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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photo adapted / Horia Varlan Cliff-hangers and nail-biters aren’t the only ways to keep readers turning pages. When you develop their inherent conflict, quieter, almost insignificant-seeming moments can successfully produce an itch in your reader that only reading on will effectively scratch. Here are some of the many ways that can be achieved. 1. Someone fakes it From the time we are born, we are acculturated in a way that allows us to function in a family (don’t bite your brother, even if you want to) and in society (don’t bite your neighbor or sleep with his wife, even if you want to). Showing our characters “faking it” to override baser urges adds layers of interest…
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All right fine, two decades later, I’ll admit it. Back in grad school I may have been a little overeager. Probably a lot overeager. While most of my fellow MFA candidates approached the program with an enviable amount of cool, professional detachment, I was about as cool and detached as a sugar-crazed toddler running wild through Disneyland. In my defense, I’d spent my entire life up to that point surrounded by non-writers. In grade school and high school, my aspirations to someday become a novelist made me a favorite of English teachers, but a curiosity to my classmates. In college, my best friends were business and finance majors. The first bits of my post-undergrad ad…
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Where do our female characters stand in history? As authors of fiction, are we bound to reflect their situation as it would have been in the (implied) time and culture of the story? What if that time and culture was one that oppressed, demeaned or belittled women? Does historical accuracy mean reduced agency for the women of our story, and how does that go down with the contemporary reader? Whatever the chosen period, a writer of historical fiction has a certain obligation to be accurate. The reader expects the story to be true to its time, not only in the detail such as what people wore, what they ate and drank, and how they travelled, but also more broadly: politics, r…
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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. Enjoying your long Labor Day weekend? I sure as hell hope not. Writers labor on Labor Day. This is the weekend you’re going to regain all the writing momentum you’ve lost. No matter how far behind you are on your goals, you’ll be amazed at how easy it is to convince yourself that you can atone for it all if you really buckle down over a weekend that is one whole day longer than any other weekend. Does this sound unrealistic? I’m sorry, but it’s time for some tough love. You’ve spent t…
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We’re so pleased to introduce you to longtime contributor Sophie Masson’s latest book for children: Four All at Sea, which releases on September 6th! Illustrated by Cheryl Orsini, this is the lively, funny sequel to the popular Four on the Run. A continuation of the series will publish next year. Sophie is the award-winning author of over 70 books for children, young adults and adults. In 2019, Sophie received an AM (Member, General Division) award in the Order of Australia honors list. Please visit her website and blog to learn more, and enjoy this brief interview with Sophie about her latest! Q1: What’s the premise of your new book? SM: It’s a new adventure for four…
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In an earlier post for WU, I wrote about the process of writing my audio-first novel for adults, A Hundred Words for Butterfly, and how it had differed from other novels I’ve written, because of the fact I specifically created it for the audio format. Well, this week the novel has been officially released by its publisher, Spineless Wonders Audio, and is available now for purchase on lots of different platforms, including Google Audio, Kobo, Nook, Libro, Authors Direct, and others. Audible will also follow shortly. It’s been an amazing and exciting process, seeing and hearing the audiobook take shape as narrator (Sarah Kennedy) sound engineer (Echidna Audio) cover designe…
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Photo by Ted A small painting hangs in my hallway. Created by a friend some years ago, it is one of my very favorite things, and illustrates a poem by Sappho: People do gossip And they say about Leda, that she once found an egg hidden under wild hyacinths When I asked my friend to paint the poem for me, I had an idea of what I wanted it to look like — a girl in a white dress perhaps, discovering an oversized egg on the ground. But I kept my thoughts to myself, and I’m so glad I did, because the end result was so much better than what I’d anticipated. Brilliantly, my friend painted neither the swan, nor Leda, nor the egg — instead she gave me a simple sketch of hya…
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A lion tamer at Bertram Mills Touring Circus, Ascot, 1936. Photo by Edward G. Malindine Certainly our work is the most important component of an author event. With that in mind, most of us choose what we’ll read with care, incorporating the anticipated audience, reading time allowed, and how much backstory setup is required for a particular passage. Maybe we practice reading aloud and timing ourselves. I know I do. As a person who has issues with anxiety, I need to feel prepared. Yes, a large part of that is about what I’ll speak about or read. But I also pay more attention than I probably should to my personal presentation. Below are some of the tricks I found durin…
