FINE TUNING THE EDITING

Year ago while still learning the craft of writing, I found an article on a website . After all this time, I no longer  have the name of the website or the author.   I’ve used the following list on each of my books and all my other writings. I hope you find some use for it also.

 

EDITING

After the final draft, edit using the "find" function for the words on the following list. Next, read the sentence containing the offender, and either correct it or leave it be, depending. They are all valid words, if used in moderation, but are prone to misuse, overuse and abuse.

"Fine Tooth Comb and Red Flags and Snags"

and – but (can indicate run-on sentences) that (unnecessary in most sentences)

that (when you mean "who")

just

nearly – almost

really

seem – appear

felt – feel

begin – began

would – should – could

quite

few

rather

thing

stuff

anyway

because

"ly" adverbs

so

then

even

only

down  – up (as in sit down, stand up – can be redundant)

got – get

Look for passive use:

it – is

am

are

was

were

has

had

have

been

to be

there is

there are

there was

there were

 

Okay, so most of know all this. We still have the tendency to interject them into our writing without thinking. Try this excerise  once and see if it tightens and strengthens your piece of writing. I would suggest doing it on short story first.

 

Happy writing.

 

 

Stuck @ Chapter 2

I listened to a few of the moderators podcasts and thought wow, he’s on to something with the writing from different tenses. 

I started out the novel with first person present tense and well, the first chapter was great but, making the transition to having a narriator fill in the gaps is giving me a few problems. 

I don’t really know who to ask questions too b/c in my house only my eleven year old likes books as much as I do and am skeptical to share my ideas with others on line because none of my ideas are copy righted and well… to be honest I have not written a book yet.  I have tons of stuff I have written just nothing published. 

I am stuck on the tense to use and can’t seem to move forward.  It’s like I am caught in the details here banging my head against the monitor. 

I tried writing the three starting paragraphs in different tenses and letting my eleven year old read them and my husband read them. 

It’s supposed to be a childrens book and the one she liked the best was the first person one.  My hubby liked the other one where I changed it to first person past tense. 

Am gonna copy my first three Paragraphs here.  In different tenses.  If you were a ten to tween child which one would seem more understandable and appealing. 

Any feed back would be much appreciated.  Thank you!

First person past tense:

That day was like any other late summer day.  The clouds partially covered the sky the birds in the distance and me sitting at the computer contemplating the course of the day.  Garage sales, antique shows, and flea markets and other unusual thrift stores awaited.  Mom was an avid collector.  She inherited quite a fortune from my grandfather this allowed her to extend her arms into an area that before was just a hobby.
I geared myself up to go with her that day after all, it was much better than staying home and studying for midterms.  I had mastered the art of procrastination so waiting until the last minute to study was far from unusual.  Luckily college was not like high school.  Mom was more lenient and I was able to stay out a bit later than when I was younger.  Her main motto was that we should network with other important people.
Though I neglected to see how hobnobbing with the well to do crowd would help in the future.  All I could see at the time was the back stabbing and eccentric need to keep up with the neighbor next door.  It seemed like a futile endeavor compared to my own interests in clothes from the cheapest thrift store I could fine.  The outfits I choose back then looked like tattered window drapes in contrast to their lavish clothes.

First Person Present tense: 

Today was like any other late summer day.  The clouds partially covering the sky the birds in the distance and me sitting at my computer contemplating the course of the day.  Garage sales, antique shows, and flea markets surrounded the day. Mom was an avid collector so our normal events consisted of venturing out on one of these excursions.  Her recent inheritance from my grandfather now allowed her to extend her arms into an area that before was just a general interest.  So I geared myself up to go after all, it was much better than studying for my college midterm.  So much easier to just put that off until the last minute.  I had mastered the art of procrastination and cramming for the next test.  Luckily home in college was not like high school.  Mom now allowed me to stay out later and to visit more with friends from college.  Her motto was that we should network with other important people.  I neglected to see how hobnobbing with the well to do crowd  would help me in the future.  All I saw was the back stabbing and eccentric need to keep up with the Jones’ next door.  It seemed like a futile rat race where my preference in clothes from goodwill looked like tattered window drapes compared to their lavish outfits and summer get ups. 

Thanks:)

I feel like if I can figure out the tense then I will be home free.

