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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What hunger drives your writing life? The hunger for approval by the publishing powers that be? For seeing your name on a cover? For developing your talent and improving your storytelling? For immortality? Glory? Money? Fame? Validation? Excellence? For shoving your success in the face of naysayers? For seeing a story to its end? For proving you can do it? For losing yourself in story? For making gifts for others? For changing the world? Is your hunger enough to keep you going when writing and life get really hard? Will it keep you going and growing through repeated failure? Through success? Chris Bosch, a champion basketball player, talks about the gift of hunger in hi…
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Like firstborn children, debut novels get a lot of attention. I’m a firstborn myself, as well as the first grandchild in a cohort of twelve, and I’ve always liked the role. But what about second novels? I’d heard about the “sophomore slump”—the letdown and diminished interest, from friends as well as the media, in a second book. I’d also heard that a second book is easier because the process isn’t quite 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 launch my own second novel, I was curious to know what others had to say—writers who had “gone before” and could…
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I had another post written for today. But something didn’t feel right about it. I consider the essay an acceptable effort, and I may share it another day, but I shelved it. I think my subconscious needed to release something else. But here’s the rub: up till this past weekend, I still didn’t know what that something else was. It finally hit me on our chilly but sunny walk this past Saturday morning. My wife said something about the fast-approaching spring solstice. That in combination with the recent reminder of the one year anniversary of the pandemic being declared made me think of my March post from a year ago today, titled: It’s the End of the World As We Know It (And…
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I was about halfway through book three in my series when I realized I needed a series bible. And since I write in Scrivener, creating it there was the obvious choice. In case you haven’t heard the term before, a series bible (or series guide) is a collection of key details about everything and everyone in the world of your series, from the characters’ eye colors, birthdates, personalities, and the cars they drive, to their family history, the name of pertinent streets, and the timeline for major and minor events (current and backstory). If you’d like to maintain a series bible in Scrivener, you’ll want to consider whether to put the series of books and the supporting ma…
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Flickr Creative Commons: Vicki DeLoach Several years ago, I read a terrific bit of writing advice from Chuck Wendig: “After today’s writing ask: does my character have agency? Did she push on the story more than it pulled on her? Is she a little paper boat on the river, or is she the goddamn river? (Hint: she should be the river.)” Ever since then, I’ve had a sticky note pinned to my bulletin board that says “Be the goddamn river, not the paper boat.” It’s good advice, and it’s stood me in good stead in life as well as writing. But here’s the thing: Sometimes, in life as well as writing, we can’t help but be the paper boat, swept away by circumstances beyond our control …
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photo adapted / Horia Varlan In 1999, when Janet Fitch’s debut, White Oleander, was chosen as an Oprah Book Club pick, Winfrey described Fitch’s prose as “liquid poetry.” In an interview at the time, which I’ve never forgotten, Fitch said something that she’s repeated during the free “Writing Wednesday” talks she’s been giving on her Facebook page since the start of the pandemic: that her constant goal, in revision, is to replace any wording in her draft that she’s seen before with something that feels fresh. Clouds like cotton candy? Out. Heart-breaking sorrow? Out. In: a sky the color of peaches; sorrow that tastes like a copper penny. Whether or not you write on the …
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I’ve been updating the house style guide for Arkbound Foundation, where I’m on the board of trustees, and for its publishing arm, Arkbound. This means I’ve been reading various style guides over the last few weeks. These are generally dry documents that detail the publisher’s preferred spelling, punctuation, layout, reference formatting and even grammar choices. Almost every time I edit for a new corporate client, I have to read through their guide and make sure the style is applied consistently throughout all their publications. And I love it. I’m fascinated by these proclamations that can range from a single page to a book as thick as a bible. The The and the The The …
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Flickr Creative Commons: Barbara W Two years ago, I went backpacking in Canada on one of the most difficult, grueling hikes I’ve ever done. And as I was standing in a field of boulders by the shore of Lake Superior in a driving rain, with 35 pounds on my back and several miles to go before the next campsite, I thought “What am I trying to prove? And to who?” The answer that came to me, in a flash of insight that shouldn’t have taken me a lifetime to achieve, was: “Nothing. I’ve got nothing to prove to anyone, and I don’t have to do this.” I did have to keep walking that day, but ever since I have given myself permission to listen to my own inner voice and trust it, to not…
