Showing posts with label writing tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing tips. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

How to Submit Your Writing to Literary Magazines

"Those who think the editor is rejecting with some pleasure in hurting are entirely wrong."

Makes sense to me. Unless the editor is a sadist, of course, but I'm guessing most sadists wouldn't choose to edit a literary magazine just to torture writers. There are easier ways. :)

That quote is from the article What Editors Want; A Must-Read for Writers Submitting to Literary Magazines. It is a very informative article on how to handle submitting to literary magazines. Like most things in marketing - and getting your stories published IS marketing, whether you want to admit it or not - in order to succeed, you need to understand the person you're trying to reach. You need to understand what motivates them (the editors, the development execs, the agents, the fresh-out-of-college script reader) to take action. I've been telling writers for years to pick the magazines they submit to wisely. If you know what they are looking for, then you can pull something from your story catalog that fits that publication. Don't write one story and blanket it all over the literary universe. Write many stories and send them to the appropriate places. If your stories are ready, your acceptance rate will increase dramatically. This doesn't mean you should write for a specific audience. Write whatever story YOU want to tell. THEN find the right interested party.

Also read the LA Times Jacket Copy Article about it.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Blogs About Writing and Our Favorite Posts

It's tough to write, read, raise kids, work day jobs, keep up with the cleaning and laundry, meditate, get in some cardio, and then read about writing. With all the information out there on Facebook, Twitter, blogs, paper books, e-books, it's an overwhelming task just to keep up with all that reading.

We're going to make it a little bit easier for you. We're going to scour the web for the most helpful articles about writing and present them here, to help streamline at least a small part of your day.

Here's what we found over the last few days:

Point of View in Fiction by Writerly Life.com


The Quick and Easy Cheaters Guide to Writing Plotlines by Flash Fiction Chronicles (If we gave out gold starts for great blog posts, this one would get tripple gold stars)

What Editors are Looking For by Pub Rant's Agent Kristin

That's our list for now - more to come!

If you have a blog you follow and want us to follow it for you and post the best stuff here, let us know!



Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Starter Blocks v. Writer's Block


Last night Nicole and I were guest speakers at the monthly Ventura County Writers Club meeting. It was great to get out and mingle with so many writers! We want to thank Tysa Goodrich, the club's Vice-President, for inviting us out.

When we were first asked to speak, Nicole and I got together and realized that one of the main things LAwritersgroup.com helps writers overcome is the dreaded writer's block, so it was a natural subject for our topic last night.  Then driving home together after the event, we realized we should really share our insights with you! So, here's what we've come up with over the years:

Basically, there are three types of writer's block:  1) the "I can't make myself sit down at the computer"; (2) the "I've sat down and now I'm just staring at the screen / blank page"; and (3) the "I'm full of anxiety and have a fear of judgment."

1. The "I can't make myself sit down at the computer"
  • Find a new location to write:  When we step out of our usual environment with a specific purpose, the purpose wins the day.  Instead of staring at the dishes that need to be done, we're fully attentive to the computer screen / blank page.  Why do you think there are so many writers in your local coffee shop?
  • If you have a 9-5 job and when you get home, you just feel too bushed or too distracted, stop somewhere on the way home.  Go to the library or the coffee shop or yes, even to that dark bar to write and then go home.
  •  Finally, set a dedicated time for writing and stick to it!

2.  The "I've sat down and now I'm just staring at the screen / blank page."
  • Here's where writing prompts come in handy.  Start by googling "writers prompts" and you'll come up with 100s.  Even better, you can keep track of your own.  This is a tip that we picked up from David Hunter at The Writer's Den. Look, we're writers, we carry a little notebook around with us everywhere (and if you don't, then start). Maybe, while we're out and about or even at home chopping up some onions for dinner, we come up with a cool character idea or a sudden phrase, pull out the notebook and write it down. And then, instead of keeping it in your notebook, tear out the page and put it in a box on your desk or near your writing area.  Now when you sit down to write, reach in your little writer's box and draw your inspiration.
  • Commit to at least 15 minutes of writing. That's it. Just 15 measly minutes. Trust us, you'll go over
  • If you're really stuck, review your old work and revise it.  Then get online and come up with at least 3 places to submit.  (Or check into this blog once a week for our Writers Round-up.)

3. "I'm full of anxiety and have a fear of judgment."
  •  First of all, we all know where that judgment is coming from and it's not the writer at the next table over.  It's you. Here's where we do something new with that 15 minutes of writing time. Freewrite. Freewrite. Freewrite. That means, set your timer, put pen to paper and keep it going, no stopping, no crossing-out, no revising. If you get stuck, write "I feel stuck" or even better, start the piece with a phrase like "I wish someone had told me..." and when you get stuck, repeat that phrase until you can move on.
  •  Write as if no one will ever see it. So what does it matter? And this is when you will discover your writer's voice and it will feel free to speak above a whisper.
  • Long term solution? Learn some form of meditation. I've been meditating for over 3 years now. It revolutionized my writing. My husband, also a meditator, who never wrote prior to his practice, has now written 1 and 3/4 (2d nearly finished) screenplays in the last year. I practice and teach Vedic Meditation but there are many options. Meditation stills the inner critic but even more important than that, it drops you to the state of being, the source of thought, and you would be amazed what's milling around just waiting to be pulled to the surface by your writer mind.
 
Most writers have faced writer's block at some point so we'd love to hear from you - did we leave anything out? Let us know what works for you!