Twitterific

Terry3_thumb[1] Here are writing links that I’ve posted to Twitter for the past week.

If you’re looking for a particular topic, just plug in your keyword into the search box at the top left-hand corner of the blog (on the black header right above my blog name…next to the Blogger symbol…the small search window is next to the magnifying glass) and the roundup with your subject will come up. To narrow your search down on the page, do a CTRL+F, type your subject, and hit enter.

In Praise of Unlikable Characters: http://dld.bz/ySxk

Best Articles This Week for Writers 10/8/2010: http://dld.bz/ySxj

Self-publishing–baby steps: http://dld.bz/ySxa

Dialogue tags: http://dld.bz/ySwX

10 of the best wolves in literature (Guardian): http://dld.bz/ySwV

How can one afford to be a writer? http://dld.bz/ySwS

The Top 25 Underrated Creative Writing MFA Programs (Huff Post): http://dld.bz/ySwH

Why you should read debut authors: http://dld.bz/ySwB

How Linguistics Can Help You Part 4: Semantics: http://dld.bz/ySwA

For the traveling writer–international travel tips: http://dld.bz/ySw7

Writing our book’s climax: http://dld.bz/yBvW

Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Sweet Tooth Chicken Breast http://bit.ly/9ZcIwY @CleoCoyle

How to Pick an Agent if You Write for Many Audiences: http://dld.bz/yBvA

The importance of knowing your intent: http://dld.bz/yBvk

7 Ways to Promote Your Book With Video: http://dld.bz/yBuX

How to Attract Influencers to Your Blog: http://dld.bz/yNRT

Taking Your Writing Off the Back Burner: Writing in the Moment: http://dld.bz/yBuD

Should you start a blog? Yes! Blogging benefits for writers: http://dld.bz/yNRz @HartJohnson

How to Get a Foot in the Door With Agents: http://dld.bz/yBu9

Planning for a Writing Push: http://dld.bz/yBu5

7 Tips to Mastering Facebook Advertising: http://dld.bz/yBuz

6 Tweets To Promote Your Online Fiction: http://dld.bz/yBuu

Creating Characters Using the Dialectical Method: http://dld.bz/yBue

What do Amazon rankings mean to authors? http://dld.bz/yBtW

Using smell to improve your fiction: http://dld.bz/y3G7

A Stranger in a Strange Place: Migrant Writing: http://dld.bz/yzcm

I Want to Publish My Book. Now What? (Writer’s Digest): http://dld.bz/yubm

Who Does What? A Breakdown of Each Job in Publishing and Marketing a Book: http://dld.bz/yuaU

National Book Foundation Announces 5 Under 35 Honorees (GalleyCat): http://dld.bz/yuaR

National Graphic Novel Writing Month (part 1): http://dld.bz/yuaH

Being a writer vs being a blogger: http://dld.bz/yuaE

The 4 Golden Rules of Being a Writer: http://dld.bz/yuap

Writing, social media, emails–how do you stay on top of it all? http://dld.bz/yHkY

Writing Dreams in the Age of Twitter: http://dld.bz/ytZU @PauloCamposInk

London Police Catch Prankster Who Stole Writer Jonathan Franzen’s Eyeglasses (NPR): http://dld.bz/yuax

Myst. Lov. Kitchen: A Dinner to Die For (Literally) and My Answer to the $40 Lamb Chop by Cleo Coyle http://bit.ly/cFnDI0 @CleoCoyle

Demystifying industry terms: http://dld.bz/yBvG

The Doldrums – Latitude and Longitude: http://dld.bz/ytgA

Your Old Job in Publishing Doesn’t Exist: http://dld.bz/ytg7

Freelancers–5 Tips to Getting Out of an Assignment Rut: http://dld.bz/ytgv

War, Peace, and Fantasy: http://dld.bz/ytgu

Revision tip–be specific: http://dld.bz/ytgk

How to write a novel in 30 years or less: http://dld.bz/ytgd

Upstart Publishing, Staying Human in a Digital World: http://dld.bz/ytfU

‘It Was A Big, Big Surprise,’ New Nobel Laureate Mario Vargas Llosa Tells NPR: http://dld.bz/yDC5

