For Authors: June 06, 2018 Issue [#8944] |
For Authors
This week: Investing in Your Writing Edited by: Jeff More Newsletters By This Editor
1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions
"Do not over-intellectualize the production process.
Try to keep it simple: tell the darned story."
-- Tom Clancy
Trivia of the Week: Yang Jiang was a Chinese author, playwright, and translator. After being educated at both Oxford and the Sorbonne, she spent a great deal of her life translating Western classics into Chinese. Most notably, her translation of Don Quixote was not just the first Chinese translation of the novel, but is also still considered the definitive translation today. This is in large part due to the fact that, after learning both English and French, she considered those translations unsuitable and instead opted to teach herself Spanish so she could directly adapt the original Don Quixote text herself.
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INVESTING IN YOUR WRITING
If you're taking your writing seriously, there's probably a point at which you need to consider investing some money in the endeavor. That could manifest itself in a variety of ways, from a screenwriter buying software to make the formatting easier, to attending conferences or conventions for networking purposes, to spending money on editing or cover design if you're an author going to self-publishing route. And with all the different places out there to spend your money, it can be confusing to sort out just how to get the most bang for your buck while avoiding wasting your resources.
While this is by no means an exhaustive or authoritative guide (after all, depending on your individual goals, personality, etc., your mileage may vary), what follows will be some general tips on how to assess whether a potential opportunity is worth spending your hard-earned time and money on.
First, you need to determine whether an opportunity seems like a good fit for what you're trying to accomplish. If you're an extreme introvert, it's probably not a good idea to spend money going to a convention to network, especially if you know that you're unlikely to feel comfortable approaching strangers and striking up a conversation. Similarly, if you're just starting out and publishing your first book, you probably don't need to spend a ton of money on fancy consultants that will develop a marketing strategy for you (if you have one book, your strategy should be to sell that one book and write another as soon as possible!
Second, you need to figure out whether you can actually afford it. While some financial risk is part of being a professional, there's a difference between taking a calculated risk and being irresponsible. Even if you're an extrovert and know you could make amazing connections at ThrillerFest, that's an expensive event to attend unless you already live in New York City. Between plane tickets and a hotel room in the city, you could easily spend several hundred, or even several thousand dollars on those four days in the Big Apple. If you have that kind of money to spend, great. But if that would be a financial hardship for your family, it's not worth going into sustained debt over (or struggling to pay your bills over), no matter how many great connections you make.
Third, make sure you're getting good value for your money. Look at what's really being offered and decide if the price is reasonable. This is particularly egregious in the entertainment industry, where "screenplay consultants" can charge thousands of dollars for notes on a writer's screenplay. They often justify this price by claiming to have been readers for reputable companies (like the movie studios), or claiming to have access to people at those companies who they'll pass your script along to if they really like it... but at the end of the day, we all know that writing is a subjective medium and, at the end of the day, no matter how much a script consultant, or developmental editor, or professional beta reader charges, they're still just one person with one opinion of how to improve your work. It's not a guarantee that addressing their concerns will automatically result in success. Don't buy into hype and baseless promises; make sure you're getting a clear sense of the service being provided (and preferably what kind of value other clients think it has)!
Fourth, look at your other options and decide whether this particular thing is the best way to spend your money. If you're a traditionally published author, there are a million demands on your time. Do you do a book tour? Speak on a panel at a conference? Teach a class? If you're a self-published author without the infrastructure of a publisher behind you, there are even more demands on your time and money. How much are you spending on an editor? How about a cover? And marketing? You need to be able to assess the various opportunities you have and decide which one will maximize your return on investment. Speaking on a panel might get your name out there to potential new audience members, but could that money be allocated to a better cover instead? Or another round of edits?
What all of these steps are really getting at can be boiled down to be responsible about how you spend your money. There are a lot of companies and individuals and services out there that are more than happy to part you with your money. Some of them are intentionally duplicitous, while others may still be taking advantage of writers even if they mean well. All of us who are pursuing writing professionally to one degree or another end up spending money on something at some point... and whenever you're faced with that opportunity, it's worth really scrutinizing those details and making sure you're okay parting with your money (mostly because you know exactly what you're getting out of it).
Until next time,
Jeff
If you're interested in checking out my work:
"Blogocentric Formulations"
"New & Noteworthy Things"
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This month's official Writing.com writing contest is:
I also encourage you to check out the following items:
EXCERPT: Often considered a gift from God, free will is the capacity to be in full control of one's actions and decisions. For hundreds of years, this was not held as belief, it was fact. Then philosophers burst on the scene and did what they have always done: they began trying to answer questions that were previously unasked, even unheard of. Is free will real? Are events predetermined, or might even they be random? Should this be approached scientifically or spiritually? If you ask any ordinary person if they have free will, they'll probably say yes; could this be a mere delusion? If it doesn't exist, what would be the moral implications? I intend to present the case that Determinism is the true phenomenon, but more importantly, I propose that this distinction doesn't matter in the slightest.
