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Archive for March, 2010

Special Guest Historical Romance Author Beverly Kendall

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

MamaWriters are excited to have debut author Beverly Kendall here today!  Her debut romance, Sinful Surrender, released in January, and she also runs the new and highly-frequented blog and linked forum community The Season, sites designed for readers of historical romance.  Oh, and she’s also a mom.  :-)

Please help us welcome Beverly Kendall!

sinful surrender coverMy World As I Knew It

I could never have imagined that my life would change so utterly now that my son comes home at 2:30pm.


For years I had my days completely planned. My son went off to school in the morning and I picked him up from after school care at 5:30pm, right after work. It was a lovely routine. So lovely in fact, I took very little notice of how lucky I was. I worked from home, so I was able to get a lot of things done that I couldn’t if I had to hike to the office everyday (I worked 40+ miles away).


Then with the down economy, I was laid off. It made no sense to keep my son in after school care any longer, so out he went. The thing is I was busier than ever. I might no longer have a paying full-time job, but now in its place I added job hunting, writing, and web site mistress to the pool. And now this was consuming more than any full-time job ever had. I needed at least 6 additional hours in the day to get everything done. This all would have been manageable had my son started coming home 3 hours earlier than I was accustomed to.


Boy, who knew (though, seriously, I should have) what a difference those 3 hours would make to my day. What has suffered? Well housekeeping for sure. But it took a hit when I started writing, which was back in November 2006. The serious crime here is my writing started to suffer. I wasn’t get near the daily word count I would have liked and needed to get done.


I can’t write with the television on—especially if it’s a kids’ show. I can’t write if my son is tugging at any of my body parts. I can’t write if there are children (my son and nephew) chasing each other around the house. And I can’t write if my son is upstairs…and the place is terribly quiet—too quiet—because that means there’s trouble afoot.


What I’ve discovered is I have to write through, in, and around the madness, the noise, and the too quiet. I now force myself into that seat each day and tell myself, ‘You can’t get out of this chair until there are xxx number of words on the screen.’ I had to forcibly remove myself from Twitter, Facebook, and all the other—what can be—time-consuming sites and blogs. I had to focus like never before. This was the net result of my son coming home at 2:30.


What about you? What are some of the things that distract you from writing and how do you cope?

Too Much Stuff

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

eliza-2Just the other day, my girlfriend’s daughter came to play at our house.  She was looking around with this bemused expression on her face, then out of her mouth popped this:  “You have too much stuff.”

 

I was immediately a wash of emotions: mortified, confused, amused.  I gazed around my house.  Piles.  Neat piles at least.  Magazines stacked on the coffee table.  Magazines stacked under a desk.  Books, and books, and books and stacks and stacks of books.  Nick nacks… bits of paper, post it notes, notebooks, pens. And the thing is, it isn’t messy.  There is just a lot of it.  So I sent the kids back to the basement, pulled out a trash bag and started tossing magazines, papers, and anything I realized I didn’t care about particularly.  I filled a whole trash bag, and felt a little better.  I left a side table with a candle, and my coffee table with a candle a decorative plate.   Tidied up the books, and stacked my papers on my desk.

 

Out of the mouth of babes…  whoo!  But it made me realize something too, and I’m always correlating real life to writing.  As an author, contest judge, professional critiquer, proof-reader, copy editor, reviewer, I do A LOT of reading.

 

Sometimes we put too much stuff into our stories.  And we don’t even notice it!

 

Too much stuff, like what?  Too much backstory.  Too much inner dialogue, too many secondary characters.  Too many secondary plots. 

 

Then there’s the complete 180 degree turn…  Not enough stuff.  Not enough action, dialogue, conflict, personality. 

 

As writers we have to be careful that we have the right balance.  That we aren’t tipping the scales too much in one direction.  We want to engage our readers without boring them or overwhelming them.

 

How do you find that fine balance?  Think of your story.  What is it about?  Who are the main characters?  What is your “what if?” question? (This is your one-two sentence question or statement, your pitch, about your story.  Example:  What if a crazy book hoarding romance author met and fell in love with the host of a clean freak television show?)  What are your characters’ GMCs (Goals, motivations, conflicts)?  Ask yourself, is this relevant to the plot of my story?  Does this move my story along?  Are my characters growing from this? 