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Are you living up to your full potential? It’s a haunting question that provokes in us everything from guilt to introspection to greater effort. It’s also a false provocation. Like the myth that we only use 10% of our brains, it’s simplistic. Your full potential under ideal life circumstances is not the same as your full potential under real life circumstances such as childhood trauma, diabetes, bankruptcy, covering bail for your shifty brother-in-law, or your basement flooding. Are your characters living up to their full potential? Now wait a minute, you are thinking, if asking that question about my life isn’t fair then how is it fair to ask that question about my…
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An editor waiting to eviscerate the nearest adverb It is a truth universally acknowledged that the very best thing you could do for your writing is to tighten it up, just a little. Still with me? With bowing and scraping apologies to Jane Austen, my take on that initial sentence that clogged your pores: it’s a gasbag, a dirigible without a destination. Why? Because it’s filled with unnecessary words and phrases. It’s filled with air, not substance. But this is air that doesn’t breathe life into your reader’s lungs—it suffocates them. Consider: any sentence that has a qualification, a dodge, is a sentence that whimpers. Words like “very” and “really,” which seem to be in…
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Over the past year, the global pandemic has cost us all so much that 2020 has become known as “the lost year.” Considering that time is our most precious unrenewable resource, I can’t justify writing off an entire year as lost, so I’ve been thinking about what I gained in 2020. Today, I’m sharing some of my experiences from the lost year and the lessons I’ve found within them—as well as reflection prompts to help you consider how they might apply to your life and writing journey. Being Adaptable is More Effective than Being in Control. At some point along the way, I got it into my head that I am in control. I’ve set goals. I’ve tracked calories, miles, followers, wor…
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Apologies in advance for the unpleasant imagery that follows. Some years ago, I was traveling through Malaysia, and part of that meant a long bus journey. At one point, I really had to use the bathroom on the bus, but I’d been avoiding it the whole trip because I could smell that bathroom all the way to my seat near the front. But, as my old dad used to say, you cannot hold what is not in your hand. So, eventually, I had to go. I tried to make the visit as short as I could – no longer than I could hold my breath. But that wasn’t short enough. In the moments I was in there, the bus took a sudden sharp corner. Physics took over and shifted the momentum to the back of the …
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I met author, editor, and educator Yasmin Angoe through an organization for BIPOC editors. We’re not only colleagues; she is a constant motivator as I go about my own writing journey. Yasmin is a heads-down, work-hard, show-don’t-tell kind of person, and when this Deadline article announced her book deal and seven-figure TV option earlier this year, she showed the writing world she meant business. But headlines only tell part of the story, and I wanted to learn more about her writer’s journey. In the latest installment of my Author Up Close series, Yasmin shares her path to publishing, her wins and losses, and why she advises all aspiring authors to try just one more thin…
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I have a confession to make: I am a gamer. I’ve been one since the age of seven when I first picked up a Nintendo controller after one of my cousins told me I was too young to play. It felt so powerful being able to press all the buttons, making Mario jump up for the shiny coins. The ability to advance through all the obstacles was thrilling! My love of gaming has advanced with technology and though I no longer smash Goomba, I still feel the thrill of accomplishing quests and killing “the bad guy.” It’s easy to think that video games are the antithesis of creativity, that by playing them we are taking away from valuable writing time. But in truth, video games can benefit…
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April 2020 in Athens. Image – iStockphoto: Mehmet Uğur Özer Fits and Starts I’ve noticed that when looking back at the year since the first major outbreaks of the coronavirus, what stands out are leftovers of various stages of understanding and concern and response, stages of attention, many of them reflective of the earnest but evolving understanding of COVID-19 among scientists–and a stunned public. None of this is meant, by the way, to be funny. It’s not in the least funny, though at times it’s ironic. And it’s worth a few minutes of thought. There were videos–for adults–about how to wash your hands, remember? Some had such special instructions as, “Don’t forget your …
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I have an aloe vera plant in my office. Her name is Alice. Alice came to me in a cute little terra cotta pot, and has followed me from sunny windowsill to sunny windowsill through a move across state lines. You could say we’re pretty close. A few months ago, I noticed Alice wasn’t doing well. She was wilting, and the tips of her leaves were turning yellow and withering. She wasn’t growing at all. After some experiments in watering and sunlight levels, I gently picked Alice up out of her pot to look at her roots. It turns out Alice was rootbound, and the thin white threads of her roots were filling up the potting soil and beginning to curl around the bottom of the pot it…
