The Big Dreams blogfest is hosted by myself and Misha Gericke.
We set goals and each month we meet to discuss our progress.
In July I accomplished NOTHING!!
Yep. I'm supposed to be writing 2 Woman's World Stories/month.
I wrote 0.
I should have one book edited and half way through writing the next.
I'm half way through editing one.
I'm supposed to be blogging at least twice a week and commenting on 10 others. You guessed it. 0.
But there is ONE thing.
I've been working on my thesis manuscript for a year. I finally made the hero--probably one of the most hated people in history--likable. I guess that's an accomplishment.
Goals for August (Bet some of these sound familiar--since they were goals for June)
read book RIG
crits for CP
revise thesis
revise His First Lady
revise Before Hope Dawned
write 1 Womans World Short
Sub Woman's World Short
blog 2x/week
visti 10 blogs/week
Get off candy
work out 3 days a week
How did you do in June? What are your goals for August?
Friday, July 29, 2016
Monday, July 25, 2016
DIY MFA: Contemporary Romance Reading List
This semester's reading list is for contemporary romance and women's fiction.
Have you read any of these? Are you going to read along with me this semester?
(By contemporary we mean recently published, so you'll notice not all of these books are what we would call contemporary in the blog-o-sphere).
Romance:Brenda Jackson, A Brother’s HonorRobyn Carr, Virgin RiverKristin Higgins, The Best ManWomen’s Fiction:Linda Goodnight, The Memory HouseTerry McMillan, Who Asked You?Debbie Macomber, A Girls Guide to Moving On
Have you read any of these? Are you going to read along with me this semester?
Wednesday, July 13, 2016
I'm Alive!
Hi All,
If you're reading this after more than a month of neglect, thank you.
I'll have a real post up this weekend and start posting regularly again. I thought I would just pop in to say I'm alive.
If you're reading this after more than a month of neglect, thank you.
I'll have a real post up this weekend and start posting regularly again. I thought I would just pop in to say I'm alive.
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
IWSG: Getting It Done
IWSG couldn't have come at a better time this month. I need to finish a novel. Today. I wanted to have it done yesterday. And as with any novel there comes the questions of the unknown. Will it sell? Will it get horrible reviews?
But I think today I would settle for just getting the book done. I haven't published anything since 2014. And I'm hoping to release a complete trilogy this fall starting with His First Lady, a book about a marriage of convenience between a Presidential candidate and a grad student who happens to be a Senator's daughter. But I want to have the second book written before I release the first so that I can release within a month of each other then release the third a month later. My goal is to release August 15, September 15, and October 15.
And speaking of releases--because writing a book isn't enough to do--what is the best way to launch now? Do you have suggestions?
What are you insecure about this month?
But I think today I would settle for just getting the book done. I haven't published anything since 2014. And I'm hoping to release a complete trilogy this fall starting with His First Lady, a book about a marriage of convenience between a Presidential candidate and a grad student who happens to be a Senator's daughter. But I want to have the second book written before I release the first so that I can release within a month of each other then release the third a month later. My goal is to release August 15, September 15, and October 15.
And speaking of releases--because writing a book isn't enough to do--what is the best way to launch now? Do you have suggestions?
What are you insecure about this month?
Saturday, May 28, 2016
Update Day: The Real Update
The Big Dreams Blogfest is hosted by myself and Misha Gericke.
I put up a dummy post yesterday saying I was drafting like a maniac hoping to report I had a draft today. Yeah. That didn't happen. I wrote a whopping 200 words and spent most of the day getting life in place. I've been working a temporary day job since January which ended yesterday. The good news is I'll have more time to write. The better news is I've got things in order so that I can take a few months to find a job. The not so great news is it's going to take me even longer to be able to hire a publicist which I desperately need.
My goals for 2016:
Increase my count to a million by two hundred thousand words. (I estimate I've written about 50k this year. I'm going to have to write like mad through December which will be hard with everything going on.)
Get romantic fiction published in woman's world ($800/short would help with next goal)
Make $1,500/month writing at least one month this year.
Get my thesis novel through the first pass
Complete 20 graduate hours (I've completed 10. This will happen by December.)
Find a new job (I quit the day job due to migraines). (I did this, but it was temp so now I have to do it again.)
Get off Coke-Cola
Find a better writing/life balance. (I either don't write at all or abandon other parts of life.) (Not happening)
Make $500/month writing at least one month before June (This did not happen.)
Goals for June:
I put up a dummy post yesterday saying I was drafting like a maniac hoping to report I had a draft today. Yeah. That didn't happen. I wrote a whopping 200 words and spent most of the day getting life in place. I've been working a temporary day job since January which ended yesterday. The good news is I'll have more time to write. The better news is I've got things in order so that I can take a few months to find a job. The not so great news is it's going to take me even longer to be able to hire a publicist which I desperately need.