Encourage others to buy your book, and to upgrade to a hardcopy version!

If any of you want to see a pretty cool idea to encourage others to buy your book, and to upgrade to a hardcopy version, please see my link at

http://kck.st/cgXgnB

Cliff

‘Views from Sandhausen – Experiences from a Foreign Service Assignment” is complete

‘Views from Sandhausen – Experiences from a Foreign Service Assignment” is complete. It is the story of our life in Germany. Many of you have seen bits and pieces; this is the whole story, and will be available in Hard cover, Soft cover, and e-Book formats – nearly 300 pages with photographs, beginning in November.

Because of Lynn’s significant medical bills I have had to go to a Venture Funding model. Interested parties can go to the site http://kck.st/cgXgnB
 
to purchase shares in the venture. A $15 dollar share will return a signed Soft cover copy of “Views” with you name included as a sponsor.
 
A $25 dollar and up share will return a signed Hard cover copy of “Views” with you name included as a sponsor.
 
ALL Shareholders names will be included in the book as Sponsors. That means that your name will be in the Library of Congress, in our book, forever. What a great thing to have and display to future generations?
 
My Author e-Mail address (for your questions and feedback) 
 
Book blog address (to allow you to monitor my progress towards a November launch)  http://flaauthor.wordpress.com/
 
and my LinkedIn addresses are below.  http://www.linkedin.com/in/clifffeightner
 
There is also a link to the Kickstarter.com site that I have established to help defray the costs of production.  http://kck.st/cgXgnB
 
I’m really excited by this project. We have often been asked to tell our story of those three years; here it is in a 300 page illustrated book, in your choice of formats.
 
I thank you all for your support!
 
Warm Regards,
 
Cliff 

Author and I.T. Project Management Professional

"Lynn’s Story"

"View from Sandhausen – Experiences from
a Foreign Service Assignment"

Available November, 2010

Kickstarter Contributions: http://kck.st/cgXgnB

 

http://www.linkedin.com/in/clifffeightner

http://flaauthor.wordpress.com/

http://www.cfeightner.com

Letters of Love

Love can be lustful,

Love can be offensive,

Love can be vulgar,

Love can be erotic.

 

 

 



Love can be lonely,

Love can be open,

Love can be virtuous,

Love can be emotional.

 

 

 



Love is liking,

Love is organic,

Love is venus,

Love is endless.

 

 

 

Love was lost,

Love was over,

love  vanished,

Love  expired.

 

 

 

Love will lure,

Love will ooze,

Love will vindicate,

Love will embrace.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Love is and can be many things,

none greater than an eternal mystery.

 

 

 

 

Top 10 Reasons Not To Be A Writer

Top 10 lists are pretty popular these days. Do we have Letterman to thank for that? Anyway, in the interests of being in with the popular crowd, here’s a Top 10 list that seems blatantly obvious to me, but might serve as a warning to others. And before anyone accuses me of being all jaded and defeatist, I prefer to look at it as arming myself with the truth in order to beat that fu**er down and prove every point on this list wrong. Wish me luck.

Top 10 Reasons Not To Be A Writer

10. For the chicks. Generally speaking, being a writer doesn’t get you chicks like being a rock star might.

9. For a sense of self-worth. Seriously, almost constant rejection is not good for self-esteem.

8. For the cool. Most people, when you say you’re a writer, will look at you with that when-are-you-going-to-get-a-real-job look.

7. For the influence. No matter how much we think we’re changing the world, people are pretty fixed in their own personal delusions. Anything we write is unlikely to affect them much.

6. For self-fulfilment. This one is slightly off-kilter. We require the self-fulfilment of writing, but most writers I know are rarely happy with what they put out there and constantly bemoan how crap they are and how they wish they were better. I’m like this. We’re all a bunch of fragile little flowers.

5. For the fame. There are a handful of uber-bestselling writers that you might recognise if you passed them in the street, but not many. Have a look along your bookshelf and think about how many of those names have a face attached in your memory banks.

4. For health. Sitting in a gloomy room hunched over a computer, spewing forth imagination from the deepest recesses of your mind. Not exactly a jog along the beach, is it.

