Archive for the magazines Category

How to write a compelling piece.

One of the key pieces of advice that bubbles to the surface of my consciousness time and time again is, “to write well, you have to read well.”
That means reading the chosen piece twice. Once for shear enjoyment and then a second time to analyze the authors technique and craft points.
It also means, reading what you want to write - be it technology articles, poetry, literary fiction, historical non-fiction, travel writing, short stories, or mysteries in all their glorious sub-genres.
It’s a tall order and that is why sometimes, picking a genre or theme and sticking with it is so important for new writers.
Focus and practice, not every four weeks, but every day develops a flow and a rhythm and there is no better way to do this than writing a short blog on a subject that interests or entertains you.
The blog can be set to private for you alone or shared with only those you nominate, at least until you’re ready to face the world or have it face you.
If anyone would like help or advice in setting up there own blog drop me a line.

In the meantime, I can recommend reading Andrew McAleer’s “The 101 HABITS of highly successful novelists” available on Amazon.

Got a family history or memoir in you?

Checkout the December 2007 copy of The Writer.
Page 14 has a breakthrough story about Betty Grant Henshaw, who wrote an account of growing up in the Oklahoma Hills during the Dust Bowl and Great Depression era.
At 60 years of age she decided to try her hand at writing, took writing classes, joined a writing group and wrote stories about her life.
Then, recognizing that they did not hang together, she drew up an outline (something she said that she should have done at the beginning) and created a book length novel. She spent the next 10 years attending writing conferences, talking to agents and sending out samples of her work, only to receive rejections.
The breakthrough came when a writer friend recognized that her work told the history of the era and suggested she submit it to a university press.

Texas Tech University presses jumped at the chance to publish her memoir and provided editing support and cover design. The book ‘Children of the Dust: An Okie Family Story’ is a finalist for the Oklahoma Book Award.

In a similar vain, page 30 has a six-page step-by-step article by Moira Allen on “How to Write a Family History”, which includes interesting sidebars on the ‘crazy-quilt memoir’ (an alternative to the usual chronological approach), and using birthday letters and tales from the family newsletter as source material.

|