The Writer and Social Media

Alethea Williamsby Alethea Williams

The release of an author’s new book means it’s promotion time. Since most new authors can’t afford much paid advertising, we are always looking for free ways to bring our work to the public’s attention. In these days of proliferating social media, there are some outlets that are crucial. Before the book is released a writer should have a Twitter account and start following and gathering followers. I started by using the search box and looking for writers, tweeting general writing items, and slowly gained a following.

Image representing Facebook as depicted in Cru...

A writer should have a Facebook account, another place to gather friends and join groups where one can promote. In addition to a writer’s personal account, an author page and/or book page is mandatory. I’ve found Facebook useful for connecting with other writers, keeping up with what others are publishing and how they are promoting, and even as a place to learn how to use Web-based tools that I wouldn’t have discovered on my own.

WordPress Logo

A writer these days must have a blog. A writer must have a Web presence, a place to expound and expand, a place to showplace publications and link to one’s Facebook page as well as to places to buy the book.

G is for Good Reads

Amazon, Shelfari, and Amazon’s newest acquisition, Goodreads, are all places the writer can build an author page, list published works, describe characters and settings, and link to Twitter, as well as one’s blog and one’s Facebook page.

English: Google+ wordmark

There’s Google+, which kind of resembles Facebook as a place to connect and see what other writers are doing. I’ve been unable to fine tune the settings on Google+, though, and a very few writers have hijacked my notifications to tell me every single thing they’ve seen, read, or thought about during the day, all day, every day. Google+ overwhelms me with useless information although I do like the new design of showing three columns at a time and the fact that a writer can now post a separate page for each work.

English: Red Pinterest logo

English: Red Pinterest logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

There’s Pinterest, to show in pictures what one is interested in, to pin pictures from one’s blog or the Web, or to tell a story in pictures which is mainly how I use it.

Image representing LibraryThing as depicted in...

Image via CrunchBase

The newest writer/book sites that I’ve joined are LibraryThing and AUTHORSdB. Since I’m already friends with hundreds of people on Goodreads and haven’t found a way to import my books to LibraryThing, that new site holds scant information. I haven’t had much time to explore AUTHORSdB beyond uploading my book’s cover and some personal information.

Yahoo! Groups used to be big, but I think more and more writers are migrating to Facebook to disseminate their news.

LinkedIn, again, connects a writer with a lot of people. But I don’t know that a listing there sells any books.

It is getting harder and harder, with all the writers, the books, and the book-related Web activity,  to attract the attention of readers. The ways that I have been trying lately, outside of promoted posts on Facebook which I think is way too expensive for the scanty returns, are guest posting on the blogs of other writers, and blog hops.

Guesting on another writer’s blog is usually a book spotlight consisting of blurb, excerpt, cover and links, or else an author interview or character interview. The hope here is that a writer gets wider exposure by being introduced to another writer’s audience.

I have just begun participating in blog hops, where writers of the same genre get together in big groups of 50-100 to host giveaways and link to each other’s blogs. It is getting extremely difficult to build up an audience and attract comments to one’s own blog, even to give something away. Blog hops offer the chance to contribute to a big grand prize, so I’m hoping for a better response but I’m not holding my breath!

As readers become more jaded and more surfeited with free books and swag giveaways, there will inevitably be more sites that authors are expected to join to advertise and promote. The only question then is when and what to let go of in the time crunch: sacrifice more writing time or just ignore some of the social media sites.

**This will be my last post for Writing Wranglers and Warriors. In addition to Willow Vale, I have a new contemporary romance out plus another newly accepted, and have signed a contract for a second historical. It’s been fun contributing to this blog, but writing under two names means I have two blogs of my own. Thanks for reading! It’s been fun.**

The author of historical novel Willow Vale, available at AmazonBarnes & Noble, and Jargon Media, Alethea Williams blogs on ActuallyAlethea about writing, writers, and Wyoming history.  Follow on Twitter @actuallyalethea, or like Alethea Williams, author on Facebook.  Friend her on FacebookGoodreads, LibraryThing and Google+.  Connect with her on LinkedIn and AUTHORSdB. Comments and honest feedback always welcome!

