Blog Archive

Showing posts with label finding an agent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label finding an agent. Show all posts

Friday, July 29, 2022

Around the Web: Best Posts on Writing I've Discovered This Week

 I subscribe to and follow several authors, blogs, and writing sources throughout the week.

Each Friday, I include links to FIVE sources to improve your writing that I found useful.

Here are my offerings for this week. Hope they inspire you to start writing and continue writing! 

Take a look at these before and after comparisons. Hope you'll notice the white spaces. That's a big part of making your book more readable.  https://blog.bookbaby.com/how-to-self-publish/book-design/why-does-my-book-need-interior-formatting

If you want to indie-pub a children's book, start your search for an illustrator. It takes time to find the right fit plus you need to know the costs involved so you can have the money ready. https://www.laurenranalli.com/new-blog/2019/9/19/how-i-found-my-illustrator

If you want to go the traditionally published route, you will probably need an agent as many publishing houses don't accept unsolicited manuscripts. They figure they have a better chance of finding a good story if someone in the business - an agent - thinks the story has merit. So here's a good breakdown of how to search for the right agent for your writing. 

If you don't define your characters well enough, the reader will get lost in who's who and stop reading your book. You don't want that! https://www.helpingwritersbecomeauthors.com/how-to-structure-stories-with-multiple-main-characters/

If you write mysteries, here's some tips for you on how to create a strong hero, which doesn't mean he's perfect! https://www.livewritethrive.com/2022/07/25/11934/

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Keep Sending out Queries! Author Interview with Robin W. Pearson


Prior to writing your first novel, what writing credits did you have?
I began freelancing as a writer and editor with educational publishers, magazines, novelists, and homeschool publications in 1997, after leaving Houghton Mifflin Company.

What made you decide to write that first novel?
I started my debut, A Long Time Comin’, after writing down pieces of our family’s history and genealogy to pass down to my little people.

How long did it take you to write your first book?
The first draft took about three years, but the manuscript went through numerous edits before it was eventually published several years (and little people!) later.

Who encouraged you along the way?
Along the way, I was encouraged by my parents, my family, writer-mentors like Carrie Turansky, and by critiques from members of American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW). Friends urged me to keep writing when I wanted to give up.

How did you go about finding an agent/publisher?
To find an agent I queried, queried, and queried again. Did I mention that I queried agents? I attended conferences such as Writing for the Soul and the Philadelphia Writers Workshop, participated in writing contests, subscribed to QueryTracker and Writers’ Digest, and…queried.

From the point you were offered a contract on that first book, how long did it take to make to print?
In September 2017, I attended ACFW’s conference in Dallas as a Genesis finalist and there, I watched Cynthia Ruchti accept an award for another writer. She blew me away with her humor and grace. A few months later, I learned she’d become an agent with Books and Such Literary, and I jumped at the chance to work with her.

I signed with Cynthia in February 2018 and ten months later, I signed a two-book contract with Tyndale House. Readers started digging into my debut, A Long Time Comin’, about a year later.

What is the hardest part of writing for you?
I’m like most mamas, so letting go of my “baby” is probably the hardest part. I always think it can be better, that I need to rephrase one more sentence, insert a comma, or rework another scene. I suppose I feel my characters will always need me. Yet, there comes a point when I need to type The End and submit—both the manuscript and my writer’s spirit.

What does your editor remind you to do most often?
When my agent read my latest manuscript, she told me to ditch the semi-colons and watch out for over-used phrases. Now, I love semi-colons; they’re underappreciated punctuation. So, that direction cut right to my heart! With A Long Time Comin’, my editor kept me centered on nuts and bolts—the details—making sure ages and timelines matched, maintaining consistency, and deleting extra scenes and characters.

Sometimes when you’re parenting, you can get caught up in the lecture, not the lesson or the person. At times, that’s what I did in writing. Caleb reminded me to focus on the story; not to go down rabbit holes that led away from the plot. Painful, yet oh-so-necessary work.

What’s the best encouragement you’ve had in your writing?
I love when readers write to me and share how my characters remind them of a family member or that they’re still thinking about the book long after they closed the cover. This tells me that my writing has taken on flesh and blood; it lives and breathes and isn’t just words on a page. I want my work to elicit strong emotion so readers will identify with/love/hate my characters (emphasis on love) and jump right into the book.

We have all experienced rejection. How have you learned to write past it?
I always seemed to get thisclose in writing contests and lose, and the rejection hurt. Invariably, the feedback was either they didn’t like my Southern style of writing, they didn’t feel it was “Christian enough,” it was too religious, too multicultural, etc.

After a few stumbles, I had to push through by deciding to stay true to my style, my message, my characters, and my story—all inspired and provided by God. I learned to write in the wait, and at the right time, He brought a publisher and an audience that loved me and my work. I won where it counted without losing what made me, me.

What has frustrated you the most in writing or publishing?
Many may consider completing a novel while raising seven little people a Herculean feat. Yet, building a platform has posed a similar—and often greater—challenge. Managing social media—planning posts, balancing fun vs work time, and simply figuring out how to use Instagram stories—frustrates me; it’s a new world.

What has surprised you?
I’m quite surprised, however, how much this self-proclaimed introvert enjoys connecting with readers, other writers, and friends and family. Sure, I rarely post where I go for breakfast, but I love sharing how I feed my family spiritually, mentally, and emotionally.