10 ways writing is like renovating: http://dld.bz/yDGA @elspethwrites

On the character therapist–from anger to amore: http://dld.bz/ytfS

E.B. White on the tricky valuation of a writer’s time: http://dld.bz/yD9K @maudnewton

10 Android Apps for Improving Productivity: http://dld.bz/yD3K

Don’t Let “The Rules” Stifle Your Creativity: http://dld.bz/ytfG

Internalization, Silence and Avoidance: http://dld.bz/ytfp

Stop! Before You Try to Get an Agent, Some Questions to Ask Yourself: http://dld.bz/yCyM

For writing prompts and practice, try http://dld.bz/yCyb and http://dld.bz/yCyd @andymeisen @PauloCamposInk

Serial Characters and the Book Deal: http://dld.bz/ytfj

How Deliberate Practice Can Make You an Excellent Writer: http://dld.bz/yteY

Follett’s Fall of Giants E-Book Outsells Print in Spain: http://dld.bz/yteV

A Lesson in Bad Writing – Why it’s Good to Read Books that Disappoint: http://dld.bz/yteG

Writing inspiration and some links to help you prepare for NaNoWriMo: http://dld.bz/yAfC

Writing For Grownups, Writing For Kids: http://dld.bz/yteF

Book Packagers 101: http://dld.bz/ytem

The Editing Hour: Creative vs Academic Writing: http://dld.bz/yte7

Query letter samples: http://dld.bz/yteq

Editor & Agent Advice: Follows, Tweets, and Posts: http://dld.bz/ytef

Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Something Warm and Toasty—Easy Veggie Soup…in the Slow Cooker http://bit.ly/aMwLLW @CleoCoyle

The future of publishing takes shape (Guardian): http://dld.bz/ytdh

Empathize With Your Main Character: http://dld.bz/yk7y

Outlining: The Best and Hardest Planning Tool: http://dld.bz/yk7h

When is e-royalty not a royalty? When 9th Circuit Court says it’s not: http://dld.bz/yk7f

30 Ways to Save 30 Minutes a Day (and use it for writing?) : http://dld.bz/yk6z

Could Someone Be Plagiarizing Your Writing? http://dld.bz/yk5R

Writing is like…working out? http://dld.bz/yk5P

How to Overcome Fear & Let Your Creativity Flourish: http://dld.bz/yk5E

5 Ways Facebook Can Boost Your Freelance Biz: http://dld.bz/yk5C

The Artist’s Responsibility: http://dld.bz/yk5v

Defeating Your Inner Critic Part I – Track the Problem: http://dld.bz/yjNV

Six Tips for Selling Your Book: http://dld.bz/yjNN

Behind the scenes–“The Call”: http://dld.bz/yjM2

5 Ways to Make Your Novel Helplessly Addictive: http://dld.bz/yjEv @victoriamixon

Public speaking–when your speech goes wrong: http://dld.bz/yjDY

Writing the devil into your bad guy: http://dld.bz/yxQk

How to create sound bites that resonate: http://dld.bz/yjDG

Does paid advertising work for small-time novelists? http://dld.bz/yjD2

Tips for writing query letters from someone in the industry: http://dld.bz/yjDz

Barnes & Noble gets into the self-pub biz with PubIt!: http://dld.bz/yjDm

Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Road trips rock! http://bit.ly/bwPRvD @CleoCoyle

Thoughts on Changing Agents: http://dld.bz/yjDg

Write your book & make it as good as it can be. Let that be its own reward. http://dld.bz/yhug