WHAT KEEPS YOU FROM WRITING?

By Neva Bodin

105182105411181CDP

When my precocious daughter was four, she decided she could ride my old bike which was designed for a seven or eight year old. Tall for her age, (people thought she was six), she could pedal and steer the unwieldy thing by standing on it, if she could just get her balance. She fell, got hurt, cried, and kept on trying.

In anguish myself, seeing her tears, I commanded her to stop.

“No, I have to ride it!” she cried as sobs coarsened her voice and Wyoming dust outlined tears on her cheeks. Eventually she triumphed, riding away—a victor.

ladybeetleRecently I watched a small beetle attempt to cross over a large twig in its path. It fell, it tried again, fell, tried again…you get the picture. Eventually it succeeded. It didn’t stop to look embarrassed (can bugs look embarrassed?), or appear discouraged; it just kept trying.

For fifteen years a story has been marching around my brain, irritatingly begging me to let it out. Encouraging this brain persecution is the conviction that there are women out there (somewhere, everywhere) who could grow a Christian faith and understanding of some struggles by reading this story. An inspirational romance, the hero and heroine must work through misconceptions, emotional and physical pain, and getting to know themselves in order to find love and rediscover their faith in God—if I can write it well enough. There is the rub—fear and pride are marching around in my head also! I now realize I learned from my daughter and the beetle—there is false pride and there is healthy pride.

Tears and pain sometimes accompany learning something that will eventually give us a healthy pride in ourselves, thereby increasing our self-esteem.  We must ignore fearful self-talk and naysayers. Failure many times leads to success; it hones our skill. Thomas A. Edison said, “I’ve not failed, I have just found ten thousand ways that won’t work.”

False pride doesn’t allow for failure and embarrassment when pursuing our goals. It may keep us from pursuing goals. But who do I think I am to avoid looking foolish in my failures?

Many successful and now famous authors have been rejected multiple times. Among them are George Orwell, J K Rowling, Dr. Seuss, and Stephen King. The stories rejected by some publishers went on to become best sellers. While I am no one special, I am in good company if my manuscript is rejected!

Ted Geisel (Dr. Seuss) half-length portrait, s...

Ted Geisel (Dr. Seuss) half-length portrait, seated at desk covered with his books / World Telegram & Sun photo by Al Ravenna. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

“Rejection slips, or form letters, however tactfully phrased, are lacerations of the soul, if not quite inventions of the devil – but there is no way around them,” said Isaac Asimove.

Realizing that part of my procrastination comes from feeding the wrong kind of pride has given me new insight and inspiration to finish, polish and begin submitting my novel. No, my tendency to procrastinate and delay work on my novel with the excuse that the flowers need watering, the dishes need washing, etc. has not gone away. But, I now face the real reason I fight myself on this issue, and remember the lessons a little girl and a bright shiny bug taught me. We are meant to try and keep on trying any worthwhile passion, until we get it right. Not only might we  accomplish it, but we will be an inspiration to others on the journey. Portrait on side of Dr. Seuss.

Follow me at Twitter @nevabodin1, on Facebook, or http://nevabodin.weebly.com/

WHAT KEEPS YOU FROM WRITING?

WHAT KEEPS YOU FROM WRITING?105182105411181CDP

When my precocious daughter was four, she decided she could ride my old bike which was designed for a seven or eight year old. Tall for her age, (people thought she was six), she could pedal and steer the unwieldy thing by standing on it, if she could just get her balance. She fell, got hurt, cried, and kept on trying.

In anguish myself, seeing her tears, I commanded her to stop.

“No, I have to ride it!” she cried as sobs coarsened her voice and Wyoming dust outlined tears on her cheeks. Eventually she triumphed, riding away—a victor.

Recently I watched a small beetle attempt to cross over a large twig in its path. It fell, it tried again, fell, tried again…you get the picture. Eventually it succeeded. It didn’t stop to look embarrassed (can bugs look embarrassed?), or appear discouraged; it just kept trying.

