Preparing for a Panel

By Elizabeth S. Craig @elizabethscraig

By Elizabeth S. Craig @elizabethscraig

Tomorrow, November 14, I’m on a panel for the Get Read online conference—a conference that’s all about helping writers learn more about effective marketing.

My panel is “Publishing Your Way To Success.” The description:
The core thing that connects writers to readers is the stories you craft – be it fiction, nonfiction, memoir, poetry or any form of writing. In this session, we explore how releasing new work can grow and more deeply engage your audience.

It panel runs for about 40 minutes and starts at 1:45 p.m. ET.

I tend to really enjoy panels, although as a rule, I’m not fond of public speaking.  Panels are easier for me and I get a lot from listening to the other speakers…occasionally to the point where I forget what the original question was and have to ask for it to be repeated when it’s my turn (oops).Continue reading

Thoughts On a 99 Cent Sale

by
Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

It’s been a very long time since I’ve sold anything at 99 cents.  I’d read some blog posts that advised against it.  I’d heard readers say that it was tough finding anything good at 99 cents.

Then I started reading those same things…but it was now arguing against a $1.99 cent price point.  The best, most recent examination I’ve got on the subject is this post by writer Molly Greene: “Ebook Pricing: What’s The Perfect Number?”Continue reading

Twitterific

 by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

Twitterific links are fed into the Writer’s Knowledge Base search engine (developed by writer and software engineer Mike Fleming) which has over 23,000 free articles on writing related topics. It’s the search engine for writers.

 

This week– November 13-14:  Get Read – Marketing Strategies for Writers: Dan Blank’s We Grow Media is a  two-day online conference for authors looking for promotion strategies–and, ultimately, readers.  Speakers include Porter Anderson, Chuck Wendig, Dan Blank, Jane Friedman, Therese Walsh, and many others.  (I’m one of the scheduled speakers and am also am serving on the advisory board.)  More information about the conference and registration information can be found here.

 

If you use the discount code elizabeth, you receive $20 off the conference price.

Check out the new resource for writers.  It’s Alex J. Cavanaugh’s Insecure Writer’s Support Group website.  There you’ll find pages of links to resources—writing tips, publishers, agents, queries, self-publishing, marketing, contests, and publications for writers.

 

Friend and fellow mystery writer Margot Kinberg has put together a crime fiction anthology: In a Word–Murder.  The ebook retails for $2.99 and proceeds from its sales benefit Princess Alice Hospice, in memory of Maxine Clarke, a supporter of and good friend to the crime writing community.  One of my stories is in the collection, too…my first attempt at short fiction. :)

 

The Search Engine for Writers: http://hiveword.com/wkb/search

How to nail NaNoWriMo: http://dld.bz/cT3Ej @nailyournovelContinue reading

Completing Your Novel Plot

Guest Post by Jack Smith

At some point in drafting a novel, you will probably see the need to add more actions or events to complete the plot.  You know the story isn’t complete.  You may need to rethink where your story is going.  Try this process:

  • Write a brief summary of each chapter.  This is time-consuming, but once you have concise summaries, you will be able to see your novel’s overall direction more easily.  Sure, you can read and reread your novel itself, but sometimes you can forget what happened first, second, etc.
  • Brainstorm more conflicts to complete the plot.  I do say “brainstorm” because you can’t be sure these conflicts will work until you get back to the writing itself.   Will they work once you dig back into your characters?  Would your character do this, do that?  Hard to say.  Don’t force it.  But try it out, and maybe your character will end up doing something even more interesting and compelling.
  • Decide where these conflicts go.  Here again, this is tentative.  You might decide to include a given conflict in Chapter Three, but really it will work out better in Chapter Six or Seven, or Ten.   But for now, write down where the conflict might go.   Choose a colored type (red maybe?) so it’s easy to spot these tentative places to include tentative new conflicts.
  • Add your new conflicts to your novel manuscript.  It might be best to re-read your novel up to the point where you intend to add new material—to get back in the swing of the work.  To get a sense for the mood and tone at this point.   Once you’re ready to include new conflict material, let your imagination take over.  Get back into your characters.  See them, hear them speak, let it happen.

Plot usually doesn’t fall out of the sky and arrive fully intact.  It takes doing and redoing.  This is only one process you might follow.  You might need to go through this process one or more times.  Once you’ve done so, re-read your entire novel and see if it’s complete.  Don’t depend entirely on logic.  Does it sound and feel complete?

 

Jack Smith is author of the novel Hog to Hog, which won the George Garrett Fiction Prize (Texas Review Press. 2008), and is also the author of Write and Revise for Publication: A 6-Month Plan for Crafting an Exceptional Novel and Other Works of Fiction, published earlier this year by Writer’s Digest

 

Over the years, Smith’s short stories have appeared in North American Review, Night Train, Texas Review, and Southern Review, to name a few. He has also written some 20 articles for Novel & Short Story Writer’s Market, as well as a dozen or so pieces for The Writer.