Learning about writing through the golden rules of medicine: http://dld.bz/yhtS

5 Productivity Myths That Need to Be Busted: http://dld.bz/yhtq

Tweeting Interns: Helpful or Hurtful? http://dld.bz/yhte

What to do while you wait for your book’s launch date: http://dld.bz/yhsZ

3 Reasons to Start Blogging Before a Book Contract: http://dld.bz/yhsT

The art of introducing your heroes: http://dld.bz/yhsB

Are You Rewarding Yourself through Procrastination? http://dld.bz/yhsz

9 Ways to Prepare for the National Novel Writing Month: http://dld.bz/yhsf

Self Publishing on the Kindle: http://dld.bz/yhsd

How to keep writing when your inner critic screams: http://dld.bz/ycdJ

7 Reasons Why You Should Read Your Book Out Loud: http://dld.bz/ycd7

A group challenge to submit work to 10 markets by the first of each month: http://trunc.it/bjq96 @mercedesmy

Series writing–thoughts and resources: http://dld.bz/yqYc

NaNoWriMo starts right here, right now: http://dld.bz/ycd4

Why writing is like riding a bike: http://dld.bz/yq4R @SimonCLarter

5 reasons writers should be on YouTube: http://dld.bz/ycdu @clarissadraper

A Word to Children’s Writers: Spend Time at Schools: http://dld.bz/ycdh

Enjoy the Luxury of the Unpublished Life: http://dld.bz/ycde

The Writer Himself: http://dld.bz/yccT

Quick writing tips–on permission: http://dld.bz/yccM

Spiderpunk: http://dld.bz/yccC

Myst. Lov. Kitchen: PHILADELPHIA FOOD http://bit.ly/bYBtZR @CleoCoyle

The Worst Writing Advice: http://dld.bz/yccz

Books on Writing… Lyrics, Screenplays, and Science Fiction: http://dld.bz/yccf

Surviving the cheap seats of the writing journey: http://dld.bz/yccd

What’s the Career Path for Ambitious Freelancers? http://dld.bz/ycbX

As one writer sees it–why writers don’t make money: http://dld.bz/yjN5 @KarenGowen

Tips For Writing Effective Dialogue: http://dld.bz/ycbT

Twitter and Facebook cannot change the real world, says Malcolm Gladwell: http://dld.bz/ycbF

Too many books? Far too few, more like (Guardian): http://dld.bz/ycb8

8 Steps to Hiring the Agent You Need: http://dld.bz/xXxk

The White Noise That Is Twitter: http://dld.bz/xXxj

Non-Stop Writing: the Index Card Trick: http://dld.bz/xXxh

The rules of contemporary romance novels: http://dld.bz/xXxd

Adding Sensory Details to Your Writing (Part 2): http://dld.bz/xXxb

Should You Self-Publish, Then Get a Literary Agent? http://dld.bz/xXwX

Is paranormal romance hijacking urban fantasy? http://dld.bz/xXwR

A quick tip for keeping our writing momentum: http://dld.bz/yfrB

A Writer’s Diary: http://dld.bz/xXwK

For crime writers–information on medical examiners: http://dld.bz/yfdD @authorterryo

Surviving the MFA: http://dld.bz/xXw9

Who should rescue Barnes and Noble? Maybe a publisher: http://dld.bz/xXw8

One writer’s evolving novel opener: http://dld.bz/xXrA

When plotting goes wrong: http://dld.bz/xXrb @jillkemerer

Myst. Lov. Kitchen: Veal Delicious http://bit.ly/9TBeRS @CleoCoyle

Does a writer need talent? http://dld.bz/xXqV

Tips for writing in restaurants, etc.: http://dld.bz/xXn2

Ten of the best vendettas in literature (Guardian): http://dld.bz/xXnP

Three Traits of Compelling Characters: http://dld.bz/xXnH

How to Use Vivid Descriptions to Capture Attention: http://dld.bz/xXnG

10 great science fiction novels that have been banned: http://dld.bz/xXn9

New Twitter, New Rant: http://dld.bz/xXnf

Advice for aspiring writers from a freelance editor: http://dld.bz/xXnb

8 Things We Can Learn About Freelance Writing From The Movie Making Business: http://dld.bz/xXmH

One writer tells the problems she’s experienced with author events: http://dld.bz/xXmG