What do you know now about writing you wished you had known sooner?
Writing tends to be a solitary activity; it’s a one-on-one, woman-and-her-laptop relationship. I have to withdraw to produce, even if it’s only mentally while sitting smack dab in the middle of my family on Friday pizza movie night.

If I’d known how supportive and loving my writing community would be, I would’ve emerged from my computer-shaped shell, many moons ago and engaged with my critique groups, attended book clubs, conferences, and interacted with online literary-based organizations.

What is the best writing advice you’ve received or could give?
Don’t let anyone tell you how, where, or when to shine. You might write Christian fiction or general market, African American or Women’s, Southern Lit, Contemporary, or historical fiction. Children or YA. Any, all, or none of them. Find your own place in the sun and bask in it.

Are there any other points about writing you would like to add?
Write every day. Don’t let rejection, the (in)existence of a publishing contract or pressure of a deadline, or binge-watching “This Is Us” episodes keep you from putting fingers to keyboard. Tap out ideas, outlines, a paragraph, chapters. Write. You never know when you’ll need to draw from your well of words.  

What is the next book coming out? Can you give me a short synopsis?
Tyndale releases my second book in spring 2021. It follows more characters from the area around Spring Hope, North Carolina. This novel encourages readers to see that their scars, weaknesses, and mistakes don’t make them “less than” or unworthy of love and acceptance. They’re uniquely made, and so is their pain, and they are more than enough.

Sounds like an encouraging story. If you’d like to learn more about Robin’s work, here are some links to get started
Blog and newsletter: http://robinwpearson.com/

Tuesday, August 13, 2019

Write to Have Something to Revise: Author Interview with Lisa Robinson.


What I despise about movies or TV shows that have main characters who are writers is how they make it look so easy. The character meets someone who works for one of the big publishing houses who automatically picks up their manuscript and the newbie writer gets a big fat advance or immediately becomes a best-selling author.

For those of us in the writing trenches, we know this isn’t true for 99% of the time. My interview today is with an author who personifies what being a writer is all about. So, read on for the true story of getting published.

I read your blog which noted you have had over 100 rejections on your submissions. What kept you going? Most writers would have thrown in the towel! Or decided to self-pub. 
So many things kept me going: my passion for writing and getting published; my critique group who encouraged me and told me to not to quit; watching other writers persevere and ultimately cross the publishing threshold; multiple near-misses made me aware that I was getting close; also, somewhere along the way I read that it takes about 100 rejections before one gets close to getting published.

I took that as a challenge: keep working on my craft and submitting and one of these days I'll get there. The closer I got to 100, the more I felt that I was close to getting published. (And it turned out to be true!) 

How did you finally get your agent?
After much research into agents who represented both novels and picture books, I approached my agent, Alyssa Eisner Henkin, through the usual online querying process; however, in addition to several submission-ready manuscripts, I also had an offer in hand from my Two Lions editor, Marilyn Brigham, for my picture book, Pippa's Night Parade. I made the connection with Marilyn that resulted in this offer through the RUCCL conference (Rutgers University Council on Children's Literature), which I highly recommend.

Alyssa read my YA novel manuscript as well as a picture book biography and offered to represent my work. Alyssa's been a wonderful agent and subsequently sold three additional manuscripts.

And what are those other books? 
I have another fiction picture book coming out with Two Lions this year: Pirates Don't Go To Kindergarten. And two nonfiction books are coming out with Schwartz and Wade/Random House in 2020: Madame Saqui, Revolutionary Rope Dancer and Were I Not a Girl, The Inspiring Story Of Dr. James Barry. 

Tell me about the process of having your manuscripts accepted and published.
In general, the submissions process seems to take 3-6 months and I understand that that's fairly standard. With regard to the publishing process, both of my editors have promptly sent me editorial suggestions and we've gone back and forth three to five times with edits that have been thorough and thoughtful but not overly extensive. My agent is also responsive and thoughtful in guiding me.

My publisher, Two Lions, involved me with the illustrator choice, asking me what kind of style I preferred, whereas Random House did not loop me into the process at all (and yet, in spite of those differences, I'm delighted with all the illustrator choices).

Do you or your publishers write the book blurb on the back cover?
Both publishers wrote the book blurb but ran it by me to make sure I was okay with it. My debut book, Pirates Don't Go To Kindergarten, is coming out this month so that's the only book for which I can comment on the marketing process; I've been very pleased so far -- it's part of the Amazon First Reads program and they've also organized a blog tour. 

Your blog also notes you’ve written dozens of fiction picture books and several nonfiction picture books. Are any of these under consideration with a publisher? 
I have a new YA novel we'll be sending out in the fall.  Two of my nonfiction picture book manuscripts are out on submission right now. 

What is the hardest part of writing for you? Starting?
Writing a first draft is the hardest part! What appears on the page is never as good as what's in my mind and that's dispiriting. What keeps me going is the reminder that it's all about revision, revision, revision. And you have to have something to revise! 

What’s the best encouragement you’ve had in your writing? 
It's so important to find a writing community that nurtures and sustains you. My writing community cheers me on when things are going well and encourages and consoles me during times of disappointment and difficulty; this is essential and I'm happy to do the same for my writing friends in return. 

We have all been frustrated by writing rejections. Yet you said one particularly devastating rejection turned out to be for the best. Could you give me the details? 
To preserve confidentiality, I'd prefer not to give specific details. However, I can say that the rejection cut me loose from a connection that wasn't the best for me, but I didn't realize that until much later. 

