Monday, June 8, 2009

What to do when you lose your writing steam!

Thanks to Sharon, this comes from Mike Foley in The Writer's Edge. I think we've all suffered from lack of enthusiasm at one time or another or God forbid...all the time!

AMEN!

Losing enthusiasm for your writing? Here’s how you can handle it.

1. Stand BackThis involves creating a certain distance between you and the project. When you’re writing, you focus on a specific area, a certain scene, or a critical chapter of nonfiction information. And so it’s easy to lose perspective. Your original enthusiasm sprang from your concept of the project as a whole. When the enthusiasm wanes, it’s time to stand back and revisit your original concept. View the project as whole, complete, and engrossing—the way you first thought of it. That’s where you’re headed. That’s where the book is headed, no matter what stage it’s in right now. Reminding yourself of this is great way to rekindle your enthusiasm.

2. Move On—Very often, enthusiasm wanes because a writer is struggling with a particular section. And because that section isn’t going well, it’s easy to think that the entire project isn’t working. The cure? Set those pages aside and write a different section of the project. Pick a section that seems fun or exciting to you. Chances are the writing will go well and your enthusiasm will begin building once again.

3. Read—Enthusiasm still weakening? Begin looking over the manuscript that you’ve produced so far. As you reread what you’ve done, pick out a few aspects that are strong and working well. It might be a particular character, a section of dialogue, or in nonfiction, an exciting anecdote or even a strong how-to section. When you see something that’s working well, it’s hard to view the project as a lost cause. And so your enthusiasm can return.

4. Focus on Yourself—That’s right. You’ve come this far, and what does that mean? You’re a writer. Plain and simple. Even if the project doesn’t seem to be going well, you’ve taken it this far. You’ve done more than most people do. You’re far beyond those folks who casually say that they’ll “write a book someday,” then never write a word. You’ve taken the risks and created something. You’re a writer. And if a piece of writing isn’t well done, a writer can fix it. If a project has lost its zing, a writer can rediscover that. A writer can tap imagination, alter words, and make things right. You’re a writer. You’re capable of doing all that.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Celia Yeary: Do You Love Your Book?

Celia Yeary: Do You Love Your Book?

This post is definitely worth a read for all of us who've ever questioned whether we've got a book worthy of publishing.

Have a read, and have a wonderful day.

~Ashley

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

From Sharon... 8 Tips for a compelling conflict from ICL

  1. Be certain your main character has a worthy, noble goal -- no one likes a shallow greedy protagonist.
  2. Consider the tension of a ticking clock. Time limits for reaching a goal will create an urgency that readers find compelling.
  3. A plot is one obstacle after another -- never make it too easy for your protagonist.
  4. Your main character needs to solve his own problems. Readers like active protagonists who do something, not passive kids who are done to. Yes, parents solve problems in the real world. Guess what? Stories are not the real world.
  5. Your main character must act consistent with the person you have created him to be.
  6. The story outcome has to matter to the main character. Something must be at stake if he fails -- something big. Look at your story and ask yourself, what happens if my protag fails? Are the consequences great enough to create strong motivation to overcome?
  7. Jump into the story at a moment of action, conflict, or excitement. Jump right into a scene where something is happening instead of backing into the story by explaining stuff to us. Even the best conflict won't help a story if your reader abandons you before he gets to the exciting part.
  8. Resolution of the story must not leave reader with a lot of loose ends or questions. Readers expect to see the main character reach his goal, or abandon the goal in favor of a more desirable goal. Never give the reader the impression that you just got tired of the story and ended it -- the ending should be emotionally satisfying and logically drawn from the characterization and story details.
Challenging myself to 1k words/day - following sage advice of fellow writers - Promo is good. Keeping up with your WIPs? That's BETTER! Who's with me?! http://tinyurl.com/c4ybmd

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Do You Know When to Give Up?

I'm forwarding a link today - because I think it's worth everyone reading.

I've only read this one blog post, but the first comment was from James Scott Bell - so, I trust the company that mystery writer keeps! ;-)

How Do You Know When To Quit? By Toni McGee Causey

Please take a look, and if you haven't yet - DO take a moment to follow her YouTube link, and see Susan Boyle's performance, whom the author references. And watch the WHOLE 7 minutes if you haven't. You won't regret it.

Look forward to seeing everyone soon...I won't be giving up. Hopefully, none of you will, either.

~Blessings

Ashley

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Agency Contests

Info from Cindy Myer's Market News this week:

The Knight Agency is holding a Book in a Nutshell Contest Submit three compelling sentences (150 words max) about your completed, unpublished manuscript to submissions@ knightagency. net Write BOOK IN A NUTSHELL in the subject line or it will not be deemed eligible. One submission per project, please.

Twenty of the best submissions will be chosen and requested by various agents who will then give feedback on your work...and it may even lead to possible representation. Hurry, the deadline is April 20, 2009. Winners will be notified by May 1, 2009. For more info, go to
http://tinyurl.com/cnfe9d

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Plot & Point of View Discussion - March 23, 2009

Good morning, everyone!

Great session last night - and so glad to have seen all of you. Take a second to find that "Comment button" at the bottom of this post, and press it. "Sign In" and fill out a comment with your name if you showed up!

We're just the TemeculaWriters.blogspot.com - my mistake. Go to TemeculaWritersToolbox, and that is where Bev lives. :)

ANYWAY for those of you who didn't make it (as I often don't) I just wanted to give a quick over view of our session:

A few notes: We had a new member - Kelly - who is an inspirational romance writer - Welcome, Kelly! Ashley is back after several months off - thanks for the warm welcome, everyone.

After Sandy led us in prayer :) we had a group review of James Bell's Revision and Self Editing chapters 3 & 4 - Plot and Point of View, respectively.

Plot:
A review of the LOCK method. (Starts with Lead, ends with Knockout! Read it!)
An animated review of "The Hero's Journey"
Description of the three acts, and the two doors to propel readers forward.

Point of View:
A review of Omniscient Narrator, First Person, Third Person, and How tense the tense you choose can make your story (present tense or past tense).

Finally - we had time (!) to plot out a quick story - which was LOADS of fun for this author anyway. Feeding off each other's creativity, we plotted a story to make any lover of fantasy, romance, adventure, and Christian fiction proud. :) Well done. I'd call dibs on writing it, but I might have to arm wrestle Tyler, Pat, or Sharon and I'd lose to all three!

Have a wonderful day and PLEASE post a comment here. Ask a question if something is still nagging at you - and we're looking forward to our next exercise next month!

Many blessings on each of your writing as you attempt to work these lessons into your craft.

~Ashley

AND Please e-mail me if you need more information on Blog Posting! or would like to Blog--this is an open forum for the WHOLE group.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Next meeting: March 23, 2009

March 23
Review Chapter 3 & 4, Plot and Structure and Point of View (POV)
* Discuss.
* Group plot a novel

Should be lots of fun! See you there at 7PM

~Ashley