Showing posts with label Florida Writers association. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Florida Writers association. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 06, 2013

IWSG November 2013



http://www.insecurewriterssupportgroup.com/p/iwsg-sign-up.html

In October I went to a writer’s conference I really enjoy attending. My first time at this particular conference was last year and since then I have become assistant secretary to the Florida Writer’s Association, #FWA13, the group that hosts the conference every year. One of the main reasons I went this year was to recharge my writing batteries. I get very tired sometimes of trying to motivate myself to put words on paper in a meaningful way, by which I mean, specifically on a novel. I went to the conference hoping to come away with a new energy and vitality to give to my chosen career.
http://www.floridawriters.net/
Did I? Did the recharge work? Yes and no. I came away enthused and ready to go. I have a plan I didn’t before. I have information and contacts I didn’t before. I basked in the chance to talk to other writers and have them not look at me like I’m crazy for talking about writing. So in that way I am charged and ready to go. On the other side of that though, is the fact that I still have to make myself sit down and put the words on paper, well, on the screen and in a file, then on paper.
That part has not changed and neither has the effort it takes to do it. But having met the folks I did, getting the input I did has done one thing to help in this challenge I am presented with daily, and that is, yes, I am alone in my pursuit of happiness (and a living) but I am not alone in how people  view me and support my efforts. I am not alone in my dream, and there are folks out there willing to be there for me and cheer me on while I do the work, as I am for them. Made me think of you guys, my IWSG buddies and how we support one another and pay attention to what matters. People.
http://www.insecurewriterssupportgroup.com/

So, thanks for being there for me. I hope you feel the same about me and my efforts to support you.
Happy Thanksgiving All! 



Image from:

Wednesday, September 04, 2013

Disposable Words




I have a guest blog post today as my post for the Insecure Writer's Support Group this month. I'd like to introduce, to those of you who don't know him, Chris Hamilton. He is a writer and the blogger for the Florida Writers Association, of which I am a member. After reading this post I thought it would be perfect for today's posting. Please let me know what you think...
 
 
 
 
August 29, 2013

Every child my age made an ashtray like this. in some cases, it's more rare and valuable than our words. Makes you wonder.

I did the math once about the number of words I write each year on this blog. Without getting into the algorithm, the numbers around 120,000 words a year.
I thought about that as I looked at a bowl at my parents’ house that I think was made by someone too young to vote–a grandchild. And I thought about artisans and other artists and what they produce and the value of what they produce.
And then I thought about writers and about writers who blog.
It would be pretentious to equate what’s produced on this blog with actual artwork. It’s not the design of this blog to be art. It’s supposed to provide information and something for you to think about as a writer. It’s not meant to be something to treasure and hang onto for generations to come.
In a related note, there’s a lot of talk about how the inundation of digital content is driving down the monetary value of what we produce. But if you look at the economics of the situation, what we produce is more plentiful than it ever has been. And I don’t mean just self-published books. There are blogs and an infinite number of websites for fun and information.
When I was a kid, the only way to find out how the Mets did and check details was to wait for each day’s Schenectady Gazette. Because it was the only place to get information, it was worthwhile for me to pay for the paper. I kept up the tradition for years, moving past the Gazette to the USA Today, the Albany Times-Union, the Washington Post and Washington Times, the Arizona Republic, and the Chicago Tribune. Only after we moved to Florida did I decide that the paper wasn’t worth the money for me because there were an infinite number of places to go for box scores and other news.
And so here we are, us writers, blithely producing content to build our online presence. The amount of free content is nearly endless. And we complain about how the value of our work seems to be falling–with good reason.
But maybe it’s falling because at least some of it is built for now. By tomorrow at this time, another post will appear in this spot. This will become just a single pebble under the stream. In two or three days, no one will remember it.
It’s too bad that way. Leads you to wonder if more is necessarily better.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

The Next Big Thing Blog Hop

Mary Wagner, a great friend that I made at the recent Florida Writer's Association Conference in Lake Mary, Florida, sent me a link to her blog with a wonderful idea that goes right along with the FWA's motto of "Writers Helping Writers." After reading her post I wanted to participate and I thank her most profusely for inviting me to do so! The Next Big Thing is a way of reaching out to other writers/bloggers who might want to share their works-in-progress (WIP) with other "artisanal" authors. Another writer I met at the conference, who helped me through the stressing agent appointment process is named Bitten Twice, and come to find out she is who introduced Mary to this blog hop. So I am including Mary's link here (where you can also find Bitten's and those who invited her), so you can check out Mary's WIP, after, of course, you read mine!

