I gave an Interview on Amanda Young’s Romance website, complete with excerpts and covers. Come take a look and let me know what you think.
http://www.amandayoung.org/blog/
Edward C. Patterson
http://www.dancaster.com
I gave an Interview on Amanda Young’s Romance website, complete with excerpts and covers. Come take a look and let me know what you think.
http://www.amandayoung.org/blog/
Edward C. Patterson
http://www.dancaster.com
I gave an Interview on Amanda Young’s Romance website, complete with excerpts and covers. Come take a look and let me know what you think.
http://www.amandayoung.org/blog/
Edward C. Patterson
http;//www.dancaster.com
Today Publetariat launches a new series on the psychology of writers and writing. First up is a video from the TED network featuring author Elizabeth Gilbert (Eat Pray Love) speaking on the emotional pitfalls of being a creative person, particularly about feeling at the mercy of your muses. In the clip, Gilbert explains how she came to a healthier, more positive attitude about the seeming capriciousness of the creative process.
This video is approximately 20 minutes in length. In it, Ms. Gilbert talks about the psychological and emotional challenges of being a writer, how to make peace with the emotional risks one takes in creating, and how altering your perspective on creativity can free you to find new joy in your work.
Watch for additional articles in this series, to be run each Wednesday.
In this Flash video, BookNet Canada CEO Michael Tamblyn identifies the key stumbling blocks hampering publishers in today’s environment and presents six suggested solutions. The video is approximately half an hour long, but well worth the viewing for anyone with a vested interest in books.
In the presentation, Mr. Tamblyn makes reference to some innovative websites. Links to those sites are provided beneath the video. If you are having trouble viewing the video in the widget below, you can view it on blip.tv, here.
Links:
Ed Patterson
I’m getting spoiled with all this exposure on websites (blush) this week. Part I of an Article I wrote called Writing Good Stories is featured today on Hold the Presses (WheelmanPress):
http://bddesignonline.com/Press/wordpress/
Edward C. Patterson
This post, by Seth Godin, originally appeared on his blog on 3/11/09. In it, Mr. Godin offers some excellent advice for anyone who’s swimming against the tide; indie authors and small imprints, for example.
There’s a story in the bible with very specific instructions for building an ark. Included in the instructions is a call for using tanned dolphin leather. Regardless of your feelings about the historical accuracy of the story, it’s an interesting question: why create an impossible mission like that? Why encourage people who might travel 100 miles over their entire lifetime to undertake a quest to find, capture, kill, skin and eventually tan a dolphin?
My friend Adam had an interesting take on this. He told me that the acquisition of the leather is irrelevant. It was the quest that mattered. Having a community-based quest means that there’s less room for whining, for infighting and for dissolution. Having a mission not only points everyone in the same direction, it also creates motion. And motion in any direction is often better than no motion at all.
All around you, people are telling you two things:
1. whatever you want, forget it, it’s impossible, and
2. sit still, preserve resources, lay low.
And yet, the people who are succeeding, creating change and (not coincidentally) are happier aren’t listening to either of these pieces of advice. Instead, they’re on the search for dolphin leather.
Frank Sinatra had it wrong. Your dream shouldn’t be impossible, but it sure helps if it’s improbable. Don’t choose your dreams based on what is certain to happen, choose them based on what’s likely to cause the change you want to occur around you.
Read more of Seth Godin’s insights on his blog.
Publetariat has plenty of great information and articles for indie authors and small imprints who are already actively publishing, but there’s not a whole lot here for would-be indies, or authors who are just getting started down this road. Fortunately, one of Publetariat’s site contributors has built a fantastic site just for you.
Zoe Winters is an author of paranormal romance, an indie author who speaks from a position of experience and passion, and she can relate to the challenges indies face.
One of those challenges is figuring out how to handle all the things a publisher would ordinarily arrange for an author: editing, layout and design, cover design, soliciting for cover blurbs, and creating a customized promotion plan for the finished book.
If you’re the type who feels very comfortable hunting down these services for yourself, or even doing all of them yourself, Zoe’s articles will give you most of the guidance you need to get started. You can get more help from the free IndieAuthor Guides offered by Publetariat site founder April L. Hamilton on her site, or from her book of the same name.
Others would prefer to maintain a more hands-off approach to these ‘production’ matters. For you, Zoe also offers book coordination and consulting services at reasonable prices. Since Zoe was formerly a wedding coordinator, she has a great deal of experience in tracking down paid professional services and negotiating for the best possible prices for her clients, as well as in packaging numerous services together to maximize efficiencies and minimize cost. You can contact her here.