3. For a social life. See above. I have to admit that there’s a vibrant community among genre writers in Australia, and presumbly elsewhere in the world. I’ve got some great friends that I’ve met through being a writer. We only tend to actually meet a handful of times a year, though, at conventions.

2. For the satisfaction. You’ll never be happy with what you achieve as a writer. Sell a short story? You’ll wish you could sell to a better magazine. Sell a novel? You’ll wish you got a bigger advance. Got a great big advance? You’ll wish you were higher on the bestseller lists. I’ve never met a writer yet, at any level of success, that is satisfied with their achievements. They’re all mighty happy to have got where they are, but they all want to achieve more. Every one of them.

1. For the money. Yeah, as if this needs explaining. There doesn’t appear to be any. Anywhere. This is the one thing on this list that I’d most like to prove wrong.

There are a handful of rock-star-god-emperor authors out there that prove every single one of these points wrong. People like Neil Gaiman or Stephen King. But for every Neil Gaiman, there’s a million mid-listers struggling to get by. And for every mid-lister like that there’s a million more hard working writers, wishing they had that mid-list level of success.

The truth is that there is only one reason to be a writer. Because you have to. We all do it because we have stories to tell and we can’t imagine not writing them down. If we can sell them, bloody brilliant. If we can sell them and have any kind of effect on people, fucking spectacular! But the single reason we do it is because we can’t not do it. Any other reason and you’re deluding yourself. Don’t say you haven’t been warned.

 

This is a cross-posting from Alan Baxter‘s The Word blog.

My Fiction Workshop Fortunes

The capacity to tell stories is an accident of birth for me. I was born thinking this way. There was no point in my life when I did not think about stories and causal events, about humorous and dramatic ways in which events could be told, and about how a blank page could be filled with wonder. If I have wandered far and wide, and been driven, seduced or called away from writing in my life, I have always returned to a string of authorial stepping stones that connects my past with the future before me.

Actually becoming a writer — by which I do not mean a professional, but rather a practicing writer — is a combination of accident and intent. The more things go in your favor, the easier it is to harness gifts and put words to a page. The more things go against you, the more you must overcome. Whatever obstacles I’ve faced in life, I was born with a number of storytelling gifts. I also happened to be born and raised in a town that is home to a school that values fiction writing. That I neither new nor cared about these things until I went to college is yet more evidence that the fates were being kind.

My Home Town School
By nature I am not a particularly adventurous person. I have tended most of my life to look before I leap, even when others have counseled that he who hesitates is lost. So it should not come as a surprise that when I finally decided to go to college, after considerable academic carnage in my high school career, I had no thought of going anywhere except to the school in my home town. It wouldn’t have mattered what college it was, or what town I had been born in: that’s what I would have done at that point in my life, and probably for a decade after. (It’s true that my grandmother, father, mother, aunt and uncle also went to the same university, but that’s not why I went. I went because it was familiar and close.)

That I was born in and grew up in Iowa City, Iowa, is an accident. That Iowa City is the home of the University of Iowa, which is the home of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, is also an accident. I planned none of it, yet when I finally decided to wade into storytelling, after more academic carnage in college, the Workshop was there.  

Now, if you remember nothing else about this post, please remember this: I do not have an MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. I have a Bachelors’ degree from Iowa, and all of the following relates to my undergraduate experience. That the process I went through, and even the level of instruction I received, was commensurate with the graduate workshop, is a blessing, not a license. Whatever an MFA is worth or means, I don’t have one.

My Fiction Workshops
When I went to Iowa the undergraduate offerings were pretty much as they are now. The first class I took, Fiction Writing, was a class you simply registered for. After that I submitted stories to the Undergraduate Writers’ Workshop each semester, and was fortunate to be accepted each time I did so.

Here are the people who taught the six workshops I attended over three years:

  • Leigh Allison Wilson — MFA student and Flannery O’Conner freak, who would go on to win the Flannery O’Connor Award for short fiction the following year.
  • Jack Leggett — the director of the Workshop at that time.
  • Hilma Wolitzer — an award-winning novelist who just recently dipped her toe in the cyber sea. (Stop by and say hi!)
  • Bob Shacochis — a writer’s writer, and at that time the most recent winner of the National Book Award for first fiction.
  • Rust Hills — long-time fiction editor of Esquire magazine, and a person about whom I will have more to say in an upcoming post.
  • Jack Leggett

Looking back, that’s an absurd list of extremely talented people. To me at the time, however, they were almost ancillary to the process — by which I mean the nightmarish process of risking my ego, identity and life in order to determine whether I had any capacity to tell stories. Because somewhere along the line that became more important to me than anything else.