Best Articles This Week for Writers 10/1/2010: http://dld.bz/xXmw

Midlist and backlist authors are losing out with the agency model: http://dld.bz/xUk3

Earning A Reader’s Time: http://dld.bz/xUjQ

Myst. Lov. Kitchen: What’s Your Favorite Cookbook? http://bit.ly/96N1hW @CleoCoyle

There Is More to Reading Than Digital: http://dld.bz/xUjd

The Magic of Rituals: http://dld.bz/xUjb

How to be a writer in 15 easy steps: http://dld.bz/xUhQ

To make it as a writer, outwit, outplay, and outlast: http://dld.bz/xUhH

The privatization of libraries (NY Times): http://dld.bz/xUhD

Writing 100 facts about your characters: http://dld.bz/xUhy

Agatha Christie–5 of her best books: (Guardian): http://dld.bz/xUhq

Children’s publishers: focus on content, not platform: http://dld.bz/xUa6

Skimming

blog1 My 4th grade daughter is reading the Chronicles of Narnia.  She started out with The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe and really enjoyed it.  Then she decided to read Prince Caspian.

One night last week, I told her that her reading time was up and it was time to turn in.  “But Mama!” she said.  “I’ve only read four pages!”

Usually in that length of time she’s read at least a chapter, so I decided to take a look.  I’d forgotten that C.S. Lewis had such long descriptive passages.  And I love Lewis.

But he’d very carefully written out a description of a ridge the group was crossing and the valley beneath.  The description of the journey over the treacherous ridge took several pages of description.

My daughter doesn’t really know how to skim yet, and she’d gotten bogged down in all the details.  It wasn’t that she was savoring every word—it was that she was trying to work through the heavy imagery.

Which made me think.  Yes, if anyone could write a beautiful descriptive passage, it was C.S. Lewis.  And I know my nine year old isn’t the speediest reader in the world, but it did slow her down and trip her up…which isn’t what we want for our readers.

When it was time for her to write her synopsis of the chapter for school, she didn’t have much material to write about.  The plot hadn’t actually progressed during the description…it could be summed up with: “The group made a harrowing journey toward the enemy’s campsite.”

It made me realize how frequently I skim descriptive passages.  I think it’s a shame—but I honestly don’t have as much time as a reader anymore.

As a writer, I don’t write much description.  In fact, my editors usually ask me to put more in.  I’m more likely to try to give a picture of a character through their actions, instead.

How much is too much description?  How much is too little?  As a writer, does the amount you put in reflect how you view descriptive passages as a reader?

Staying on Top of it All

114413351638 I was volunteering Wednesday night for a church program my daughter is involved in. I was supposed to help a couple other ladies cook dinner for about sixty kids and ten adults.

This meant my working in an industrial kitchen at the church…with an industrial dishwasher, huge gas oven and massive cookware, etc. I was flummoxed just looking at the equipment.

The lady in charge of the kitchen came in. She was in a tremendous hurry and giving quick instructions before she rushed off to help with another part of the program.

She started giving me instructions: “So it’s nacho night. The chips can go in the plastic green bowls there. Shredded cheese in eight Styrofoam bowls—one for each table. Same with the salsa. The shredded lettuce is in the fridge…you’ll want it to sit out for a little while to thaw out a bit—the fridge runs cold. The meat is pre-cooked and pre-seasoned…you’ll just need to put it in boiling water at 6:10 to warm. I’d put the pot on that burner there. Scissors to open the bags are in that drawer over there. The middle school kids should set the tables, but you’ll want to check in thirty minutes to see if they have. Tongs for the lettuce are on the opposite wall in drawers. And please make sure you’re serving the food in the dining hall at 6:45 for the kids to sing a thank you song to you….”

