Silk: Caroline's Story;Tapestry: A Lowcountry Rapunzel; and Homespun.
My Blog:
Friday, June 11, 2021
Meet Addi & Gunther!
Today is my birthday, and my 19-year-old daughter surprised me with this linotype of Addi with her wolf-dog, Gunther. Addi is the protagonist of my as-yet-to-be-published YA (young-adult) fantasy novel. I was over the moon at seeing this! No, my daughter hasn't had any sort of specific class in how to create linotypes, just got the notion to do it, so looked it up online. She says this is still unfinished; somehow she's carved the lines in a tile, then inked it and pressed it onto a paper. This was a 'sample' of what she's working on, she says. Anyhow, it seems very period, as they used to create images with woodblocks and ink them onto paper for mass distribution. I could bore you with bragging about how innately talented my daughter is--but she has had art classes ever since she was little, and she even just took an art class at UGA. Hopefully you'll be seeing more of Addi and Gunther one day sooner rather than later, but it may be a while, since Tapestry is next in line after Silk!
Friday, May 21, 2021
Silk a Finalist In Its Very First Contest!
What a thrill to find out that Silk received an award in the category of historical fiction in an international contest!
Inspired by a writing friend’s success at an entirely different writing competition, I submitted the revised version of Silk for the Next Generation Indie Book Awards 2021. How did I choose that one from the many? Well, it was the next one (recommended by some book publicist) due from among the ones I looked at! So, in a big rush, I did something I don’t know if I’ve ever done before—I paid extra for fast shipping to send the three required copies to them! (In my case, they were advanced reader copies, of course.) It always helps me to have deadlines so that I’ll get a move on things.
Speaking of deadlines, the contest has had a profound effect on another very pertinent one—because the organization will be publicizing its winners, Silk’s release date has been bumped up to June 30th! The e-book is now up for pre-order on Amazon—so do go ahead and reserve your copy if you read a Kindle and would like to ensure it’s delivered as soon as it’s released. As it becomes available with other vendors, I will try to keep you posted. If you prefer to own a paperback copy, mark your calendar for June 30th, when it will be available to order.
So, I suppose one might say that the Next Generation Indie Book Awards has lit a fire under my butt not once, but twice! Very efficient of them. But it’s quite alright. I’ll bear such difficulties gladly. In fact, the day I found out about the award, my cheeks hurt from smiling so much .
Wednesday, May 19, 2021
Silk on the Beaches of Hawaii!
Thursday, May 13, 2021
Writing Tip #2: Listen to Your Novel
Listen to your novel—and I mean this literally! Once you’ve written and edited your book to where you think you’re about ready to fling it out into the world, take a few extra days and listen to it being read aloud. You will catch redundancies, extra words, and awkward sentence structures that your glazed eyes just pass right over on the screen or on paper. After all, you know what you mean already, and it’s hard to read it so closely. Trust me, it is invaluable to hear the words spoken aloud.
Brace yourself. The
digital voices that reads your book in their relatively-flat monotone are nowhere
near as wonderful as those brilliant voice actors who will one day make your
work(s) sound like near-poetry. Nonetheless, once you’ve steeled yourself, take
your story for a walk—or listen while you do chores, pet the critters, paint a
canvas… You may very well need some
therapeutic activity to get through it, but it will be worth it in the
long-term for your book if not in the short-term for your morale! Keep in mind
that the advantages for your morale are more significant in the long run.
Various programs will read aloud your writing for
you, but I use my Kindle Fire’s text-to-speech function with my Word documents,
for which I’m infinitely grateful. Keep
reading if you want the instructions on how to use this device to listen to
your audiobook, but otherwise, good luck and good listening! Please do share with me your experiences with
other text-to-speech programs in the comments.
As for the Kindle Fire, sometimes the voice glitches, and I have
to continually check to see if I really had a typo, or if it’s just the voice
narration. It’s usually the narration, but I’ve also caught many typos this
way, so don’t neglect checking. It is a
hassle, though.
However, for all that I disparaged the monotone of the voice, it’s
actually quite remarkable how well the auto-narrator reads the text. So many inflections! The pitch changes, even, when she reads conversation,
to distinguish it from the other text.
Really impressive, honestly.
The Kindle document is slightly troublesome to set up the first
time, as you’ll need to go into your Amazon account and tell it to allow
documents from your email address to go through to your Kindle. Here’s the procedure (at this point in time):
- 1. Log into your Amazon account.
- 2. Click on ‘Account & Lists’ at the top right of the page.
- 3. Under ‘Digital Content & Devices’, click on ‘Manage Your Content & Devices’.
- 4. Click on ‘Preferences’ (it’s on a white bar header at nearly the top of the page).
- 5. Click on ‘Personal Document Settings’.
- 6. Scroll down to ‘Approved Personal Document E-mail List’. Under this you’ll see a link for ‘Add a new approved e-mail address’.
Whew! There you are. I
think you can take it from there. Took me ages to figure all that the first
time.
Once you’ve had your own email address approved, you can e-mail
yourself attached documents at the email address listed in 'Personal Document Settings' under 'Send-to-Kindle Email Settings'. I usually use my Word documents—I don’t believe it
will even read a PDF aloud for you, though you can still send it to read to yourself.