This piece, by Eric R. Danton, originally appeared in The Washington Post on 3/7/09.
There’s a curious divide in the pop arts world over the do-it-yourself ethic and the different, and opposite, ways it applies to books and to music.
In music, DIY is a source of credibility for acts that take pride in circumventing the music machine and the compromises often required to release an album through a record company — especially a major label.
With books, by contrast, do-it-yourselfers are usually regarded with skepticism, if not outright derision, when they pay to publish their own work through what is disdainfully referred to as a "vanity press."
"In the book world, it’s so fragmented, with so many publishing houses out there, that somebody doing something on their own has more of a stigma, because it suggests that everybody else passed on it," says Josh Jackson, editor in chief of Paste magazine, which covers music, film and books.
There are signs, though, that the stigma within publishing is lessening slightly. That is due to a combination of technology that is democratizing the way would-be writers produce and distribute their work, and a deepening economic recession that has induced dramatic cutbacks at publishing houses, including HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster and Random House.
Popular music has a long independent streak, dating at least as far back as Sun Records and Stax in Memphis, and Motown Records in Detroit. Motown was an unusually successful example of the DIY ethic, releasing 110 Top 10 singles between 1961 and 1971, but the basic idea has held sway ever since.
Since the ’60s, rock bands have operated outside the major-label system, recording and releasing their own records. By the ’80s, the American underground rock scene was large enough for musicians, and some fans, to build an independent-music infrastructure, thus birthing indie labels such as Sub Pop, Touch and Go, Homestead, SST and Dischord.
In the current decade, of course, thanks to the Internet and the increasing affordability of recording gear, bands have attracted an audience even without the help of independent labels. A few such groups, including the New England jam band Dispatch and New York indie-rock act Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, built considerable fan bases without a record company.
"Nobody’s going to tell me what to do from a creative standpoint. If you’re not involved, then what . . . sort of authority is there that would make somebody imagine that they could suggest certain things?" Clap Your Hands singer Alec Ounsworth said in a 2006 interview, just before the band self-released its second album. "We’re not making albums for the record label or anybody, really. We’re just making albums."
Things work differently in the literary world.
Bands have the comparative luxury of writing songs and then performing them before they ever record them, which helps hardworking (and lucky) groups build audiences for the albums that might eventually follow. Writers, by contrast, traditionally have relied on finished products, such as books, to build their audiences, although that’s starting to change as more post their writing on blogs.
"Maybe that’s where the parallel is," Paste’s Jackson says. "You have bands going out and playing live shows, and you, as an author, can congregate an audience through a blog. Bloggers are getting book deals all the time these days, but I think it’ll be interesting to see if bloggers start self-publishing."
Read the rest at The Washington Post.
This essay, by author Neil Gaiman (Coraline, The Graveyard Book, American Gods, Anansi Boys, Neverwhere and much more), originally appeared on his site some years ago. It offers fascinating insight into his creative process, which may help you with your own creative struggles.
Note that links have been added, and open in pop-up windows so that looking at the books being referenced will not close this window.
Books have sexes; or to be more precise, books have genders. They do in my head, anyway. Or at least, the ones that I write do. And these are genders that have something, but not everything, to do with the gender of the main character of the story.
When I wrote the ten volumes of Sandman, I tended to alternate between what I thought of as male storylines, such as the first story, collected under the title Preludes and Nocturnes, or the fourth book, Season of Mists; and more female stories, like Game of You, or Brief Lives.
The novels are a slightly different matter. Neverwhere is a Boy’s Own Adventure (Narnia on the Northern Line, as someone once described it), with an everyman hero, and the women in it tended to occupy equally stock roles, such as the Dreadful Fiancee, the Princess in Peril, the Kick-Ass Female Warrior, the Seductive Vamp. Each role is, I hope, taken and twisted 45% from skew, but they are stock characters nonetheless.
Stardust, on the other hand, is a girl’s book, even though it also has an everyman hero, young Tristran Thorne, not to mention seven Lords bent on assassinating each other. That may partly be because once Yvaine came on stage, she rapidly became the most interesting thing there, and it may also be because the relationships between the women – the Witch Queen, Yvaine, Victoria Forester, the Lady Una and even Ditchwater Sal, were so much more complex and shaded than the relationships (what there was of them) between the boys.
The Day I Swapped My Dad For Two Goldfish is a boy’s book. Coraline (released in May 2002) is a girl’s book.
