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Archive for the 'Writers and Writing' Category

November 15, 2007

Writers Write

Written by Jenna Petersen in Jaunty Post, Writers and Writing

For the last six months or so I have been ‘an author’. For the last two weeks, I’ve been ‘a writer’.

So what’s the difference?

Well, an author has all this outside stuff to do. Sometimes I think I get all caught up in that outside stuff, like managing my MySpace page and writing blogs and posting responses to message boards and traveling to conferences. The websites, the amazon numbers, the group sites… all ‘author’ territory.

What does a writer do? They write. That’s it. They write. Butt in chair, staring at the blinking cursor, working scene by scene… WRITING. That’s the hard stuff, the tough stuff and honestly, it’s the good stuff. When the ‘author’ work gets hard and frustrating and painful and disappointing, when I go into the writing, that’s good. It’s safe. It’s pure pleasure.

Sometimes, though, I see aspiring authors getting all caught up in ‘author’. They want the recognition, the website, the pen name, the whatever. And they forget about the writing. So here’s my writing advice for the week. I rarely give it here, but what can you do.

You can’t get to author without writer.

If you don’t do the work, if you don’t sit in the chair, if you don’t sweat and grow and learn your craft, it won’t matter if you built a website or picked a pen name or have your review sites all lined up. It won’t matter.

And besides, when you’re knee deep in reviews and conference flights… you’ll want that safe place that writing provides. So make it. Nurture it every day if you’re a writer. Give it your whole heart. And it will give you so much in return.

5:40 am | Permalink | 8 Comments 

September 16, 2007

Ever Wonder What It’s Like to Be An Author?

Written by Shana in Writers and Writing

Have you seen this? Quills, can you relate?

5:49 am | Permalink | 5 Comments 

September 12, 2007

Good advice

Written by RobynDeHart in Writers and Writing

Not too long ago I was watching the season finale to The Next Food Network Star (one of my summer indulgences) and I was struck by something that Bobby Flay said. He told the contestants, “if you’re not nervous about your passion, you’re not passionate about it.” Think about that as that statement implies so much. Some might argue that if you get nervous about something, then you’re not meant to do it and I would say that that’s totally true when it comes to jumping out of a plane, but I’m sure there are plenty of skydivers out there who would argue with me. When it comes to your passion though, I think nerves are healthy and even crucial to some degree. For me, my passion is my writing. I love it. Okay if my critique partner heard me say that, she’d totally laugh since I mostly complain about my writing, but in reality as much as I complain, I wouldn’t want to do any other profession. I am passionate about writing. And I’ll be honest, it makes me crazy nervous. It scares the pants off me some days. The business aspect is terrifying on its own, but the craft itself is nerve-inducing. How can I take the perfect story that’s in my mind and do it justice on paper? Do I remember how to write a book since the last time? What if they find out I’m a fraud? What if no one likes my stories? Writing makes me nervous. But it only makes me nervous because I truly love it. If I didn’t feel the passion I do for it, then I wouldn’t care how things turned out, it wouldn’t matter if I wrote a great book with characters that readers relate to.

So what do you think? Do you think Bobby Flay is right? And what are you passionate about? I’ll pick three random comments and give the winners an autographed copy of my latest release, Tempted At Every Turn.

6:25 am | Permalink | 22 Comments 

July 18, 2007

Irrational Fears

Written by Shana in Writers and Writing

fears

Fears can be kind of funny, huh? What’s terrifying to one person is completely benign to another. For example, I have a friend who is irrationally afraid of frogs. She’s so afraid she won’t walk in certain areas of her neighborhood for fear a frog might be lurking. I like frogs, but I’m not exactly comfortable with them. If I see one, I step out of its way.

Of course, I have my own fears. I am afraid of cockroaches. I’m irrationally afraid of live roaches. I will scream and run away from a live roach. I don’t like dead ones much either. I make Ultimate Sportsfan dispose of their dead corpses. I would have written that I wasn’t irrationally afraid of roaches, but I was going to put a picture of one at the top of this blog and then I was just too distressed by the idea of searching for roach pictures to do it. So maybe I’m a little irrational.

So how does this fit into my job as an author? Well, one thing that makes characters more believable is if they have hopes and fears the rest of us can relate to. I can certainly relate to a character who’s afraid of roaches. And one who isn’t afraid—well, I would automatically think she was pretty kick-butt tough (and maybe a little inasane).

So what about you? Do you have any irrational fears?

5:14 am | Permalink | 15 Comments 

July 13, 2007

Sniff-Sniff. So I didn’t get to go to RWA National, but…

Written by Kimberly Logan in Writers and Writing

…as a way to pass the time until the rest of the Quills check in from conference (And just to prove that I do actually go to some of these events on occasion, LOL) I thought I would share a couple of pics from the Reader/Author Get-Together that I recently attended in Cincinnati, Ohio. Hosted by authors Lori Foster and Dianne Castell, it was a lot more laid back than your typical conference or convention, and I had a blast mixing and mingling with readers and fellow authors!