The Workshop Environment
With all that literary firepower floating around, and with the Workshop’s storied history as a backdrop, you might imagine that I was exposed to all kinds of secret handshakes and rare literary knowledge. You might also imagine that the environs of the Workshop were teeming with publishers and agents looking to scoop up the next award-winning breakout star, and I’m sure there was some of that. At the undergraduate level, however, and even at the graduate level, almost all of the conversations I was privy to were about craft.

And I’m not just talking about the students. Of all the workshop leaders listed above, I cannot remember any of them talking about literary trends or publishing deals or bullet-pointed solutions. There were no classes on pitching ideas or writing query letters or figuring out how to please the gatekeepers of the day. There weren’t even discussions about how hard it is to write, because every single person there — at every level — took that as a given. (There’s no point grousing about the emotional trauma of writing when everyone in the room is going through the same hell.)

So what did all these people talk about? They talked about craft. They talked about the stories that were being workshopped on their own merits, not relative to what anybody else was doing at the time. They talked about whether or not each author hit what they were aiming at, and why that was the case. They talked about how some of what a writer writes comes from a place that no one can control, but once it’s on the page it’s the writer’s responsibility to shape it and make it work harmoniously.

We all wanted to be effortlessly great, but those teachers never talked about writers who were effortlessly great or profound or genius. They talked about editing and cutting and tightening and focusing and killing darlings, because they knew that there never has been, and never will be, a writer who is effortlessly great.

My Father
I had a difficult relationship with my father, for reasons I think anyone would understand — chief among them abandonment. After I had been writing in college for several years, and had been in the Undergraduate Workshop for a year or so, I happened to talk with my father about the Workshop and about my interest in fiction writing.

Now, my father had his own history with the University of Iowa, some of which I knew about second-hand through my mother or family friends, but nothing I knew about directly from him. So when he told me that he had been in the Writer’s Workshop himself, back in its early days, I was neither surprised by the fact nor surprised that I had not previously heard about that part of his life.

As we talked it turned out that not only had he been in the workshop, but one of the people in the workshop with him was Flannery O’Connor. It also turned out that Flannery O’Connor was incredibly shy and could not bring herself to read her stories aloud when she put them up — as was then the practice.

My father had been a musician and band leader, and because he had a pretty good voice even then (which only got better with age, and alcohol), it turned out that he was one of the people who read Flannery O’Connor’s stories out loud for her. (I later told this to Leigh Allison Wilson, and I still have an image of her rapt and excited face in my mind. That my father’s story made its way to her — to the one person on the face of the Earth who wanted to hear it more than any other — amazes me to this day.)

Now, interesting as that all is, that’s not the happy accident I wanted to tell you about. The happy accident is the fact that I didn’t learn about any of this until I had already invested myself and tested myself in a number of workshops. Because when I say I didn’t have a good relationship with my father at that time, what I mean is that I didn’t like him and I didn’t want to be like him.

Had I known about his fiction-writing past I almost certainly would have decided not to pursue my own interest. So I will be forever grateful that I knew nothing about my father’s history until I had made storytelling and writing at Iowa my own.

The Limits of Luck
In the end, I feel I took full advantage of the fortunes that befell me. I don’t talk about these experiences much because I didn’t work to put myself in that position. I know a lot of writers — both in spirit and by profession — who never had such advantages, but who would have given anything to take my place, and who would have worked like dogs to get there.

I got lucky, and I know it. What luck didn’t and couldn’t do was write a single word I wrote. And I wrote a lot of words.

So whether the fates are smiling on you on any given day, or throwing obstacles in front of you like a tornado tossing trees, remember that you can always write. Even when you think you can’t write, put a few words down. It will give you a new stepping stone to stand on, and bring another within reach. And you won’t have to lean on luck.

 

This is a reprint from Mark Barrett‘s Ditchwalk.

