National Novel Writing Month

I’ve been involved with NaNoWriMo since  2005 in the Dayton, Ohio region.

This year, I’m the Municipal Liaison for the “Elsewhere in Ohio” region, and am running a few events in and around Urbana, Ohio.

Since this region is so spread out, I’ve scheduled a kick off event in my own town, and I’m planning a few other events in my area. I’m hoping to try to do some online networking as well…more to come soon. Really.

For those in the Logan/Champaign/Clark county areas of Ohio…(and, well, Union, Madison, Miami, or Greene counties as well…)

There is a kick off event scheduled for

OCTOBER 29, 2011 FROM 2 PM UNTIL 5 PM IN THE CHAMPAIGN COUNTY LIBRARY MEETING ROOM.

I’ll be there…and I’m hoping to push/pull/drag a few people into helping out.

I’ll provide some snacks (and maybe cookies!) and will be there to answer questions about the event, talk about writing, and otherwise see what I can do to encourage others to take on the manic insanity of writing a novel in 30 days!

Come join us!

Happy Happy Joy Joy

WHEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!

This morning, I overslept and was rushing like a maniac to get to work on time.

I got to work and checked my email, logged in, checked my files, and then started my day. I was on the phone, and on hold, so I got into Google Reader to check publishing blogs on my Blackberry while I waited.

And that’s when I saw it.

I had no idea that the trade paperback version of MYSTERY TIMES TEN had hit the Amazon bestseller list at #13 the week it was released.

The Kindle version was released last week. It hit #12.

Here’s the link to the publisher’s blog, announcing this.

Ten minutes after I found this out, I was scheduled to go to a legal seminar about the changes to Ohio sentencing law; not exactly the most entertaining of topics, although it’s always information that lawyers need to have. I’m sorry, Nick. The presentation was well done. I really tried to pay attention, and for the most part, I succeeded, but I kept thinking… “I just need to get home and do some more writing…” and then I’d have to fight to pay attention again. It had nothing to do with anything going on in the room and everything to do with the fact that I needed to be scraped off the ceiling. And I hadn’t even had caffeine yet for the day.

The Easiest Mood Cure in the World

So I was cranky when I got home from work last night.

It wasn’t that I’d had a bad day. Far from it. It had been a strange day, with oddball cases in court, but for the most part, the day had run on schedule.

But it was hot. And I don’t just mean shorts and a t-shirt hot. I mean humid and hot, as if I was breathing soup instead of air. I grumbled into the house about having to go out later and water all my flowerbeds and gardens, checked on the goldfish in the pond, and went inside to deal with Velcro-kitty.

The cat was GLUED to me. For some reason, beyond my understanding at the time, she was absolutely wigging out. And she wanted to sit rightthere, attached like Velcro to my hip, as I tried to check my email.

We’ve been in need of rain for quite some time. It’s so hot that plants are getting scorched in the sun.

I decided that I was going to sit down, pay the fuzzy minion some attention, have an adult beverage, and relax, to shake off the cranky-pants mood I was in.

And then it began to pour down rain outside, sheeting against the front windows, thunder booming and echoing outside. No wonder the cat was freaking out. She’s terrified of loud storms, and had known it was coming. It rained and poured and there was lightening and thunder.

And then I realized I’d forgotten to get the mail. Luckily, the mailbox is on my front porch, which has a roof over it, so I could step outside and get the mail and take a minute or so to watch the storm without getting wet.

And then I saw it. It was a package I’d been waiting for. It was my author copies of the anthology coming out this Friday. It was the first time I’d seen my own fiction in print, the first time I’d seen my name as a byline under a title of one of my own stories, the very first paid publication credit I’ve gotten.

I started grinning. It hasn’t stopped yet, twenty hours later.

(Yup, that’s my hand. I couldn’t figure out another way of taking the picture without terrible glare from the overhead ceiling fan.)

There is nothing on this earth that jollies one out of a bad mood faster than seeing your own name in print for the first time.