Reader/Author 1

Here I am, stuffing myself at the first night pizza party. (My friend caught me on camera with a mouthful of soft drink, but that’s par for the course with me. :) ) That’s Harlequin author Kay Stockham in the background on the far left. I shared a table with Kay and author Catherine Spaulding during the event and really enjoyed talking with them.

Author/Reader 2

And here’s a group shot of all of the authors who attended. Can you find me in the crowd? It’s a bit like Where’s Waldo, isn’t it? If it helps, I’m next to author Erin McCarthy. Now, all you have to do is find her

I definitely plan on going back next year!

1:14 pm | Permalink | 3 Comments 

July 11, 2007

A Ghostly Specter! Oh, wait… it’s just Jenna.

Written by Jenna Petersen in Writers and Writing

I’m not here, yet I’m writing a blog. I know, the power of post dating, right? I’m actually in Dallas, with several other Jaunties… oh, and about 2000 of our best writing friends. Today is a really fun day. Probably my favorite at conference. See, today is the Literacy for Life Booksigning. If you’ve never been to one, it’s an experience, to say the least. There are hundreds of romance authors all lined up at table after table after table. The books are all donated by the publishing houses (or authors) and all the proceeds go to local and national literacy efforts. Here are some pictures from booksignings past:


At the siging in Atlanta, 2006.


At Reno, NV in 2005 (sitting as Jess Michaels and very, very blonde).

These images are from my Day-by-Day Diaries in the Articles section of Passionate Pen, by the way.

Anyway, it’s great fun and I love meeting people and I’m sure I’m having a good time right now doing… something, depending on the time you’re reading this.

My Mom actually did some work with literacy issues when I was a little girl. I remember thinking it was sad that people couldn’t read, since I enjoyed it so much. I still think it’s sad because reading is such a joy to me (let alone writing). So good on RWA for sponsoring such a great effort. And good on the publishers for donating books for the cause.

I’ll be back Sunday and I’m sure we’ll all have much to report from Dallas! Have a great week everyone.

4:07 am | Permalink | 11 Comments 

July 10, 2007

About The Regency Period

Written by Margo Maguire in Writers and Writing

I just finished reading a book called Our Tempestuous Day, A History of Regency England, by historian Carolly Erickson, PhD (who has written several other books on historical periods and people). It’s a relatively short book (276 pages), and has a lot of footnotes, but does not go into great depth about the period. However, the author does give a very good overview of the forces at work during the years 1810-1820.

Besides the grand society that we are so familiar with through reading our favorite Regency romances, it was a decade with huge social forces in play. Hannah More was an evangelical reformer, teacher and writer. She worked closely with William Wilberforce (remember the movie Amazing Grace?). Miss More said that popular fiction “debased the taste, slackened the intellectual nerve, let down the understanding, set the fancy loose, and sent it gadding among low and mean subjects.” Her books and pamphlets outsold everyone else during this period. In order to improve the lives of the poor, More established schools – to teach farmers’ children to read the bible. The first school was located in Cheddar, a parish badly neglected by the church (because it was so poor). “Children came into the world without baptism and frequently died without a funeral.”

According to Erickson, Wilberforce was a humanitarian when it came to African slaves, but not with English laborers. He said their attempts to form unions was immoral. He also argued that Christianity should make the lower orders “less discontent with their lot, and the Bible taught them to be diligent, humble and patient.”

The Family Shakespeare was published in 1804 by Thomas Bowdler, who removed every impropriety he read in Shakespeare’s woks. The author wanted to protect women and children from being subjected to Shakespeare’s blasphemy and vulgarities. Men, of course, could read whatever they wanted, in private. Words were replaced (body became person; God became heaven. And everything was sanitized so that no bodily functions or expletives were found. In fact, the changing of a work in this way (with a silly connotation) has come to be known as “bowdlerization.”

On the opposite end of the moral gauge was George Gordon – Lord Byron. He was a gorgeous fellow who caused ladies to faint in awe when he entered a room. But he did not hold with the evangelistic leanings of the day, having adulterous affairs and living a rather dissipated existence.

Starting around 1812, there were “Luddites” – Regency terrorists – who came into country villages (anonymously) and smashed hosiery workshops. This was done in protest over the loss of work for framework knitters. It’s a complex story of labor/supply/demand, but suffice it to say that there was a huge group of people who were put out of work by the conditions of the day and they did not just sit still and take it.

George IV caricature

And then there were the Corn Laws.
After the first defeat of Napoleon, the people became disenchanted with the government. Orators sprang up – spokesmen who would speak eloquently against the status quo. People gathered in crowds to grouse about the price of bread, singing anti-government songs and posting slogans on walls. When a bill was introduced in Feb, 1815, which would limit the importation of foreign grain, it threatened the survival of the lower classes. At this time, it was estimated that the average adult ate a pound of bread a day. Bread was the chief staple of their diet, and it had to be affordable.

But Parliament, in its typical way, passed the bill that favored the landowners. It kept the price of grain artificially high, creating vast numbers of people who could not afford to eat! After the second defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo, they used the army to disperse the disenchanted crowds that gathered, sometimes with tragic results.

