That fine line between art and product is difficult to draw, but it’s essential to protect your sanity. It’s not news that artists are highly creative people, typically with a teensy bit of mental instability (it comes with the territory). I mean, doesn’t everyone have a bit of the crazy when our imagination comes into play? When you were a child, those shadows wouldn’t have turned into monsters without your brain being on the fritz. And that’s exactly why when we create something we are inherently attached to it. We love it. We hate it. But overall, it is a piece of us.
In order to get your writing out in the world though, you need to separate yourself from the art and view it as product. Your book is ...
Sorry for the interruption, but The Artist Unleashed posts have moved to a new domain. Please click HERE to read the rest of this post and for the opportunity to comment.
In case you haven’t noticed, Facebook has built a neat little widget called “Trending” that now appears on the right hand side of your news feed. This widget is supposed to act like Google Trends, informing you of the news that is popular around the world (or at least around the internet) at that moment.
Why am I telling you this?
Because, as a writer, there is going to come a time when you (the writer) will have the opportunity to be a part of a trending news topic. During this moment in time, assuming that reporters can find you and that your network is set up properly, you (and your work) will be ...
Sorry for the interruption, but The Artist
Unleashed posts have moved to a new domain. Please clickHEREto read the
rest of this post and for the opportunity to comment.
The video below is of me miming to "Mr. Lee" by The Bobbettes, and was recorded as a special way to wish Lenny Lee a happy 15th birthday today, and to tell him how much we miss reading his blog! Where are you Mr. Lenny Lee?!
It's hard to believe that I met Lenny five years ago, when he was only TEN. He has been a part of so many bloggers' lives; loved and cherished dearly. These five years have meant a lot, as he's been through many battles with his leukemia. But he's a strong young man, and will forever be my indoor sunshine.
Lenny, I hope this video makes you smile. We miss you! And HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!!
First, I’d like to thank Jessica for
reading (and supporting) my memoir, SEVEN LETTERS FROM PARIS. I’ve known
Jessica “virtually” for almost five years now. (I can’t wait to meet her in
person one day!)
Not only is Jessica a remarkably talented author and a great
friend, she is the go-to gal for writerly advice. So, today, in keeping with
theme of my memoir, and Jessica’s amazing blog, I thought I’d post my top SEVEN
tips regarding the crazy world of publishing and writing. Some of this advice
you’ve heard before. And some of it applies to how I actually sold SEVEN LETTERS FROM PARIS.
1) EARN YOUR RACING STRIPES!
Work on your craft. Connect with other
writers. Learn the business, albeit traditional or self-publishing. Read in
your genre. Build up your platform, your social connections. No matter how
supportive she is – your mother is NOT a critique partner or a beta reader! And
neither is your sister, spouse, or best friend. Put your work out there. Yes,
with strangers. One of the best resources on the web to learn the business AND
connect with other writers is http://www.absolutewrite.com/forums.
Also, if you write middle grade or YA, check out Verla Kay’s “blueboards,” now
located on The Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators site: http://www.scbwi.org/boards/
2) REVISE. EDIT. REPEAT.
Unless you are extremely rare (or an alien
from the planet Wordsmith), your first draft will most likely be a steaming
pile of cr@p. But you haven’t wasted your time. The great thing about writing
is you can always dust yourself off and turn the page. Revise. Edit. Repeat. It
took me four drafts and many revisions before SEVEN LETTERS turned into a
saleable manuscript.
3) DON’T LET CRITIQUES or REJECTION or BAD
REVIEWS GET YOU DOWN.
Take critiques with an open mind and never get
angry. Let advice simmer for a day or two before sending off a scathing email. Your
writing partners want the best for your story. When critiquing others, I always
apply the sugar, salt, super-sugar method. (What’s good about the story, what
needs work, and what totally rocks). Separate yourself from the story,
especially if you’re writing a memoir. We’ve heard this time and time again:
publishing is subjective. It’s true. And I think we can apply the same
principals to bad reviews. Remember, people aren’t critiquing you. (If you ever
receive reviews attacking you personally,
these people have severe emotional problems. And we can’t fix them.)
Note: A friend of mine recently offered
this advice: don’t focus on reviews or book stats; write your next book. (I’m
about to cross this bridge. I’ll let you know how it goes.)
As for rejection, the first ones buzzing
around in your inbox sting like an attack of malicious killer bees. Just
remember, although there is pain, you’re not going to die. You’ll know you’ve
become a seasoned writer when you can actually
laugh at rejection. In fact, I received a rejection from an agent I’d queried one
year earlier...the day I sold my memoir to Sourcebooks. Ha-ha-ha! Instead of
responding, I opened up a bottle of wine. Cheers!