EXCERPT: Once in Europe, there was a period when creativity and arts are taken away from people, and people began to feel miserable. Humanity declined. And that is when Europe stepped into the Dark Ages. But then there was a period in the 14th century called the Renaissance. Millions of creations were constituted. At that time, the artists were the ones who saved the people. Michelangelo, Da Vinci, Michael, and a lot more. Their creations inspired the art development.
EXCERPT: The ex-convict's mind raced. He was Jean Valjean. The man going on trial, Champmattheiu, was not. Jean Valjean had been freed, only to stupidly commit another crime. He had stood on a boy's coin and chased him away with a stick, which was considered armed robbery, and would have put him in jail for life. However, he had not been arrested. Years later, after becoming a completely new man, he was free; or so he thought. He was still being searched for, and he had been found. Only, the Jean Valjean that had been found was not Jean Valjean. It seemed a way to get out of his former life completely. Should he take that excuse and forget about the condemned man, or should he turn himself in? Jean Valjean decided to take the honorable way and save the man on trial from life in prison. He made the right choice for three reasons: it was just, it was against his nature to stand by while others suffered, and he would be following God's example.
EXCERPT: Everyone writes for different reasons: every writer is following a unique and sometimes lonely path. And yet - after storytelling for money most of my life - I feel there are certain suggestions to make your work more insightful, more readable, and more emotionally accurate. One or more of these ideas may appeal to you. If they all sound good, feel free to do them all.
EXCERPT: Sharon, I'm writing this note, not for instructive purposes...(I feel like a blind man grouping around in the dark) but rather to help pull together and encapuslate a broader picture of how one expands their thinking to better write a novel. My search is based upon how writing a novel evolved into its current form and what are the building blocks upon which it is based.
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Feedback from "For Authors Newsletter (May 9, 2018)" about writing yourself into your stories:
Boulden Shade (fka Jeff Meyer) writes: "Grrr! I hate it when authors do this. When Stephen King would have a character refer to a Stephen King book in a story, I thought that was cool, that it really gave the story an anchor in the real world. But when he became a character in the Dark Tower series, I was VERY turned off. I would warn whoever wants to use this trick to consider it very carefully. You might be better off simply writing in first person. Anyway, that's one reader/author's feedback on the topic. Thanks for the post! --Jeff Meyer"
I think you hit the nail on the head. When done well (i.e., subtly or cleverly), this technique can be great fun and give the reader the feeling of being a bit of an insider. When done poorly, it can be really grating and off-putting. Thanks for writing in!
willwilcox writes: "You always have the best newsletters. Thank you."
Thank you, Bill!
Quick-Quill writes: "I'm sure we all put a bit of ourselves in our writing. I know exactly where John Grisham stands politically. He's been filling his books with that slant. I think we tend to write characters with the same strong beliefs we have. The Nemesis to our characters have the opposite beliefs, challenging them so they are stronger when by the end of the book. I'd have a hard time writing about someone who's ideals were complete opposite mine. I have no connection where they are coming from? How did they get those ideas?"
I think we all have a hard time writing characters who are diametrically opposed to our own views. Most of us are able to write diversity from our own opinions, but it's really hard to write a character that has the opposite viewpoint of our own, especially when it's a particularly sensitive topic. Hmm, that sounds like a good writing prompt...
brom21 writes: "I used author surrogate in a poem one time about the woes of being schizophrenic. Having the disorder myself, I can see how I used my experiences as a template. I'm also an avid Christian and I have infused that into many poems and stories. I'm now editing a Story I began three years go which has spiritual elements. Hopefully I'll learn to better use the author surrogate method. Thanks for the NL."
You're very welcome! Thank you for sharing about your experiences!
StephBee writes: "Great topic! Reminds me of how Stan Lee always has a cameo in every Marvel movie. It helps to make the movie a bit more heartwarming."
Thank you! And yes, Stan's cameos are often one of my favorite parts of the Marvel movies, just to see where they're going to work him in.
K8 writes: "Thank you for this great news letter. I have wonder if I was the only one that wrote them selves into their own stories, I'm pleased to see I am not."
I think we all write ourselves into our stories to some extent. Some of us just do it a little more often and a little more blatantly than others.
Red Writing Hood <3 writes: "Great advice!"
Thank you!
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