7 Links That Will Make Editing Your Work Easier

As I work my way through Darren Rowse’s 31 Days to Build a Better Blog, I decided to take on his earlier challenge to write a post with seven links. Since this post was originally going to be about critiquing or editing, I went with seven links on that subject. Without further ado, here they are:

 
  1. Critters Makes for Better WritingDon’t let the title fool you. It’s not about household pets. This post about finding someone to give you honest feedback on your fiction.

  2. Sandwich Critiquing this is perhaps my favorite post, giving you a helpful technique to use when you are asked to critique someone else’s not-so-perfect manuscript.
  3. Editing With or Without a Budgetmore helpful tips on how to use money to learn how to edit.
  4. Blogosphere Trends + Handling High Word Counts this is a great guest post on Problogger by Kimberly Turner on how to trim the fat in your writing.
  5. When Editing & Critiquing, Check Your Personal Opinions At The Door the title says it all. A great post by April Hamilton of Indie Author.
  6. POD People Scares Me I love this title, but that’s not the only reason I chose it. Find out why editing is possibly the most important thing you can do before sending your manuscript to the publisher or POD (print-on-demand) company.
  7. The Art of Critiquing receiving criticism is difficult, especially when the person giving it doesn’t give you helpful details you can actually use to improve your work. This post will get you thinking of specifics to address when giving criticism to someone else. 

Editing your work, giving and receiving criticism, it’s all part of the process. Knowing how to do it makes it all the easier to move on down The Road to Writing.

 

This is a cross-posting from Virginia Ripple‘s The Road to Writing.

What I've been up to, these past three or four months….

I’ve been trying to earn a living. Not the best of times for watching a bank account fatten, as I’m sure you all know. We also lost our companion Obie, our best buddy for 18 years. Being cat-less and sad only lasted a month, then we adopted three shelter kittens, so I’m back to up-to-my-elbows and then some.

Meanwhile, I began actually getting some notices of royalties paid on my first book, The Red Gate, which while not really paying any bills…yet…still feels better than no sales at all.  For an all-too-brief time, my Amazon ranking rose to the mid-600Ks, then of course, pluymmeting like a stone back into the 1-2M, but it was a shining moment. I guess I’m easily amused. Then there were reviews…A few months back, I recieved a review on Amazon — about the same time my book turned up on Barnes & Noble — that rocked my world, but not in the good way. 

The reviewer gave it 5 stars, believe it or not, then told the crowds, er ah, the one or two that happened to read it, all about the typos and writing errors in it. OHMYGODNO! I checked, and sure enough, a proof had been mixed up, and a bad re-format had been approved. Such being the lot of the unwary Indie Author,  I rushed to correct it all, and got the revised copy to press in a record of late-night toothy grinding. But some damage had been done. Oddly enough, the review was closed by the reviewer stating how enjoyable the read was and that he looked forward to the sequel. Go figure.  I tried to replace all the bad copies with good new coipies, but I figure there must be some old crappy ones still out there, so if anyone buys one on Ebay, it will probably be one of the early releases before I caught the…sob…reformatting issue. 

What I have been doing, with all the extra time on my hands is write.  I’ve been writing like a demon was sitting on my back, which is what it feels like to have three Works in Progress swimming around in your brain. Simultaneously. 

To sum up, the (insert highly acclaimed, long awaited, etc.) sequel novel, The Gatekeepers — pun might be intentional — will be out towards the end of next month, and the next book after that is about 3/4 finished.  This is, of course, the best of the lot, having learned the hard way the first time around!  Sometimes, all the free and otherwise obtained advice in the world is not as good as screwing up in a big, ugly way. Having doe so, now I’m duly chastened and more diligent when it comes to my pre-publication checklist. It now includes several beta-readers of pre-Pub proofs.

 

In Defence of Swearing

I swear a lot. I’ll be the first to admit it. I’m the worst person to have around your kids because I swear so casually that I don’t notice I’m doing it. I do try to remember when kids are around, but even that bothers me to some degree. They’re just words.

[Editor’s note—even though it should be obvious—: strong language after the jump]

Though I do understand that little Sally turning up in a schoolyard and telling her teacher to go fuck herself is a potential parent/teacher-relation nightmare.