For fifteen years a story has been marching around my brain, irritatingly begging me to let it out. Encouraging this brain persecution is the conviction that there are women out there (somewhere, everywhere) who could grow a Christian faith and understanding of some struggles by reading this story. An inspirational romance, the hero and heroine must work through misconceptions, emotional and physical pain, and getting to know themselves in order to find love and rediscover their faith in God—if I can write it well enough. There is the rub—fear and pride are marching around in my head also! I now realize I learned from my daughter and the beetle—there is false pride and there is healthy pride.

Tears and pain sometimes accompany learning something that will eventually give us a healthy pride in ourselves, thereby increasing our self-esteem.  We must ignore fearful self-talk and naysayers. Failure many times leads to success; it hones our skill. Thomas A. Edison said, “I’ve not failed, I have just found ten thousand ways that won’t work.”

False pride doesn’t allow for failure and embarrassment when pursuing our goals. It may keep us from pursuing goals. But who do I think I am to avoid looking foolish in my failures?

Many successful and now famous authors have been rejected multiple times. Among them are George Orwell, J K Rowling, Dr. Seuss, and Stephen King. The stories rejected by some publishers went on to become best sellers. While I am no one special, I am in good company if my manuscript is rejected!

Ted Geisel (Dr. Seuss) half-length portrait, s...

“Rejection slips, or form letters, however tactfully phrased, are lacerations of the soul, if not quite inventions of the devil – but there is no way around them,” said Isaac Asimove.

Realizing that part of my procrastination comes from feeding the wrong kind of pride has given me new insight and inspiration to finish, polish and begin submitting my novel. No, my tendency to procrastinate and delay work on my novel with the excuse that the flowers need watering, the dishes need washing, etc. has not gone away. But, I now face the real reason I fight myself on this issue, and remember the lessons a little girl and a bright shiny bug taught me. We are meant to try and keep on trying any worthwhile passion, until we get it right. Not only might we  accomplish it, but we will be an inspiration to others on the journey. Portrait on side of Dr. Seuss.

Follow me at Twitter @nevabodin1, on Facebook, or http://nevabodin.weebly.com/ Continue reading

Technology – Love It and Hate It

Kathy - face

Blog by Kate Wyland

Our internet was out for over two days this week. Some vandals decided to attack the phone system for our area, and although we didn’t lose phone service like many others, we did lose our DSL. My husband and I were so totally frustrated. Couldn’t get on to check and respond to email, except by smartphone, which isn’t the most convenient way. Couldn’t keep up with Facebook and Twitter, couldn’t schedule my blog or respond to comments. Couldn’t check the news, do research or check the spelling of a word the easy online way. Couldn’t send out the last two entries I was judging for a writing contest. We were totally lost. Finally we drove 30 minutes away to another town to get access.

For someone who grew up long before the internet, cell phones and GPS, it was amazing to be hit again with how dependent we are on our modern technology. When we tried to actually talk to a real live person at the phone company to get more info than the canned “The internet difficulties will be fixed in 24-48 hours” message, they wanted our account information. Since I use auto-pay online, I didn’t even have a recent copy of the phone bill and couldn’t give them that number. Scream and pull the hair! Eventually we did get a human being, but got the same canned response. It took three days to get our DSL service back.

This experience reminds me of an incident that happened with our first computer—pre-Apple and PC days. We had a MSAI-8080 made from a kit, which had a whole 16K of RAM and two 8” floppy disk drives that held a total of 128K of data. We also had a hand-assembled Heathkit monitor and an old telex machine for printing. Talk about a dinosaur! But it had something quite new at the time—word processing software. Wordstar, the grandmother of them all.

I soon grew enamored of a system that allowed me to correct mistakes easily and even move text without re-typing everything. Then one morning I couldn’t get to my file. It had disappeared. Frantically, I tried everything in my limited repertoire, but no luck. I was devastated. All my work was gone. I’d only been using the computer for about a month and I couldn’t believe how dependent I’d become on it. The thought of going back to the typewriter was totally unacceptable.