The first thing I knew when I started American Gods – even before I started it – was that I was finished with C.S. Lewis’s dictum that to write about how odd things affect odd people was an oddity too much, and that Gulliver’s Travels worked because Gulliver was normal, just as Alice in Wonderland would not have worked if Alice had been an extraordinary girl (which, now I come to think of it, is an odd thing to say, because if there’s one strange character in literature, it’s Alice). In Sandman I’d enjoyed writing about people who belonged in places on the other side of the looking glass, from the Dreamlord himself to such skewed luminaries as the Emperor of the United States.
Not, I should say, that I had much say in what American Gods was going to be. It had its own opinions.
Novels accrete.
American Gods began long before I knew I was going to be writing a novel called American Gods. It began in May 1997, with an idea that I couldn’t get out of my head. I’d find myself thinking about it at night in bed before I’d go to sleep, as if I were watching a movie clip in my head. Each night I’d see another couple of minutes of the story.
In June 1997, I wrote the following on my battered Atari palmtop:
A guy winds up as a bodyguard for a magician. The magician is an over-the-top type. He offers the guy the job meeting him on a plane – sitting next to him.
Chain of events to get there involving missed flights, cancellations, unexpected bounce up to first class, and the guy sitting next to him introduces himself and offers him a job.
His life has just fallen apart anyway. He says yes.
Which is pretty much the beginning of the book. And all I knew at the time was it was the beginning of something. I hadn’t a clue what kind of something. Movie? TV series? Short story?
I don’t know any creators of fictions who start writing with nothing but a blank page. (They may exist. I just haven’t met any.) Mostly you have something. An image, or a character. And mostly you also have either a beginning, a middle or an end. Middles are good to have, because by the time you reach the middle you have a pretty good head of steam up; and ends are great. If you know how it ends, you can just start somewhere, aim, and begin to write (and, if you’re lucky, it may even end where you were hoping to go).
There may be writers who have beginnings, middles and ends before they sit down to write. I am rarely of their number.
So there I was, four years ago, with only a beginning. And you need more than a beginning if you’re going to start a book. If all you have is a beginning, then once you’ve written that beginning, you have nowhere to go.
A year later, I had a story in my head about these people. I tried writing it: the character I’d thought of as a magician (although, I had already decided, he wasn’t a magician at all) now seemed to be called Wednesday. I wasn’t sure what the other guy’s name was, the bodyguard, so I called him Ryder, but that wasn’t quite right. I had a short story in mind about those two and some murders that occur in a small Midwestern town called Silverside. I wrote a page and gave up, mainly because they really didn’t seem to come the town together.
There was a dream I woke up from, somewhere back then, sweating and confused, about a dead wife. It seemed to belong to the story, and I filed it away.
Some months later, in September 1998, I tried writing that story again, as a first person narrative, sending the guy I’d called Ryder (who I tried calling Ben Kobold this time, but that sent out quite the wrong set of signals) to the town (which I’d called Shelby, because Silverside seemed too exotic) on his own. I covered about ten pages, and then stopped. I still wasn’t comfortable with it.
By that point, I was coming to the conclusion that the story I wanted to tell in that particular little lakeside town … hmm, I thought somewhere in there, Lakeside, that’s what it’s called, a solid, generic name for a town … was too much a part of the novel to be written in isolation from it. And I had a novel by then. I’d had it for several months.
Writing is a lot like building a bridge. Each scene serves as scaffolding or supports for your entire story to rest on without sagging.
Maybe you’ve made a great start. You have a dynamite hook (some of my favorites: "The last camel collapsed at noon." Ken Follet, "The man with ten minutes to live was laughing." Frederick Forsyth). You’ve gotten off to a good strong start. Maybe you know how your book is going to end, and even have the final scene written.
Now, how do you get through the middle part without it sagging and possibly collapsing?
First of all, you don’t need to write chronologically. You can write scenes out of order. (See my article Overcoming Writer’s Block ). Pick out some highlights and write those scenes, then see if you can figure out what you might be able to fill in between A and G.
Now, send your inner "nice guy" out for ice cream and figure out just how mean you can be to your character. Conflict is the key to keeping a story moving, to shoring it up. You’ve introduced your character and the problem she has to solve. You know what the goal is at the end.
Let’s say Cathy Character wants to be the first teenage girl to climb Mount Huge. What are her obstacles? Her parents are against the idea. It’s too expensive, too dangerous, she’s not in shape, who else is going?, etc. Cathy has to overcome each objection, solve each problem.
