Monday, January 21, 2013

A Step in the Write Direction--January 21, 2013


A Step in the Write Direction
January 21, 2013
Update:
January Special: 10% editing discount on book manuscripts if paid in advance (by check or through PayPal).
RIP Stan Musial! I met Stan in the Philadelphia airport a number of years ago. He was passing out autographed photos. Gave me one and asked me if I wanted more, so I got one for my brother and son. We talked awhile, discussing the on-going baseball strike, then I asked him if I could take his picture. He said okay, if I'd wait till we got to St. Louis. When I boarded the plane, he was sitting in first class with another man (bodyguard, I don't know). I thought, "Yeah, he knows that by the time us peons get off the plane, he'll be long gone." To my surprise, when I got off at St. Louis he was waiting for me. Handing my camera to his friend, he put his arm around me and now I have a picture of the two of us together.
No great news to report this week! No health problems, no proofreading jobs, but a couple of editing jobs. Finished an ABC picture book and sent it to the publisher, the same one who’s publishing the Rhyme Time Bible Stories for Little Ones picture book.
Goal this year: MARKETING! I have about 12 manuscripts finished that need to be sent out. For some reason, editors aren’t knocking at my door (or my e-mail box) asking if I have anything!
Thought for Today:
"Don't be so preoccupied with the destination that you bypass the beauty of experiencing God in the journey" (Dr. Stephen Trammell).
Laugh for Today:
A church congregation decided to have four worship services each Sunday. There was one for those new to the faith; another for those who liked traditional worship; one for those who'd lost their faith and would like to get it back; and another for those who had bad experiences with churches and were complaining about it. The church came up with a different name for each of the four services: "Finders," "Keepers," "Losers," "Weepers."
Guest Blog
KIMBERLY RAE
Author, Speaker, Former Brave Girl
13 Tips for Writers

1. If you want to be a writer, you have to be willing to learn, be rejected, and work hard.

2. Wherever you are at in your writing expertise, you have a lot more to learn. Be teachable!

3. There is an overwhelming amount of information and options on the internet. Find a few resources/blogs/people you trust and stick with them for most of what you need to know. It gets very overwhelming doing random searches for information, so do it sparingly.
4. Major publishers are harder to get in than ever. If you don't have a following of thousands of people already, expect it to be nearly impossible. I know that's disappointing, but I'd rather tell you now than tell you that after you waiting 6 months for a rejection letter.

5. Subsidy publishers are eager for your book, but that's because you will be paying them and so they will make money whether you do or not. I have not heard of one yet that has worked out to an author's benefit. Be very careful about any publisher that makes you pay them first--and that's not for printing books, it's for the actually publishing of your book (and possibly some "marketing" on their part, usually this runs in the thousands of dollars before you ever see your first book).

6. Self-publishing is easier, cheaper, and you get a book a lot sooner than other options, but know that you are the 100% sole marketer responsible. If you are self-motivated, have a great message, and believe in your book, this can work great for you. Self-publishing is also good for someone who only wants to run a few copies rather than ordering hundreds up front (if you do POD—Print On Demand—rather than one that starts the print run in the hundreds of copies).

7. If you choose to self-publish, PLEASE create a good product. I can't tell you many books I've seen and read from Amazon that have typos, grammatical errors, very homemade covers, or just aren't good writing. Kindle and POD have helped make self-publishing not the stigma of lack-of-quality it used to be, but books like that put the whole group down again.

8. Whatever you decide about publishing, get an editor or have lots of people read the book before you ever put it out there. You can have 50 people read it, and the 51st will find that elusive typo everybody else missed. Believe me, it happened to me, except the person was about the 450th and the book was already on the market! Find people who will give honest feedback. This is one of my favorite parts in the process because I get to experience my book from a new reader's eyes. What was confusing? Did I get a fact wrong? Can I make this clearer? Is it age-appropriate?

Typos can really change your storyline...and they lived sappily ever after....oops, I mean happily ever after!
Let's eat grandma...or rather Let's eat, grandma.
He was doping...I mean hoping.

9. Print-On-Demand is the cheapest way to self-publish. I'd recommend Amazon's Createspace. They are user-friendly, have great customer service, and are connected with Kindle, so you can put it up easily on e-book as well. I sell about 3 e-books for every paperback, so getting in with Kindle is important.
10. Spend time on the extras. You may have a fabulous book, but if the two paragraphs on the back are boring, people aren't going to read it. Why spend so much effort on the inside and then fall short on your author bio or your back cover or the one sentence you put on the cover?

11. Invest in a great cover. People say you can't judge a book by its cover, but we all do. With Amazon, especially, you're not picking books off shelves and looking through them. People are scanning pages and pages of covers and if yours is boring, or worse, looks cheap, there are millions of better ones to choose from. If you don't know what I'm talking about, just go to amazon.com and check out the covers.
12. Don't let rejection stop you. When I used to write a lot of articles for magazines and such, I began to expect 9 rejections for every 1 acceptance. Once I got the hang of who to write for and how, that number got better, but it was a realistic way to start. There are lots of reasons for being rejected that don't mean your work is bad. Keep going till you find the right readership (unless your work really is bad, in which case, learn and improve!).

13. Don't use God as an excuse for poor quality. That may sound mean, but agents and publishers get wary when someone says, "God gave me this book," or "The words are God’s, so..." and then proceed to say that's
 why the publisher really should want to publish it, or they won't take suggestions for improvements. If God called you to build houses, He would still expect you not only to learn how to build houses, but to build them well. If you just started nailing boards together, telling people God told you to build houses, you would get a bad reputation and actually dishonor your testimony rather than honoring God. So if God has told you to write, do so, but work at becoming the best writer you can be so your work honors Him.
There you have it. If you've learned some good lessons along the way, add to my list! It's always great to learn from someone else, especially someone a few steps farther up the path than we are. Helps us see potholes we might miss from our viewpoint….

Happy Writing! And may you live sappily ever after. =)
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Hope you enjoyed Kimberley’s blog, and have a sappy—I mean happy—week writing!
Donna Goodrich


www.thewritersfriend.net
"A Step in the Write Direction--the Complete How-to Guide for Christian Writers"

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