And I’m still smiling.

(FYI, it is available for pre-order on Amazon now, and the release date is THIS FRIDAY!!)

RIP Allan W. Eckert

I’ve loved books for years.

When I was a kid, though, there was a bit of a disconnect. For some reason, I thought of writers as famous people and not people with normal lives. I thought they’d all live like rock stars and in glamorous towns and houses with all the books anyone could ever want, and that they would all live in New York or Hollywood and wait for movies to be made of their books. (hey, I was eight; give me some leeway here-I don’t think I was too much past believing in the Tooth Fairy and the Easter Bunny.)

Then I learned that there was a renowned book author living not ten miles from where I grew up. He’d been nominated for seven separate Pulitzers. And he wrote A LOT. Big door-stopper sized books, and a bunch of them, mainly dealing with nature, Ohio and Midwest history, and Native American history. As I grew up, I learned that more people knew his name than I realized.

But he lived in Bellefontaine, Ohio. In my neck of the woods. Nothing wrong with Bellefontaine. Like a lot of small Ohio towns, though, it’s cute, not glamorous. It’s small, not glitzy. And it was home, not some exotic locale with palm fronds and beach fronts.

That didn’t really burst the bubble of venerating authors in my heart of hearts. Instead, it lit a fire under me. If this guy from Bellefontaine could be a well-known author, why couldn’t a girl who grew up in West Liberty, just ten miles away? It made the dream of writing more accessible, more realistic. Hey, I realized, it is possible for me, this small town girl from the Midwest, to write and be successful at it. 

Still working on the success part. But the writing, oh, I’m doing that.

He’s not the only writer in the area. Far from it. But he was the first one I’d heard of that was successful enough to count in my eight-year-old brain as a “Writer” and one who was known for being a writer. Probably that was influenced because my dad and my uncles read his books voraciously and I saw them lying around all the time. I read one of his books, years ago, as a teenager. (The Frontiersmen, and I remember being fascinated by the history in it, and how it all related to real life places that I’d seen and been to and heard of).

Now don’t be thinking that I’m talking down about Ohio, about the Midwest, or about my hometown or the surrounding area. I’m not. I am saying that when I was a kid, for some reason, I had a belief that writers just didn’t live here, weren’t from around here, and didn’t come from here. Mr. Eckert’s success blew that belief right out of the water.

So, when the word came today that Allan Eckert died in his sleep last night at the age of 80, I couldn’t help but remember the unknowing, silent encouragement that he’d given to me as a writer. I’ve never met the man. But I wish his family well, and I will be thinking of them as they work through the condolences and good-byes and services. And it’s hard not to say a small prayer of thank-you for this man, for providing an example to me that being a writer wasn’t wishing on a star that could never come in…much like any other goal in life, it’s something anyone can aspire to as long as they work for it, they sacrifice for it, and they are willing to put the time in to learn. It’s a goal that doesn’t matter where you live or who you are, because it’s not about any of that. It’s about the writing. I can live with that. And I can do that.

For more information, please click on the following links.

http://www.springfieldnewssun.com/news/springfield-news/blue-jacket-author-allan-w-eckert-dies-1203153.html

http://www.allaneck.com/index.html

Official Pub Date

For those who don’t know, my short story, “Poltergeist on Aisle Fourteen” is being published this summer in an anthology entitled MYSTERY TIMES TEN 2011.

I just got word that the official publication date is July 22, 2011.

It’s already showing up on Goodreads here.

It will show up on Amazon in the next week or so for pre-order, and will also be available through the Barnes and Noble website.

More news as I get it!

Curiouser and Curiouser…

 

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/43507275/ns/today-books/

Yesterday I saw a report that J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter books will be available for sale as ebooks through the new Pottermore website, which is scheduled to launch on July 31, 2011.

That’s news, because Rowling never sold the ebook rights to her books, and they’ve never been officially available as ebooks (though there were some illegal copies floating around, I’m sure).

