Cool. Something for my E-reader, it's been hungry for new content.
Buffy ,'Beneath You'
The Great Write Way, Act Three: Where's the gun?
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
That feedbooks site is interesting (the place Holli's book is at). I like how it puts things into so many formats including Kindle. It's something I can definitely see as being useful for distributing a free book.
Has this been linked to?
"I'm going to write a Novel."
"For the love of all that is holy, why?"
Heh, Gud, I saw that last week and was howling because every single writer I know has had that conversation with someone, at least, in part.
By the time it got to the last minute, all I could think was, "It's James Frey's life story..."
By the time it got to the last minute, all I could think was, "It's James Frey's life story..."
Heh.
Hopefully my expectations are low enough. I'm hoping literary agents won't send me back mail-bombs to prevent me from writing in the future.
Don't bomb them with a blanket mass e-query, don't slip a manuscript beneath the door of a bathroom stall, and make sure you know what gender an agent is before you address the salutation and you should be good.
Seriously-- my agent is up to something like 180 queries on the same book, from the same guy. He just keeps sending them, every few days, like guerrilla warfare. He even numbers them in the subject line.
Wow, with the same book? Why would you even think that would work?
My plan is short, controlled bursts, just a few at a time. I've still got to do a final go-over and writing a synopsis to have at the ready before trying to forge queries. And that's after finishing this revision (80% done).
I'll be sending out a short story before then, but that's not quite the same kettle of ducks.
I got letters like that with submissions all the time. "This is the next New York Times bestseller! Together, we're going to make piles of money!"
My favorite submissions were always the ones from prison, though. Which is not the same thing, but was always highly amusing.
Barb, we get those guys at our pissant litmag too...did that one ever write a poem about the hypothalamus? Because he needs a hobby desperately. Sometimes I'm not sure why I'm writing this novel.
I started listening to a copy of Twilight I checked out from the library. I got curious because I keep hearing alternatively how good (my aunt just commented that is was really well written) or how bad it is, and I figured it might be an interesting thing for my blog. (http://www.iplayawriter.com).
I don't think I was really prepared for how dull it has been so far. Though the dullness may be largely because I am not now, nor have I ever been a teenage girl.
On the novel front I'm now about 75% through my current revision and my wife is kindly looking through it finding errors (not many so far :)) and suggesting adjustments (a fair number of those, though they help chip away at word count). I think it's significantly improved since the days people were generously beta reading here.
I've also replaced some of the names to make them a bit more fantasy-ish out of concern of taking some readers out of the story. I'm going for not-contemporary but pronounceable with characters from the same locations sharing name roots. The MC is no longer named Aimee. It's sort of sad.