4) HIRE AN EDITOR.
Whether you want to self-publish or ease (ha!)
on down the traditional publishing road, I really can’t stress how important it
is for you to hire a well-seasoned editor. I did. And it was the best decision
I’ve ever made. My editor didn't change my voice, or fix grammar issues, or
re-write my story. He asked me the hard-hitting questions. He suggested cuts.
And additions. Things my alpha readers didn’t catch. I told him to “bring it
on,” that I had thick skin, and could handle whatever he threw at me. We revised
the manuscript again. We polished the book proposal up. Then, I enlisted an
army of beta readers. Once I could no longer stand to look at my manuscript, I
sent it off in the world, trying to land a new agent.
This didn’t happen.
It
was then I decided to take my book into my own hands and I pitched SEVEN
LETTERS to Sourcebooks. I figured if I didn’t sell the manuscript, I’d be in a
much better position to self-publish. A few weeks later, the unexpected
happened. Sourcebooks offered me a publishing contract, which I signed once I
stopped doing a happy dance. A year later, they sold foreign rights to Random
House Australia and, so far, translation rights to Lithuania and Bulgaria. So,
yes, hiring an editor to fine-tune SEVEN LETTERS was worth every damn penny. But
the work didn’t end there. My editor at Sourcebooks, Anna, and I revised my
manuscript two more times before it was sent on to copy edits. Which brings me
to my next point...
5) PREPARE TO WORK HARD! BE PATIENT!
It took me five books and seven (there’s my
number) years to land a publishing deal. Now, I have two books coming out
within two weeks of one another. (Tangent: I’m probably the only author with a
romantic memoir and a middle grade about mutant kids coming out at the same
time. Who needs a pen name? The truth? It always comes out!) Once an
agent/editor picks you up or you make the decision to self-publish, the work
doesn’t stop. If you thought writing a book was time-consuming, just wait until
you enter the marketing phase. There are endorsements to snag, events to plan, guest
posts and interviews, and more. Look at what our friend, Jessica, has
accomplished with her White Lady
tour! (She’s on my blog today, which brings me to point six...)
6) SUPPORT OTHER WRITERS!
Honestly, I’ve been in the midst of
launching two books, so I haven’t been on the blog scene much. But I am here behind
the scenes, offering my support to my network. I do what I can when I can. I
buy books (when I have the money). I leave reviews. I sign up for blog tours. I
critique my writing group’s manuscripts. There are about twenty-or-so people who
I can call on when I need them, and, likewise, they can always call on me.
We’re all in this together.
7) NEVER GIVE UP!
In sum, my publishing journey wasn’t easy and there were no short cuts. (Some people get lucky! We will lynch them later.) Along the way, I made many, many mistakes, and I broke a lot of rules. Alas, if you really want to be a writer, the most important advice I can give is: Never give up! Sometimes I call myself Seabiscuit. Thankfully, I found the right people who believed in me and pushed me forward. Now that I’ve earned my racing stripes, it’s off to the races. And, if I fall down, I’ll just dust off my knees and get back up. Giddy-up.
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SEVEN LETTERS FROM PARIS: A MEMOIR:
Twenty years, seven letters, and one long-lost love of a lifetime
At
age 40, Samantha Verant's life is falling apart-she's jobless, in debt,
and feeling stuck... until she stumbles upon seven old love letters
from Jean-Luc, the sexy Frenchman she'd met in Paris when she was 19.
With a quick Google search, she finds him, and both are quick to realize
that the passion they felt 20 years prior hasn't faded with time and
distance.
Samantha knows that jetting off to France to reconnect
with a man that she only knew for one sun-drenched, passion-filled day
is crazy-but it's the kind of crazy she's been waiting for her whole
life.
Watch the book trailer:
Jean-Luc and Samantha in Paris 1989.
Praise for SEVEN LETTERS FROM PARIS
“A
charming story, and a delightful tribute to the power of a good
old-fashioned love letter.” ~ Peter Mayle, bestselling author of A Year in Provence
“Seven Letters
from Paris is a real-life fairytale. You’ll be rooting for this bubbly
American heroine and her prince charmant.” ~ Elizabeth Bard, author of Lunch in Paris: A Love Story, with Recipes
“Enchanting. A
captivating real-life fairytale romance that will have you reading
slowly so you can savor every delicious word. Castles included!” ~ Janice
MacLeod, author of Paris Letters
“Seven
Letters from Paris is a celebration of l’amour across cultures and
across decades…Samantha Vérant embraces France, and her French love,
with an all-American enthusiasm that is nothing if not infectious.”~ Hilary Reyl, author of Lessons in French
Samantha Vérant is a travel addict, a self-professed oenophile, and a determined, if occasionally unconventional, French chef. She lives in southwestern France, where she's able to explore all of her passions, and where she's married to a sexy French rocket scientist she met in 1989, but ignored for twenty years.
