Tag Archive for 'genius'

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interview with Jacqueline West

Today we are fortunate enough to peek inside the genius brain of Jacqueline West, author of the BOOKS OF ELSEWHERE series.

As soon as I saw the cover of THE SHADOWS I knew I would love the story, but it wasn’t until I read about the book that I was smitten. Roald Dahl meets Neil Gaiman?? A creepy Victorian mansion?? Paintings you can travel through??

Where have you been all my life?!!!???

Definitely sounds like it will be my new fav. I had to meet the author. So I stalked her and asked for an interview. She was gracious enough to oblige. As you’ll see below, she’s quite awesome. Please check out her Livejournal and visit her website to find out more. Also, her book trailer is below the interview.

here goes:

1. What’s your revision method? (Do you use critique groups and/or beta
readers? How many revisions do you average before you feel that your work is ready?)

JW: I revise as I write, so it’s hard to keep track of how many times I go through a manuscript before it actually goes off to my editor – and then, of course, there’s more revising. Once a manuscript feels fairly polished, I usually have a small selection of people read it and give me feedback. (Often it’s just my husband, who reads it aloud to me. The dog sometimes listens, too, but he has very little to contribute.)

I don’t currently have a writing group, because we’ve moved around a lot in the last few years, and I prefer critique groups that meet in person. But I have found them to be very supportive and inspiring in the past…so, if any writers in western Minnesota are searching for group members, look me up!

One thing has stayed consistent for me: No matter how much I revise, I’m never sure that my work is “ready.” Letting someone else read it for the first time or sending it to my agent or editor often feels like tearing open a cocoon: you’re not sure if you’ll find a finished moth, or a surprised pupa with stumpy little wing-nubs.

2. When you begin a manuscript, do you favor an outline, or do you tend to fly by the seat of your pants?

JW:  I’m somewhere in between. Often, in the first flush of inspiration, I’ll make a whole bunch of notes about the potential plot, working out a chain of events. When I actually begin the writing, the notes give me a general framework, but I toss out as many ideas as I keep. I find if I’ve outlined in too much detail, I write merely to advance the plot, and the tone, style, and humor of the writing get lost. Instead, it sounds like an eight-year-old describing a movie he just saw. (‘And then…and then…and then he says…’.) No one wants to read that.

3. What’s the weirdest source of inspiration you’ve ever experienced?
(Gardening? People watching? Cleaning the bathroom?)

JW: Inspiration seems to have no pattern for me, so I just try to keep my eyes and ears open, and to carry a pen wherever I go. I’ve found it in so many odd places that it’s impossible to name just one – in hospital waiting rooms, in my grandparents’ bathroom, in lots and lots of cemeteries, and of course in crumbling old houses (although I’m not sure that’s very weird).

These days, when I’m waiting for a messy knot of ideas to work themselves into something I can use, I play fetch with the dog, down in our big, bare basement exercise/martial arts room (a.k.a. The Training Chamber of Doom.). Something about the repetitive action and the empty space helps me to step back from the problem, and I’ll suddenly see solutions that were hidden before.

4. When did you first realize you were destined to write?

JW: I’m not really sure how to answer. If you mean “destined to write” as in to write as a career, I’m not sure that was destiny –it was more of a long, strange struggle, full of failed attempts and experiments (and lots of really embarrassing teenage poems). If destiny was really in charge, she sure could have made it easier.

I write because I can’t help it. I’d be writing if no one else ever saw my work, if I never got paid for it, and if I never even attempted to get published. And I’ve been filling journals and typing poems for so long that there was never a moment of realization. It’s just become part of my identity. Writing is the lens through which I look at the world.

On the other hand, I was reluctant to call myself “a writer” – even in my own mind – until I was making real money by doing it. I realize how hypocritical and silly this is, but it’s the truth. I’m in a long-term, love/hate relationship with external validation.

5. If you could go back in time to the point when you decided to try this writing thing as a career, what is the one piece of advice you would give your past self?

JW: Hmm. This has the Back to the Future conundrum all tangled up in it. If I advised my past self to do something differently, then my present self might not be where I am. And I’m happy where I am. I appreciate the experiences I’ve had, even the difficult ones, and I couldn’t have found better people to work with: my agent, my editor, my publisher. I’d probably just pat past-Jacqueline on the shoulder and tell her not to be quite so hard on herself. But even that might be dangerous.

