I wanted some kind of little gift to give my friends who have supported me in my goal of publishing my own work. These are some ideas for window decals. What do you think? I’d love to read your comments!
Posts Tagged With: self-publishing
My Notes on Reading Like A Writer by Francine Prose
Reading Like a Writer by Francine Prose
Rarely do I like a nonfiction book enough to read it from cover to cover and take notes voluntarily. I did for this book because there was some stuff I just didn’t wan to forget. This is good stuff! My notes were as follows:
Close reading: Reading a book “closely” allows you to see beyond the plot, characters,
and ideas in the book.
Words: Word choice tells the reader about the author and shapes the tone of the story. It shows why certain writers endure.
Sentences: Look at the really great sentences! Sentences are what writing is about.
Paragraphs: Paragraphs are the completeness of the work and give it a musical quality, a rhythm.
Narration: Who is listening? On what occasion is the story being told and why? Is the protagonist projecting this heartfelt confession out into the ozone, and, if so, what is
ithe proper tone to assume when the ozone is one’s audience?
Character: Characters are defined by how you describe them, what they say, and what they do.
Dialogue: You can’t and shouldn’t try to make fictional dialogue sound like actual speech.
Details: God is in the details. They make the story and drive it.
Gesture: The description of gesture sets good writing apart from common. Common writing describes common gesture while good writing shakes things up.
Learning from Chekov: Books are still the best way of taking great art and its consolations with us on the bus.
Reading for Courage: The fear of writing badly, of revealing something you would rather keep hidden, of losing the good opinion of the world, of violating your own high standards, or discovering something about yourself that you would just as soon not know, prevent people from writing. Literature is an endless source of courage and confirmation.
A few more links
I just posted a few more publishing links! These didn’t fit in with any particular experience I’ve had, but they are excellent resources. Here they are:
Some important info for authors from a self-publishing site: http://www.authorhouse.com/AuthorResources/default.aspx
Penguin Publishing’s Author’s guide to online marketing: http://us.penguingroup.com/static/pdf/misc/penguin_authors_guide_to_online_marketing_summer_2008.pdf
WikiHow’s article on self-publishing: http://www.wikihow.com/Self-Publish-a-Book (I especially like the “Tips” at the bottom!)
I found the link I mentioned a few posts ago about which gave me the idea for my “Think Tank”! It was tucked away in One Note “where I wouldn’t lose it”. Hehe! Silly me! I’ll put it in the article too for you later taters. http://jaynie2000.hubpages.com/hub/Publishing-Tips-for-First-Time-Authors
Megan Michaelis Photography Shout-out!
I want to post a special thanks to Megan Michaelis and her beautiful headshots of me! Working with her was a pleasure and she took some fantastic photos. She was extremely accomodating, allowing me to take my headshots along with my family photo session, and I really appreciate that.
Thanks again, Megan!
http://www.meganmichaelisphotography.com/
http://www.facebook.com/#!/MeganMichaelisPhoto?sk=info
michaelisphoto@gmail.com
Why I Love Microsoft OneNote (as a writer)
I don’t know if any of you writers out there have a “crazy train” of thought like I do, but Microsoft OneNote is something wonderful, I’m telling you! I am. Right here. (If you’ve been reading the blog, you understand about the “crazy train”.)
First of all, it is very flexible and I can put everything in one place or I can make a new notebook or a new page or a new un-filed note for whatever I want. I have a notebook for my personal book reviews with a page for Wins and a page for Fails, a page for Manga reviews, a page to list the ones I have moved to an excel spreadsheet, and another of the books I have downloaded on Overdrive (from the library in case there is one I read but didn’t review).
Reviews, by the way, have been an excellent tool for me to use my reading addiction to fuel my writing compulsion. I can remind myself with each review what was good or bad about the book and then remember to do or not to do that!
I also have a notebook for each of my books, and it is extremely useful when I need to organize my thoughts outside of Word while I am working. I am easily distracted and frequently find myself finally getting to a place in my book to change something but forgetting what that was. But! If I switch over to OneNote, where I have been “showing my work”, I can see exactly what I need to do. I can even write it there before wedging it into my manuscript.
My Disenchanted Pet notebook will be my example:
- The first page is all about the themes I want in the book and the other deeper workings of the book.
- The second page is an outline page. My outline is vital, but changes constantly and OneNote is flexible enough to take it.
- The third page is random cut-and-paste content for when I take something out I want to keep, or need to organize something for the writing.
- The fourth page is just for comments and ideas from my Think Tank, so I can keep track of comments and ideas they have made.
- The fifth page is just for listing stuff I want to change or “tune up”
- The sixth page is Bios of my characters, so I can be sure everybody is consistent.
- The seventh page is actually on this blog, my list of “Things to do” for my book.
- My author profile has the next slot, where I can put all permutations of my Author Profile blurb.
- The eighth page is my acknowledgements, to put into the book when I publish.
- The Ninth is my copyright page.
- The tenth is my dedication page.
- The eleventh is all my editing notes from my recent edit, and my responses to her comments by number.
It is so easy to add in things I want and take out things I don’t, never having to worry about saving because it somehow keeps every change without losing them. Only once did I get a “corrupt file” and lose the book reviews I had transcribed from my email to OneNote. That was the last thing I had done before the problem, but everything else was there.
The caboose for today’s crazy train will be the beauty of the dedicated email address. I set one up for myself just for my personal and writing notes, and I can email from my phone. Wherever I am, as long as I don’t forget to bring my phone, I can email my sacred email account and all my thoughts go right to my email inbox, on my laptop, where they are the most useful. TaDa! I highly recommend it even if you aren’t a writer. It works for shopping, calendar planning, bad memory, and to-do lists, among other things.
The edit is here!
If you friended my Facebook profile, you would see that my edit came! It is a “first rough draft” edit, but after 2 months, it is glorious no matter what! I didn’t blog it yet because I had to wring all of the juice out of it as fast as possible. I know I have irritated my easy-going editor, and she appears to be irritated by my writing as well. Sigh.
I am a complete noob at this, so I could be getting played, or I could be completely unreasonable. My editor is a noob too, so that helps.
My tip: Do get a deadline. I didn’t really have one or need one, but it would have been nice to have a date forecasted instead of just winging it.