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Flickr Creative Commons: paolobarzman Real life might be stranger than fiction, but does that mean writers should abandon plausibility? The past year has seen me doing two things. The first thing has been coping with the pandemic during the massive COVID spike India witnessed earlier this year. The country was reeling in shock from the lack of basic infrastructure while grieving with the loss of loved ones. Of course, the world is not done with this terrifying plot; if anything we’re just getting better at living in the moment. The second thing I’ve been doing is finishing my second novel (yes, this was the productive part of my coping). I was writing a plot that ‘could…
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Have you read the recent essay here on WU titled Don’t Finish Your Book, by Allison Larkin? The excellent piece led me to download and devour Larkin’s wonderful new book, The People We Keep. You absolutely should read the essay right away, but if the book has yet to appear on your radar, I’d be honored to be the blip that sends you on your way toward making this story a part of your writing journey. There’s so much to say about the book, but for today’s purpose, suffice to say it’s one of those stories that accomplishes so much, and seems to do it effortlessly. I promise, as a writer, it’ll leave you thinking and as a reader, it’ll leave you feeling. I tweeted after finis…
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Barbara O’Neal is an auto-buy author for many of us here at Writer Unboxed, and for good reason. Not only is she a long-time WU contributor who gifts us with wise words and optimism (and who doesn’t need that?), her books are word candy for word lovers and a craft study for authors-in-progress. We’re thrilled that she’s with us today to talk with us about her latest novel, releasing this coming Tuesday, called WRITE MY NAME ACROSS THE SKY. Enjoy! Q: What’s the premise of your new book? Barbara: When former glamor girl and flight attendant turned Gloria hears the news that her long lost love has been arrested in Europe, she knows she’s in trouble and calls in her nieces …
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I’ve spent virtually my entire life in the entertainment business, starting as a child in local amateur theater, then professional music, then this whole crazy book-writing thing. As different as these disciplines are, they have some core traits in common, chief of which is the need to please an audience. After all, if nobody comes to your show, or listens to your music, or reads your book, aren’t you just shouting into the void? So a core trait that each successful artist has in common is that they do please their audience. The really successful ones please a really BIG audience. But it’s never everybody. Just as not everybody likes chocolate better than vanilla (beca…
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We wouldn’t need the saying “Don’t judge a book by its cover” if people weren’t always doing exactly that. The cover of your book is important! It makes a huge difference to how the book is perceived at every stage of the process, regardless of how your book is published or distributed. And making the most of the cover reveal is something any writer can do. Fresh off my own cover reveal (about which more later), I thought I’d share a few tips that you can use as guidelines while you’re planning and executing on sharing that powerful first look at the cover of your upcoming book. Here are three things you’ll want to do: Plan ahead. When the final cover of your book hits…
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“One writes out of one thing only—one’s own experience. Everything depends on how relentlessly one forces from this experience the last drop, sweet or bitter, it can possibly give. This is the only real concern of the artist, to recreate out of the disorder of life that order which is art.” James Baldwin – Notes of a Native Son Over the ages, any revolutionary movement has an element of art tied to it, whether it be paintings, sculptures, writings or music. These mediums are weapons in the fight that shed no blood and take no prisoners, yet they inspire, enrage, motivate, and encourage. Art is resistance to the status quo. It is a gift that enables the user to figh…
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Hello! If you’re one of the over 5,000 people who subscribe to WU’s daily emails, you may have noticed that those posts haven’t appeared in your inbox since the end of July. There was an issue with an errant file extension, but thankfully that has now been resolved. Email service will start up as usual tomorrow, but here is a brief rundown of what you’ve missed, including links to full posts: 3 Tips for a Great Cover Reveal by Greer Macallister, 8/2 “Don’t Finish Your Book”: the grace of a long-term project by Allison Larkin, 8/3 21st Century Craft: “The Walking Stick” — on authenticity in storytelling by Donald Maass, 8/4 To Like or Be Liked: on the writer and social…
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Please welcome today’s guest: longtime community member and friend Thomas Pope! Tom’s third novel, IMPERFECT BURIALS, releases today. The story, about an American journalist who exposes a 50-year-old war crime that then imperils his life and leaves him without a country, was hailed as “sharp,” “clever,” and “rich with historical intrigue” by New York Times Bestselling author Chad Zunker. More about Tom from his bio: Tom’s early dreams of writing novels were short-circuited by a 25-year jaunt into songwriting and acting. Like all people in the arts, he has held many jobs — California vineyard foreman, builder, meditation teacher, football coach, real estate agent and ESOL…