6. How do you fight the am-I-crazy times when you doubt yourself or your work?

JW: Ugh. Those times come much too frequently. Realizing that they come to everyone – even writers I really respect – is very soothing. Talking to other writers or reading other writers’ blogs and journals helps me feel less alone. Books like Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird are therapy for distraught writers. And sometimes crying to my most patient and loving family members (people who are obligated to be nice to me, even when I’m at my most self-pitying and whiny) is a relief. I remind myself of all the encouraging things that have happened to me and the kind things people have told me about my work. If nothing else helps, sometimes I simply need to take a break from writing for a day or two, so that I can come back to it more objectively.

Bonus!!! If you could choose one single meal to eat three times a day, every day, for the rest of your life, what would it be?

JW: Bread, fresh fruit, and coffee with milk. The bread should be sourdough – fresh and dense and squishy. The fruit should include raspberries, strawberries, and pineapple. (And no kiwi. Sorry, kiwi.) The coffee should be French roast, with plenty of skim milk. In other words: BREAKFAST. All the time.

See? Told you she sounded quite awesome. I immediately wanted to purchase THE SHADOWS, but it doesn’t come out until June 15th. Luckily my birthday is June 4th, so I will be preordering it as a gift to moi. Check out the trailer::

Click to check out more about the BOOKS OF ELSEWHERE.

Also check out this great review of Book One: THE SHADOWS

Have a beautiful day!
Peace

Looking Glass Wars Review

Long before Lewis Carroll tried to interpret Alyss’s story, a little girl from another reality became irreversibly immersed in the struggle between white and black imagination.

The Looking Glass Wars

book 1

by Frank Beddor

review by me

I actually listened to this book on CD. Obviously it’s a different experience than seeing the actual words on paper, but I find myself picturing the images of the narrative and getting emotionally involved in the story just as much when I listen as when I read. There are several covers for the first book. I included them all so you could get a sense of the cool atmosphere this book creates.

This book is the most imaginative and entrancing spin off of Carroll’s story that I’ve read. I personally love anything to do with Wonderland, but I’m usually pretty disappointed in the movies and books that try to capture and reinterpret the magic of the original.

Beddor’s book plays with the names of Carroll’s characters and creates an entirely unique story line built around the premise that Alyss told her story to Lewis Carroll and he butchered it. These books tell her real history.

Part scifi and part fantasy, the first book takes you on an epic sweep of 20 years in Alyss’s life.  Wonderland (basically its own planet) was once peaceful, but throughout most of the book it is ruled by the evil Redd and her mutant creatures produced by black imagination. Killing machines, card cuts and all seeing eyes are equally dangerous as Jabberwockies. There is a very cool continuum built on a system of mirrors that you can travel through. Imagination rules the world, and there is a constant struggle between those who want to use it for devastation and those who want to use it for edification.

Alyss is also sent to Earth as a last minute attempt to protect her. This was the slowest part of the book. Obviously it’s necessary for her to meet Carroll and tell her story, and we also get a bit more of Alyss’s personality, but I thought it could have been shortened just a smidge. I would not call it boring, the entire time you’re rooting for Alyss and the fight back home in Wonderland.

This book is not a zany light-hearted romp down the rabbit hole. There is dry humor throughout, but there are also some pretty dark characters and black imagination is deadly. Seriously, people die! Beddor’s vivid imagination and deft descriptions make it an entertaining story that sticks with you. I’m anxious to see how he handles the next book in the series.

I feel like this UK cover most accurately captures the setting of Wonderland.

I loved how this book broke away from many of the guidelines we are trained to follow (however Beddor does it with a smooth sense of craft).  Sometimes the narrator tells us the internal feelings and motivations for multiple characters within the same scene! We watch Alyss grow up into her 20s! Basically it’s not your typical MG or YA read and that made me enjoy it even more. I loved getting caught up in the story and I recommend checking it out for yourself.

4 and 8/9ths hearts out of 5

♥♥♥♥♥

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Stop by Wednesday for my interview with author Jacqueline West!!

Peace

Interview with Heather McCorkle

Today we have a peek inside the mind of brilliant blogger and author Heather McCorkle. She’s repped by Ken Atchity of AEI. Check out the link! Her blog is full of valuable advice and discussions on the writing life. She’s in the process of editing and outlining her own work, but was still sweet enough to agree to an interview on her writing process.