 Mary Wagner's blog is: Running with Stilettos

So, the deal is, I post the answers to ten questions here on my blog, as Mary did on hers and Bitten did before her. I add the link of the writer who invited me so that blogs keep being added to the "hop" as we go, like a game of "tag." Now, I will invite five authors to participate and if they accept, they will link back to me/us. It seems like a fun way to see other writer's works and to find interesting blogs. So, here are my answers to the ten questions about my WIP.


1. What is the working title of your book?
“The Seventh Man.” I like to title my novels with something that can almost be a double entendre, or, something that pertains very closely to what the book is about. In this case it can mean two things, but you have to read it to find out what those two things are.
2.  Where did the idea come from for the book?
First and foremost, my infatuation for the actor Sean Bean inspired the story. If it ever made it to the big screen, it seemed like a movie he might actually do. Second, a story I read about the amount of CCTV cameras used in the UK, more than in any other country thanks to the IRA. Here is one article similar to what I read:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/mar/02/cctv-cameras-watching-surveillance  Third, I love mysteries. I love London. I love York. I wanted to write a mystery tied to those places. Fourth, the “abduction” scene in Robert Ludlum’s novel “The Bourne Identity” gave me the idea for the kidnapping scene in this novel. Other than that it all came the way stories sometimes do, straight out of thin air into my mind.
3.  What genre does your book fall under?
Police thriller/procedural. There are three protagonists in this novel, an assassin, a kidnapped writer and the policeman trying to find them.
4.  Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition?
Of course Sean Bean would play the assassin. John Hannah would be the policeman. I adore him and he has done police shows before. So far, for the writer the only woman I’ve been able to imagine playing her is Wynona Rider. She has the waif/tragic heroine look about her that fits the character in the novel.
5.  What is the one-sentence synopsis for your book?
In London three destinies are altered forever when an assassin, an American woman, and a cop collide on a lethal mission and find that the completion of it might cost each of them more than they bargained for.
6.  Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
At this point it will be an “artisan published” novel. (artisanal, word coined by APE writer Guy Kawasaki of Apple fame) After all, it is a work of art. I am also querying an agent who asked to see a partial of it. I’m reading Guy’s (co-writer Shawn Welch) APE (Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur) book right now to see if it is of use to me as a fiction writer.Guy and the APE Many of the books out there on the success of self publishing are based on non-fiction books. Fiction is a totally different can of worms, as my writer/fisherman father would say.
7.  How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?
One year. That seems to be my time for completing a first draft. (This is my forth novel and each one took a year to see a completed first draft) Now I am in rewrites and have found not only a policewoman in London willing to be my consultant, but also a professional editor who is working with me. So far both women really seem to know their businesses and are making a profound effect upon my writing of this novel. By the way, I think any and all artisan novels should be professionally edited. If we want to be taken seriously, and have readers pay to read us, we need quality out there folks, not just stories. (I didn't have an editor with my first published novel and I regret it. I am doing it now. I thought I knew more than I did and thought I couldn't afford it. Little did I know I couldn't afford NOT to!) Sorry about the soapbox!
8.  What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?
In a way I would compare it to The Bourne Identity and that type, in that it has a lot to do with police, chases, constant movement and questions; a mystery that must be solved to catch the “bad” guy. But there are very personal stories attached to each protagonist that give the story a different feel.
9.  Who or what inspired you to write this book?
Sean Bean, CCTV cameras and I love to read mysteries. I’ve never written a police/mystery, why not write about something/one I like?
10.  What else about your book might pique your readers’ interest?
I love to read character driven novels and so the characters and their personal dramas are the main focus of this story. I hope readers will find them interesting, relate-able, human and flawed yet sympathetic, not flat or unimaginative. Not just words on a page. There is a race against a short time restriction as the story takes place over only four days. I also, for those into police procedurals, am using something that the actual police in the UK use to solve crime that I haven’t seen or read about in other novels. I’ve tried to make the settings of London and York come alive for the reader.