What has surprised you the most in writing/publishing?
What surprised me a lot (but shouldn't!) is the wild subjectivity of this industry. My agent can send out a manuscript and one editor will love it and praise it and another editor will clearly think it's boring or unmarketable.

What frustrated you the most? 
It’s the glacial pace of the process. I've learned that the best antidote to that frustration is to keep on working on new projects. 
What do you know now about writing you wished you had known sooner?
There's a lot of joy but a lot of disappointment, frustration, and self-doubt. 

What is the best writing advice you’ve received or could give? 
Bill Lychack, one of the faculty in my MFA program, told a group of students one day: "If you can stop writing, just do it. Really, stop it if you can."

I took that to mean he was recognizing that for many of us writing is a compulsion, something we have to do, that we need in order for us to live our lives fully. But it's also an arduous and frustrating and doubt-filled process that one should avoid if one doesn't have this compulsion. It may seem odd but I found this comforting since I'm one of those people who just has to keep writing, in spite of how hard it is at times.

What is the next book coming out? Can you give me a short synopsis? 
Pippa's Night Parade is about a creative little girl whose imagination gets a little out of control and results in her having trouble with monsters (coming out of her storybooks!) at bedtime. Luckily, she's able to use her wits and that same imagination to take charge of her fears and tame the monsters. 

That’s all for today’s interview. If you would like to learn more about Lisa and how and where to buy her books, you can go to her website: https://author-lisa-robinson.com 

Tuesday, July 9, 2019

Seek Out Your Champions: Author Interview with Lija Fisher


You have a BFA in Theatre Performance. What drew you away from acting to writing a book/series for middle-graders?
As a theatre actor, I rarely did back to back shows, so I often had a lot of down time in NYC where I was just doing the 'hustle'...working my day job and auditioning. It was during one of those times that I really felt the need to do something creative, even though I wasn't in a show. 

I discovered that I really enjoyed writing, and my work as an actor gave me the ability to spin a good yarn, and before I knew it, I had a book written! Basically, I became a writer out of desperation when nobody would hire me as an actor!

Your bio also states that you were a Writer in Residence with Aspen Words. How did that come about? 
The writing residency through Aspen Words and the Catto Shaw Foundation gave me a month alone in a cabin outside of Woody Creek, CO, where I had nothing but time to write and wander the woods for inspiration.

During my residency, I wrote the second book in my cryptid duology, The Cryptid Keeper. I had attended a summer writing conference through Aspen Words a few years prior, and truly felt like what I learned in that week helped my first book get published. 

After I received my book deal, I applied for the residency and was fortunate enough to be offered one, and hope to someday be granted another one as it was so valuable to me. There's one that takes place in a medieval Scottish castle that I dream of being accepted for!

What drew you to writing an MG book about a child on a quest to find mythical creatures? 
I happened to read an article about a hunting party that went out to find the Otterman in Alaska. I had never heard of the Otterman and after researching it discovered this whole world of cryptozoology or the study of 'hidden animals,' animals that might be real even though we lack scientific evidence. Like Bigfoot.

I first wrote the story as an adult novel and I got an agent based on that book, which was about a Delta Force soldier hunting down these cryptids. He encouraged me to re-write it as a Young Adult novel. That version was terrible, it was about a boy looking for dragons while wishing he had a girlfriend. 

So, my agent suggested I re-write it again as a middle-grade novel, and that seemed to fit my storytelling voice the best. I didn't know I was an MG writer, I kind of stumbled my way there! 

The whole process of writing three different versions of the same book took about a year and a half, and my agent was the only person helping me with the editing. 

Are you active with any writing critique groups?
I'm not at the moment. I have a couple of friends who read my work and give me great notes, but in general, I just throw stuff at my agent and he guides me. He gets my voice so well and always steers me in the right direction. 

How did you go about finding an agent/publisher? Did you go to conferences? Send out queries?
I got my agent by querying. It is possible to be found through the slush pile!

What is the hardest part of writing for you? Starting?
Probably the hardest thing for me is finding the 'heart' of a book. I love action and snappy dialogue and funny characters, but none of that means anything if readers don't care about the characters. I'm always ready to storm the castle but discovering why that's important to the people involved is always the tough part for me. 

What does your editor remind you to do most often?
My agent reminds me to keep doing what I do best, writing funny adventure stories. My editor reminds me to keep it grounded in reality, which is hard when I'm writing about Bigfoot and UFO's!

What’s the best encouragement you’ve had in your writing?
Honestly, the first literary agent who read my work told me NOT to join a writing group. He said to trust and hone my natural voice, and he was 
worried that if I spent too much time being told what was wrong with my writing it would discourage me.

So, for the first few years I just wrote for myself, had fun with it, and never had anybody tell me my work wasn't any good, because I didn't show it to anybody! It was actually a really nice way to gain confidence in my writing. 

We have all experienced rejection. Give me an example of how you learned to write past it.
I'd experienced so much rejection as an actor that by the time I began writing, the rejection didn't bother me much. I knew I enjoyed writing, I knew I had a tiny bit of ability to do it well, and I was just grateful to have the chance to be creative. I queried probably 100 agents, and only one responded, but my stories make him giggle the way they make me giggle so he's able to guide me to write my best work. Listen to those who say you're amazing, and close your ears to the others. Life is much more fun that way!