Here goes:

1. What’s your revision method? (Do you use critique groups and/or beta readers? How many revisions do you average before you feel that your work is ready?)

HM: I have a four step revision method.

#1 I handwrite everything in a notebook first then at the end of the day I
enter it into my computer and do a mini-edit.

#2 Once my novel is completely finished I do a read through edit to correct
grammar and blaringly obvious mistakes. After this I try to set it aside for at
least a week to simmer.

#3 Is my big one. I print it out and take a red pen to it, looking for everything
from plot holes and character arc to misspelled words or repititions.

#4 I read it aloud to my beta reader. This serves two purposes. I catch a lot
of things when reading it aloud that my eye or pen passed over so I correct
those issues. Also, my beta reader catches inconsistencies, missing parts,
or any other problems I usually passed right over. I do have a critique group,
the Scribe Sisters, who I bounce things off of throughout the whole process.

2. When you begin a manuscript, do you favor an outline, or do you tend to fly by the seat of your pants?

HM: I love to fly by the seat of my pants when I begin a manuscript but I
resist the temptation. I learned the hard way that an outline will keep me
from screwing up the plotlines and character arc. By writing an outline I
cut my editing time in half.

3. What’s the weirdest source of inspiration you’ve ever experienced? (A crazy dream maybe? The subway? Vacuuming your carpet?)

HM: Inspiration usually hits me strongest in the shower. I have no idea why
but when I’m stuck on a particular part of my book that always works!

4. If you could go back in time to the point when you decided to try this writing thing as a career, what is the one piece of advice you would give your past self?

HM: That’s easy, go to writers retreats and conferences now, don’t wait! My
writing improved in leaps and bounds after attending two writers retreats. I
could have been where I’m at now a long time ago if I would have done that.

5. How do you fight the am-I-crazy times when you doubt yourself or your work?

HM: That’s a really tough one. Every writer has moments of doubt when they
think they’re crazy for pouring all their time and heart into writing. The
important thing to remember is you aren’t alone. When it happens to me I
lean on my friends on at Twitter, Heather’s Odyssey, and the Scribe Sisters.
Other writers and readers are the most supportive people I’ve ever met.
Bottom line is, I don’t give up. I keep writing. When in doubt, write
another book, then another.

Bonus #6. If you could choose one single meal to eat three times a day, every day, for the rest of your life, what would it be?

HM: Icecream, hands down.

mmm…sounds nutritious.

Thanks again, Heather, for taking the time to let us in your world. I still can’t believe you hand write everything, but it sounds like a great revision process. Seriously genius. Best wishes for your awesome blog and books!

PS. She also has an inspiring interview on the GLA blog, here.

Peace

How to write a super synopsis

Do you ever wonder how those authors who’ve written twenty books can sell based solely on synopses? THIS IS HOW THEY DO IT.

Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the Synopsis Salad Shooter.

Why should stories make sense when they can be fun??  Give it a whirl and I guarantee you will come up with a killer plot idea that will have agents swooning.

(If you need help with any of the parts of speech, I put a brief description at the bottom of this post, along with examples I came up with.)

Please share your dynamite stories with us all!!

noun=person, place or thing.
verb=an action
adverb=describes a verb
adjective=describes a noun

My examples in order: Mary Kole, dog, wasted, flower, purple, snail, squirms, vomit, hamsters, hastily, fuzzy, eyeballs, bombed, eons, tremblingly, Olleymae

Peace

Interview with T.H. Mafi

The hilarious T. H. Mafi was generous enough to agree to an interview on my humble, new, little-known blog.  If you don’t check her blog like every day, you should because she’s a riot.

Let’s hear what she has to say, shall we?

Question 1. What’s your revision method? (Do you use critique groups and/or beta readers? How many revisions do you average before you feel that your work is ready?)

THM: oo tough question. believe it or not, my revision process breaks many,
many rules. [insert massive cringe here.] i revise as i go, and as a
result, usually max out at two drafts. my only experience with beta
readers [read: my unwilling brother and two incredibly generous
friends] were for my very first MS, and mostly because i was so
excited and [equally as] convinced that it was the greatest work of
literature ever known to man. after realizing my MS sucked dog doo, i
vowed never to burden my loved ones with my slush ever again &,
consequently, worked in solitude. the MS that landed my agent has
never been read by anyone but me and her lovely, lovely self. please
note: i do not recommend this method to anyone. my experience was some
kind of freak fluke. revision and beta-ing are suuuuper important. i
was just too embarrassed to ask.

