The Moving Word

Sharing my life as a writer, bookworm, & Fibromyalgia sufferer

Archive for the category “Writer”

The Informed Writer

Links to various things that I think writers might find interesting. Since we are all different, we will not all agree. But, hey, what can you expect for free. :)

See my other Informed Writer posts for a bevy of links.

Why Reading is Good for your Brain

Nine images from Washington Irving books

An African-American young man asks what’s wrong with reading? The culture NEEDS to change

Literary Agent is Attacked by an Author who had his Manuscript Rejected

Ten Surefire ways to Succeed in Publishing

35 Fossil Words

The 2012 Man Booker Short List

Read more…

My Pinterest Board

I have a popular Words on the Page board at Pinterest on Books, Reading and Writing. I hope to see you there! 

Writing Fiction is Easy and Very Difficult

Putting pen to paper and describing the scene in our head is easy. Stringing dialogue based on the way we speak is not challenging. However, forming everything together into a cohesive, compelling novel that publishers will consider publishing is quite a different matter, indeed.

Countless people aspire to write fiction and dream of accolades and glory. Friends and family read their offerings and praise their efforts. They start building houses in their head and plan the outfits they will wear to book signings.

Confident in their mastery, they send their masterpiece to someone knowledgeable about writing and hear that their manuscript is filled with mistakes and inconsistencies. They either become angry, crushed or ambivalent about the advice.

Why does this happen? Because writing fiction is easy and very difficult at the same time and the sooner we realize this, the better. Anyone can tell a story but doing so at the highest level takes an incredible amount of work.

Read more…

What is Literary Fiction?

My reading tastes have changed through the years. In elementary school I voraciously read biographies. The school library had these biographies with orange covers and I read every one they had.

As I grew older, I began reading horror. In high school, I would get my work done quickly and sit and read the remainder of the class period. I read countless novels in the genre through the years. In time, though, I moved on and stopped reading horror completely.

Then I moved to mysteries/thrillers and read hundreds of them until I became fairly well-versed in the genre. They read quickly and I enjoyed the puzzles.

When I finally decided I had wasted enough time dreaming about writing a novel, I began work on a manuscript. Accordingly, as the plot developed, my reading tastes changed again. I needed to broaden my horizons to fill in the gap.

I began reading more books by women and more romance so I could do a better job understanding female characters. As I began studying writing in earnest, the mystery stories I was reading began to look stale and drab.

I began to seek out better books with higher quality writing. That led me to literary fiction, a genre I had little knowledge of. When people asked me what genre I primarily read, it was hard to give them a firm answer. So I went in search of one.

Read more…

Writers’ Group (1)

I was asked to lead a Writers’ Group at the public library in Hinesville, Georgia. I appreciate very much being allowed to serve in this capacity to help people become better writers. We had a dozen people attend and we had a great time together. Most were happy to have such a group available.

Every month I want to summarize our discussions, so group members can refer to these pages and new members can catch up.

The next meeting of the Writers’ Group will be November 19, 2011 at 2:00 P.M.

We want to learn together and encourage each person to rise to their potential.

  • “There are three rules for writing the novel. Unfortunately, no on knows what they are” (Somerset Maugham).
  • Powerful writing moves the heart and feet, stirring us to action.

If you would not be forgotten

as soon as you are dead and rotten

either write things worth reading

or do things worth the writing.

- Ben Franklin

We will not be a successful writer unless we take the craft very seriously and are willing to work to accomplish our goals.

Questions for the group:

  • What does writing mean to you?
  • What part of writing do you find most difficult?
  • What part of writing do you find most rewarding?
  • What makes a great novel?
  • What makes a bad novel?
  • How important is reading to the process of writing?

We talked about our love for writing and why we feel driven to keep putting words on paper.

I shared my own passion.

“Real writers are those who want to write, need to write, have to write” (Robert Penn Warren).

“Planning to write is not writing. Outlining, researching, talking to people about what you’re doing, none of that is writing. Writing is writing” (E. L. Doctorow).

Writers must be courageous enough to dig deep within themselves for good material.

  • “Writers who will not read are writers who will not be read.

Work to grow every time you write. Never settle for mediocrity.

Become a relentless editor, willing to cut anything to produce quality writing. If there is some passage or sentence that needs to go and we can’t part with it, write it down and use it elsewhere.