 

Writing is a lot harder than simply putting fingers to keyboard (or pen to paper).  Sure that’s the basic part, and you can’t get anything done without actually sitting your butt down in that chair, but it also takes a knowledge of the craft if you want to write “The End” on a decent piece of work.  Study writing.  Read a lot.  Write more.  Ask others to take a look at your work.

 

So tell me, so I know I’m not alone, do you have too much stuff?

 

Eliza Knight is the author of historical romance and time travel erotic romance.  Visit her at www.elizaknight.com

 

hercaptaindaresall_w4370_3002Releasing April 28, 2010!!!!

 

Her Captain Dares AllBook Three in my Men of the Sea series, a Regency romance novella.

 

Pursued by kidnappers, Lady Tessa Woodward is running for her life. When handsome Captain Jeremy Williams comes to her rescue in the backstreets of Paris, she persuades him to help her escape France and return to her home in England.

 

Captain Jeremy Williams is captivated by Lady Tessa’s fiery nature and agrees to give her passage aboard his ship. Once on board, his desire grows and soon reveals a sensual side to the woman he can’t deny. But when danger threatens his lady, will the captain dare all to save her?

 

 

 

 

Upcoming Workshop 4/5/10 – 4/30/10

 

The Power of GMC: Crafting Compelling Characters and Kick-Butt Stories

 

by Renee Knowles and Eliza Knight

 

Do you find yourself confused by GMC? Is it a challenge to create gripping goals, motivations and conflicts for your characters? Do you have a hard time determining the difference between internal and external GMC? Do you want to kick up the tension and conflict in your story? Then it’s time to learn the ins and outs of GMC.

 

Without a solid backbone of internal and external goals, motivations and conflict, your story won’t grab the reader and characters can fall flat. This class will teach you how to dig deep and uncover your hero and heroine’s true GMC, re. You’ll learn how to define their goals succinctly and relate them directly to their conflicts and motivations. You will do exercises designed to help you use GMC to enhance your plot and give your story more direction.

 

In those lessons we’ll also be discussing POV, passive vs. active, showing vs. telling, and other nitty gritty details that make your manuscripts come alive.

 

Visit: www.celtichearts.org to register!

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Being 16

Monday, March 29th, 2010

OMG. My mother keeps telling me about how my son (now 2!) will soon be off to high school and proms, etc. She says, “It will happen before you know it.”

 

I know she is right. Time does fly. But I want to hang onto every precious moment.

 

It made me think of my niece. She is going through a very tough time. Though my little one is only a toddler, I’ve been hearing lots of stories from parents of teenagers about how very hard it is to raise a good kid in this crazy world. Is it s refrain that has sounded through the ages? Likely. But it started me thinking about being 16. About how life is so different now than when I turned 16, many years ago (okay, not so many…but long enough J).

 

I began to wonder if the problems facing the young men and women today are different or even harder than when I was a teenager. Life is faster. Cell phones and texting are the order of the day, causing more than one teenager to be distracted while driving. And there is a different expectation of the kids today.

 

I think the age of taking on huge responsibilities keeps getting older. Not that there aren’t some amazing kids who do some wonderful things at eighteen. Some fight for us, some are holding down two jobs, some are parents.

 

But a comment my sister shared not too long ago let me pondering. She said that she had been married at nineteen, and she just couldn’t see a lot of the kids she knew today at nineteen taking on that responsibility.

 

I wondered if things are really so different than when I grew up.

 

Yet looking at my beautiful nieces and their friends, I see the same excitement about life that I had at that age. The same knowledge that you could do anything, be anything you wanted to be. And as I pondered this, I realized that feeling never totally goes away. I was in my thirties before I decided I wanted to write a novel. I was ready to finally realize my dream of writing.

 

I knew that I could do anything, be anything I wanted to be. Sure, it was different. I had a lot more responsibilities. I wasn’t able to work on my writing craft full time. But the passion was still there. The knowledge that you can go far if you put your mind, and most of all your heart, into it.