What has surprised or frustrated you the most in writing/publishing?
In publishing, there's no manual for 'what comes next,' so things can often seem like a mystery, especially after you're published! My editor would send me things like 'first pass pages' and I'd have no idea what they were or what I was supposed to do with them. Talking with fellow writers who had been through the process became invaluable.

What is the best writing advice you’ve received or could give?
The advice I would give is to write the story that makes you happy, that makes you giggle or cry or want to read yourself, the story you love, and then find your champions who feel the same way you do about your work.  

Are there any other points about writing you would like to add?
You WILL be rejected, so find a way to love your work even when others don't. It's criminal to let someone's else's opinion of your stories crush your ability to tell them best.

What is the next book coming out? Can you give me a short synopsis?
The Cryptid Keeper comes out August 20th! In it, Clivo and the Myth Blasters are back on the trail of the immortal cryptid, all while keeping Aunt Pearl in the dark about their dangerous adventures!

How many more “Cryptid” books do you think there will be in the series?
If it were up to me, so many more! Right now, the book series wraps with book 2, but I'm hoping it turns into at least a trilogy. But that all depends on how much love readers give it!

Sounds like a fun read for kids. If you’d like to learn more about Lija’s writing, here are some ways to get you started.
Website: LijaFisher.com
Twitter: @lijafisher 
Instagram: @cryptidcatcher
Youtube (for Bigfoot videos!): Youtube.com/lijafisher

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Encouraging Young Readers: An Interview with Pepper Springfield

What was your inspiration for your first book? 
One night, several years ago, one phrase popped into my head: “Bob the slob.” That was it.  I had been thinking about how I wanted to create funny, entertaining books with relatable characters for kids who aren’t necessarily great readers. I wanted the books to be written in rhyme and be easy to read so kids who struggle with reading could feel successful.  And, because adults (teachers, librarians, parents and grandparents) are gatekeepers of children’s books—I wanted to create a series that grown-ups would also want to pick up from the shelf and have fun sharing with children.

Bob the slob is definitely relatable. Where did you go from there?
Little by little, I built a world around that one phrase—“Bob the slob”— and created a story about a family of slobs named Bob and a family of super neat characters all named Tweet. (Except that the youngest member of each family is not like the others.)  Encouraged by a flamboyant character named Mo the two families independently—and unwittingly—both move to Bonefish Street—and end up living across the street from each other.  It’s a real “Hatfield vs. McCoy” moment.

I had no idea where that one phrase—“Bob the slob”— was going to take me or how hard it was going to be to get there. I just got to the point where I couldn’t stop thinking about “Bob the slob” so I finally sat down and started to write to see where it would lead. 

Did you originally have the idea of writing a series? Or did the Bobs and Tweets (your book characters) just take over?
Yes! I knew I wanted to write a series because I know that once kids get hooked on a book they are hungry for more stories about those characters.  But I certainly didn’t know—and still don’t—where those characters want to go in their next book so they are definitely driving the bus.

Was there any particular author you read that made you think:  “I could write like that.”?
I am inspired by great children’s (and adult!) book creators whose characters and series feel timeless and continue to captivate readers across many decades.  There are many, many authors I admire and strive to emulate in different ways, but some of my favorites who have created series with lasting appeal to a wide and diverse population of readers are: Dr. Seuss, Dav Pilkey, Beverly Cleary, Judy Blume, Mary Pope Osborne, Jerry Pallotta, and Jeff Kinney.  It is no small feat to ignite kids’ interest in reading and reach millions of kids and their families year after year—and these authors have all done that.

I make many school visits each year and talk to hundreds of kids about books and reading.  Kids have a lot going on in their lives and reading can take a back seat, particularly when kids struggle with fluency or can’t find anything they are interested in.

So I saw a hole to be filled. I was looking for the next book for kids who had outgrown early readers such as Frog and Toad and were ready for more complex plots but couldn’t handle longer chapter books.  I really wanted to find books that would help stop kids from dropping out of reading because they weren’t having enough fun—or feeling good enough about themselves—doing it.  Eventually, I came to realize that I could try to create these books myself

How long did it take you to write your first book? 
It took me five years from that first phrase “Bob the slob” and the first concept of Bobs and Tweets to the final published book. If you search through my laptop you will find hundreds of false starts!

How many rewrites did you do on it? 
When I started writing in earnest I had to print everything out to be able to re-read and re-write so I also have bunches of tote bags stuffed with printed drafts and revisions.  (By now, I have trained my brain to work on my digital drafts and I don’t need to print everything out.)

I was also very disorganized.  I think I was so self-conscious about trying to be a writer that I didn’t allow myself to develop a real system for tracking my latest drafts. So I often started rewriting everything from scratch. It took me a really long time to accept the fact that I actually was writing a book, give myself permission to come up with a process that worked for me, and act like a real writer.

But for me, the writing is all in the rewriting.  Sometimes, when my writing isn’t going well, I will force myself to get something—any nonsense—down, just so I will have something to revise from.  I hear writers talk about the process of rewriting but I didn’t fully understand what they meant until I sat down to write myself. Ideas do not come out of my head perfectly formed.  I need to get them down in words and then start shaping and reshaping and reshaping some more.