Editing Cleans up the Garden

Write to be quoted

Write To Be Quoted

Writers should never use flowery language simply to impress the reader with their skill. The story or the article is the focus, not us. We stand behind the piece we are writing.

Overwriting is an unforgivable sin. It cheapens the story and distracts the reader, negating any work we have done. Accordingly, the story or message we have labored to create has no audience because of our ego.

Instead, write to be quoted. We utilize all of our skills to construct powerful sentences that stand out in the reader’s mind. We have our own Hemingway or Dickens moment.

The turn of a phrase blends into the story but towers majestically above it. It is the master brush stroke, for which we rejoice and the agony of all our labors wash away.

Imagine the scene when the reader stops reading and shares the sentence with a loved one. Pursue this priceless moment with a passion, knowing  we have created a sentence that is resilient and timeless. Such craftsmanship is how books become old and well-worn.

Always strive to grow as a writer, never settling for mediocrity. Practice, learn, dream and when it all comes to focus in a pristine piece of prose, we are ebullient about the thing of beauty our mind has crafted.

Be proud and try to do it again.

Writer’s Workshop

On October 22, 2011, I will be conducting a Writer’s Workshop at the Live Oak Public library in Hinesville, Georgia. I will be posting some of my notes here after the Workshops. If you are in our area, we would love to have you there from 2:00 to 3:00 PM.

I’ve never been to a Writer’s Workshop in this format. I’ve attended lectures by writers and I always enjoyed them immensely. I love the subject and possess a great passion for writing. It is my first love and has been with me since I began writing short stories in the fourth grade.

I am always learning and growing in my knowledge and I want to share some of that learning here, when I get time. My website needs more TLC from its author. Hope to accomplish that.

Thank you for visiting my website! God Bless.

Reviewing “Outlining Your Novel”

K.M. Weiland’s book, “Outlining Your Novel” is a wonderful resource for writers. She proposes a program where most of the hard work is done before we begin our first word. We design the plot, characters and scenes through brainstorming, planning and hard work.

Like an architect, we build the house on paper, so we can easily construct it on the property. When we finish the planning stage, we will have a clear destination in mind.

Writers can become lost in the morass of their imagination and produce a disjointed first draft that requires massive revisions and heartache. Why not save the stress and pain relievers by outlining?

Weiland is cognizant of the need for fresh ideas and allows writers the option of deviating from their original plan. Our characters become living, breathing individuals with a measure of freewill. They have to go their own way, sometimes. Accordingly, she provides input on how to let our characters blaze new paths while retaining our own vision. Some characters do need a leash, after all.

“Outlining Your Novel” is a treasure for aspiring and experienced writers that will be retrieved again and again.

The Informed Writer 6/20/11

12 Principles of Social Media Marketing

Why is Publishing So Slow?

Is There Too Much Darkness in Youth Adult  Literature?

A Response to the Darkness in YA Literature

Four Ways to Make Every Word Count

How to Let Plot Guide Your Short Story

How to Write and Publish a Novel

When Your Characters Come to Alive

Do We Have to Have Fairytale Endings?

Search Engine for Writers

20 Practical Tips for Freelance Writers

 

Review of “Choose!” by J. Randal Matheny

Books come in different forms and serve various purposes. Some books are read, then shelved so they can be retrieved during times of difficulty. Like poems and Psalms, they wrap us in a protective coat and inspire us to persevere. With wisdom and guidance, they offer us a gentle push and help change our perspectives on life.

J. Randal Matheny’s book, Choose! 13 Choices to Transform Your Heart and Soul is one such book. It is a short but powerful book of devotional thoughts designed to spur our thinking and help us develop a healthier outlook on our daily lives.

[Read my interview with Randal]

Matheny writes about personal responsibility, which is desperately needed in our age. Too many people think that our life’s trajectory cannot be changed and we are stuck with misery.

Matheny asks us to choose better climes. He writes, “You have options. Your choices can transform your life. You’re not at the mercy of impersonal forces. The key is the type of choice you make. This book will show you great possibilities within your reach by focusing on choices within your control.”

Choose! is concise and filled with fabulous quotes and well-chosen passages from Scripture to educate us in the choices we should make. We choose how we handle this life and Matheny wants to play a part in helping us make wise decisions. His layered approach is useful with commentary, quotes, Scripture and practical applications.

Make a wise decision and purchase Choose! today.

 

 

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