With so much social upheaval going on, our fascination with the titled elite of this era is interesting, isn’t it?

5:00 am | Permalink | 3 Comments 

July 9, 2007

The Queen of Romance

Written by RobynDeHart in News, Writers and Writing

cover

The romance community received sad news this weekend when we learned that legend, Kathleen Woodiwiss had passed away. If you ask any historical romance reader how they got started reading and the majority will point this woman. She pioneered love scenes when it was taboo to even consider women reading such material. And she swept us away to far off places full of romance and passion and love. She is the reason I started reading romance and certainly the reason I ended up writing it. I was 17 when I picked up a copy of A Rose in Winter and those first few pages I just felt something click inside me. I just knew, that’s what I wanted to do to. I went on to read Shanna, The Flame and the Flower, Come Love a Stranger and the rest of the Woodiwiss greats and I passed them on to friends. A few years ago before I had sold I was at an RWA National conference and she was there to accept an award. The entire room fell hushed as we all realized her presence and then as she took the stage, we all took to our feet and the room was filled with applause and more than a few of us had to wipe away tears. She was a giant in our industry and she will be sorely missed.

A Rose in Winter is still my favorite romance and though my copy is tattered and torn, it will forever be on my keeper shelf. So what’s your favorite Woodiwiss and what did she mean to you?

5:03 am | Permalink | 10 Comments 

June 25, 2007

Research – the Nitty-Gritty

Written by Margo Maguire in Writers and Writing

Angela recently asked about my research methods, and so I thought I’d give you some insight into the way I do the research for a book. And yes – my research often leads me to add situations to the story. Here’s what I’ve got for my next book so far …

The year is 1868, and the hero is Cullen MacPherson – a highlander who was banished by his father from his home at age twelve. He joined the Royal Navy and worked his way up to a lieutenant class, but returns home after he’s wounded in battle.

The heroine is Ginny Jones, a young Englishwoman who will inherit a lot of money once she reaches her 21st birthday. But there are bad guys out to get her, and she has to flee to a place where they will never find her – the highlands - Cullen’s highlands.

My methods:
I’ll start with my personal resources. I know a few people who have made in-depth studies of the history of the British Navy. I’ll get plenty of info from them, and they’ll be able to steer me toward some good resources (books and the internet).
I also know a few Scots in Scotland – people who have firsthand experience in the highlands. Once I come up with specific questions, I’ll ask them. (And I visited Scotland last year, so I’ve got my own memory to rely on, too).

Then I’ll go to the internet, but that’s tricky. You have to be careful about your internet sources, because some of them are dicey. They’re more pop-culture and hearsay rather than factual information. So I’ll usually go with university sites, or sites that have been vetted by my trusted author friends.

A few visits to the community library will be useful, and then I’ll probably go to the university library for particular detail. That’s basically it. One scenario will lead to questions, and I’ll start there. For example, Cullen was a navy officer. That leads to questions about the 19th century navy. What would his rank have been? If he joined up at age 12, what position did he have? How was he wounded? Since I know it happened during a pirate attack, who were the pirates, and where would the attack have occurred?

Then there’s Ginny - she’s going to inherit money when she reaches her majority. Is it age 21? Would she have been allowed to manage her money at that age? Would an older relative have control?

See how the questions come up? For my purposes, everything needs to be answered, so that the rest of the story rings true.

I know that many of you are writers … tell us how you get your research done. I’ll draw someone’s name tomorrow and send the winner a brand new, autographed copy of A Warrior’s Taking, which will be released Tuesday!

5:00 am | Permalink | 19 Comments 

June 22, 2007

Gone With the Wind

Written by Shana in Writers and Writing

I was in Atlanta over the weekend and finally got to do something I’ve been wanting to do for years: visit the Margaret Mitchell house.

House
Margaret Mitchell House

I wanted to go last year when the RWA conference was in Atlanta, but I was never able to get out of the hotel—too busy! So when we had to travel to Atlanta again this year, I told Ultimate Sportsfan that we couldn’t miss our opportunity this time.

Of course, USF didn’t feel as though he’d missed his opportunity last time, but then, he’s not a big Gone With the Wind fan. In fact, not only has he not read the book, he’s never seen the movie.

GWTW
Never even seen the movie!

Obviously I am a bad wife because I have yet to remedy that oversight, and I own the movie.

The Margaret Mitchell House was interesting but not overly impressive. When Mitchell lived in the house, it was divided into several small apartments. She lived on the basement level. The quarters were cramped, and I can’t imagine how she got much writing done in that space—much less a masterpiece like GWTW. So I guess that just goes to show us that we don’t need fancy chairs or big desks or computers to write a good book. We just need passion and persistence.

I’m in the mood to give something away, so comment on this blog–something about your favorite movie or book or museum or whatever. I’ll pick a winner first thing tomorrow morning and send that person a signed copy of GOOD GROOM HUNTING.

5:01 am | Permalink | 29 Comments 
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