What’s the big deal? Well, on its face, it appears that one of the biggest selling authors, well, ever, has decided to self electronically publish (epub as some call it in shorthand) her books.

Booksellers don’t seem too happy about the development. They were, after all, the ones who sold millions of copies of the print versions of the book. This means that they won’t get any of the profits in selling the ebooks, right or wrong.

It occurred to me, however, that books like the Harry Potter series could encourage more sales of ereader platforms, such as Kindle, Nook, iPad, or Sony Reader. After all, the sales of the Harry Potter books brought more people into bookstores and interested more new readers than many other books over the last decades. It stands to reason that their sudden availability could finally topple those sitting on the fence of whether or not to buy an ereader device squarely into the buying category. Booksellers like Amazon or Barnes and Noble, might actually make out okay; booksellers without their own device might not, because of the lost profits with regard to what they might have made online with traditionally published ebooks. That’s not an argument for a million and one new and different ereader devices to come out, by the way. It’s just something that I had thought of when I read the article I linked to above.

On the other hand, I’m intrigued. There’s been a lot out there about epub. I’ve been watching it all very closely, and I have friends, both published and not, also watching it closely.

Between the recent moves of Barry Eisler and J.A. Konrath into self epub, as well as the moves of Amanda Hocking moving from self epub into traditional publishing, the future of the industry is definitely changing.

I’m definitely watching, although I’ve made no decisions and no permanent choices with regard to when, if, or what, I might consider following down this rabbit hole. And if I did follow it…is it a wise choice to make, a major gamble, or is it blind trust…like Alice and the Drink Me bottle as she went to Wonderland? I don’t know. I’m pretty cautious by nature. I’m watching and waiting to see how some of this shakes out.

 

Ideas versus Story

Writers always have tons and tons of ideas, but ideas aren’t necessarily stories.

I spent most of the evening the other night trading emails with a friend of mine about various writing ideas. Both of us have ideas out the wazoo, but neither one of us really has a story arc thought out for all of them.

In several emails, we discussed a zombie Christmas story, my current novel (THE GRIMM LEGACY), my plans for my next novel, her multitude of ideas for futuristic romance, Judy Garland, romantic suspense, steampunk, my idea for a Victorian supernatural monster hunter, and Caleb Carr’s CREEPY CREEPY CREEPY novel THE ALIENIST. (Which I have to say fascintated me, because I have a degree in Criminal Justice, and there were all these cool historical crime-fighting and forensic things that I had read about in college on the history of law enforcement and corrections.)

Anyway, back to the point; I get weird ideas, and I get them at weird times. I sometimes call myself the Queen of the Weird Mental Connection. Here’s an example.

Several months ago I was walking through an outdoor store with a friend and got very quiet. My friend asked several times if I was okay, and I made some non-committal pre-verbal noise meant to shut them up and reassure them at the same time. We repeated the process several times throughout the store, and when we got in the car to leave, my friend inquired again if I was okay.

I said I was, but that I’d had an idea. My brain had tumbled pretty far down the rabbit hole, exploring the idea (zombie deer hunters), and it took a bit for my brain to file it away.

I have yet to write this. I may never do so. I needed to process the idea (especially while surrounded by lots of camo pants and ammunition), and figure out if I had a PLOT to go with the idea. I still don’t, even though I keep coming back to a similar idea. It’s not enough. Writing “zombie deer hunters” twenty thousand times is not a novel.

There seems to be some misconception out there that writers need ideas. Believe me when I say that they don’t. Ideas are everywhere. Ideas are a dime a dozen. An idea is generally not enough to write an entire book or even a short story.

Ideas are the fuel that the plot engines run on. You might have a killer idea, but it needs more than that. Once you have your idea, the next question really needs to be about what kind of story you want to tell. And then it’s about the next idea that takes you on the path to tell your story.

An idea is the start. It’s the first step on the journey, but the journey is made up of multiple steps. You don’t finish the journey until you’ve taken more steps.