 

He has published reviews in numerous literary journals, including Ploughshares, Georgia Review, Missouri Review, Prairie Schooner, American Review, Mid-American Review, and the Iowa Review.

Smith taught full-time at North Central Missouri College for some 24 years, and  has also served as Fiction Editor for The Green Hills Literary Lantern, an online literary journal published by Truman State University, for over two decades. Learn more about Jack and his work in the November 1 edition of PIF magazine.

 

 

 

Thoughts on Social Reading and Other Intrusions

by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig

A couple of months ago, I read an interesting post on social reading: Is Social Reading the End of an Intimacy?  Porter Anderson discussed the topic on Jane Friedman’s blog for his Writing on the Ether weekly column there (excellent coverage of publishing industry topics there, if you haven’t checked it out). 

I’ve kept thinking about the post, since this social aspect keeps slipping into ebooks I’ve been reading.  I’ve gotten used to the underlined passages, for instance, although they startled me the first few ebooks I read.  The fact that I’ve gotten used to them is what makes me think about Porter’s post.

The underlined passages may not be such a huge deal, but as Porter put it, it could get more extensive:

“I’m imagining pop-up notes nudging me with other readers’ bright ideas; reviews rolling all over the place; and marginalia marching around the glowy screen of my preferred tablet reading device.”

What does bother me (and this is device intrusion, not specifically social media):

When my Kindle tells me that I have 5 minutes left in my chapter. My device has been timing my reading and applies it to unread text.  This is my device interacting with me.  It makes me feel as if I’m racing the clock…and since I definitely don’t need to be reminded how very little free time I have, it gives me a harried feeling.  Clearly, I need to turn this feature off (now to figure out how to do that).

What doesn’t bother me:

Seeing a request at the end of the book to like a book on Facebook, tweet about it, or buy the next book.  I don’t do any of those things, but I don’t mind seeing the request.  But I read on a survey in the last year (tried to find the survey and can’t, darn it) that readers frequently feel irritated when they get these requests at the end of a book… that reading should be a sanctuary from social media.

Underlined passages don’t bother me. With my Kindle in hand, I’ve been at book club and watched as folks have fumbled through their printed books, looking for just the right passage to illustrate their point.  I’m able to immediately find that passage because the thing has been underlined by 500 people.  Not wanting to be a know-it-all, I just wait for them to find their spots.

Underlined passages are also useful for writers—these underlined spots create helpful research as to favorite scenes and what worked for readers.  You can check out the ones readers underlined on your book’s page on Amazon.

What sometimes bothers me:

Reader comments while I’m reading a book…this bothers me.  And you’d think it wouldn’t, with my background. For the record, I’m the daughter of a now-retired high school English teacher. For my first twenty-two years, I rarely read a book that didn’t have annotations in the margins or underlined passages (unless they were library books).  I do believe it may have warped me because I write in nearly all of my print books.  But Daddy’s notes were a teacher’s notes and I found them insightful.  I don’t have the same interest in other readers’ marginalia.

But!  I don’t mind reading notes after I’m finished with a book, when I’ve already drawn conclusions for myself.  Then I do like to read others’ opinions and analyses. Book club meetings have maybe softened me up for some forms of social reading in my ebooks.  But only on my own terms and only after I’m done with a novel.

What’s probably key with social reading, from a publisher/developer perspective:

Porter hit the nail right on the head here, for me: “And our busy developers gussying up social reading platforms need provide us with an escape. An OFF button. I will use it. Indeed, if I can’t turn off these fine features when I want to, I’ll be as anti-social in reading as I am (some tell me) in life.”

Yes.  I have to be able to turn it all off. I have to turn off highlighters, forget about annotations, and not “share” at the end of the book unless I darn well want to.  I can’t deal with too much clutter in the margins. And I’m with Porter about hearing blather from readers—inconsequential information that has nothing to do with the book.  I’d want more insightful comments…sometimes.  And sometimes maybe I want to just read and be by myself with my thoughts.

As a writer, though, I’ve noticed the fact that I have gotten used to some of this intrusion, as I mentioned earlier in the post.  This makes me think that our future will feature books that are a lot more interactive in a social way.  If I can so easily get used to it in my middle age, my kids accept it as a matter of fact.  Although I feel somewhat divided on this, I have a feeling that it will be one of many ways we keep writing and reading relevant to a new, computer-native generation.

How do you feel about social reading?

 

 

Image: MorgueFile: Alvimann
 
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