Question 2. When you begin a manuscript, do you favor an outline, or do you tend to fly by the seat of your pants?

THM: i’ve never outlined. ever. i can’t stand the idea. (sorry outlining-
friends!) in fact, i often start writing with absolutely no clue what
i’m writing. i just feel a character developing in my head and follow
his/her/it’s voice. the story unravels itself.

Question 3. What’s the weirdest source of inspiration you’ve ever experienced? (A crazy dream maybe? The subway? Vacuuming your carpet?)

THM: mmm… this is a good question, but i’m afraid i have nothing
particularly interesting to offer. my first MS was inspired by a
serious concept i was considering for awhile. (although it did have a
lot to do with purple eyelashes, so i suspect that might be strange?)
one was fairly random. one was inspired by a song. one was relatively
autobiographical. & the one that caught Amy [Tipton], my agent, had
the funniest source of inspiration: my brothers’ stupidity. i talked
about it at length on my blog — you can find the link here:
http://stiryourtea.blogspot.com/2010/03/amy-tipton-love-story.html

Question 4. If you could go back in time to the point when you decided to try this writing thing as a career, what is the one piece of advice you would give your past self?

THM: “YOU IDIOT WHY DIDN’T YOU FINISH THE BOOK BEFORE YOU STARTED QUERYING?!?!” <— yes. i really did do this.

more pertinently? i wish i’d have known about AW before i started
writing and/or querying. The AbsoluteWrite forums & friends saved my
life. (love you guys!)

Question 5. How do you fight the am-I-crazy times when you doubt yourself or your work?

THM: *nods very slowly*

yes. this happens often. this happens every day, in fact. it happens
every time i write a blog post, much less a novel. i wish i had a
foolproof solution, but i don’t. i just take a deep breath and keep
pushing forward. because i love writing. i love it with every fragile
feeling in my body. i have to do it. and so i do. onward and upward,
always.

Bonus #6 (oops…how did an extra question get in here?). If you could choose one single meal to eat three times a day, every day, for the rest of your life, what would it be?

THM: oh goodness. what a question!! one single meal, every day for the rest
of my life?? hm. hmmmmmm.

i don’t know.

i like chicken?

——–

And there you have it. Of course she’s a genius. And apparently quite blessed with talent.  Thanks again, Tahereh for your time.  I hope you are super successful on submission because I can’t wait to read your gosh darn book.

PS. I don’t know if you noticed, but I cheated on the first question (It was really more like three questions! mwhahaha.) but I put them in parentheses so it was less noticeable.

Peace

ooohhh weee

So have you seen that SNL skitty-skit where these celebrities are getting interviewed, but they never get to say anything because this other guy starts singing “ooooohhhh weee what’s up with that? what’s up with that?” WELL THAT’S KINDA WHAT’S GOING ON IN MY HEAD NOW.

Super Cool Conference this weekend. I don’t have time to say much because my husband is cleaning my car and that’s supposed to be my chore, so he must be growing impatient.

Let’s just say, “CURSES TO YOU, WRITING THE BREAKOUT NOVEL WORKBOOK! WHY COULDN’T YOU JUST LET ME BE COMPLACENT WITH MY BASSACKWARD REVISIONS???? WHY DID YOU MAKE ME WANT TO REVISE MORE?

Alsssoooooooo….
Number one #1 #1 #1 TIP from the conference:
Wear a stop watch around your neck and keep track of your writing time. Every time you click over to twitter, surf, or blog, or pick your nose, whatever, stop the timer. Then you will see how little much time you truly spend on writing.
Genius.

Peace

apologies…and CONTEST

oh, silly, silly me. Did you catch the typo in my earlier post? The one about getting the grammar revision done by…what was it? Oh, 2/6/10. Why didn’t I catch that? I meant 2/13/10. Sometimes I hit my goals, and sometimes I don’t. Especially when I leave the printed copy of my manuscript at work over the weekend. Oh the genius!

Speaking of genius…Another contest is coming up! I just need to enter by Feb 21st!