But the Word documents can be better manipulated—fonts altered, too. The reading
speed can even be changed.
Oh, but the documents don’t go right through! No, sirree. Amazon will send you an email
asking if you want that document to go through to your Kindle, and you’ll need
to approve that within a limited-time window.
I usually just stay in my email account after sending a document so that
I can approve it, watching for that confirmation-request email from them (maybe
check ‘other’ and ‘junk’ folders if you don’t see that email right away).
Make sure your Kindle is connected to Wi-Fi or a Hotspot. Your
document will very likely not show up right away, however. Mine usually don’t. I often have to Sync my device (that’s under the
‘Settings’ app on the Kindle Fire, way down on the menu) and then turn off my
Kindle completely before I can get it to show up (after I turn it back on, of
course). It might take a few minutes and another sync or two. The troublesomeness of this varies, actually.
Sometimes it’s easy-peasy, and other times I’m frustrated as hell. But it’s best to go into it expecting a bit
of a hassle.
Now, originally on my Kindle Fire’s Home Menu, the Documents App
was clearly visible right off, but for some reason Amazon has restructured my Kindle
Fire’s Home Page so that I have to go into the Utilities Folder to find my
Documents App. I click on this, and my
emailed documents show up here.
Once your document downloads and you pull it up, you can tap on
the screen to see various options. At the bottom right, there should be a text-to-speech
option with a little sideways-triangle ‘play’ button. Tap it to listen! The Kindle will scroll through the pages
while it reads aloud, and you can actually sit there and read it at the same
time as you listen. That might be a wise thing to do, but I generally just keep
the Kindle nearby so that I can easily mark whatever needs fixin’. You don’t even need pencil and paper. You can find the spot on your document, press
on the word to highlight it, and press 'note' to enter your correction or
thought. When you’re done for the day, I
advise entering those edits as soon as possible, while you remember them. There’s an icon at the top of the page that
looks like a page with lines across it. I use that to instantly retrieve my
notes and marks so that I don’t have to scroll through the entire book
endlessly. It’s scary, but I delete
these as I go—do save your Word document often on your computer as you’re
making the corrections—so that I don’t miss any in the endless-seeming list.
I usually don’t bother entering a note, actually. I just use a color-coded system for the
highlighters. Blue means there’s a redundant word, change one of them. Red
means delete. Yellow means ‘Pay
attention; this is kinda weird’. Orange
means ‘Change this! What were you thinking?!’
You can also bookmark the text.
That option is two over from the ‘note page’ icon.
Okay, so that sounds like a lot of hassle, but it’s worth it to
review your book in a different way. You’ll
be surprise how much you catch by listening to it. And you might even enjoy the listen. I do on occasion.
Thursday, April 1, 2021
Anxious People by Fredrick Backman Is Oh-So Depressing!
I do NOT recommend the book Anxious People by Fredrick Backman. It is well-written, and there is a sort of dry wit, but is oh-so tremendously depressing. The author portrays a series of miserable, hopeless lives and often purposely misleads the reader. Nothing so finely done as The Sixth Sense, where the twist at the end was plausible. No, this is simply an unreliable narrator—well, does that imply it was intentional? It’s obviously intentional. Annoyingly so.
But seriously, don’t read it. One of the author’s more subtle tricks towards the end, if I understood it correctly (I listened to the audiobook and didn’t back it up), was to make you think for a moment that one woman had jumped off a bridge (a minor, surprising plot point). The story was so depressing throughout that by that point, I almost found it a relief! Needless to say, when I realized she hadn’t, I wasn't as glad as you’d expect, which struck me as dire. But again, I’ll say that there is a snarky wit that keeps you listening/reading, and the author wraps things up tidily at the end--almost too neatly, as if the smidge of hope that the author is giving you is fake, just a nice, 'happy ending' for the book. The connections between the characters’ pathetic lives unfold slowly, and that part is well done. If you do choose to listen to the audiobook, stick through to the end, at least, as the narrator will provide you with a hotline number for if you’re feeling suicidal. You may need it.
Friday, March 26, 2021
Writing Tip #1: Finish a Novel Using Daily Word Counts
To write my very first rough draft ever, I used a 30-day novel-writing kit by the founder of NaNoWriMo (originally National November Writing Month). It had inspirational cards, one a day, and a calendar to fill in with my progress. I loved it! The most important part of this kit, however, was its emphasis on and support for keeping up daily word counts.
It really isn't so impossible to write a novel in a month! Less than 2000 words per day can bring you to a short-novel-length work. For an optimal word count of 70,000 to 80,000 words, however, a writer probably needs to extend well past the 30-day cycle. My daughter used the process effectively in a month-long break from school, keeping up her word counts, but her novel was not near to being done when her time ran out, and she never did get back to writing on it--not yet, anyhow (I keep hoping she will; she's incredibly gifted). Some authors may find it works to just stick to that 50,000-word initial draft length, making sure to wrap it up shortly after hitting the mark, and then go back to add descriptions and metaphors and senses later--all those things that draw in readers. Sometimes you'll add extra scenes--and at other times you'll delete redundant sections. I can be extremely redundant, I've found!