White trash musical poetry at its best, I say!
“Now I’ve got them. . . .
steadily depressing,
low down,
mind messing,
workin’ at the car wash blues.”
Music Monday – Jim Croce
White trash musical poetry at its best, I say!
“Now I’ve got them. . . .
steadily depressing,
low down,
mind messing,
workin’ at the car wash blues.”
Love in Bloom – blog hop
All you have to do is follow me and leave a comment stating your favorite swoooony scene–preferably from a book (but I won’t judge if you absolutely LOVE, say, the end of While You Were Sleeping when dreamy Bill Pullman shows up at Sandra Bullock’s train station hut and drops a ring in the coin slot. Swoooon!) Don’t forget to leave me your email addy.
One winner will be chosen at random on May 23rd.
Thanks for stopping by and being part of this special hop! Now you can check out all the other great giveaways featuring other contemporary/lighthearted, sweet & clean romances….
Love in Bloom – blog hop
All you have to do is follow me and leave a comment stating your favorite swoooony scene–preferably from a book (but I won’t judge if you absolutely LOVE, say, the end of While You Were Sleeping when dreamy Bill Pullman shows up at Sandra Bullock’s train station hut and drops a ring in the coin slot. Swoooon!) Don’t forget to leave me your email addy.
One winner will be chosen at random on May 23rd.
Thanks for stopping by and being part of this special hop! Now you can check out all the other great giveaways featuring other contemporary/lighthearted, sweet & clean romances….
What I’ve learned from editing
As many of you know, for the past few weeks, I’ve been living in Edit Heaven: eating, breathing, sleeping my manuscript. “Abby Road” is really shaping up thanks to the wise (and, I’m sorry, freaking brilliant) notes from my editor at Entangled Publishing.
Maybe I’ve been viewing this whole process through proverbial rose colored glasses, but. . .seriously, I’m having such fun! Writing is the love of my life, and I’ve felt (practically) nothing but joy as I’m understanding my darling, precious characters more and more, and while seeing them through different lights and angles.
That isn’t to say, however, that there haven’t been some hard lessons and some tough love. My editor is kind but she also tells it like it is. Which I’m so very grateful for.
Here are some things I’ve learned:
Be true to my characters. When I’ve made a point of writing particular personality traits, it’s unfair to create a scene with them behaving in a different way. Real people aren’t like that. And since I’m writing about “real” people, I am obligated to stick to that rule. Real people do real things.
Be clear not cutesy. Editor thought one of my characters was Jamaican because of the dialogue. He’s not. So, apparently writing accents is not my current forte. Another lesson learned.
Sometimes readers get bored. Really? Come on now. But this is the greatest story in the world! Otherwise, why did you buy it? Yes, yes. But sometimes even the most interesting stories can get bogged down. . .either by too much description or too much dialogue. Mix it up. Keep in interesting. Make your lovely readers keep guessing.
Leading readers down a path only to slam into a dead-end isn’t cool. (see Breaking Dawn. Really? Bella is trying to get fake ID’s? Then what? I’m still ticked about that!) One of my very minor subplots came to a climax, and I originally decided to have it end in nothing–almost as if it was the reader’s fault that they cared about it. (Which I’m sure would make plenty of readers angry had they been watching that storyline develop.) This was pointed out to me. And with a few adjustments, that subplot worked itself out in a much more satisfying way. Again: Be true to characters.
Sometimes humor unintentionally comes across as sarcastic or even mean. Yeah. I have this problem in real life too. There are no emoticons in manuscript writing, so there’s no way to add a ” 😉 ” after saying something snarky while trying to be funny.
Build tension and don’t give everything away in the first three chapters. Well, duh. But honestly, it’s not as easy as it sounds. For me, at least. Perhaps because I know my story so well and have been living in it for so long, I figured that no one would “get” the secret and I could plant a million clues and expect my audience to be as dumb as I am. You’re not. And thanks for that.
Throwing in a sudden revelation in the last act doesn’t work. Maybe I thought this was kind of a fancy sneak attack, but when there are very few (if any!) clues along the way, having a main character, say, admit they have some disease in the last chapter–which is why they’ve been acting so crazy the whole time–is sloppy and unfair.