 Were you active with any writing critique groups?  
I was so self-conscious and so terrified about telling anyone I was writing a book that I didn’t know where to go for feedback.  In my day job, I am supposed to be an expert in children’s publishing and I really feared that if a book I wrote wasn’t well-received that I would be exposed as a fraud who didn’t know what she was doing.

I was too embarrassed to join a writer’s group.  I didn’t even tell my close friends and family that I was working on a book.  Eventually, I got enough courage to hire an independent editor to work with me and give me feedback long before I submitted to a publisher and then I started to get the helpful feedback I needed.  

Who encouraged you along the way?
Nobody encouraged me along the way because I didn’t let anyone know what I was doing.  I stood firmly in my own way. I was really my own worst obstacle.

Tell me about your experience in writing for Scholastic. How did it come about?
Initially, I didn’t expect Scholastic to publish Bobs and Tweets.  I really just got up enough nerve to ask a publisher friend in the Trade division what she thought of it. 

I found Kristy Caldwell—a brilliant illustrator—on the SCBWI website. Kristy didn’t know me and I didn’t have a deal for the book yet but she was brave and interested enough to meet with me and together we created a dummy of Meet the Bobs and Tweets.

I also wrote up a survey for kids to answer questions about the book and the characters.  I made some copies of the black and white dummy and sent it with the survey to a few teachers I know to share with kids in their classes.  I got incredible feedback from those 
surveys—the kids who read the dummy said they loved the story and the characters. 

What happened next?
I took the dummy and the survey results to my publisher friend at Scholastic to ask for advice and she said they would be interested in publishing it.

I was thrilled but also very nervous.  I work very hard to make sure my editor, Celia Lee, knows I am totally receptive to all editorial feedback.  I try to make myself very coachable.  I have so much to learn as a writer and I didn’t want my day job (President of Scholastic Book Clubs) to be intimidating in any way.

One note: I don’t think a snazzy presentation necessarily gets your book submission noticed but it was important for me to show my concept and provide some supporting materials for my idea. Even though the finished book doesn’t look anything like that original dummy, it --and the surveys from kids --did a lot to help me convey what I was trying to do.

What is the hardest part of writing for you? Starting? Creating a scene? Dialog? etc?
I am happy to be distracted by Facebook updates, texts from my kids, and flash sales of any kind (!), so it takes me a while to sit down and fully concentrate on writing without giving in to interruptions and fun distractions.

Even when I get rid of all the distractions I have days when I sit in front of my computer for hours and get nothing. And I find if it’s not coming, I will fall asleep.  That seems to be my stress reaction.  So I’ve learned to go with it: just put my head down for a few minutes, wake up, then get on with it.

In general, the hardest part of writing for me is keeping my main characters—Dean Bob and Lou Tweet—front and center and giving them agency.  I love to develop lots of interesting tangential plot lines and I also tend to focus on some of my adult characters (such as Mo, the self-appointed Mayor of Bonefish Street; Ms. Pat, the kids’ teacher, and Mark, the Bonefish Street Pool lifeguard) and have to keep pulling the main plot back to the kids.

Do you have a daily writing commitment? 
It does get tricky when I can’t get my writing to flow because I don’t have a regular schedule and I have a day job, so I constantly have to find scraps of time to write.  I plan my weekends carefully and try to make sure I block out at least a few hours to write.  I have learned, it comes out bit by bit.

Does rhyming come easily to you?
Rhyming is really hard.  I have to work to create very “tight rhymes” which will be read the same way, with the same cadence, by most readers.   I began asking my family to read the rhymes aloud to me as I wrote so I could hear pitfalls in the rhyming structure.

Of course, the only person forcing me to write in rhyme is…me! But the Bobs and Tweets books are designed to be easy to read and I think rhyming helps that so it’s worth the struggle.

We have all experienced rejection. Give me an example of one you’ve had, and how you learned to write past it.
Even though I experience all kinds of rejection in my corporate job every day, the fear of rejection for my writing held me back for years.  I was so terrified of rejection that I created a pseudonym—Pepper Springfield—and I didn’t tell anyone but one close friend and my immediate family that I was really Pepper. 

I was so afraid of being “outed” as a fraud. As I said, in my day job at Scholastic, I’m supposed to be an expert on children’s books—how could I hold my head up if my books weren’t bestsellers or didn’t inspire great reviews? In a way, I rejected myself so no one else would be able to.  I didn’t allow anyone to support and encourage me or my writing life.

Finally, I realized that people are not lying in wait, hoping that I will screw up.  And even if there are people who don’t love the Bobs and Tweets, there’s nothing I can do to change that!

Although this fear of rejection still holds me back to some degree, I know now a snarky review can be hurtful but it won’t kill me.  I need to promote my books unapologetically, because if I don’t love them publicly then I cannot expect readers to discover and love them too! My advice to myself is to just keep going and not let fear hold me back.

What is some of the best writing advice that you’ve received or could give?
It’s funny until I sat down to answer these questions, I never put into words how The Bobs and Tweets got started.  And I realize I was actually unknowingly following some great advice I heard Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, give during his Harvard commencement speech when I was there with my Dad for his 65th college reunion last month.

 Addressing the graduates and alumni Zuckerberg said,  “Ideas don’t come out fully formed. They only become clear as you work on them. You just have to get started…The idea of a single eureka moment is a dangerous lie.”

When I first began the Bobs and Tweets series I only had one phrase “Bob the slob,” but as I kept working on it that phrase became two families, two best friends, a neighborhood, a community, and an entire world that I now love so much!