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The Writer Ghost Lights One of my favorite fanciful notions is that of the ghost light, the light theaters leave burning center stage, a light that serves a practical purpose, yes. A way to keep the dark safely at bay until proper lights can be reached and turned on. It’s also a light said to appease the spirits in the theater, a way to give them what they most want- the stage. As a writer, I’m learning to keep my own ghost light burning, an offering to the restless stories and luscious words too often just out of reach. I visit them, humbly, with pen and paper, and keep a record of them, of their stories. But the question I kept asking myself is this- am I truly a writ…
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“One writes out of one thing only—one’s own experience. Everything depends on how relentlessly one forces from this experience the last drop, sweet or bitter, it can possibly give. This is the only real concern of the artist, to recreate out of the disorder of life that order which is art.” James Baldwin – Notes of a Native Son Life is full of disorder. There are so many things that are, that ought not to be. In any environment, we not only see disorder when it’s present but we can feel it, we can sense it, we can taste it. It messes with our holistic equilibrium. Some of us fear disorder, others easily live in it, but many despise it. The real question is, “What d…
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Welcome to a new edition of Desmond’s Drops! This month, enjoy three drops about: Combining Characters Escalations Flashbacks Email subscribers, please click through to view. Look for more of Desmond’s Drops in September. 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, which was nominated for …
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How did Judith Ortiz Cofer transform herself from a “frustrated artist” to a “working writer”? Read The Latin Deli, where she describes her transformation as “an act of will.” She decided to get up at 5:00 a.m. each morning, two hours before anyone else in her household. The decision became an expectation she had of herself, and the expectation developed into a daily ritual, whether she was writing poetry or fiction or dividing her time between the two genres. She completed her novel, The Line of the Sun, not by expecting an enormous swath of time to open magically before her, but by writing in small increments every day. She developed short, reflective essays and stories…
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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. Everybody loves the smash-hit TV show Ted Lasso from Apple TV+. The ongoing saga of Jason Sudeikis as an aw-shucks football coach from Kansaz who gets hired as a Premier League soccer coach in London is equal parts hilarious and heartwarming. Expertly performed, directed, and written, Ted Lasso is a masterclass of writing lessons for everyone from the most famous of authors to the hackiest of hacks. I’m a little bit of both, so here’s what I learned from watching Ted Lasso. On work ha…
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USA Today bestselling co-authors, Hazel Gaynor and Heather Webb’s novels have all been published to critical acclaim. Last Christmas in Paris won the 2018 Women’s Fiction Writers Association Star Award, and Meet Me in Monaco was shortlisted for the 2020 Romantic Novelists’ Association Historical Novel award, as well as the 2020 Digital Book World Fiction award. Their latest work, Three Words for Goodbye, will be published this coming Tuesday! It’s gained some serious notice already, sweeping the “Best of” lists at: BUZZFEED, “17 Historical Fiction Books You’ll Want To Get Your Hands On This Summer,” FROLIC, “The 25 Best Books of Summer 2021,” BIBLIO LIFESTYLE, “Most Antic…
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I’ve recently become obsessed with pie. Not eating it, necessarily—I can generally take or leave most pies—but I’ve been dedicating an inordinate amount of time to making pie…more specifically, pie crust. Partly I blame the Great British Baking Show for my obsession—my husband and I devoured ten delicious seasons night after night for months, and I managed to convince myself while watching these avocational bakers that I, too, could churn out flaky rough puff like a natural-born pâtissier. But pie crust, as it turns out, despite having basically four simple ingredients, is a lot more difficult than cutaway shots of bakers expertly book-folding fat chunks of grated butt…
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There’s a concept in storytelling that I’ve long tried to understand: “authentic”. Mostly it’s invoked with respect to characters. It’s important to know them. It’s important that they act and speak in ways consistent with who they are, whether entering a room or rocketing to the stars. It’s also important to know how they came to be who they are. Back story wounds and burdens shape and define them and become the engines of change. If writing is “authentic” then every gesture, action and utterance is “honest” and everything observed is rendered in a way both original and pinpoint accurate. “Authentic” means writing not to formula but as characters would actually beh…
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Here is the thing you need to understand about this post – It is not a recipe for perfecting the meet-cute scene of a new romantic comedy, at least not exactly. Simply ask Google to find dozens of suggestions for tackling that particular knot, which makes for a good writing exercise even if not your usual cup of tea. But, no, today my inspiration derives from something much simpler – an admiration I have long held for writers of stage, screen and print, across a wide range of genres, who manage to craft indelible moments when characters engage each other for the first time. Such interactions, handled deftly, add intrigue, tension and occasionally, as with the aforemention…
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