 

Maybe in some ways we don’t change. Maybe the core of us stays the same. If I close my eyes, I can still imagine I am a teenager with my whole life ahead. I can still see myself I my mind’s eye as a young, vibrant girl. Yet, I am happy where I am now. Nearly forty, a new mom with the greatest job in the world—writing.

 

No, I don’t long for youth. Let my niece relish this time in her life, and I will relish mine.

 

Hugs,

 

Renee

 

www.reneeknowles.com

 

 

Categories : Uncategorized
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Constructive Criticism –How to Reap Results from Group Critique

Friday, March 26th, 2010

This morning I’m late–it was a matter of either get the Kindergartner dressed for “Miss Match” day, or make my post.

Sorry Mamas. But, I know you understand!

Anyway, I got her dressed and ready. Polkadot mismatched knee-socks, striped shorts, checked top, funky hair bows, and mismatched, sequin shoes. She smiles a mile wide and says, “PERFECT! I don’t match AT ALL!” Here she is:

Miss Matchy!

Miss Matchy!

How amazing, that striving for imperfection made her day. Made me also think about criticism. Our inner critics as we race out the door in “mom-wear” – hat pulled down, sunglasses, and sweats – to get our kids to school or play-dates on time! And how much time we take ironing out our manuscripts before we get them ready for print.

So, take a moment and read through this post by my fellow critique partner, friend, and new Mama Author, Beverly Nault – as she dishes on Constructive Criticism, and how to handle a solid critique:

Reaping Results from the Group Critique – by Beverly Nault

Think of your critique group as a greenhouse. Whether infant or mature, each PLANT requires pruning and fertilizing, just like a story, article or scene. Follow these guidelines for an abundant HARVEST worthy of today’s market.

When you submit for critique:

Have Patience – only unwanted mushrooms grow overnight. Be ready to learn, it takes a discerning eye to identify weeds in the money crop. Even mature writers can learn a thing or two.

Listen – Babbling about your hours in the field wastes valuable time. Save chit-chat and seed swapping for later.

Accept advice and input. You waste everyone’s time if you don’t intend to glean wisdom.

Never argue, explain, or apologize. Let me explain. Briefly introduce the context, but if you defend or argue, you could have stayed home and read the ‘script to the chickens. Apologizing means you didn’t spend enough time checking for typos, errors, or other problems.

Take it all in. Some input you should take with a grain of salt, some you might take to heart. Consider all feedback, maybe your co-author has a point. Friends and family members, sometimes even busy editors, may not offer the honest perspective fellow authors will.

Now, grab your hoe, um, pen, and take a turn in someone else’s garden to prepare for the HARVEST. Here’s how to cultivate:

HELP by beginning with a positive comment about at least one, preferably several things, in the submission. Your remarks may inspire the author to develop a special technique or style. Also, you wouldn’t dump a truck load of fertilizer on a seedling, so try to measure out advice appropriate for each member’s readiness.

Agree and move on. If you concur with another’s remarks, say so, but keep it simple. For example; “I agree with Farmer Joe that dandelion patch needs work. Now about these boll weevils.”

Resist rewriting. Your style is different from everyone else’s, don’t try to clone. You should, however, suggest alternatives to clumsy or clichéd smaller sections. Also, resist asking questions; receivers should listen, not expound.

Value concept and content. It’s not just a good idea, it’s the law–freedom of speech, right? If the work is for a specific market, you can identify something that’s possibly offensive or that might alienate, but what others grow, er, write, is not your concern.

Explain only (and briefly) if you’re an expert or professional. Maybe you know more about the rare blooming titan arum than the average Jane and the piece mentions a second annual bloom. Gasp! Authors rely on valuable resources, and we should check each other’s facts and information whenever possible. That being said…

Stay focused. Following rabbit trails consumes precious time.

Thank other authors for presenting their precious cuttings and encourage them to return with another scene or revision for the next session. Nurture, nurture, nurture.

By sharing our own and reviewing each other’s creations, we gain knowledge, skill and the courage to plant seeds for a fruitful harvest. That rare titan arum? It only blooms once a year. When it does, it smells like rotting fish. Eww. No stinkers here please.