That’s also why writers gnash their teeth at people who propose to come up with the idea so that the writer  can write the book and split the proceeds. You’re saying you’ll take the first step, and they should take the remaining 9,999 steps and give you 50% of the profit. Um, didn’t we all learn in kindergarten the idea of ‘that’s not fair’? And truthfully, it isn’t, unless the idea-haver is willing to pay the money for the writer to write the book the way they want it. That’s a different kind of writing, and that’s okay. I know people who write on contract for others; people writing a publisher-owned series, people who write media tie-ins (i.e., Star Wars novels, World of Warcraft novels, and more). That’s nothing to be ashamed of, but that’s not the same thing.

On the other hand, it’s okay to share ideas. Ideas are not copyrighted. If I said redneck zombie deer hunters to a group of writing friends, someone would write about a zombie apocolypse wearing camoflauge and plaid flannel, some would write about hunting zombie deer, some would write about the deer taking on the zombies. Some would write about zombies in a trailer park. Those are totally different ideas.

Now, it’s completely okay to call up a writer friend and say, “I had this weird idea. You might want to use it.” It’s okay if they disagree. It’s okay if they agree. An appropriate thank you for the idea, if it is used?

  • A mention in the acknowledgements page, if the book gets published. Or a free, personalized, signed copy of said book to the person with the idea. Even an Advanced Reader Copy (aka ARC).
  • An opportunity for the idea-haver to be a beta-reader. As in, they read it first!
  • The writer taking the friend out for coffee.
  • A small (and I mean $10 or less) gift certificate.
  • Flowers
  • A thank you note.

And that’s up to the writer. Not the idea-haver. And the writer’s not required to do any of the above. They are nice gestures. The idea-haver is entitled to nothing when the writer used the idea and turned it into something bigger. The writer did the work.

Of course, the writer’s response may well be to encourage the idea-haver into writing it themselves. And that’s good, too. The writer and the idea-haver may not think of all the same things, the same PLOT, if you will, so they would end up writing entirely different books.

CAVEAT: There is a difference between sharing an idea, and someone ripping off your story. There have been lawsuits about this kind of thing. It’s unethical. If you write and try to sell a story about Larry Rotter, who goes to school in a castle to learn about magic, who has two best friends, a pet owl, and a wicked scar on his forehead, I would bet that you will hear from attorneys representing J.K. Rowling. And quickly. I said IDEA. Not copyright infringement.

My friend and I talking about steampunk would come up with entirely different ideas. She writes mysteries. I tend toward fantasy and paranormal, which likely has mystery elements. We’d write different futuristic stories. We’d write different mysteries, even if we started with the same core idea.

Just recently, an attorney I know called me with a story of something that happened to him. Personally, I would have been creeped out by the whole thing, and I told him so, but it was a heck of an idea to use in a book. It’s not an entire plot. I don’t know the settings well enough to write his story, but it brings up an interesting idea to use in a story of my own. Don’t know if I’ll ever go there, but it’s interesting. He knew I wrote fiction, and wanted to share it. I’m good with that. I appreciate the story, and the idea. It’ll bounce around in my brain for a while for me to decide what, if anything to do with it.

My point? Share ideas. It’s okay. Understand that the idea will not make you rich and famous. It probably won’t make the writer rich and famous, but even if it did, the most you get is a cup of coffee, a mention in the acknowledgement section, and bragging rights. It takes WAY more work to come up with a complete plot.

Another Fun Release!

So I completely spaced.

My friend, Stephen Saus, has a new story in an anthology that came out March 2. He let me know about it, and in the midst of work insanity and grand jury craziness, I just haven’t been on much to let people know about it.

Sorry, Stephen! I didn’t mean to forget…

I have not read this story, but I’ve seen some of his other stuff, and it’s really good. I’m looking forward to seeing it myself! Check it out!

You can catch up with Stephen and all his doings here.

And you can go order a copy of the book here. Just like I’m going to go do right now.