Are there any other points about writing that you would like to add?
Well, you have to tell a good story.  Otherwise, it’s just words. You have to have characters that people are rooting for.  Once you have that you can fill in the technical details but if you don’t have a good story, who cares?

I offer this from my perspective as Pepper Springfield, but also from my experience in my day job:  you need to step back and act like the intended reader of your own book. I get lots of submissions from writers and I wonder: would YOU really want to read this?  It might be an interesting concept but is it really an engaging read? Are you, the writer, interested in your own story? Because if you’re not, then no agent or publisher or editor or reader will be either!

I think I knew Bobs and Tweets was going to work because I would laugh out loud when I re-read the story. But when I read it back to myself I also have to be honest about the parts that are slow or overwritten.  I learned to pay attention to my own thought process.  Was I skipping over parts or reading them from a distance? If so, they weren’t connecting even to me and they had to be edited. Of course, that’s where editors come in.  If you can’t find one, use your friends or network and be open to their feedback.  You don’t have to take every idea everyone gives you but you do want to be approachable and listen. You can even learn a lot from bad feedback.

And I can’t say this enough: be prepared to cut! I cut at least 50% of what I write.  Just because I got it down on paper doesn’t mean it’s going to work as the book evolves. But often what I end up cutting makes room for something better and the result is a much stronger rhyme or scene. 

One more thing: writing and publishing are not the same thing.  There is an audience for everything written—even if the audience is only one person—the writer.  But publishing your book and trying to get others to read it is daunting.  On the one hand, these days, with social media and on-line booksellers, there are so many opportunities for you to connect your book to all kinds of possible audiences. But on the other hand, it takes a huge amount of time, energy, and attention to satisfy them all.

A book isn’t going to find a market without your help.  That’s why I had to stop hiding behind Pepper Springfield and get to work helping people discover my books.

My daughter helped push me to be a better “self-promoter.” She said, “Mom, people want to support you—they just need to know how!” So I finally sent an email to my friends and family and asked them to check out my book and they did and that momentum really encouraged me.

Do you have another book in the series? Can you give me a short synopsis?
I spent a lot of time building the world of Bonefish Street and the characters who live there and Kristy Caldwell spent years developing the characters visually so there is no way they are going to stay confined to two books!

We introduced the characters and their world in Meet the Bobs and Tweets. In book two, Perfecto Pet Show (pub date: 6/27/17) Lou and Dean along with their pets Chopper and Pretty Kitty perform in a Kid/Pet Talent Show. And I am excited to say I just got the go-ahead for Book Three—a Halloween title scheduled for Fall 2018.

Sounds like you have a full schedule ahead of you. If you would like to learn more about Pepper's current and upcoming books, here are some ways to do that. 

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Never Give up: Author Interview with Michele-Young-Stone

Most everyone thinks they can write a novel. When did you start writing your novel?
I started writing in second grade, but I didn’t realize that I was a novelist until I couldn’t keep any of my short stories under twenty-five pages. I had dreamed of being a published writer since second grade, and at age 32, after teaching high school English for seven years, I went back to college to study fiction-writing full time. I attended a three-year MFA program at VCU in Richmond, VA. I actually decided to return to school and pursue my dream after reading Wally Lamb’s novel, I Know This Much Is True. There was something in that book that spoke to me and told me that if I was ever going to be really serious and go after my dream, the time was then.

How did you come up with the idea of your first book?
My first novel, The Handbook for Lightning Strike Survivors, in an early form, was my thesis. For four years, from 2004 to 2008, I tried to find a New York literary agent to represent my first book. I acquired hundreds of rejections. I actually queried every New York literary agent from A-Z in the 2004 edition of The Writer’s Market, and this was before you could submit electronically. Everything was done by snail mail.

After all those rejections, what kept you pushing forward?
Being a published novelist was my life's dream.  Every time I got a rejection, the only thing that made me feel better was to send out another query.  I refused to give up. 

What happened from there?
I had my son in 2005. I remember nursing him and holding him, trying to talk to agents on the phone, trying to find time to revise and ultimately rewrite the book. Having my son actually gave me a much larger perspective on my characters and craft. I realized that I had always seen things from the child’s perspective. With motherhood, I understood things in a brand new way, which led me to rewriting, and ultimately finding my agent, Michelle Brower.   

How did that all come together?
We had first spoken in 2005, but because she was new to the business, she couldn’t represent my book. In 2008, I was once again starting with "A" and querying agents in New York. I tried her again, and after reading my revision, she made some suggestions and told me that if I could make those changes and get it back to her within two weeks, she felt certain that she could find a home for it. On November 14, 2008, I had offers from Algonquin and Random House. It was very exciting.

Were there more rewrites before the final edit?
Yes, there were more rewrites after I found my editor, but there weren't "a lot".  I am now on book #3 and a pro at rewriting.  Everything is in service of the novel, of the story and the characters.    

How do you write? Did you do an outline first?
I wish that I could outline, but it’s not like that for me. I start with images and characters and I have to write and write and rewrite to find the story.

What type of publicity does your publisher expect you to do in promoting your book? What do they do on your behalf?
I’m expected to have a social media presence, to tweet and facebook. Also, I’ve been fortunate enough to meet other published writers, and we are all very supportive of one another. In particular, my first novel, The Handbook for Lightning Strike Survivors came out around the time of Heidi Durrow’s novel, The Girl Who Fell from the Sky, and I had the good fortune of doing two book events with her at Word Brooklyn.

