, but it definitely warrants paying close attention. It was impossible to include every newsworthy item, but here are some highlights. AI Is AI all that? It’s too soon to tell, but lots of people in the biz have lots to say about it, from chatbots that argue with you to creating original book covers, and a surge in AI-generated submissions that caused one publication to stop accepting submissions. Can AI be sued for copyright infringement? Is AI artwork protectable? We’ll …
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This post is a bookend to the post I did last month where I interviewed Damyanti Biswas. She discussed how she had to learn how to change her narrative approach from the one she learned reading and writing books in the predominant style of her homeland, India, and instead learn such “Western” techniques as three-act structure. Like Damyanti, Jen Wei Ting was a student of mine several years ago in a Litreactor class, and she impressed me immediately with her command of craft and her insightful writing. But as Wei Ting discusses in an article she wrote for Catapult magazine titled, “Unlearning the Colonial Gaze in Southeastern Art,” her writing journey has taken somewhat…
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photo adapted / Horia Varlan Over many years of attending writers’ conferences, I’ve heard agents share the opinion that a background in journalism is not necessarily a strength in a query letter. As a dance journalist whose intended debut novel was set in the dance world, I questioned this opinion. I thought of my background as a strength. For two decades I’d been honing my professional writing game while accumulating bylines. I worked well with editors and copyeditors. Tracking down resources? Producing on a deadline? Writing tight? No problem. I’d developed an eye for relevant detailI and understood the value of exploring a story from all angles. Besides, a legion o…
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When I think of the word home in relation to writing fiction, certain novels spring immediately to mind. There’s Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, in which home and family are the core that binds all. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy, in keeping with much high fantasy, has an epic journey away from home and an eventual return, but our protagonist is so changed by his experiences that the old home no longer fits him. The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society, by Annie Barrows and Mary Ann Shaffer, is a long-time favourite of mine. Through letters exchanged between various characters, it tells a moving story of life under wartime occupation on the island of Guern…
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Like a lot of us who have borne a lifelong love for language and words, I have always been almost as fascinated by the mechanics of writing as by the style and substance. Spelling bees were the bomb for me when I was younger (and I admit to participating in more than one adult version as well), and diagramming a sentence was my jam in high school—the order and logic and lucidity of it all! In its precision and clarity, language could be like math, except actually fun. Those of us who find our way into editing careers often seem to be as left-brained as we are right-brained. Punctuation can be as thrilling as grammar: The wrongly maligned semicolon magicking a comma-spli…
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I would very much appreciate someone stepping into my brain and giving it a thorough scrubbing. Dust out the cobwebs of old thoughts, repair the broken neural pathways, maybe give my self-confidence a nice polish while they’re at it. At the very least, they could hold me upside down and give me a good shake so that all the loose nuts and bolts inside my head might fall out. When my mind feels cluttered, I find it difficult to be creative. Meditation, yoga, and similar activities are great for this, particularly for maintenance—and would probably be even better if I actually stuck to doing them regularly—but sometimes, it feels helpful to go through a Big Refresh, or the …
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You started writing because you loved writing, right? The power to make something from nothing, to create, to bring characters and events into being and take readers along with you on an emotional journey. It was heady. Powerful. Do you remember that feeling? Now: years later, do you still have that feeling? Every time you write? Even sometimes? For many of us, even though it started out so fun, the act of writing can become downright unpleasant. It’s work. Some days that work feels like a grind. Especially if you’ve professionalized it, entered the world of publishing and contracts and deadlines, want to can get smothered under have to. There’s nothing wrong with profe…
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Writer Unboxed contributor Julie Carrick-Dalton‘s second novel, The Last Beekeeper, releases in just two days, on March 7th, and we are thrilled to help her celebrate its release. Julie’s debut, Waiting for the Night Song, was named a Most Anticipated Book by CNN, Newsweek, USA Today, and Parade, and was an Amazon Editor’s Pick for Best Book of the Month. A Bread Loaf, Tin House, and GrubStreet Novel Incubator alum, she holds a Master’s in Creative Writing and Literature from Harvard Extension School. With a background in farming and beekeeping, she is a frequent speaker on the topic of ‘fiction in the age of climate crisis’ at universities, museums, libraries, and confe…
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Five hundred years of peace between queendoms shatters when girls inexplicably stop being born. As the Drought of Girls stretches across a generation, it sets off a cascade of political and personal consequences across this matriarchal society, throwing long-standing alliances into disarray as each queendom begins to turn on each other—and new threats to each nation rise from within. That intriguing premise established longtime contributor Greer Macallister’s epic fantasy series, The Five Queendoms. For those of us captivated by her debut, Scorpica, the wait is finally over, as the second book in the series, Arca, releases this coming Tuesday. “The Drought of Girls has …
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Playground World Beauty pageant, photo from Picryl, Creative Commons. As I write this, a sneaky plan is afoot. Today, while my injured, crated, Elizabethan-collared dog is nice and sleepy from his morning dose of Gabapentin, I will tiptoe out of the house without waking him, get in my car, drive to town, and meet my contact, Beth. At Sir Speedy Printers I will pay Beth money and she will hand over the spiral-bound 375-page draft of my third novel. Back in the privacy of my car, I will stroke its flimsy black plastic cover, imbuing it with good vibes, and perhaps enjoy a fleeting feeling of accomplishment before I drive it to FedEx (sorry, USPS, I’ve lost faith). From the…
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Once upon a time there lived a generally-charming teenage boy. He was kind to neighborhood animals and younger sisters, and was both a speedy runner and a solid violist. He was wonderful in every way EXCEPT the boy did not like to study. He especially disliked studying for the SAT, even after his mother supplied him with a phonebook-size book of practice exams, and numerous gentle and eventually not-so-gentle reminders that the SAT was an important part of his upcoming college application. To please his parents, the boy pretended to study for the SAT, but when the boy received his SAT score, the proof was in the pudding: he had not studied, not a jot! When the mother…
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When I was a small child, I had a Jack-in-the-Box. It was a colorful metal container, circus-themed, with a round lid on the top and a small crank handle protruding from the side. When I turned the crank, a tinkling rhythm would play and I knew the lyrics: All around the mulberry bush The monkey chased the weasel The monkey thought ’twas all in fun POP! Goes the Weasel! At the point at which the word “pop” would be sung, the lid of the container would blast open and out would leap a little clown, leering grin on his face and arms spread wide. Inside his cloth body was a coiled spring. I suppose his name was Jack. From this remove I do not recall, but I’m certain…
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