Could be. I think I picked up some bad habits from having my initial audience be a writers group that meets once a week to read passages about ten pages long. I realized on editing that I kept re-explaining backstory in a way that made sense for a readership that got the story in small chunks once a week, but NSM for someone sitting down to read a novel in the usual fashion. I thought I'd corrected it on edit, but maybe not completely.
River ,'Safe'
The Great Write Way
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
You can't hurry voice. You can't force it. Some writers are born with it, some writers develop it, some don't ever develop it but manage to have very nice careers writing anyway. And what Bev says about why readers read a particular genre is something that ought to be embroidered on a sampler somewhere. It's one reason I'm glad I don't write strict genre.
Allyson, I'm not surprised the friend loved it. So did I.
I am going to kill my DSL, which is double posting and then turning itself off...
All I seem to do these days is drop in with links. ::sigh::
That said, here's the latest:
Lit Idol begins search for author
The second Pop Idol-style search for literary talent has begun ... The 2004 winner, Paul Cavanagh, went on to sign a deal with Harper Collins.
This year, the competition is specifically looking for a crime writer.
Writers must submit up to 10,000 words from the opening chapters of their novels and a synopsis.
>[link]
This year, the competition is specifically looking for a crime writer.
They might as well have said, "This year, the winner is Erika."
I've decided not to stop worrying about it exactly, but to limit my worry to whether or not I should continue trying to sell Lucy once I've finished this edit or concentrate all my energies on writing Anna and trying to sell it once it's done. I'm glad I'm doing this rewrite. If nothing else, it's strengthened my sense of Anna's background and issues for her story. But maybe I'm being too pigheaded in my desire to sell my very first novel, just because other people have been known to do it. It's not like it's the only or even a particularly important marker of talent or career success.
Aw, shucks, Polter-Cow.
Thank you.
It does have a certain inevitability about it, doesn't it?
But the damn thing just won't write itself. Stupid novel, making me work!
"I bought a screenwriting program...I thought it would do a lot of it."
Christopher Moltisanti
The Sopranos
You guys aren't gonna start doing this to me, are you? "Oh, that book was disgusting. Bloody and smutty and violent. I thought of you."
Kind of unrelated, but my former CW prof (Miriam Toews A Complicated Kindness just won the Canadian Governour General's Award for fiction. I'm feeling so damned proud.
Also, I've got a completed series of dialogues that a friend wants to me to adapt to be a film short... Wondering if anyone has experience with this sort of adaptation and/or wouldn't mind opining whether or not they can even see them working in this way? (no rush)
Just a quick thanks to betas who have gotten back to me on the teaching essay. I'm sorry if I haven't replied individually to your comments yet; just got home last night and am working today. I have the rest of this week off, so I'll be getting back to you soon.
It sounds like, despite minor suggestions with some wording, you all mostly seemed to think it was publishable. Woot! Thanks! I'll start pursuing that angle next week.
Kristin, I have it, but I'm frelled: I'm posting at Kinko's, because our router died, and I can't access my email at home until Nic installs the new router (plase heaven, sometime today).