There was much more that she was saying, but I was already looking at her with panic. “I’m sorry,” I said. “I know you need to leave, but I’m going to have to ask you to repeat all that—I need to write it down.” This absolutely stopped her cold, then she laughed. “Wow! I don’t think I’ve seen anyone have to do that before.”

But—I know the memory that I’m dealing with. It’s NOT good. I’ve gotten to the point where I’m juggling so much that I don’t even have room in my head for it all anymore. If I don’t write it down, then it’s gone for good.

How do writers navigate through their days with all they have to juggle? I really don’t know. I have to do the same thing every day in order to keep it straight—and write myself reminders, too.

Here are some ways I juggle to-do tasks:

Twitter—I skim my Google Reader (now I’m up to 1450 blogs…how did this happen?) once or twice a day when I have a minute. If I don’t have a minute, I make a few minutes in the early afternoon. I click on all the posts that look especially helpful. Later in the day, before supper, I load the posts into SocialOomph to post over a 14-16 hour period. First thing in the morning each morning, I make sure Twitter is set to load. At lunch, I check for @ messages and DMs to respond to. There are usually plenty.

Facebook—I check it usually once or twice a day. I’m usually more interested in seeing what everyone else is doing than in posting status updates, but I’m trying to do better.

Unfortunately, I have three Facebook accounts—my professional one under my own name (Elizabeth Spann Craig Author), Riley has one (Riley Adams is my alter-ego/pen name), and then I have a personal one….because I’d rather not have pictures of me at age 12 or old sorority photos end up on my professional Facebook account.

Emails—I skim them in the morning when I first get up to make sure there’s nothing I really need to act on. Then I check them again at lunch to respond. I’ll check again in the late afternoon. Other than that, I try not to check.

Calendar—I write everything on it. It looks like a crazy person’s calendar—various appointments, story ideas, fragments of grocery lists, reminders about the kids’ school picture days…but the important thing is that I check the calendar every night before I go to bed and again when I get up in the morning. Bad things happen if I don’t.

Writing—I’ve changed my schedule a little so that I write directly after I come back from driving the carpools to school. I write until I’ve reached my goal.

If I don’t reach my goal because something comes up, I go on to Plan B—I assign another time during the day to write. And I write on the go whenever I see I’ll have some dead time while waiting on something.

If that doesn’t work? I move on to Plan C—writing at night. I’m never wild about writing at night, but I can do it if I need to.

Stuff that tends to stress me out that I’ve learned not to do:

I’ve learned not to try to squeeze too much stuff in right before I need to leave the house to go somewhere. I’m Type A so I mistakenly think that I’ll be SO much more on top of things if I use that 15 minutes before I need to leave the house to schedule Twitter or to write my blog post for the next day, etc. But no—it usually just serves to make me lose track of time or to hurry too much as I’m leaving.

I’ve also learned that I can multi-task some things…but I can’t multi-task others. Some tasks I juggle better than others and some need my undivided attention and focus.

I’ve learned not to prematurely cross something off my list as completed. This is something I’ve been doing more and more of lately—take the laundry, for instance. I’ve been absentminded enough to cross the laundry off my to-do list after I stick it in the washer. No, Elizabeth. The laundry is actually not done until it’s hanging back up where it’s supposed to be after coming out of the dryer. I do the same thing sometimes with emails that require action—yes, I did email the person back. But I can’t cross that off my to-do list until the action they need me to do is completed.

How do you keep everything straight and juggle it all? Tips are welcomed! :)

Inspiration

MWIM Every year I’m amazed and inspired by the productivity and creativity surrounding National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo.) If you’re not familiar with it, the goal of NaNoWriMo is to write a novel in a month. You can log your progress online, participate in forums for different genres, and receive motivation, support, and encouragement from other writers.

Unfortunately, I never seem able to participate because I’m in the middle of a manuscript (to technically follow the rules, you’re supposed to start a new project), but I feed off of the creativity and excitement of the participants and lurk in the forums pretty frequently, too.

