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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From the Flickr account of lforce. Public Domain. The German playwright and novelist Gustav Freytag wrote Die Technik des Dramas, a definitive study of the five-act dramatic structure, or arc, in which he laid out what has come to be known as Freytag’s pyramid. Under Freytag’s pyramid, the plot of a story consists of five parts. (Definition paraphrased from Wikipedia). 1. Backstory/Exposition: The story begins in late January, 2020, when the debut novelist (nine months out from pub day) hears an international news piece about contagion on cruise ships. The author is on a cruise ship; a three-week trip around South America. The ship staff have protocols—lifeboat drills…
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Photo by Marcos Luiz Photograph on Unsplash In more ways than one, the Writer Unboxed community is the gift that keeps on giving. Today, I’m delighted to share one of those gifts with you. Many of you probably already know that our own Cathy Yardley is an award-winning author of romance, chick-lit, and urban fantasy and that she shares her skills with other writers through her Rock Your Plot system. But did you know that she’s worked with three different agencies over her career, feels that luck had a big part to play in launching that career, and is a self-described unrepentant nerd and geek? Cathy has sold over 1.2 million books and her answers to my Author Up Close qu…
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Which would you rather: 1) Write a novel with a world-changing theme, or 2) Write a novel that captures the exquisite pain and beauty of life? There are other choices, needless to say, such as write a novel that entertains, reaches best seller lists, earns a ton of money, or is made into a movie directed by Ron Howard. (Hey, his development team is looking.) My topic today, though, is not fiction’s commercial appeal but rather it’s literary significance: that is, what makes a novel important, if not memorable, if not a story for the ages. Theme is frequently mentioned but mostly vaguely understood. It’s a point. A lesson. An instruction, in a way, for what’s wrong,…
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Tiffany Yates Martin FoxPrint Editorial I started my publishing career back in the nineties as a proofreader and copyeditor for most of the Big Six publishers (before they started swallowing one another up). The work could be demanding and sometimes tedious—copyediting requires a laser-sharp eye on literally every word and mark on the page, not to mention questioning everything: words you think you know the right spelling for, punctuation or grammar usage that seems okay at first glance, common words that might be trademarks (Realtor, for instance, and Dumpster, for a time), facts woven almost invisibly into the narrative that you have to parse out and check (“She empti…
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Long bored by re-reading Judy Blume and The Black Stallion series, I started plucking books from my parents’ bookshelves by age ten. Mom gave recommendations at first—Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights—but said nothing to discourage me when I reached for The World According to Garp or Shogun a year later. She didn’t object when I swiped Danielle Steele titles either, though suggested I might wait a bit for D.H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover. The book remained where it was, never forbidden, until curiosity got the better of me and I read that, too. Did she know? Probably. The next time we visited a bookstore, I handed her E.M. Forster’s even more controversial novel, Mauric…
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We’re so pleased to bring you a new interview with long-time contributor and multi-published author Sophie Masson! Sophie’s latest YA novel, Sydney under Attack, releases on March 1st. A fascinating detail: Sydney under Attack will be published 80 years after the actual attacks on Sydney in 1942. Let’s get right to this fascinating story. –————————— Q1: What’s the premise of your new book? SM: Sydney under Attack is set in Sydney, Australia, in 1942, and tells the story of how Sydney came under attack from Japanese midget submarines that came right into Sydney Harbor during WWII. It’s told through the eyes of 12 year old Nick Holt, who lives with his mother and littl…
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Have you ever wished that you could attend your own private writing workshop that would teach you exactly what you need to know, at the right pace for you, and respond to your questions, problems, and needs in extensive one-on-one sessions? That’s what Your Personal Odyssey is. * The Renowned Odyssey Lectures * Expert Feedback * Deep Mentoring * Directed study with Jeanne Cavelos, former senior editor at Bantam Doubleday Dell & winner of the World Fantasy Award Apply for the Session Best for You: June 6 (6 weeks) August 8 (3 months) November 14 (6 months) About the Program: For 26 years, the Odyssey Writing Workshops Charitable Trust, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, ha…
