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Messages - Kris_W

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1
Yet another idea – Call the New York public library, tell them you're organizing a literary event, and ask if they have someone who arranges for functions. See if she (or he) has a list of venues in your price range. The locals ought to know the good spots, and libraries ought to be a soft touch for helping out an author.

You might have a look at a reservation site like Open Table, too.

http://www.opentable.com/home.aspx


2
Author Craft / Re: Grammar Question: Song title in text
« on: March 25, 2010, 03:02:09 AM »
Quotes are fine, and don't worry about it. The publishing house will have their own guidelines which they will give to the copyeditor. It's not your problem.

3
Author Craft / Re: Using short stories as a writing tool
« on: March 03, 2010, 04:24:04 PM »
Depends on what you mean.
The progression of -
      Poetry -> Short stories -> Novela -> Novel -> Trilogies and Series
- does not work.  You can't learn one form by studying other forms.

Writing short stories is not great for learning to write novels. Novels have very different needs, formats and expectations compared to short story writing.

However, writing short stories is great for learning to write stories - They help to better understand characters or work out background information or tell stories that do not fit into the format of a novel.  They give you a better understanding of story needs.


I'm being clear as mud, neh?



4
Author Craft / Re: Final Edit
« on: January 28, 2010, 05:39:24 PM »
That's great! Keep up the good work!

One point - What you need at a writer's conference is a brief description of your novel, a business card, and a finished novel which is waiting at home to be sent when requested.

There are several brief descriptions -
Hook - Brief enough to explain on an escalator ride while your listener is going the other direction.

Query - A one-page letter that includes the hook, a description of the dramatic arc and your contact information.

Synopsis - A longer description of your novel including all the major character arcs and the conclusion.


Better yet go read Miss Snark.
http://misssnark.blogspot.com/search/label/conferences

5
Author Craft / Re: On the nature of writing and profit.
« on: January 28, 2010, 06:15:36 AM »
Ransom of Red Chief.

...I'm just saying.

6
It really is not a matter of royalties going up, not when compared to the costs of production. When that is factored in even 70% is lower than royalties in the 1950's.

The 70% sounds good until you look at the deal as a whole. Publishers aren't paying to print the books, aren't editing, aren't doing publicity, they aren't even selective enough to encourage readers to look specifically for their imprint - In fact I'm hard pressed to see what it is they are doing to earn their 30%.

7
Author Craft / Re: A quick question regarding Genre
« on: January 20, 2010, 06:03:07 PM »
Genre could easily be called 'Audience' or 'Sales Target'. It is really more important to marketing, rather than writing. As your story is about Young Adults you might be aiming at the YA audience. However, oddly enough, authors of almost all of the best selling YA novels do not claim to be writing for that group.

Bottom line - Write the book you need to write and don't worry about genre until you have the book finished, polished and ready to send to an agent. 

8
Calendar Event Discussion / Re: Where are the comming events
« on: January 06, 2010, 11:12:18 PM »
Beg your local bookstores to look into it!

9
Author Craft / Re: Finished Read Through of my Draft.
« on: December 29, 2009, 02:37:10 AM »
It's good to tell the first reader that the only thing you _must_ know is 'Where did you stop reading'. No preassure reads go better.

10
Author Craft / Re: Happy Holidays
« on: December 27, 2009, 11:14:01 PM »
Happy holidays to you all - Even you, Humbug!

 ;D


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Author Craft / Re: My writing needs help
« on: December 19, 2009, 06:08:47 AM »
This always blows my mind, when I hear that people are able to write backwards. 
*snip*

One of the ways I 'write backwards' is to -

First - Look at the character as a finished product - the hero, the ultimate whozitt.
Second - Then I look for the individual strengths the character has.
Third - One by one, write up how the character acquired each individual strength.
Fourth - Put in chronological order, fixing clearly impossible stuff.
Five - Fiddle around a bit more, to find the character's low and high points then amplifying them.
Six - Put the edited, finished manuscript in a bottom drawer for a year because by now I can't stand it.

You can skip that last step.

12
Author Craft / Re: My writing needs help
« on: December 18, 2009, 09:30:38 AM »
I think it is perfectly normal for you, the writer, to have problems with endings. Finding the ending is the most artificial part of writing. The writer knows -
The Happily Ever After married couple end up divorced,
The Science Nerd who gets the girl develops MS and dies by 50 after 10 years in a nursing home,
The Triumphant Warrior has cumulative neurologic deficits from being knocked out resulting in paranoia, anger management issues and family murder / suicide around age 45.
- But the reader never knows these things because you chose where to end the story.

You might try writing time lines and character arcs for each character. Often finding 'the right ending' is really just picking a spot in the story where the lives of various characters resonate with each other.


13
Author Craft / Re: specialized writer's question
« on: December 18, 2009, 02:03:44 AM »
You could also try the motor vehicle registration office near you, see if their records go back that far. Some people in archival work get very excited about helping an author!

Also – if someone has to drag out old dusty records for you, be sure to get their name and have them spell it. Every one researcher mentioned in a book's dedication encourages hundreds of others to help look up the truly weird details we need.


14
Author Craft / Re: A writer's question about lingual shift
« on: December 16, 2009, 10:18:17 PM »
Always remember that all langauge barriers immediately dissolve when the speaker raises their voice and talks more slowly.  Every tourist knows this.  ;)

Unless you are talking to another traveler from your own country, while in public, and talking about how stupid the natives of the area are. In that case not one of the thirty people glaring at you speaks your language no matter how loud and obnoxious you are.

 ::)



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Author Craft / Re: A writer's question about lingual shift
« on: December 16, 2009, 04:20:50 PM »
Sorry. I can't help it. :D

Arrrrgggg!

You are correct. Thanks!






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