Categories : Ashley Ludwig
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Welcome Special Guest Suzanne Brockmann

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Today, MamaWriters is pleased to welcome New York Times Bestselling Author Suzanne Brockmann to join us.   Suzanne is the author of the fabulous Troubleshooter series (and if you haven’t read any, I can’t recommend them enough.  Get started with this Troubleshooter’s Sample PDF at her website.)  She also has an amazing new venture to tell us about below… so without further ado:

Suzanne Brockmann

17868_1327029933636_1167547937_963705_1929296_nJAMIE:  (to audience) So my mom is like the perfect mother. I can talk to her about anything. She’s totally awesome. Well, almost totally. She can get a little intense sometimes. She was calling to find out how the audition went. (into the phone) I guess at first I didn’t think it went well at all. (beat) Because I got interrupted by a phone call. (beat) No, no, not to me. God, no. The casting director got a call. (beat) I know. Anyway, that sucked, and I thought it was game over, but then, about five minutes ago – are you ready for this? (beat) I got a call back.

JENNIFER HOLLIS (played by SUGAR), screams so loudly, JAMIE holds his phone out from his ear. She emerges from the Greek Chorus and stands, downstage left.

JENNIFER:  Tell me, tell me! What part? Big? Little? What, what, what?

JAMIE:  Oh, my God, Mom, it’s big–it’s for Jimmie Shields, Billy’s boyfriend.

JENNIFER screams with joy again, and again, laughing, JAMIE holds the phone away from his ear.

JAMIE:  (laughing) Mom. You gotta stop that. The neighbors are gonna call 9-1-1.

JENNIFER:  I don’t care. You got a call back in a real movie! I’m so proud of you I don’t know what to do. Oh my God. You are perfect for this part!

JAMIE:  The good news is that you’re totally objective.

JENNIFER:  What does Harlan think?

JAMIE:  I haven’t told him yet. He’s still at work.

JENNIFER:  And you can’t call him while he’s at work?

JAMIE:  It’s hard for him to talk during the day.

JENNIFER:  It’s hard for him to talk – because he’s in the closet.

JAMIE:  Mom, give him a break, it’s a conservative place.

JENNIFER:  He’s out to his parents, though, isn’t he? (JAMIE is silent.) Oh, Jamie.

JAMIE:  Not everybody has a mother like you.

JENNIFER:  Well, they should. You have a kid, you love your kid, period, the end.  I have to tell you that I really don’t like you spending time with someone who’s ashamed to be himself. Because if he’s ashamed of himself, then isn’t he also ashamed of you?

From Looking for Billy Haines, by Suzanne Brockmann and Will McCabe

suzanneb

As a writer – and a mother – I’m in the middle of a huge adventure.  I’ve written a stage play that’s being produced Off-Broadway in New York City.  As a writer, I’m faced with a live audience nearly every night (seven shows a week, with matinees on Saturdays and Sundays), and wow, is that different.  Novelists, by nature, don’t have immediate feedback to their work.  Sure, there are readers who send me an e-mail when they finish reading my latest book, but it’s not as if I ever sit there, watching as readers turn pages and laugh through the funny parts, and cry through the sad parts.

But playwrights, in comparison, do get an instantaneous response with each new audience.  And this is a new experience for me as a writer — and not for the weak of heart.

As for my adventure as a mother, I’m being given a chance to tell a beautiful story about love and priorities — one that I hope will help change hearts and minds in terms of the ongoing fight for equal rights for gay Americans.

See, I’m a PFLAG mom.  (PFLAG stands for “Parents, Family and Friends of Lesbians and Gays.”)  My wonderful, talented, creative, funny and kind son is gay.  And because he’s gay, there are some people, here in America, who feel he should therefore be a second-class citizen and not enjoy the same rights as heterosexual Americans.

And that’s just not okay with me.

I suspect that most of the mothers who read this blog have kids who are school age or younger.  (Although heads up, moms, the she-bear bristling and desire to protect and stand up for your kids doesn’t fade, even when they turn twenty-one.  Or twenty-four.  Or (I suspect) seventy-four.)