Despondent, I turned the computer off and went on with my day. That evening, when my husband came home, he flipped it on and wonder of wonders my file was back! (I’ve since learned that turning the computer off and on can solve a multitude of problems.) From that day to this, computers have become a bigger and bigger part of my life. I literally don’t know how I’d function without one.

If all your electronic gizmos stopped working, which would you miss the most? Computer, cell phone, e-reader, mp3 player or something else? What can’t you live without? Or would it matter to you at all? Several friends and family are virtually electronics-free, except for TVs. I’m sure the fiber optic sabotage didn’t bother them at all.

*************************************************************************

Learn more about Kate Wyland:
Website: http://katewyland.com/
Blog: http://katewyland.com/blog

Checkout her book:

Wyoming Cover - 4x6 - #2

Wyoming Escape

Two dead bodies. One dirty cop. Is she next?

Also her short story:

Cover - Images - 2

Images – A Love Story
She’s learned to hide from life.
Should she hide from him?

I love A-Zs – Don’t you?

For CCThis post is by Nancy Jardine

An author friend of mine at Crooked Cat Publishing commented that he was having a ‘go’ again at the world wide April A-Z Challenge Blog Hop. He’d done it last year for the first time and recommended it. A number of ‘we’ fellow ‘Cats’ signed up.

Rules are simple. Blog for 26 days of the alphabet on anything of your choice so long as your post is centred around the letter of the day (Sundays off for good behaviour) Try to visit at least 5 other blogs each day – lots more if you can is very welcome.

Main idea – ENJOY reading/viewing everyone else’s posts.

Why did I decide to fit this into my already busy life? Good question and my answer is for lots of different reasons. There are 1942 people signed up on the linky list. I’m sure I will meet some new people during the hop who will hopefully remain cyber friends. I’m also learning something new every single day when I visit other blogs, and most of that has little to do with writing.

This year they’ve put up a category listing, so if you choose to you can sign up for one of these and post about that subject eg. LI posts are about Lifestyle. There are classifications for photographers, artists, gardeners, politics minded people – lots to choose from if your posts are themed.   If you don’t want to enter a theme category you can post anything so long as your daily post is centred around the letter for that day.

I’ve chosen to do all my posts about Celtic/Roman Britain AD71-84. What? Loads of you might say – that’s nuts! Why have I restricted myself to historical posts like that for 26 days?

Food fresco from Pompei - Wikimedia Commons

Food fresco from Pompei – Wikimedia Commons

During the last 6 months, when not doing my full time babysitting of said cherub who is my granddaughter, I’ve been writing the sequel to my historical novel, THE BELTANE CHOICE, which is set in Celtic/Roman Britain AD 71-84. Surprise, surprise! I’ve amassed a huge amount of historical data that will never sneak into my novel- though I do that whenever I can!

The A-Z Challenge is a superb way of ‘airing’ that knowledge and finding a practical use for my time researching. Since I love history and am obviously steeped in Celtic/Roman Britain I’m loving the CHALLENGE already.

What I’m sure would be far too difficult would be ‘winging it’. I’m more inclined to be a ‘pantser’ in my writing but I’m sure I’d be spending all day long chopping and changing my mind if I had no theme to work to. So, does that make me more of a ‘plotter’. Oops- I guess I’m that too!

Whatever…  the challenge of posting an A-Z entry forces some discipline on me. I intend to complete the challenge… and get my sequel completed this month.

Apples, pear, plum, cherry!-image acquired from www.123rf.com

Apples, pear, plum, cherry!
-image acquired from http://www.123rf.com

Oh… did I forget to say I got 5 fruit trees as a birthday gift a few weeks ago from my daughter. (mother of grandchild) They arrived a couple of days ago and since the snow outside has now melted, and we’ve had a couple of nights almost frost free, I guess I’m spending my day planting my trees in patio containers.

 Roll out that compost!

I’m delighted to do that since, around AD 84, there were possibly as many as 10,000 Roman soldiers encamped about 400 yards away from my garden. (Yes I really do mean that number as recent evidence has proved the camp to have been very large) My fruit tree garden compost was possibly trampled down by them. (Spurious- I know but the thought makes me smile a lot!)