My goals for 2016:
Increase my count to a million by two hundred thousand words. (I estimate I've written about 50k this year. I'm going to have to write like mad through December which will be hard with everything going on.)
Get romantic fiction published in woman's world ($800/short would help with next goal)
Make $1,500/month writing at least one month this year.
Get my thesis novel through the first pass
Complete 20 graduate hours (I've completed 10. This will happen by December.)
Find a new job (I quit the day job due to migraines). (I did this, but it was temp so now I have to do it again.)
Find a better writing/life balance. (I either don't write at all or abandon other parts of life.) (Not happening)
Make $500/month writing at least one month before June (This did not happen.)
Goals for June:
- client edit
- read book for res
- crits for res
- outline 2nd Pennsylvania Avenue book
- revise His First Lady
- revise Before Hope Dawned
- Write 10,000 words
- write 1 Womans World Short
- Sub Woman's World Short
- Get off candy
- work out 3 days a week
How did you do in May? What are your goals for June?
Friday, May 27, 2016
Update Day
So. This is a dummy post. I will have my real update post up by 9 a.m. CST tomorrow. I'm drafting like a maniac today to get as close to done with a draft of this book as possible to have something to report.
Tomorrow after I post I'll be around to check blogs.
Love you guys!
Tomorrow after I post I'll be around to check blogs.
Love you guys!
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Twilight: A Classic
Twilight: A Classic
My book of choice will forever be Twilight by Stephenie Meyer. For me,
this book is magical. Before I found Twilight,
I rarely read and when I did it was theme-packed literature commonly known as
literary fiction.
Then my
husband rented a vampire flick he heard a lot of girls liked. His slasher flick
sparkled, shined, and left me wanting more. I tore through the YA section of
B&N. I wrote a horrible NA paranormal romance about the redemption of Judas
before NA was a thing. I didn’t let anyone read it, but I kept writing romance.
(And Judas is being redeemed through an MFA).
Most readers will have a strong
emotional response to a classic. Twilight
can claim that. It inspired me, and it inspired a generation. A quick
Google search lists pages of Twilight inspired
blogs, weddings, tattoos, wedding cakes and fan-fiction including 50 Shades of Gray. A lot of people hate
the book. That’s okay, because when they tell you how much they hate it, they
get very detailed. They might not be willing to admit it, but the story and/or
characters struck a chord or they wouldn’t be so vehement in their hatred of
it.
The best
reason to look at this book as a romance classic is because it “changed the
landscape of romance.” (Regis pg. 107). As a middle school student reading YA,
I loved The Face on the Milk Carton. Janie
had a really good boyfriend and I wanted him. While I don’t think The Face on the Milk Carton was genre
romance or even romantic suspense, it was the most romance filled thing my
school library owned. So much so that they refused to order the sequel. After Twilight hit the market and sold well,
YA romance exploded first in paranormal imitations followed by YA contemporary
romance. Adults were reading YA romance, some stated it was more emotional
because the emphasis was on the romance not the sex. In other words, it was
sweet with strong emotional tension at a time when adult romance was not as
sweet and filled with sexual tension. The Huffington Post slide show The Top 5 Reasons Women Love Twilight
cites the Austenian feel in reason number one. The YA romance market bloomed so
remarkably that NA grew out of it. Regis claims the author of a romance classic
“innovated or perfected a main romance subgenre.” (Regis pg. 107). Meyer turned
YA into a main romance subgenre.
Two other
things stood out to me in nearly every book we read this semester: the
characters were memorable and details were filled in so intricately we began to
refer to it as a “slice of life.” As for memorable characters, the heroine was
usually very strong and able to stand on her own. The heroines were so dynamic
they could have easily been put in a non-romance and still survived the
journey. I’m not convinced Jane Eyre didn’t survive a non-romance journey. The
heroes were strong, emotionally closed off before falling for the heroine,
protective, and committed. Though the protection and commitment displayed
itself in different ways from Darcy who tracked down his arch enemy and paid
him off to marry Lizzy’s sister and secure her standing in society to de Valmy
who cruised the entire French countryside in search of Linda and her charge to
Skimmerhorn who was physically protective of Dora. But actions made it clear
the earlier men would have been physically protective if the need arose.
While each story was unique, they
were almost the same story of a wounded hero healed by a caring woman who would
confront her own demons to be with him. There has been a lot of discussion as to
whether Bella Swan is a strong heroine. Interestingly enough, many of the
arguments used to say she is a weak heroine aren’t in the first book. (Later in
the series, she allows Edward and Jacob to battle a vampire army for her, and
she refused to terminate a pregnancy with her life on the line. I found that
last choice very strong and a choice I hope I would be strong enough to make.