But they are just words. Of course, they’re words with a certain power. All words have power. Love is not a swear word but it carries enormous power. As does hate. The taboo nature of swearing gives these words added power. We can deliberately drop them like bombs. You want some attention in a loud conversation? Don’t talk any louder than everyone else, just swear more. People will sort of grind to a halt and look at you, their expressions all cautious and surprised. But you got their attention.

That’s why it really bothers me when people say, “Swearing just shows a lack of vocabulary and an inability to express yourself properly.” Fuck off, you pompous cunt. Not swearing shows an inability to use the words that would express your position most clearly.

For example, if someone is all up in your face, as the kids say these days, what expresses your real emotion more:

Go away!

or

Fuck off!

It’s not a case of lacking vocabulary. It’s a case of picking the most powerful word for the occasion – the right word. We recently visited the Writers’ Museum in Edinburgh. The place was a bit underwhelming, to be honest. But while there we got a set of fridge magnets with all of Shakespeare’s best insults on them. A few choice ones include:

Cream faced loon! MacBeth

and

Thou crusty batch of nature. Troilus & Cressida

Or my personal favourite:

Thou elvish-mark’d, abortive, rooting hog. Richard III

But, clever and entertaining as they are, they don’t really work in today’s world for really expressing what you want to say. As I mentioned above, I can understand tempering your language around kids. Give them as much time being all sweet and innocent as possible. But don’t fear the usefullness of some quality, well placed swearing. Don’t overdo it or just swear every other word for the sake of it. That does just sound dumb. But equally, if a situation calls for a powerful word, don’t be afraid to use one.

And don’t ever tell me that swearing shows a lack of vocab or an inability to express yourself, because that’s clearly a load of bollocks.

 

This is a cross-posting from Alan Baxter‘s The Word.

Facsimiles of Evil

(I’ll disclose up front that yes, for those of you who know me, having worked at Troma and having partaken in my fair share of horror films in the past, this post may seem inconsistent. Or even self-contradicting.)

There is enough evil in the world that I don’t believe that artists have any moral need to create work that mimics evil. If you can provide me with any examples of these facsimiles of evil that provide some value or insight through absurdist methods or satire, then let’s talk about those. But right now my point is, what the hell are we doing creating, patronizing, and promulgating films and novels that depict evil? Why?

We can discuss the old adage about art mimicking life, or is it life mimicking art; or we can discuss gratuitous violence and freedom of speech. But more to the point, let’s think about why a writer would embark on writing a novel, a good mystery that is well-written, that graphically portrays a serial-killing family that brutally attacks, rapes, and kills women, including its own women. So yes, I’m picking on the Dragon Tattoo thing, among others.

After the news and authorities revealed a few examples of the world’s worst human beings who kept their own families for years under torturous conditions, there is absolutely no human value in recreating these acts in any form of art.

Facsimiles of evil. Just stop it. Do something else, please. Let’s rid ourselves of this genre.

 

This is a reprint from Lenox Parker’s Eat My Book.

A Christmas Gift

On a cold December day in Baltimore, Maryland in the year two thousand nine, Jennifer was  at home in her bed.  Michael, her  devoted husband, was by her side. Jennifer has been gravely ill for the past few weeks suffering from metastatic breast cancer. She spent most of the  year in the hospital having chemotherapy treatments. The cancer had already  metastasized  beyond the breast. Just recently Michael had taken her home, since the doctors had done all they could.  December was a more difficult month for her. She was eating very little and had lost more weight. Her health  further deteriorated to the stage where she was totally bedridden. Suddenly, Jennifer opened her eyes and wheezed,"call the children!"
 
 
                                                                                                       
 
                                                                                                                     
 
 
Fifty Years Earlier
                                                                                                                       
 Jennifer and her parents, Mary and Robert,  had just finished a pleasant dinner together. Jennifer was on Christmas break from school where she was in the fourth grade. After dinner, she and her mom were going to May’s department store. Mary had to pick up a few gifts  in layaway. Jennifer wanted to buy her dad a Christmas gift, since Christmas was only two days away.  As they departed from the house, a light snow suddenly began to fall. Jennifer always liked this time of the year with the homes tastefully decorated with Christmas tree lights showing through the windows. The parking lot was nearly full when they  arrived at the department store. Mary fortunately found an open space at the far end.  The long, slow walk was extremely slippery due to the snow.
While in the store, they quickly went to the layaway department to pick up Mary’s gifts.
 