Interested in participating in NaNoWriMo next month? Here are some posts that have run recently to help you get prepared:

9 Ways to Prepare for the National Novel Writing Month
NaNoWriMo starts right here, right now
Planning for a Writing Push
NaNoWriMo (main site)

Actually, I find inspiration in a lot of other ways too:

Bad books as inspiration. (Because I don’t want to write that poorly.)

Good books as inspiration. (I’m amazed at the author’s skill.)

Watching plays or going to a concert for inspiration.

Music as inspiration.

Housework for inspiration. (I don’t want to do it and I’ll have to start vacuuming if I stop writing.) :)

Taking a walk for inspiration.

Virtual interaction with other writers for inspiration.

In-person interaction with other writers for inspiration.

How do you find inspiration? And are you interested in participating in NaNoWriMo?

Writing the Devil into Your Bad Guy

Cheryl 2007 best medium Every novel needs to have at least one major bad guy (or gal), an antagonist with flaws and desires that lead to chaos, crime and even murder. This bad guy must provide a certain amount of tension, even when he isn’t in a scene. Readers must feel him (or her) lurking, plotting and planning, creeping closer to his goal. To do this, writers must often “write the devil into a bad guy”.

By this I mean that writers must delve into the psyche and personality of their antagonist to find out what makes them tick and what they want. And they’d better want something they shouldn’t have. Money, power, control, sex or someone. What makes this character bad? Or evil? Whatever it is, amp it to a high level of devil-may-care, devil-made-me-do-it attitude.

lancelotslady2010FINALMED In Lancelot’s Lady, I started with a private investigator. Winston Chambers seemed nice enough at first. He did a good deed; he helped a character locate someone. But then we learn a bit more about Winston. We learn he has a fondness for gambling, and he’s not very good. This presents a great time to add a bit of the Devil to his personality.

Desperate people do desperate things, but desperation isn’t the only reason Winston does what he does. He’s a survivalist who lusts after power, money and one particular woman―Rhianna McLeod. Lust is the Devil’s playmate.

We later learn something else about Winston, and here’s where the Devil really comes out. He routinely enjoys the pleasures of prostitutes. Now if that doesn’t make you wrinkle your nose in displeasure, this next part will. He doesn’t treat his women very well. In fact, he’s sadistically evil.

We learn all of this as the romance between Rhianna and Jonathan progresses. Winston lurks in the background, appearing now and then to add tension to Lancelot’s Lady. You just know something is going to happen. And it does. In the end, Winston makes a bold move that jeopardizes everything for Rhianna, including her own life.

Writing the Devil into a character is a great way to show conflict, terror and suspense. It keeps readers on the edge of their seats, waiting, wondering, chewing their nails. Even a character’s physical description can add to his or her evil persona. Winston is obese, balding, wheezing, huffing and sweaty. Slimy…

Don’t you want to meet him now? Well, you can. Just pick up an ebook copy of Lancelot’s Lady.

Lancelot’s Lady ~ A Bahamas holiday from dying billionaire JT Lance, a man with a dark secret, leads palliative nurse Rhianna McLeod to Jonathan, a man with his own troubled past, and Rhianna finds herself drawn to the handsome recluse, while unbeknownst to her, someone with a horrific plan is hunting her down.

Lancelot’s Lady is available in ebook edition at KoboBooks, Amazon’s Kindle Store, Smashwords and other ebook retailers. Help me celebrate by picking up a copy today and “Cherish the romance…”

LaunchVBTgraphic You can learn more about Lancelot’s Lady and Cherish D’Angelo (aka Cheryl Kaye Tardif) at http://www.cherishdangelo.com and http://www.cherylktardif.blogspot.com. Follow Cherish from September 27 to October 10 on her Cherish the Romance Virtual Book Tour and win prizes.

Who is your favourite “bad guy” in film or a novel, and why?

Leave a comment here, with email address, to be entered into the prize draws. You’re guaranteed to receive at least 1 free ebook just for doing so. Plus you’ll be entered to win a Kobo ereader. Winners will be announced after October 10th.

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