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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Warning: Hacks for Hacks tips may have harmful side effects on your writing career, and should not be used by minors, adults, writers, poets, scribes, scriveners, journalists, or anybody. So you want to be a writer? Maybe you can string together a few good sentences, but good prose can take you only so far. Your daily routine can can affect your writing career just as much (or more!) as the words you type. Set yourself up for literary success by developing these writing habits. Write every day. The more you write, the better you’ll get. Go to a prestigious creative writing program. These programs are competitive and costly, but you’ll get to hone your craft and make co…
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For many authors, generating social media content ideas is a necessary evil: we all know the importance of keeping up a platform so we can engage with readers and the book community, but maintaining social platforms is yet another to-do item on an already long list. I’m here for you, friends. Below are 100 social media content ideas for every stage of your writing career. There are 25 items listed for each of the four stages. Whether you’re an aspiring author, have an impending book launch, just launched a book, or your career is in-swing, I hope you’ll find the below ideas useful. The content suggestions listed are best-suited to three platforms in particular: Instag…
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*Apologies to REM and to all of you for the earworm. Sometime last winter, early in the days of the pandemic, I had a conversation with one of my oldest and dearest friends about how I was no longer ambitious about anything. It was a strange concept to be exploring and I couldn’t articulate all that I was feeling, but this I knew: I was exhausted. Something had to change. I was done with endless striving. Everything in my life had been pressure-driven, from excelling in college and graduate school, to succeeding in my profession as a physical therapist, to working to create and sustain a family, to fulfilling my dream of being a published author. Imagine a road lined wi…
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Last December, I got some welcome pre-holiday news: I’d been awarded a small project grant by Create NSW, the state arts funding body for New South Wales, to develop an unusual sort of novel. Called A Turn off the Path, it would be for adults this time, rather than for my usual audience of children and young adults, but that’s not what was unusual about it. What was unusual is that I would be writing the novel for the audio format primarily, not print. That was inspired by the Audible Original range of audio books that are written for audio first and may or may not be published in print later. I’d been listening to a few of them, as well as to more traditional audio books…
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Kathleen Alcalá’s work often reads like poetry, the sort that draws our attention to the distance between what we think we have seen and what is actually there. Alcalá’s first novel, Spirits of the Ordinary: A Tale of Casas Grandes, originally published in 1996, is being reissued and will be available in May 2021. As a Latina and a writer, I find both solace and inspiration in Alcalá’s work. At every point, she challenges the amnesia that drives the homogenized, often jingoistic narrative about what used to be northern Mexico before President Polk annexed Texas in 1845; and before the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 conceded California, New Mexico, Arizona, and parts …
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Flickr Creative Commons: Michela Mongardi Growing up, I scoffed at anything playing on 92 Moose FM in favor of music by Depeche Mode, Erasure, O.M.D. and The Cure. Yes, that was a real radio station and, no, I did not fit in with my Bon Jovi, Van Halen, Mötley Crue, and Metallica loving peers in the backwoods of Maine. My appreciation for Def Leppard came at 16, perhaps because the grass was even less green in the backwoods of Finland, where my family had moved for my father’s job. The “Hysteria” album allowed me to mentally return to a time when my evening’s entertainment did not consist of a Russian documentary about women giving birth underwater, helpfully subtitled i…
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One of my favorite vintage bookstore finds is two volumes (out of three) of a 1742 translation by Rev. Philip Francis of the complete works of Horace. It’s interesting not so much for the translations (Francis turns Horace’s simplicity into contrived eighteenth-century rhyming heroic couplets) but for the technique Francis used to get it published. At the beginning is a list of subscribers – famous and/or rich people who paid a fee to be publicly seen as supporting the author. Among the viscounts and bishops is one “Deane Swift, Esq.” That would be Jonathan Swift, of Gulliver’s Travels. Of course, writers today don’t have to persuade subscribers to pay for publicatio…
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You know how it is when someone points out a jarring aspect of your writing, and you to go great lengths to explain why it’s absolutely purposeful and necessary? And then someone else points out the same element in a completely different manuscript … and then someone else in a third one … When that happened to me, I thought it was just a tic in my writing. Then I began to wonder if maybe it wasn’t about my writing, but about me—because we put features and feelings into our characters that reflect who we are and how we see the world. In my case, it was a tendency to make my protagonist brittle and defensive. Someone with a chip on her shoulder, a snarky edge. I told myse…
