Thursday 26 February 2015

My Writing Process.

My Writing Process.





I’ve never met a novelist face to face as my two careers - cooking and antiques - didn’t bring me into contact with artists, unless you believe cooking is an art, which I don’t. So when I started to write, and as I have problems reading, I had no experience of producing a novel. I don’t know how other writers and authors write; all I can tell you is how I do it.

I’ve come across different views on the Internet on writing a novel and there seem to be two main camps: plotters and pantsters. I fall into the second category. I write “by the seat of my pants”. I never had any intention to write, then one night I had a dream and had to write, from that night on I feel I have no option: I must write.

When I write I see the action in my mind’s eye. It’s a bit like watching a video. I then become the character I’m writing about - I live their life for a brief moment in time, I see how they see, I think how they think, then when I change to another character I do the same. Unexpected things happen to my characters. Now, I know that sounds a bit daft but as I am walking along the road as one of my characters, a thought pops into their – my - head. I wonder if all writers do this?

I believe I write in this way because I do not read. I’ve not read anything very much. Even when I was young I bought comic books but only looked at the cartoons. I watched television and on TV the story unfolds as you watch. Sometimes you think you know what is going to happen but you are often caught out.
I wrote my first novel in just over seven weeks, I then found an editor Steph, 

I first asked her to critique my novel not knowing if it was OK or a piece of garbage just fit for the waste bin. After a short while Steph got back to me with mainly kind words. She suggested I cut a big chunk out of the novel - to cut the 93,000 words down by 20,000 words. This was a bit of a shock. But of course she was right: it was too big a sub-plot and it took away from the main story.

After I rewrote the story, Steph copy-edited it, then proofread it and it ended up a better story which I am quite proud of.
I would be interested to know how other writers perceive their writing.




Friday 20 February 2015

7 Inspiring Lessons to Get Your Book Written and Published

I have only been writing for just over a year now and to discover a new and unforeseen passion at my age has been a revelation. My writing career started with a dream and has progressed rapidly to self-publishing my first novel entitled “A Questionable Hero”. I have also finished my second novel “Consumed By Fire”; this is being edited by a professional copy-editor as I write, and I have also started my third novel “A Path Not Taken”. These are some lessons I have learned along the way.

1. My Biggest Mistake

When I started writing I was full of enthusiasm and thought my friends and family would be as interested as I was. I would write a chapter and email it to a few friends and wait for their input. Then I would re-write parts of the chapter and send it out again. As you can imagine my friends and family soon became fed up and bored, and rightly so. The lesson I learnt is no matter how hard it might be, keep your writing to yourself until you have finished the first draft. Then get people to read it and ask for feedback.

2. New Technology

With the advent of technology at my fingertips, I have found being dyslexic has not been a great hindrance to my writing. With the help of word processors, spell-checkers and then with a good editor and proofreader, I have created a reasonably professional finished novel that I am proud of.

3. Never Give Up

With my background and poor schooling, I have learnt not to give up, no matter how difficult the road is. If you have a dream, pursue it. Try and see a positive aspect in every setback. Also, sometimes, what appears to be a positive step can turn out not to be. So, keep an open mind and believe in yourself.

4. Old Age Is Not A Barrier

I do not know if I am going to be a successful author, but I do know getting older will not stop me from trying, I think in some ways it might be a little easier, as I have more experiences to draw on. I have used bits and pieces from my past in my stories.

5. Read, Read, Read

If you take notice of other author’s advice and I try to, most say reading is a very important part of writing. I am sure they are right, but in my case and others with reading difficulties, this is not possible. I believe as long as you have a good imagination and take a chance you can win through.

6. Self-Publishing

Self-publishing is not hard to learn. There is a lot of help in cyberspace on the Internet. There are hundreds of blogs, writing groups and useful sites to help you get started, and lots of advice on how to publish. Company’s like Amazon and Smashwords make it fairly straight forward to self-publish. It just takes perseverance and the will to push on.

7. Promoting My Novel

For me, book promoting is far harder than writing. I have tried most of the popular social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn, and have been quite successful in attracting followers and likes, but I am not sure if any of this effort has turned into people wanting to read my novel.
Getting noticed can be hard if your book is not in the top echelons of bestsellers lists. There is the possibility it might go unnoticed. In order to address this, I suggest you do as much as you can, using methods such as guest posting at other blogs, and doing virtual book tours. Another way to get more exposure is to sell more books.