Not every smart character should sound British. Yes, I had an issue with this. But I don’t anymore.
Sometimes smexy is besty. Going back to being true to my characters. I had to make a pretty important decision about them fairly late on in my editing. I’ll admit, I wrestled with it for a while. But what it comes down to is: This is something these characters would do. Keep it classy and keep it sweet. And the smexy will be there. I find this to be true. Just wait. . . .you’ll see.
I love my story and I’m so excited for the changes I’ve made; they’ve done nothing but strengthen in ways I never imagined. I do wonder, however, if I’ll be as enthusiastic after our third round of edits. I sure hope so!
What I’ve learned from editing
As many of you know, for the past few weeks, I’ve been living in Edit Heaven: eating, breathing, sleeping my manuscript. “Abby Road” is really shaping up thanks to the wise (and, I’m sorry, freaking brilliant) notes from my editor at Entangled Publishing.
Maybe I’ve been viewing this whole process through proverbial rose colored glasses, but. . .seriously, I’m having such fun! Writing is the love of my life, and I’ve felt (practically) nothing but joy as I’m understanding my darling, precious characters more and more, and while seeing them through different lights and angles.
That isn’t to say, however, that there haven’t been some hard lessons and some tough love. My editor is kind but she also tells it like it is. Which I’m so very grateful for.
Here are some things I’ve learned:
Be true to my characters. When I’ve made a point of writing particular personality traits, it’s unfair to create a scene with them behaving in a different way. Real people aren’t like that. And since I’m writing about “real” people, I am obligated to stick to that rule. Real people do real things.
Be clear not cutesy. Editor thought one of my characters was Jamaican because of the dialogue. He’s not. So, apparently writing accents is not my current forte. Another lesson learned.
Sometimes readers get bored. Really? Come on now. But this is the greatest story in the world! Otherwise, why did you buy it? Yes, yes. But sometimes even the most interesting stories can get bogged down. . .either by too much description or too much dialogue. Mix it up. Keep in interesting. Make your lovely readers keep guessing.
Leading readers down a path only to slam into a dead-end isn’t cool. (see Breaking Dawn. Really? Bella is trying to get fake ID’s? Then what? I’m still ticked about that!) One of my very minor subplots came to a climax, and I originally decided to have it end in nothing–almost as if it was the reader’s fault that they cared about it. (Which I’m sure would make plenty of readers angry had they been watching that storyline develop.) This was pointed out to me. And with a few adjustments, that subplot worked itself out in a much more satisfying way. Again: Be true to characters.
Sometimes humor unintentionally comes across as sarcastic or even mean. Yeah. I have this problem in real life too. There are no emoticons in manuscript writing, so there’s no way to add a ” 😉 ” after saying something snarky while trying to be funny.
Build tension and don’t give everything away in the first three chapters. Well, duh. But honestly, it’s not as easy as it sounds. For me, at least. Perhaps because I know my story so well and have been living in it for so long, I figured that no one would “get” the secret and I could plant a million clues and expect my audience to be as dumb as I am. You’re not. And thanks for that.
Throwing in a sudden revelation in the last act doesn’t work. Maybe I thought this was kind of a fancy sneak attack, but when there are very few (if any!) clues along the way, having a main character, say, admit they have some disease in the last chapter–which is why they’ve been acting so crazy the whole time–is sloppy and unfair.
Not every smart character should sound British. Yes, I had an issue with this. But I don’t anymore.
Sometimes smexy is besty. Going back to being true to my characters. I had to make a pretty important decision about them fairly late on in my editing. I’ll admit, I wrestled with it for a while. But what it comes down to is: This is something these characters would do. Keep it classy and keep it sweet. And the smexy will be there. I find this to be true. Just wait. . . .you’ll see.
I love my story and I’m so excited for the changes I’ve made; they’ve done nothing but strengthen in ways I never imagined. I do wonder, however, if I’ll be as enthusiastic after our third round of edits. I sure hope so!
Music Monday
“All of your wallowing is unbecoming…”
doncha just LOVE a great lyric?
Music Monday
“All of your wallowing is unbecoming…”
doncha just LOVE a great lyric?