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I recently finished drafting the most challenging book I’ve written to date. Not only did it require the highest word count and psychological complexity I’ve navigated thus far, but its writing period spanned several years and became punctuated by numerous pauses, some stretching out for months at a time. Paradoxically, I felt an urgent need to complete this story, and each time I returned to it, I chafed at the lengthy but necessary reimmersion period. I wanted to leap into laying down new track, dang it. Not spend my time refamiliarizing myself with who did what to whom, and when. But hey, necessity is the mother of invention, right? In the end, I developed a trackin…
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Dear WU community, I’m so happy to share my new book with all of you, a book that’s had quite a journey … The Sound Between the Notes is the story of a woman’s struggle with timeless questions—Who am I? Where do I belong?— told through the unique perspective of a musician. It’s also the story of an adoptee searching for what it means to be a daughter, a mother, and a sister. I’m all these things. A mother by adoption. A daughter. A “serious amateur” pianist. But it took me several tries, over several years, to create a novel that would capture these powerful themes with the love, understanding, and respect they deserved. Although the book is launching after my debut, …
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http://writerunboxed.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/BOOK-COVER-518x800.jpeg Congratulations to Writer Unboxed contributor Barbara Linn Probst on the publication of her 2nd novel, THE SONG BETWEEN THE NOTES, which was released this past week. Described as “a tour de force steeped in suspense…a sensitive, astute exploration of artistic passion, family, and perseverance” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review) and “a tale of passion, identity, and art … a breathtaking emotional journey that was hard to put down” (Readers Favorite Reviews), The Sound Between the Notes explores timeless questions of identity and belonging through the unique perspective of a musician. Q1: What’s th…
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http://writerunboxed.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Untitled-design-2021-02-07T134207.261-525x295.png This past Friday, I co-moderated a Clubhouse chat with novelist and creative coach Nicole Meier and marketing pro Sarah Bean of Booklaunchers on “How to plan your path to publication.” This is maybe the third or fourth chat the three of us have had about publishing and marketing a book, and with each, I always find new inspiration and feel greater confidence in my own work. One of my favorite takeaways from Friday’s chat was Sarah’s advice to authors on marking and PR: check your ego at the door. Here’s a little homework for authors and soon-to-be authors. Think about t…
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http://writerunboxed.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Fiction-Therapy-WU-header-525x295.jpgAs an author, you want your novel to be the best it can be. A top quality product means good reviews, word of mouth recommendations, which lead to increased sales. But just a few typos and grammatical errors will put readers off. Before they’ve even fallen over your plot holes, they’re filling message boards with mocking remarks about a couple of innocently misplaced hyphens or an occasional dangling modifier. Most writers know this, and they diligently take time to search for editors who can check their manuscript for errors. But often a glance at the editor’s price list is enough t…
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Flickr Creative Commons: Thomas Hawk So let’s talk about regret. I know, it’s a terrible topic that immediately gives you that sick feeling in the pit of your stomach (or maybe that’s just me). But regret is something that every human who’s ever lived has experienced at one time or another, from small regrets (why did I order this salad instead of that juicy burger?) to the big ones that can loom over your life (why didn’t I say “yes” to that man with the green eyes?) Regret is one of the keys to understanding and creating character. I’m currently reading Matt Haig’s The Midnight Library (Viking, 2020). The concept is straightforward: A woman who wants to die finds herse…
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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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In every story, there’s a messy middle between “Once Upon A Time” and “They all lived happily ever after”. Even if you’re writing regularly, the story of your writing life as a whole, might feel a little messy. It’s gap the between “I want to be a writer” and “I’m living a writer’s life”, that’s the problem. How do you bridge that gap? I’ve built the StoryADay WRITER Code Masterclass to unlock a process that helps you navigate the messy middle between your dreams and the everyday practice of being a writer. It’s a process you’ll use over and over again, at every stage of your writing journey, whether you’re writing your first short story since high school, submitting y…
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Is It Just a ‘Token’ Effort? So there we were on Wednesday this week, duly reporting on the dash to digital by the spring/summer international book trade shows. (London Book Fair, Bologna Children’s Book Fair, the US Book Show, and more, all must again be digitally mounted again this year as coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic conditions remain unpredictable in early summer.) And then something else happened: Amazon announced the creation and activation of Kindle Vella, a platform for serialized writing. The significance of this played out in two perfectly positioned messages to the news media. (1) The news itself on Wednesday, the first in a long time from the halls of Kind…