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Basing fictional characters on people we know carries both distinct risks and unique rewards. The risks include potentially offending the person inspiring the character, especially if unflattering facts are revealed and the characterization is not adequately camouflaged—or poorly executed. That said, a great many writers I know have reported that the people on whom they’ve based characters have seldom if ever recognized themselves, if only out of misguided vanity. On the other hand, the rewards of basing characters on people we know include the ability to use personal, real-world knowledge and observation in the characterization, with the added plus of being able to us…
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*sense of humor required 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. Writers, like diamonds, sparkle under pressure. Without pressure? They’re just lumps of coal, best known for being set on fire or given to brats at Christmastime. Writers need deadlines the way Dr. Frankenstein needs electricity—it takes a dangerous outside force to inject life into our abominable creations. The power of the deadline is at the root of the Hack’s Paradox: You have no deadlines because you haven’t sold your book, but how can you sell your book i…
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We are thrilled to welcome Diana Giovinazzo as our newest contributor to Writer Unboxed! Diana is the co-creator of Wine, Women and Words, a weekly literary podcast featuring interviews with authors over a glass of wine. Diana is active within her local literary community as the president of the Los Angeles chapter of the Women’s National Book Association. Her debut novel, THE WOMAN IN RED, was released August 4, 2020. Her second novel, ANTOINETTE’S SISTER will be released January 2022. Learn more about Diana on her website. Glad to have you aboard, Diana! Five years ago my best friend, Michele, and I decided to start a podcast that we called-Wine, Women, and Words. Ou…
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This contest submissions season covers deadlines from September 1, 2021 through November 30, 2021. 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 among this list and spend less time searching for where to send your exceptional work. September 2021 American-Scandinavian Foundation – ASF Translation Awards – $0 fee Deadline: September 1, 2021 “The American-Scandinavian…
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If you’re struggling with character motivations, sometimes it helps to go back. Waaaay back. I don’t mean to that character’s childhood: even farther back. Back to the absolute beginning of time. This may seem like overkill, especially if you’re not writing speculative fiction. But if your characters grew up in any culture at all—and I hope they did, unless they were born and matured inside of test tubes in an off-planet laboratory, in which case, you’d better be prepared to write about the psychological implications of that mess—then their culture will have some sort of explanation for how their world started. And the story of that creation myth will have shaped a gre…
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Image: Getty iStockphoto: John Phoenix Hutchinson In Search of Safe Landings How do you airlift your creativity above the tree line of the moment’s social and political sensibilities? Can you be sure you’ve honestly defeated the gravity of any given moment? Especially in the political moment we’re in today, the question can become more internal than corporate, more about personal courage than contracts. Curiously, on the world stage, it’s easier. In meetings, conferences, and the world congresses of the International Publishers Association (IPA), one of the most frequently examined issues is self-censorship. Publishing Perspectives is the association’s world media partn…
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I recently had to write the acknowledgments for my forthcoming novel. This caught me off guard because I hadn’t thought about writing acknowledgments, maybe because I’m superstitious about pondering over that part of the book until you have to write that part of the book. But the process was so interesting that I’m now thinking it’s a good idea to occasionally stop while working on any sizable creative project to acknowledge what allows you to do this crazy thing. But don’t trust Writer Me, check out YouTuber Me, who captures more aspects on acknowledging and appreciating this writing space, along with the usual dose of self-mockery. NOTE: No stick figure drawings …
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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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This is a continuation of my report on the experience of launching a second novel. If you missed the first part, no worries! You can read it here. To recap: Everyone loves a debut. A new star bursts on the scene, with a world of possibilities still ahead. A friend publishes her first book and has her dream come true. The second book? Not so much. I’d heard about the “sophomore slump”—the letdown and lack of media interest in a second novel. I’d also heard that a second book is easier because the process isn’t so unknown; experience can bring clarity, confidence, and manageable emotions. Both descriptions of the sophomore novel made sense to me. Since I was about to l…
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