Any guesses why I love my Celtic/ Roman history posts?

If you’re interested my post today is all about the Roman food my Roman character might be eating in Northern Britannia.

Roman food

(NB. When I added my HI for ‘history’ as my A-Z Challenge theme it has been posted as AC for ‘Adult Content’. This is because my blog is set to that in case I’m posting a risqué romance cover when a guest blogger comes to visit… or as in today’s case a risque historical image from Pompei! My blog is, otherwise, a safe one.)

BeltaneB 500

The Beltane Choice is available from:

Amazon.com   

Amazon UK

Smashwords http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/221383

View my Youtube trailer http://youtu.be/igJmfBoXRhQ

Nancy can be found at:

Amazon UK author page for all novels  http://amzn.to/N6ye0z  
Amazon.com author page for all novels http://amzn.to/RJZzZz  http://nancyjardine.blogspot.com  http://nancyjardineauthor.weebly.com   http://on.fb.me/XeQdkG   Twitter @nansjar  http://about.me/nancyjardine http://uk.linkedin.com/pub/nancy-jardine/3a/9b0/a91/   Google+

Enjoy your day! I’m sure I’m going to enjoy mine.

 

 

 

 

Spring, Daffodils and Planting Seeds

Kathy - face

Blog by Kate Wyland

Spring has definitely sprung here in Northern California. The tImagerees are blossoming, the days are getting longer and the weather is warming. Even though we have relatively mild Mediterranean winters, one of the most potent signs of Spring for us is when the daffodils start blooming. We see them everywhere—in yards, along streets and highways, and in one very special place.

Daffodil Hill is a family-owned ranch in the gold country of the Sierras that is carpeted with hundreds of thousands of daffodils from mid-March to mid-April. Carrying on a tradition started by their great-grandparents, every year the McLaughlin family plants between 5-6,000 bulbs. They estimate that over 400,000 daffodils of 300 different varieties bloom there each Spring. And during those months, they open the ranch to the public for free so that everyone can enjoy the spectacular sight. Now a popular tourist attraction, the ranch is a labor of love and a wonderful gift to the community. To read more about Daffodil Hill you can go to the following link.  Be sure to click on the Next Page icon to get the full story. http://amadorgold.net/tours/daffodilhill/

ImageEven with a large family of kids, grandkids and great-grandkids, the idea of planting thousands of bulbs each year is mind-boggling to me. You can’t just spread them around like grass seed. Each one has to put into the ground with the roots down and crown up, as well as set at the correct depth. I’m sure the McLaughlin’s have developed an efficient method over the years, but still the task seems unbelievably daunting.

If I stop and look at it for moment, I can see that planting the bulbs can serve as a metaphor for much that goes on in our lives. We plant in the fallow times (winter) and then wait impatiently for the results of our endeavors (daffodils). We do this all our lives. But to be successful, we must plant with care, not throw our seeds into the wind. We go to college and carefully choose our major, in hopes of getting a good job. The results aren’t apparent until four or more years later. We spend untold time learning a craft or skill, then hesitantly show it to the world and hope it is rewarded.

We writers get up early, limit our time with the family, and hide away in our dark, fertile place to write and create tales that reveal our unique take on life. If we’re lucky, our blooImagems break through the soil and see the light of day. An agent or editor likes our story, a publisher agrees to take a chance on it, and  book stores display it. Or, as is happening more and more today, you decide to self-publish the book yourself and it appears on the online book sellers’ pages where you find an appreciative audience.

What bulbs have you planted and are waiting to bloom? A new skill that could be useful in a different job? A painting or sculpture that you haven’t shown to anyone yet? A story ready to be published?

Wyoming Escape
Two dead bodies. One dirty cop. Is she next?

Images – A Love Story
She’s learned to hide from life. Should she hide from him?

You can connect with Kate Wyland on Facebook, Twitter and her website.

Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/AuthorKateWyland
Twitter:  https://twitter.com/katewyland
Website : http://katewyland.com

Women reading photo credit:
<a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/ionushi/223930304/”>aurelio.asiain</a&gt; via <a href=”http://photopin.com”>photopin</a&gt; <a href=”http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/”>cc</a&gt;

Judging a Book by the Cover

Alethea

by Alethea Williams

I designed the cover of my first book with the help of my editor. I thought it was beautiful. It looked so classy to me. The tree picture was free from a stock photo site. The cover color I chose reminded me of antique, yellowed, handmade paper—perfect, I thought, for a book set in the 1920s. I wanted my grandma’s passport picture in an oval frame at the bottom, because her story was the inspiration for my fictional account of an immigrant’s journey to happiness in America.

51WyJNthFML__SS500_The comments I got on my perfect cover almost broke my heart. My father-in-law thought my grandmother had a mean look on her face in her passport photo. My son wasn’t looking forward to reading the book because he thought the cover indicated it would be a sad story. Everyone who reviewed the book assumed it was a true story because of my grandmother’s picture, even though I tried to be clear it was a work of fiction.

New Picture

Image credit: Jargon Media LLC

One of the editor’s suggestions was that I use a cover picture of an old house with lots of sunny blue sky. When I solicited comments from family, I was told the bright sky blue color indicated cheerfulness and hopefulness. I thought it looked spooky and abandoned, not the first impression I wanted potential buyers to have of the book, and so I discarded the blue.

I thought the book would have more electronic sales than paperback, completely misjudging my audience. I thought the audience for this book would read Westerns, and historicals, and maybe sweet romance. Sales were okay for a first book, but not great.

New Picture (1)

Image credit: Jargon Media LLC

If I had it to do over, maybe I would change several things:

  • Find a picture of a ranch.
  • Make my grandmother’s picture less prominent, or perhaps bite the bullet and leave it off the cover.
  • I think I misjudged my audience. Maybe I would try to sell the book as mainstream literary fiction, lower the price of the paperback, and really push paper sales. I don’t think the people who really liked the book read Westerns, or sweet romance, or even historical. I don’t think they own an e-reader. I don’t know how many times I heard, “My mom (or grandma) really loved this book.” If the reader was familiar with coal mining towns, so much the better. My aunt warned me she doesn’t read fiction, and she read it twice.
  • Maybe I would listen a little more closely to the editor, whose opinion I had paid for and who certainly had more experience in publishing than I did.
  • In thumbnail, which is how the cover is seen on most sales sites, my name is so tiny it almost can’t be read. I would make it bigger.

Perhaps part of getting published is realizing how much of our cherished illusions we’re willing to give up in order to see our name on the cover of a book. All in all, publishing my first novel was a good experience. I learned a lot. I sold the industry average number of books for a self-publisher. But, in the end, maybe I wouldn’t change anything. I still secretly like my cover best…although if I could sneak back in time and change the size of my name, I would make it bigger.

The author of historical novel Willow Vale, available at AmazonBarnes & Noble, and Jargon Media, Alethea Williams blogs on Actually Alethea about writing, writers, and Wyoming history.  Follow on Twitter @actuallyalethea, or visit Alethea Williams, author on Facebook.  Comments and honest feedback always welcome!

Historical or Contemporary Romance?

Aletheaby Alethea Williams

Writers and readers of romance novels have an important choice to make: whether to immerse themselves in a bygone time and place or jump headlong into a story set in modern time.

What are some of the pros and cons of each?

Historical

Photo credit: The book by Dave Heuts / Foter.com / CC BY-SA

Photo credit: The book by Dave Heuts / Foter.com / CC BY-SA

Historical is a well-traveled road. There are built-in audiences for all historical periods, from Jean Auel’s prehistoric period to regency England to the Western. So as long as the author follows the strictures of the particular sub-genre, there are readers who will accept stories from characters representing all layers of society within the designated time period. There are also well-informed readers who will challenge mistakes in historical fact, that is unless the genre is alternate history.