Also, there were a lot of things I didn’t understand about the business of publishing, and writers, Sheri Reynolds and Therese Fowler, went out of their way to support me.

What did you learn in writing your first book that helped you in writing the second book and getting it published?
It’s not easy. It’s never easy. It takes faith and persistence and thick skin, which most writers, myself included, do not have. You have to constantly remind yourself, “I can do this. This is what I do. I write every day. I have faith that if I keep doing what I love, something magical will come of it.”

What do you know now about writing that you wished you had known sooner?
Don’t even bother sending your novel to anyone until it’s as perfect as you can get it.

You recently published your second novel, which takes place in Lithuania. I love the review note you received from the Library Journal "...a novel that's both fanciful and brutally realistic, soaring as it does between angelic beings and heartless dictators. From America to Lithuania, from past to present, this is a heart-wrenching tale..." What made you chose that setting for your story. What gave you the inspiration?
I knew a man from Lithuania when I was sixteen. He couldn’t go home. He’d had to flee his country during World War II, and for nearly fifty years he couldn’t return to his homeland. I became fascinated by the fact that Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia were trapped between two madmen, Hitler and Stalin. Was there a lesser evil? No, there wasn’t. I wanted to tell a story about WWII that hadn’t been told, about the faith of a beautiful country and her people and how they not only kept their customs through the Soviet occupation, but even prior to Stalin, they were a resilient people who were determined to keep their language, art, stories, and music alive. They still are. I have learned that to have the faith of a Lithuanian is to have perfect faith, which also relates to the quote that begins the novel. “The reason birds can fly and we can’t is simply because they have perfect faith, for to have faith is to have wings.” J. M. Barrie

Since are a number of references to the Beatles or their songs with this book, are you a big Beatles fan?
There are Beatles references in everything I write. I am a big fan, but in general, music informs my work. There is a theme of salvation through art, whether it be visual, written or musical in everything I write.

I read an excerpt from this book and it showed pictures as well. How were the pictures chosen?
Actually, my marketing representative chose those pictures and published that wonderful excerpt on my behalf. She is amazing.

What is the best advice you’ve been given about writing or that you’ve learned that you would like to pass along?
Never give up. Have faith. Be persistent. Go to the page with confidence and gusto. Write every day, even when you don’t feel like it.

Do you have any other works in the process?
I have a third novel, tentatively titled A Great American Novel, under contract with Simon and Schuster, and I am also working on a fourth novel, a historical piece following the American Revolution about the 60,000 British loyalists forced to leave the United States.

That's all for today's interview. If you would like to learn more about Michele's writing and upcoming books, here's some links to assist you.

www.micheleyoungstone.com
http://authors.simonandschuster.com/Michele-Young-Stone/84853882
https://www.facebook.com/michele.youngstonefanpage

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Telling the Story for Children: Author Interview with Marissa Burt



You write middle grade fantasies where the fantasy character gets intertwined with real-life characters. What drew you to this concept?
I’ve always been a voracious reader, and I love the sensation of getting so drawn into a good story that the characters feel very real.  For me, the mark of a good book is one where I feel a sense of loss when I turn the final page, because I hate saying goodbye to favorite worlds and characters.  This general love for book-worlds sparked the idea of characters in books having separate lives of their own, carrying on about their business and training for their plot lines, which grew into the initial idea for Storybound.

When did you actually start writing your first book? How long did it take to write your first draft?
I began writing Storybound, then titled The Tale of Una Fairchild, the summer of 2007.  My first son was about a year old, and the transition to parenthood taught me many things, one being the value of discretionary time.  I began to see that if I ever wanted to write anything, I would need to budget my time wisely.  So I took an afternoon every other week and wrote.  This added up, and about nine months later I had a very rough first draft.  I like to include this part of my story to encourage other writers who feel overwhelmed at the lack of time.  Every little bit makes a difference!

Who encouraged you along the way? 
I did have some early readers, most notably my husband, a good friend Casey, and another writer-friend Emerson who was in high school at the time, and they all offered valuable initial input.  Later on in the process, other family members and friends read for me, whom I greatly appreciated, and I especially valued input from several young readers who were in my target audience. 

Prior to writing these fantasy books, what other published writing did you have? 
Storybound is the first novel I’ve written.  (Not counting the almost-novel I wrote in high school during chemistry class – so sorry Ms. Greene!)  I’ve always journaled, and I’ve found that to be a helpful discipline for shaping my voice and recording everyday incidents in written form.  Back when I first wrote Storybound, I did attend a few sessions of a local writer’s critique group, but I found that challenging because we all were working on such different projects at very different stages. 

Are you active with any writer’s critique groups?
I’ve found the online writing community to be of great help in my writing journey.  I’ll forever be grateful to the Absolute Write forums for helping me with my query letter and giving general writing advice.  Through forums like that, I’ve also “met” other writers, which has been a gift as writing can often be a lonely endeavor.  Not only has it provided support and encouragement, but it’s helped me join forces with other like-minded authors.  Friendships made on online forums eventually led to my participating in the Project Mayhem blog and joining up with The Apocalypsies, a group of debut 2012 authors, for local author appearances and the like. 