As for allowing the men to fight her battle, it took a pack of werewolves and a
coven of vampires to defeat the newborn army. Bella cut herself to change the
direction Edward’s final battle was going, and I’m not sure what else she could
have done). In Twilight, the first
book of the series, a tracker vampire happens onto Edward’s baseball game and
smells Bella. Edward’s protective reaction is a challenge to the tracker and
he’s determined to hunt Bella down and drain her. Edward sends Bella to Phoenix
with his brother and sister to protect her while he hunts for the tracker. But
she thinks the tracker has her mom so she evades her assigned bodyguards and
rushes to meet him alone, putting her life at risk. A bold move. The tracker
nearly kills her, but Edward finds them and destroys the vampire. Edward is
immortal and refuses to get close to people outside of his family both because
he can’t risk the temptation of draining them and because they will die. He’s
very similar to other heroes we have read. And Bella is strong enough to face a
vampire while knowing she’s a tasty treat.
Then there
was the “slice of life” element that played through many of these books. The
world of these characters and their typical day was so well portrayed that we
could imagine ourselves in their lives. We could see their lives. From the dreariness of Rochester’s estate to the
eccentricity of Dora’s theater company family, and the stylishness of her
antique shop. When I chose this book for the final essay, “the slice of life”
is what I hoped to learn how to write. As a reader, I tend to skip details. And
many of the classics we read this semester were too detail heavy for me. I want
dialogue, action, and kisses. I don’t care what color a dress is or how big an
estate is. Twilight managed to give
us these things without the details becoming cumbersome. Each character has
vividly described unique traits that live off the page. And the haze of a
constant cloudy overcast and bitter cold of a place that snows even in June is
hard not to notice. Yet it never becomes overpowering enough to detract from
the story.
Some of the
things that define a classic are outside of a writer’s scope of control. There
is no way to know if a book will withstand the test of time until it has done
so, although addressing universal themes and steering clear of time-marking
technology might help with this. Likewise, we often mix elements of other
genres in our work because most writers have more than one interest. Sometimes
those things catch on. When this happens, elements of that work start to appear
in other books of the genre. The work has expanded the genre. There is no way
to predict that. The other alternative is that the things we mix fail or go
unnoticed. While these are distinguishing characteristics of a classic, it’s
important to focus on things we can control. That leaves us with the emotional
reaction, memorable characters, the “slice of life” feel, and using familiar
tropes.
As
mentioned earlier, my thesis is about the redemption of Judas. In the first chapter
he is at a strip club with his friend. A dancer falls and he comes to the
rescue. She’s sassy and stubborn and he will protect her from that point on.
Judas feels unworthy of affection and incapable of really loving because he
knows he’s a traitor. His relationship with Reese/Rebecca changes all that.
Rebecca is a runaway trying to graduate high school without anyone learning
she’s an underage dancer at a strip club living on a stolen identity. She’s
wanted for murder and smart enough to have avoided arrest so far. This plays on
the tropes of an independent heroine and a protective hero and with redemption
being a huge part of the story plays on a universal theme as well.
However, in the early chapters Judas
(who lives under the alias of Jacob) doesn’t come across as likeable. I’ve
found that neither Darcy nor Edward Cullen come off very well in the opening
chapters, but those books are limited to the female point of view, and Edward
in particular is as mysterious as rude. His disdain for sitting by Bella and
his effort to keep a distance is noticeable, leaving Bella to wonder what she’s
done to offend him or what his problem is. Making Jacob’s internal dialogue
more ambiguous may help some of his actions become questionable rather than
absurd. It may also add suspense. Part of what keeps a reader engaged in Twilight is the desire to learn what is
going on.
As far as the emotional reaction,
I’ve got mixed feedback. Some people have found the story very emotional. One
person said she couldn’t emotionally connect to the story because she hated
Jacob. However, she used very emotional language to tell me how emotionally
lacking it was. But I think making early internal and external dialogue less
harsh and more ambiguous could strengthen the emotional impact.
The thing I need the most work on
and something Meyer does so well is the “slice of life” embedding the right
details at the right places. There are pages of description in the first
chapter of Twilight. Most books would
lose me after a few paragraphs of description, but phrases like, “It was there,
sitting in the lunchroom, trying to make conversation with seven curious
strangers, that I first saw them.”(Meyer Ch. 1). This sentence sparks the
question who is them? And lets us
know something will happen soon. A paragraph later comes the line, “But it was
none of these things that caught, and held, my attention.”(Meyer Ch.1) This
line adds suspense because we know we haven’t found the real focal point yet.
Intertwining lines like these will allow me to flesh out settings and
situations I’ve been afraid to due to a lack of action.
Twilight expanded the terrain of romance and
will withstand the test of time but the most important thing we can learn from
it is to weave suspense into our description and to use the right details to
brighten the worlds we build.
Works
Cited
Meyer, Stephanie. Twilight.
New York: Hatchette Digital, 2005. Ebook.
Regis, Pamela. A
Natural History of the Romance Novel. Pennsylvania: University of
Pennsylvania Press. 2007. Ebook
Weight, Rachel. HuffPost
Women. The Huffing Post, November 17, 2011. Web. May 4, 2016.
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