Three-quarters through a critically-acclaimed young adult novel, a book that had completely taken over the spare minutes of my life for two days, I stopped reading. I not only stopped reading, I chucked the book to the other end of the couch. I even stuffed it back onto the shelf for a while. Suddenly, I hated that great book.
Why?
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First let me thank Jessica for letting me share a little bit more of me and who I am… or at the very least whom I want to be.
I am Jeremy and I run several sites, make art books, sell t-shirts and I am sure a few more things that I just cannot think of. I started most of my sites six years ago with the intention of offering my world to you the reader, sharing my crazy obscure thoughts, and well, hope to spring a few coins.
From a cocoon to a butterfly, from design after redesign I feel ... Sorry for the interruption, but The Artist Unleashed posts have moved to a new domain. Please click HERE to read the rest of this post and for the opportunity to comment.
Need more ways to promote your work? Here's a new idea for you. Over the weekend I was a guest on The Alliance of Independence Authors Self-Publishing Advice blog, talking about how to reach readers with your own product catalogue. The beginning of the post is below. Click here to read more.
Being an expat author and musician in Athens, Greece, I am not often given the opportunity to attend live literary events. To do so, I need to travel. And that is expensive. So I focus my efforts on reaching readers online, as it’s the most cost-effective and time-efficient promotional tool for me.
But recently, the organizer of a six-day cultural art festival called Art Links here in Athens contacted me about being involved in a couple of events there. I’m going to be a part of a poetry reading and a prose reading. Both events also involve a Q&A panel of authors and an opportunity to hand-sell my products.
Making the Most of Offline Opportunities
I thought to myself, Hand-sell my products? Really? I’m actually going to have the opportunity to talk to potential readers face-to-face and tempt them with my pretty paperbacks and CDs? Finally! I was excited, but then … extremely daunted.
I have a backlist of fifteen books and six albums. I would also have to carry a receipt book with me and be sure to write one up, on the spot, for every purchase (strict laws here). And considering there is likely to be an attendance of 50 – 100 people at each event, that would mean carrying a load of … how many books exactly? ... Continue reading HERE.
If you put a White Lady, two rubber duckies, a man with crooked eyebrows, and a carving knife in a garage for 24 hours, what will you find in the morning?
White Lady is IN THE HOUSE! To
celebrate the release of my latest novel, WHITE LADY,I am giving away an e-copy (mobi, ePub, or PDF), and a $10 Amazon gift card to the person who answers the above question the most creatively in the comments. Be sure to leave your email address!
If you win, you will be notified personally by email within 48 hours.
Want more chances to win? You can comment on as many blogs and Facebook posts as you wish for a chance to win the book. In each post you will be given three statements about me, or the book. Two are lies and one is true. You need to guess which statement is true. The first person to answer correctly within 48 hours on each post will win a copy of the book. Also, at the end of October, one random commenter will be chosen from all the posts to win a $50 Amazon Gift Card (or cash via PayPal). Click HERE for blog and Facebook links.
_____________________
Now I have a small favour to ask. Please please please help spread the word through Twitter and Facebook, and any other social media platforms for me. It would be very much appreciated!
Here are a couple of posts to make it easier for you.
Just copy/paste and tada!
For Facebook
Do you like to read psychological thrillers? Well, Jessica Bell's giving away her latest release, WHITE LADY, for FREE. Comment on as many blogs and Facebook posts as you wish for a chance to win the book! At the end of October, one random commenter will be chosen from all the posts to win a $50 Amazon Gift Card (or cash via PayPal). Visit this link for a list of blogs to leave your comment. Jessica will be very happy to see you! http://goo.gl/5Y24av
For Twitter
Comment on @MsBessieBell's #WHITELADY tour posts 4 over 100 chances 2 win! http://goo.gl/5Y24av #thriller #chicknoir #contest #newrelease
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*This novel contains coarse language, violence, and sexual themes.
Sonia yearns for sharp objects and blood. But now that she’s rehabilitating herself as a “normal” mother and mathematics teacher, it’s time to stop dreaming about slicing people’s throats.
While being the wife of Melbourne’s leading drug lord and simultaneously dating his best mate is not ideal, she’s determined to make it work.
It does work. Until Mia, her lover’s daughter, starts exchanging saliva with her son, Mick. They plan to commit a crime behind Sonia’s back. It isn’t long before she finds out and gets involved to protect them.