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Please join us in welcoming Victoria Strauss to Writer Unboxed as a new regular contributor. Victoria is not only a multi-published novelist and author of short stories, she is the voice of Writer Beware–a group dedicated to empowering writers by unmasking writing scams and schemes. We’ve been fans of Writer Beware and Victoria Strauss for as long as we’ve existed here as a site, and we could not be happier to have her as a member of the WU team. Welcome, Victoria! When I do presentations and Q&As, I’m often asked to name the most common scheme or scam writers need to watch out for. Usually, I have to think a moment before I answer—not just because the universe of …
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For years (over a decade to be exact), I have been hanging on to a three-ring binder of rejection letters and emails I’ve received from agents and publishers. I’ve been hanging onto the folder as a reminder of what…I don’t know. The struggle, I guess. I’ve always had this vision of becoming a bestselling author and holding up the binder and saying, “Look at all the adversity I’ve encountered and I never gave up. You shouldn’t either.” I would picture the crowd gasping or crying tears of redemption on my behalf. I would tell everyone that no matter what, they could be a successful author, too, if they just kept at it. Everyone would be inspired by this long, hard road I’d …
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Hello, conflict, my old friend… A little over a year ago, I wrote about my long and winding road toward understanding how to implement conflict in a story. And as I said in that post, one of the hardest and most rewarding things I had to do on that journey was to face my own internalized conflict-avoidant behaviors. It was difficult to admit that my writing troubles weren’t something that I could solve through taking a workshop or reading a craft book. Rather, this craft problem emerged out of the very specific context in which I was raised: a context that, broadly, extolled the virtues of white American Protestant individualism. But having this realization also freed me…
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Have you ever wanted to track the writing/revision status for each scene in your manuscript? Or maybe you’d like a quick way to read through only the chapters belonging to your secondary storyline, or written in your villain’s POV. Sometimes you can fit everything you need in the scene or chapter document title (e.g., Wedding-Julie, 5pm, Tue 2/22, Boston), but this can quickly get cumbersome, and may provide mixed search results if you have typos or inconsistent abbreviations. For better results, you can instead tag a document with a piece of metadata. Metadata is information about an object, in our case, a document in the Binder in Scrivener. In addition to POV and st…
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This contest submissions season covers deadlines from March 1, 2022 through May 31, 2022. Spring is a great time to submit to literary journals associated with universities before the end of their semester. Response times may lag over the summer though and the pandemic continues to delay and cancel many past opportunities. Thanks to Literistic, Poets & Writers, Submittable Discover, and New Pages for many of these contests. Much like editors are looking for reasons to reject work, I want to focus on opportunities worth my time. Thus, my list of writing contests below includes reasons to submit to that particular writing contest. May you find a promising opportunity a…
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You know Greer Macallister as a long-time WU contributor, but you may not know that she has a book coming out under a slightly different name: G.R. Macallister. It’s a choice authors and their publishers make sometimes when an author moves from one genre to another, and that’s exactly the case here. Greer’s latest book is SCORPICA, the first in an epic fantasy series called the Five Queendoms, and marking a step away from her bestselling historical fiction (for now). Greer’s novels have been named Indie Next, LibraryReads, and Amazon Best Book of the Month picks and optioned for film and television. Kirkus has given SCORPICA a starred review: A bold setup for a blood-…
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Please welcome author and community member Tom Pope back to WU today! Tom was a singer/songerwriter in Hollywood for twenty years before turning to novels. His second novel The Trouble with Wisdom is a cross-genre tale, being compared to a union of McCarthy’s The Road and Mattiessen’s The Snow Leopard, a dystopian story that gives rise to hope. It launches this Tuesday, 2/22/22. A prolific guy, Tom has four more novels in the pipe line. We’re thrilled that he’s here today to bring us a provocation about hope, fear, and creation. Learn more about Tom and his novels on his website, and by following him on Facebook and Twitter. Joan Didion’s passing reminded me that afte…
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At the Pont Alexandre III over the Seine in Paris, January 1, 2022. Image – Getty iStockphoto: Marina113 ‘I’m Tired of My Ego’ That’s become one of my favorite lines of 2022, a young year that already feels three decades long. “I’m tired of my ego.” This sentiment was shared by a Christian artist who is referred to, Madonna-like, by a single name, Lecrae. (He might begin by trying to remember a first or last name.) I ran across his confession while researching recent marketplace uses of the term ego. Lecrae, who is a 42-year-old Texan, “spent the weekend posting photos and videos of himself at the SoFi Stadium” during the You Know What Bowl. Friends later “humbled him,”…
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