At the household department, Jennifer found a picture frame she really liked. She wanted a frame for a picture she had taken with her dad. However, since the checkout line was twenty deep, and it was getting late,  Mary told her she would pick the frame up in the morning.
After exiting the store, Mary cautiously drove  home  since the snow had rapidly intensified.
When they safely arrived home, Robert met them at the door and said, "thank God you’re home, I was concerned due to the snow."
After Jennifer gave her mom and dad a goodnight kiss, she  brushed her teeth and took a shower before bed.
Before falling asleep, she thought about all the precious moments she had spent with her loving mom. She was closer to her mom than dad but loved them equally.
 

The following morning, Christmas Eve, Mary prepared to go to the department store.  Before she left, she anxiously glanced out the bay window.  The snowy sky had given way to a beautiful sunrise. On the way to the store, Mary noticed several vehicles in roadside ditches.
 
Jennifer woke up to the sound of voices.  She quickly got dressed to find out what was happening.  When she reached  the bottom of the stairs, she clearly saw two men conversing with her dad.
One, a stubby, black-bearded man whom she immediately knew as their family minister.  The other, a tall rather thin man wearing a uniform that she didn’t recognize.  She slowly walked toward her dad. However, before she reached him, he told her to go back to her room, and he would talk to her shortly. Subsequently, the voices downstairs abruptly ceased.  When her father walked into her bedroom,  she noticed tears freely streaming down his cheeks.
He immediately sat down and gave her a comforting hug and a gentle kiss. He said, " your mother was coming home from the department store when a car lost control on the snow covered winding roadway and hit her car”.
"Your mother has passed on to be with God in heaven". His eyes were so sad while saying this. 
She quietly put her arms around her dad and started to cry.

Later Christmas Eve, Jennifer briefly glanced at the Christmas tree. She was uncertain if she could open her presents knowing that her mom was sadly missing. Her dad said,“your mother would have wanted you to open your presents”. With moist eyes, she reluctantly agreed. Suddenly, her mood partly changed to delight. She said," dad look what Santa brought me, I always wanted a diary!" Her dad went over and gave her a kiss and said, "your mother asked Santa for a diary."She knew you wanted one." After all the gifts were opened, she went to her bedroom immediately to start writing. Dear mom, I am writing to you in my diary Santa brought me. Santa also brought me a beautiful china doll, and I named her Mary. It was getting late so she finished writing in her diary. Merry Christmas and I really miss you, Love Jennifer. Her father laid down with her until she fell asleep,

Jennifer continued to write in her diary every Christmas Eve to her mom.
She would describe all the experiences she had throughout the year.
 
 
 
 
Michael summoned their loving children together with the family minister to express their final words of farewell.
Jennifer’s father had passed away two years earlier.
There was a certain amount of peace as they gathered around her bed to pray.
She was fading in and out of consciousness.
For the first time in months, she could embrace Cindy, her three year old granddaughter.
When in the hospital, Cindy had been extremely fearful of all the machines next to her Grandmother.
Cindy gently ascended onto her bed, and they shared one precious moment together before she fell back into unconsciousness.
 
Suddenly, Jennifer opened her eyes and her hands fervently reached upwards towards the corner of the room.
With a faint whisper, she said, " My mother is here, she looks so radiant."
The family thought she was probably hallucinating. However, Marie, Jennifer’s  ten year old granddaughter
said, "Grandma where is she? I can’t see her."  she said " you won’t be able to see her; she is here for me, not you."
Jennifer glanced over to her night stand and asked Michael to get her diary.
When he gave her the diary, she clutched her hands tightly around it.
Marie asked her mom, "What was that, that grandpa gave to grandma?" She told her it was her diary that Santa brought her  when she was ten years old.
She had written her entire life  in that diary.
 
 
 Marie said, " Mom will I get a diary for Christmas?"
Before she could answer, Jennifer began to speak. With her hands tightly clutched around her diary, she said," this is my Christmas gift to my mother."
Jennifer then closed her eyes and passed on. It was Christmas Eve.
 
 
 
 

Where Will Bookstores Be Five Years From Now?

This post, from Mike Shatzkin, originally appeared on the Idea Logical Blog on 7/11/10.