How did you go about finding an agent?
My road to publication process is pretty by the book, actually.  Once I had a completed draft that was in decent shape (or so I thought at the time!), I drafted a query letter. In the fall of 2008, researches agents and queried those who represented MG fiction and might be a good fit. 

In the first round of about twenty queries, I heard back from Laura Langlie, who is now my wonderful agent.  She took me through a few revisions before we went out on submission at the end of 2008. 

From the time you were signed by your agent how long did it take to get the publishing contract?
In spring of 2009 I heard from my now-editor Erica Sussman, who asked me if I’d be willing to work on an exclusive revision with her.  I jumped at the chance to have someone in the industry invest in my work and will forever appreciate both Laura and Erica’s encouragement and insights.  Erica took me through three or four revisions before the manuscript actually went to an acquisitions meeting in early 2010. Once Harper Collins Children’s acquired Storybound, publication was set for winter 2012, so, as you can see, it was about a five year process from writing the manuscript to seeing it on the shelves.

What has surprised you the most about getting published other than the joy of seeing your book in print?
It sounds a bit ridiculous, but I still am astonished that there are people out there actually reading my book and entering in to my imaginary world.  Of course as a writer, your goal is for others to read your work, but it’s still quite amazing to hear from readers who have loved Una or Peter or write to tell me their thoughts on plot points.  

What advice would you give someone who thinks they have the great novel in them just waiting to be told?
My advice is to not be afraid to give it a shot.  I think the two greatest hindrances to writing (and probably a lot of other endeavors) are fear and laziness.  Writing can be vulnerable, and I think it’s less scary to dream about the great novel than actually put yourself out there.  And it takes a lot of work and discipline to carve out the time to do it. 

When other writers ask me for writing advice I usually tell them to READ as much as they can and as widely as they can and to WRITE as often as they can.  Any books you read – especially those outside your own genre – will help inform your writing, and any writing you can do – journaling, short stories, character sketches – will develop your craft.

What is the best advice you’ve been given from either an editor or your agent?
What comes to mind is some advice my agent gave me early on about online presence.  Back then I was toying with the idea of blogging, and she told me to do it if only if I had something unique to say.  She said something along the lines of, “Find your niche.”  This has proved invaluable advice for across the board social networking.  For writers I think there can be a long list of ways we ought to be present online, and we can feel obligated and end up doing a lot of them poorly.  Laura’s advice has helped me be selective in where I invest my online time.

Did you have any input at all into the beautiful cover designs?

Aren’t they gorgeous?  Alison Klapthor and the wonderful design team at Harper Collins worked in tandem with the very talented Brandon Dorman to create these covers.  I saw early drafts of them and absolutely loved them, but I had really nothing to do with them.  I am very thankful and think I hit the cover jackpot.  :)

I see your books are going to be published in Chinese and Italian. Will anything be changed in the story telling to work more culturally?
That’s a great question!  And I don’t really know the answer.  As far as I know, translators work with the original text.  I did wonder if they would change Una’s name in the Italian version (since una is an article in Italian), but they kept it.  Maybe a reader fluent in Italian or Mandarin will stop by and let me know.? :)

How do you manage to raise three children and still find time to write? How much time daily do you have for writing?
Ha-ha!  Well, that has changed a great deal over the years.  As I mentioned earlier, I wrote Storybound when my first son was a year old.  Then I had two more babies in the years between querying the book and seeing it on the shelves.  Needless to say, a lot of my creative energy went in to making people and not books – ha!

How much time daily do you have for writing?
I’ve found each writing project to be fluid and my approach to finding work time changes with the rhythm of our family life.  I wrote Story’s End when I had three boys four-and-under, and it was very stressful and intense.  I wrote a draft in two months to meet my deadline, and I promised myself I’d never do that again. 

Now, my children are a little older, and on this newest project, I try and write 3K one day a week.  That seems to work well for now.

Your next book, There Was a Crooked Man, which will be out in early 2015 is it a continuation of the first two books?
There Was a Crooked Man, is the beginning of a new story.  Una’s Tale comes to a conclusion in Story’s End, and, while I’d love to revisit the Land of Story some day in the future, this new book will be set in an entirely different fantasy world. In fact, it’s turning out to be a bit more of a sci-fi fantasy blend, which has been really fun.


Could you give me some details of that book?
A little bit about There Was a Crooked Man: Eleven-year-old Wren Matthews has always known she’s weird.  Unschooled, happily solitary, and obsessed with astronomy, the only place Wren fits in is the regional home school conference.  When a mysterious visitor appears and invites Wren and her long-time science-rival Simon Barker to join the ancient guild of magicians known as the Fiddlers, things get a whole lot weirder.  As apprentice Fiddlers, Wren and Simon have a lot to learn, but their ordinary alchemy lessons are soon overshadowed by tainted legends of Mother Goose, battling alchemists, and dreams of the dangerous otherworld, the Land of Nod.

What message would you like parents and children to take away from your books?
Well, I kind of shy away from messages-in-books, perhaps because I think adults, forgetting what it’s like to be a child, inevitably try to teach children something in books.

I will say that I absolutely love to hear from readers, especially when they tell me that they’ve stayed up way too late reading my books.  I was forever doing that as a girl, and I get a secret thrill knowing that my books are giving readers that delightful experience.

That’s all for today’s interview. I hope you are encouraged to learn more about Marissa’s writing. Here’s some options to do so.  website         Project Mayhem            Facebook