If one is writing a historical romance, it’s perhaps better not to be a trained historian. The sweeping, epic historical novels that span decades and generations and are about three inches thick in paperback demand rigorous research on the author’s part and strict attention on the reader’s or both become lost. Historical romances are generally less demanding of the writer and reader, more pure escapism built on a platform familiar and enjoyable to readers. Authors of regency romance, for instance, might learn more from reading other regencies than reading history books.

Contemporary

Photo credit: Stewf / Foter.com / CC BY-NC-SA

Photo credit: Stewf / Foter.com / CC BY-NC-SA

Contemporaries, especially romances, seem for the most part confined to one economic stratum of society. As most of society in the developed world seem to be middle class, it should be easy for readers to accept stories of this layer of culture. It takes much more effort from a writer unfamiliar with real poverty or real wealth to portray with any sympathy characters who might actually live those lives, and such a setting and characters demand more empathy from the reader than one seeking pure entertainment might be willing to give.

Researching the contemporary novel should, in theory, be easier than researching the historical. Take a walk, pick up a magazine, watch television. Simple observation reveals much about the world around us. Paying attention and listening, the author picks up useful patterns of speech, slang, and regionalisms that add authenticity to the contemporary.

None of the above opinion takes into consideration the genre-blenders becoming popular today with the more adventurous writers and readers. How about a time-travel romance (already well-established by such writers as Diana Gabaldon but being expanded upon daily by more recent authors) or a werewolf Western?

I have a lot of fun writing both historicals and contemporaries, and enjoy the challenges of each. I can only hope readers enjoy the experience just as much.

There is a fascinating new blog by historical novelists on writing historicals here: http://writinghistoricalnovels.com/

An Irish writer’s blog on formula romance: http://www.trishwylie.com/tips.html

On genre blending YA novels from the American Library Association: http://www.yalsa.ala.org/thehub/2012/10/05/wait-what-is-this-book-anyway-genre-blending-in-ya-li/

The author of historical novel Willow Vale, available at AmazonBarnes & Noble, and Jargon Media, Alethea Williams blogs on Actually Alethea about writing, writers, and Wyoming history.  Follow on Twitter @actuallyalethea, or visit Alethea Williams, author on Facebook.  Comments and honest feedback always welcome!

Where Does a Story Start?

Aletheaby Alethea Williams

Most of us who write have had the experience of someone wanting to tell us their story so that we can write it down and make lots of money.  The two things I have trouble conveying to people who don’t write are:

1) I have enough story ideas of my own.
2) If they dream the story from beginning, to middle, to end, with a little discipline they can write their own story.

So where does your story start?

Characters: Do you see your characters first? What do they look like? What are they doing? Are they talking to you? (If you’re hearing an imaginary conversation between characters you know you made up, you’re not losing your mind. You’re a writer.)

Loving Handsome Couple Relaxing by photostock at freedigitalphotos.net

Loving Handsome Couple Relaxing by photostock at freedigitalphotos.net

Stylish Lady Standing With Trunk by sattva at freedigitalphotos.net

Stylish Lady Standing With Trunk by sattva at freedigitalphotos.net

Setting: Do you visualize a situation first? What’s happening? Where is this action taking place? Is it day or night? What’s the weather like?  Can you smell anything?

Sunrise by dan at freedigitalphotos.net


Sunrise by dan at freedigitalphotos.net

Plot: Does the story occur to you beginning to end? Or does the middle slump so you have to scramble to come up with what comes next? Do you outline? If so, do you stick to your outline or does the story insist on taking off in its own direction? (When the muse is visiting, I find the plot unrolling like a movie in my head and myself typing as fast as I can to keep up.)

My Spring Garden Notes by Simon Howden at freedigitalphotos.net

My Spring Garden Notes by Simon Howden at freedigitalphotos.net

Theme: Perhaps you have a message you want to convey through your story and build the entire story around your theme. Is there a lesson in what you have written? Do you mean for readers to take a moral to heart from your writing? (Readers have said that they were hesitant to start reading Willow Vale because it seems like a sad book. It’s actually a very hopeful book, so I am grateful so many have stuck with it and finished Francesca’s story!)