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I was in high school when I first read Joan Didion’s essay “The White Album,” and since then I’ve felt like my life has been divided into two eras: B.D. (Before Didion) and A.D. (After Didion). Not only did the vibrant setting of late-1960s California appeal to me, a child of the 1990s who combed her parents’ music collections for every song by the Doors, Simon & Garfunkel, and The Box Tops she could find. But the way Didion seamlessly interwove commentary on the era’s politics, zeitgeist, and her own unflinching self-observation changed the way I understood nonfiction and, by extension, writing. As a writer who has always been drawn to fiction and, lately, fantasy, …
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Welcome to our third edition of Desmond’s Drops! This month, enjoy three drops about: Your story’s midpoint The inciting incident Establishing an image system Email subscribers, please click through to view. Look for more of Desmond’s Drops in May. Have your own bit of wisdom to share? Drop it in comments. About Desmond HallDesmond Hall, author of YOUR CORNER DARK, was born in Jamaica, West Indies, and them moved to Jamaica, Queens. He’s worked as both a high school biology teacher and English teacher, counseled at-risk teens, and served as Spike Lee’s creative director at SpikeDDB. He’s also written and directed the HBO movie, A DAY IN BLACK AND WHITE,…
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Please welcome Lynne Reeves Griffin back to Writer Unboxed today! Lynne Reeves Griffin is an internationally recognized family counselor, public speaker, teacher and writer of fiction and non-fiction. Her work has appeared in Parents, Psychology Today, Solstice Literary Magazine, Chautauqua Journal, Craft Literary, Fiction Writers Review, Brain, Child and more. Writing as Lynne Griffin, she is the author of the novels, Life Without Summer (St. Martin’s Press), Sea Escape (Simon & Schuster), and Girl Sent Away (SixOneSeven Books). She writes novels of domestic suspense as Lynne Reeves, with The Dangers of an Ordinary Night published by Crooked Lane Books, available t…
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Chattering teeth. Wind them up, set them down, and instantly those plastic choppers are clack-clacking away faster than a jackhammer, skittering around in circles on a Formica table top. For a boy in the early 1960’s, there was nothing better. Well, except maybe for X-Ray spectacles, trick handcuffs, a dribble glass, rocket kits, coin tricks, ant farms, muscle builders, hypno-coins, two-way radios, snake-in-a-can, joy buzzers, invisible ink or fake vomit. These mail-away delights could be found in the classified ads in comic books and Mad Magazine, to which I was devoted. Most of those items were manufactured by the estimable S.S. Adams company of New Jersey. They k…
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When your readers engage with your novel, they go on a journey with your characters, through the twists and turns, the highs and lows. They gather up all the details as they go: our hero has two kids, her sister has vicious dog, her boss has been bankrupt twice, and we’re not sure if we can trust him this time either. Readers take in these details as they go, almost like they’re gathering trinkets and storing them in the virtual backpack of their memory. The backpack gradually fills up as they make their way to the satisfactory (but, of course, not always happy) ending. Problems can arise, however, when they get to that end and find that their backpack is full of things…
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Novels are full of conversations. As in “real life,” fictional characters speak with various intonations, emphases, and purposes. Their words might be accompanied by gestures, facial expressions, emotional reactions, or interior reflections—helping the reader “know” what the words mean. As writers, we can convey those crucial details—the keys to meaning—in numerous ways. But it’s tricky. We want to be clear without being predictable, evocative without being obscure—to help the reader follow who is speaking and how. In other eras, that was accomplished by verbs and adverbs. People didn’t just speak; they screamed, snarled, muttered, and moaned. Nowadays, though, the neu…
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Naming characters is one of the fun things about creating stories. But it can also be one of the most troublesome. Sometimes names for your characters just pop into your head, other times you have to do quite a bit of research to find the perfect one. I’ve been thinking of that because of my experience of writing my two most recent manuscripts for children (both as yet unpublished, but one already contracted). In one, the naming process was a breeze whilst the other necessitated a great deal of looking-up of quite specialized information before I could make a final decision on characters’ names. I have to confess it’s a rather skewed comparison of extremes because whils…
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It’s been a passive autumn—in our discussion of fiction craft, I mean. It started with Kelsey Allagood’s WU post on September 18th , an excellent and provocative challenge to examine protagonists who are—as Kelsey put it—“not in the driver’s seat”. I took up the challenge to suggest that the secret of passive protagonists is not their suffering but their seeking. So far so good but, as several commenters said, there remains the problem of constructing a story middle when a protagonist is, technically speaking, “passive”; which is to say, saddled with a backstory wound or burden, is a victim of fate, is helpless or powerless, has no means to move forward or affect their…
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