Upton Sinclair famously said that “it is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.”

I keep putting facts about publishing’s commercial realities that I think most of the smart people running things accept together with forecasts for the future that I think most of the smart people running things accept and coming up with a view of where we’ll be sometime pretty soon that I find very few people will accept.

We have definitely passed what Michael Cader has dubbed “peak bookstores” in the US. Shelf space for books is probably dropping faster than the number of stores as book retailers look for other items to keep their customers more satisfied and give those items space previously devoted to books. And shelf space available for publishers who don’t own bookstores is dropping faster than that because Barnes & Noble, the leading provider of bookshelf display space, is aggressively sourcing their own product both to improve their margins and to develop proprietary product not available to their competitors.

The fate of bookstores is an existential question for today’s book publishers (not to mention today’s booksellers!) Although it isn’t often stated this starkly, the core value proposition for the biggest trade book publishers is that they can put books on shelves. All of the rest of what they do (and often do quite well) — selection, editing, development, packaging, and marketing — is fungible. And usually not scaleable.

A big publisher and an agent would add to this list the “banking” function: putting up the money in advance for the author to write the book. But I’d argue that is also fungible (there’s lots of money out there looking for investment opportunities) so the publisher’s opportunity to be that banker is also dependent on the publisher’s ability to put books on retail shelves.

Read the rest of the post on the Idea Logical Blog.

The Author Background Check: Cautionary Notes

This post, from Consulting Editor Alan Rinzler, originally appeared on his The Book Deal blog on 7/12/10.

WE WERE HUNKERED DOWN debating whether to make an offer on a self-help book written by a seemingly well-qualified psychologist.

Then one of our dogged marketing assistants dashed in, shouting “WAIT!”

She tossed us a bunch of comments she’d unearthed from an obscure online forum: jaw-dropping, scathing assessments from former patients about the author’s failures as a therapist.  Whoa. We took a big pause — and ultimately dropped the project.

Don’t let this happen to you!

Searching with a fine-toothed comb

A little-known aspect of making a book deal these days is how a publisher’s editors, marketing and sales people verify an author’s platform and reputation.  We search for anything that might compromise our investment of time, passion, energy and money. Privacy’s not what it used to be, as we all know.

If your proposal or manuscript has reached the point of serious consideration, expect careful behind-the-scenes scrutiny of everything you’ve presented about your life and work.

If this is your first book deal

Publishers like nothing better than discovering and signing up the next big thing, the unknown writer with a great first book that promises to lead to many more. Before taking such a risk, however, careful due diligence is now standard operating procedure.

Here are some of the sources publishers check routinely these days, before signing up a new author:

Read the rest of the post on Alan Rinzler’s The Book Deal blog.

Zoe Who?

In this Publisher’s Weekly Beyond Her Book blog post, Barbara Vey takes a closer look at Publetariat’s own Zoe Winters‘ new social marketing project.

I really enjoy social marketing and the whole idea of marketing books. Not only have I given workshops on it, I attend every one I can. There’s always something new to learn and lots of great ideas out there. The big thing to me is branding your name.  Once everyone knows who you are, they will be more likely to pick your book over another who’s author is completely unknown to them.

With that in mind,  I love it when people send me funny, interesting things.  This video came through email yesterday from Edie Ramer.

I thought it was clever and well done.  I’m sure it echoes the thoughts of some writers.

In her blog, author Zoe Winters writes:  So I was really vague the other day and gave NO information about what I was doing. Now I can fully unveil it because the first episode is up. These are going to be 2-3 minute short videos (the kind you could watch at work when you’re supposed to be working). Hopefully it’s short enough, and entertaining enough that people will share it with others. I’m looking for hopefully one or more of the videos in this series to go viral.

I’ll be poking fun at the publishing industry, me, romance, etc.

The only thing I would have liked to have seen in the video was the author’s name at the end and her website.  Of course, this way everyone is asking, “Zoe Who?”  But probably not for much longer.

So tell me, do you think this kind of marketing ploy will work?  Does it make you want to know more about Zoe?  Are you looking forward to her upcoming videos?  Do you wish you would have thought of it first?

Bottom Line: I’ve really got to rethink the superhero outfit for when I do my future Drive By Videos.™