Writing is half hard work – the willingness to sit butt in chair and persist until it’s done. The other half is magic – watching the story unfold as our characters and start talking, with us writing as fast as we can to keep up!

The author of historical novel Willow Vale, available at AmazonBarnes & Noble, and Jargon Media, Alethea Williams blogs on Actually Alethea about writing, writers, and Wyoming history.  Follow on Twitter @actuallyalethea, or visit Alethea Williams: author on Facebook.  Comments and honest feedback always welcome!

 

Janus, a lump of coal, a key…5 days late!

mug shot 200This post by Nancy Jardine

Who was Janus? What’s with the coal? What’s the key for? And why 5 days late?

Taking the 5 days’ question first. Since this is my first ‘Wranglers’ post of the year, I apologise for it being 5 days already into this brand New Year of 2013, and here I am still wittering on about New Year and what it means to me!

I’m sure you’ve already guessed, the other things are all associated with opening doors and heralding in the coming year. However many faces Janus might have: bearded or shaven; with or without coal; and maybe brandishing a key in his right hand –  I’m ready for new beginnings.

Coal

The Scottish tradition of ‘First Footing’ with a lump of coal is a well practised custom. The Old Year is let out and the New Year ushered in. If the first person to pass over the threshold after midnight is a dark haired male bringing coal or whisky, respectively for warmth and general wellbeing in the New Year, it’s deemed a good omen. (Alternatives used when necessary!)

See my archived post of Hogmanay (31st Dec)  2012 for more details of ‘First Footing’ if interested. http://nancyjardine.blogspot.com

That explains the coal, but who is Janus?

If you don’t already know, Janus was the Roman god of beginnings and endings, and of gates and doors. With two heads he was able to look both ways, and was considered the guardian of peace when the door to his shrine in Rome was closed. If neighbouring cities were informed of open doors they knew Rome was at war, and Janus could intercede through those open doors.

Janus

He also represented transitions-for example changes in the aging processes from childhood to adulthood, or the opposites of country and city life. He was worshipped at births and weddings, clearly new starts in the life cycles of those individuals. At harvest, he was given due deference as the end of the growing season gave way to the rest of winter.

                                                                          http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Janus-Vatican.JPG

The two faced/headed Janus was depicted on many Roman coins, the god being associated with money. (Of course, the two-faced Janus is also associated with duplicity…though we’ll skirt over that one!)

Now… someone is bound to say… but what about that sneaky four faced Janus?

A temple to Janus was also built with four portals where he could look to all four quarters. A very clever idea for detecting enemies coming at you from all directions, so BEWARE of any four-faced Janus for he’s likely to corner you just a bit too much!

The image I like best about Janus is the two-faced god, bearded or not, holding a key in his right hand.

That brings me to the key!

key

You may care to disagree, but I’m happy with the interpretation that it opens the door to my future year…and maybe even beyond. I believe I can hold that key in my hand just like Janus. New openings and new beginnings are a fabulous concept. As a writer how can I not get excited about new openings, new chapters, and new places to venture into?  So this coming year I’m aiming to open new doors – to find more new places for my work to feature; new hosts to meet in blogs; and I’m aiming to welcome new guests to my blog. I’m also aiming to use that key a whole lot better since I’ve made access to new social media during 2012 but don’t have a clue how to use them effectively!

Perhaps my new friends at Writing Wranglers and Warriors will help me achieve some of those aims during 2013?

All the best wishes for 2013 to you!

Try these for info about the god Janus:

http://www.plotinus.com/janus_copy2.htm

http://www.pantheon.org/articles/j/janus.html

http://ancienthistory.about.com/cs/romangods/p/janus.htm

http://camphalfblood.wikia.com/wiki/Janus (This one is a more fun reference for you! BTW – I really liked reading the Percy Jackson books to the kids in my class (11-12 year olds) when I was still teaching, because I could do a mini- project on gods and goddesses)

PB Copy number 1

Visit http://amzn.to/RJZzZz to find details of my four novels; view my book trailer videos; and see the latest information on my blog.

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