Maybe her neighbor is a banker, so she approaches him for a loan. If he smiles and says," Sure, Cathy, anything for you," the problem is solved too quickly. The story can get boring and the reader’s interest will sag quickly.
But what if he says no? Now Cathy has to figure out another way to raise money. What should she do – a bake sale, a part-time job, rob the local drive-in? (You can see the various paths this story could take.) There are all kinds of ideas and none of them should be easy.
Every time your character figures out a way over, around or through a problem, throw up another obstacle, within reason, of course. You don’t want her to fail at everything. She needs to learn and grow through these experiences.
But when she solves the money part of the problem, there should be another one waiting. Who, besides her parents, are going to oppose her? Does she have a rival? Or is there a friend who is supposedly helping her, but is actually sabotaging Cathy’s efforts?
Building a story is like constructing a bridge. You need conflict as the pillars that shore up the middle.
For each scene you write, ask yourself:
Have fun being mean to your character and building your bridge!
This piece, by Jim Barnes, originally appeared on Independent Publisher.
50 days. An offset-printed book, from concept to the street in 50 days. Unheard of, right?
Yes, it’s unheard of, but it happened. San Francisco-based Berrett-Koehler published Agenda for a New Economy, by David Korten, in just seven weeks and two days — just in time for the inauguration of President Obama.
The book questions the Wall Street bailout and argues that our hope lies not with Wall Street but with Main Street, creating real wealth from real resources to meet real needs, and returning to an economy firmly rooted in the long-term health of people and the planet.
How the Berrett-Koehler team accomplished this feat is a tribute to the energy and resourcefulness of a dedicated independent publisher, the expertise of a brilliant author, and the technical abilities of a cutting-edge book printer.
It all began back in the fall of 2008, when best-selling author Korten, whose previous books, When Corporations Rule the World and The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community are considered must-reads for understanding our global economy, was asked by YES! magazine to write an article about the big Wall Street bailout. The piece argues that the bailout was a mistake, and calls out to President Obama for a “basic redesign of our economic institutions.”
Meanwhile, Steve Piersanti, president and publisher at Berrett-Koehler, found himself awaiting jury duty in his Contra Costa County, California courthouse, and having brought along some reading material, read Korten’s article. It must have had a big impact. By the next evening Piersanti and Korten had brokered an agreement — with one important stipulation – books had to be ready in time for a major presentation by Korten on January 23 at the Trinity Institute on Wall Street.
“Here is one of the most important, most timely, and most exciting books on which I have worked during my 27-year career as a book editor,” Piersanti recalls thinking. "Would such a timeframe even be a possibility?"
In order to get the book from concept to finished product as quickly as possible, Piersanti knew he would need an extraordinarily fast printing schedule. Enter Malloy Incorporated, the Ann Arbor, Michigan-based, family-owned printer that offers a new express offset printing service for this kind of "rush job."
“We understand the value to Berrett-Koehler of getting this time sensitive book out when the new administration takes office” said Bill Upton, president of Malloy. “We saw this last year with a biography of Sarah Palin when she was picked by John McCain, and the overnight success last June of the memoir by former White House Press Secretary, Scott McClellan.”
“Publishers need to capitalize on sales opportunities that suddenly materialize due to events beyond their control. We introduced Express Service for the publisher who needs more than a few hundred books right away. They come out ahead going with offset printing at Malloy versus a digital printing solution.” [Publetariat editor’s note: POD is a digital solution]
Read the rest of the article at Independent Publisher.
I came across this site today: Club Reading. It’s a list of review sites and provides "reviews" of each site. The site itself is a division of Bards and Sages Publishing. Heard of them? Me neither. While their list is thorough and fun to read, I think they accuse too many sites of "trying too hard to sell the book." Ummm….last time I looked we were reviewing books, weren’t we? While thorough, the POD section is quite lacking, listing only 3 review sites as I write this.
Kael, creator of the always-entertaining, and somewhat unconventional Unpublishednotdead.com, has graciously allowed me to invade his space and do an Unpublishednotdead Podcast!
I had a great time recording it, and got in some practice with the recording equipment and audio software. (One thing I realized, I still have a lot to learn!)
In the podcast, I talk some about the Squaw Valley Fiction Writers Workshop, which Kael and I both attended last summer, as well as my plans for going independent in order to get my stories out in the world.
Oh, and I also describe my extremely high-tech recording studio.
You can find it by searching for Unpublishednotdead on itunes (my episode is Podcast 11, but while you’re there you should check out the others as well) or by clicking here.
Happy listening!
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