Friday, June 25, 2010

Topics, trailers, contests and conferences…

Topics, topics, topics…

I’ve discovered coming up with a topic or topics to cover in a blog can be brain racking and time consuming. I start researching one topic and another pops up and I get sidetracked into reading about that topic and pretty soon, I have absolutely no direction and not enough information to write about anything.

So, I’ll put aside those thoughts until I can research them thoroughly and present them with some semblance of intelligence (don’t laugh).

Trailers, websites and contests…

It seems another writing friend, Summer Falls, has created an outstanding trailer for her book “Stellar Surprise”, which is a lovely erotic fairy tale and is available through breathlesspress.com. To see her trailer go to http://summerfalls09.blogspot.com/ —both the trailer and Summer’s story are beautifully crafted.

***

A good friend of mine, Dawn Boeder Johnson, has recently launched a website called www.menopausepress.net. She describes the website this way - Menopause Press is for writers and readers interested in literature for women, by women, and about women.
Yes, men are welcome, too!

Dawn offers writing tips and tricks and maintains a blog. Each month she features new works of fiction, poetry and art that are usually, but not always, created by women. Currently, Menopause Press, is running a contest for both short works of fiction and poems. The deadline is July 31, 2010, so go to menopausepress.net and check it out. And if you’re feeling adventuresome and start digging around in archives or click on artist bios, you might find a little blurb about some crazy woman named Margaret Clark, who is in reality, me. There is a short poem of mine posted in the archives there called “No End”.

Not being one to sit around and what for the next great thing to come along, Dawn has a second website called www.word-edge.com. At word-edge she offers editing, critiquing and proofreading services, plus help with cover letters and resumes. Services a writer, or just about anyone, could use.

RWA’s Annual Conference…

I am getting a little jazzed about RWA’s conference coming up at the end of July. I managed to snag an editor’s appointment with Linda Fildew from Harlequin Mills & Boon Ltd. I did my research before hand and know that Linda is interested in author’s who write Regency Romances, my preferred genre.

So, not having had any experience with interviewing with an editor, I tapped my cousin, KC Carlson, on the shoulder to ask for advice. KC was an editor for DC Comics for 10 years. Currently he freelances and works with comic book authors and artists. He and his wife, Johanna, have a website called www.comicsworthreading.com where they both review comic books and recently released DVDs of television programs. Although it’s mostly Johanna’s reviews you’ll find there, with KC as a contributor. KC also writes a blog for www.westfieldcomics.com.

I know part of KC experience includes meeting authors and artists at conferences and trade shows where they would pitch their ideas to him in hopes that DC Comics would be interested. I asked him for any advice he would have liked to have given to the people sitting across the table from him. He told me, be confident. He said the one thing he found with so many artists and writers was their lack of confidence in their work. Too many times he spent most of the interview building up the artist or author’s confidence. You know your work, he said. Go forth and present it in a confident and intelligent manner and half the battle will be won. He also advised getting to know a little bit about the editor so you could have some common ground to stand on with them. So, I’m doing both of those things and have been working on a short presentation of my book (I only have 10 minutes with her, kind of like speed dating) and doing google searches on her name, which has produced several things, so wish me luck.

Well, for not having any thoughts really collected about what I was going to blog about, I managed to bang out over 675 words.

Any thoughts? I'd love to hear from you.

ttfn

mc

Friday, June 18, 2010

Blogging, romances and other things

Thoughts on blogging

Blogging, a strange new world for me but one I’ve consider exploring for a quite while. A friend of mine, a fellow romance writer and published author, began her adventure into the ‘land of blog’ months ago when she was fortunate enough to have her first book published (check out this link - http://www.breathlesspress.com/erotic/heart-of-the-maze.html). Since then Rain has been encouraging me to join in on the fun too. Even more than that Rain Chapman, Summer Falls and I have even discussed joining forces and establishing a blog that three of us will maintain while promoting our work and helping others with theirs. At this point our plans are in their infancy, but as thing progress I’ll discuss them here with links to our joint blog.

For now, if you’d like to check out Rain’s blog, here’s a link to that as well - http://rainchapman.blogspot.com/ Rain has also produced an amazing trailer to promote her book that you can see at her blog as well. It totally rocks, IMHO.

Reflections on romance writing

Three years ago, just before my youngest child graduated from high school, I began working on my first romance novel. After years of being an avid romance reader, I wanted to write the stories that had been banging around inside my head. I have completed my first novel and have begun the search for someone who is interested enough in my story to publish it. I have also completed my second novel, which I am heavily editing now.

One particular question has been asked of me when I tell people I’m writing a romance novel – why romance? For me romance has always been about escapism in its purest form. The feeling of becoming someone else while I’m lost in the pages of a romance is nearly as potent as any drug. A good romance pulls you in and takes you away from day to day worries. Giving you a refreshed state of mind so that you can deal with the laundry, kids, balancing the checkbook and even listening to the evening news, which lately is so distressing it is unbearable. Romance is heartbreak, wonder, denial, forgiveness, passion, love and an HEA (that’s romance writer speak for happily ever after).

Have you ever wondered what actually classifies as a romance? The RWA National describes the genre this way –

Two basic elements comprise every romance novel: a central love story and an emotionally-satisfying and optimistic ending.

A Central Love Story: The main plot centers around two individuals falling in love and struggling to make the relationship work. A writer can include as many subplots as he/she wants as long as the love story is the main focus of the novel.

An Emotionally-Satisfying and Optimistic Ending: In a romance, the lovers who risk and struggle for each other and their relationship are rewarded with emotional justice and unconditional love.

One other interesting tidbit about romances, during tough economic times romance novels outsell nearly every other genre. I believe that the reason for this is basic. People need an escape from the troubles that surround them, whether those problems are personal or the troubles of the world around them. Romance novels provide that escape into another world and at a reasonable price, something sorely needed during sucky economic times.

Any thoughts? I’d love to hear from you.

And as Tigger would say – ttfn

m