And through the years I’ve watched my beloved son Jason grow from the sweetest little boy, into a wonderful young man – a man of whom I am endlessly proud.  (See list of adjectives above.)

I suspected Jason was gay when he was about three years old.  I remember having a conversation with my husband about this:  What if Jason is gay?

We both immediately agreed that we loved him unconditionally and that it was of utmost importance that he grow up feeling good about himself.  See, when you recognize that your three-year-old is probably gay, if you had any doubts at all about the fact that being gay is completely natural, they dissolve on the spot.  (I wish I could introduce any skeptics regarding this to Jason at three, at seven, at eleven, at fourteen years old.  It’s so beyond clear that my little boy was a loving gift sent from a higher power – a child of God, if you will.)

But that question, What if Jason is gay? (because, of course, we didn’t know for sure, and we were careful to wait to let Jason define his sexual orientation for himself) stayed with me, and turned into a more specific question:  If Jason is gay, how can we give him the support and safe environment he needs so that he never feels he has to hide his true self from the world?

I didn’t want my beautiful son to take his brilliant, glowing light and be forced to conceal it.  Can you imagine how terrible it is to live in a world where “don’t ask, don’t tell” is considered a “solution?”  Don’t ask means you never get to ask about a fellow service person’s family life.  Don’t tell means they never get to tell you about their vacations with their life-partners or even the dinner they shared last night.  Plus, the need for secrecy implies that there is something wrong with being gay – and there is not.

I’m constantly astonished when I hear of parents kicking their children out of their homes for being gay.  To me, it’s as absurd as the idea of telling your kid to pack up and leave because she’s left-handed.

But okay.  There I was, all those years ago, with my little boy dancing about the room in his gold lamé cape, singing along to his favorite Broadway musicals, with a picture of Bette Midler in a place of honor in his bedroom…  (Stereotypical?  Maybe.  But all his choices.  And when your kid desperately wants the soundtrack to The Secret Garden for Christmas, Santa delivers.)

How could I protect my son from the people who hate him without knowing him?  From the people who insist that he will go to hell?  From the people who think he needs to be “fixed?”

The sad answer is that I couldn’t and I can’t.  But what I could do was make sure he grew up knowing that he was loved, in a home where being gay was something we talked about openly – it was not unheard of or kept secret.  Some men fall in love with men, some women with women.  And aren’t they lucky for finding love in a world where there’s too much hatred and divide?  And how about that Ellen DeGeneres.  I bet her mother is super-proud of her…

We were gender-neutral, too, when we discussed Jason’s future.  Someday you’ll find someone wonderful, someone with whom you’ll want to grow old…

And we absolutely, positively outlawed all gay-bashing – even as jokes – in our house.

PFLAG was and is a wonderful resource, filled with terrific information.  (www.PFLAG.org)

Jason came out to me when he was fifteen years old, and I was so proud of his courage and honesty.  Some years later, he admitted how scared he had been of my rejection – and this in a home where we’d all but laid out a red carpet for him.  (It really makes you think about the courage of kids who come out to parents who aren’t as welcoming.)

These days, Jason’s not just out, he’s Out, with a capital O.  He lets his light shine – and I’m so proud of him, that just like fictional Jamie’s mom, Jennifer, I often don’t know what to do!

So okay, that’s me as a mother.  Now let me tell you about my current project, Looking for Billy Haines.

3597724300_1d0d3a3f84A few years ago, I discovered Billy Haines.  I was forty-four years old before I first heard about him – and I consider myself to be a well-educated woman — as well as old-movie-literate, and a fan of the MGM era in Hollywood.  But I found myself blinking in disbelief at the idea that Billy Haines – a movie actor I’d never heard of before – was the top male box office draw in 1930.  We’re talking a shining star in the firmament in the style of, say, a Tom Cruise or a Harrison Ford.

Except – here’s the really cool part – just like my son Jason, Billy Haines was openly, unapologetically gay.

The way the legend goes is that after he’d successfully made the leap from silent films to talkies, MGM chief Louis Mayer offered him a new contract – on the condition that Billy marry a starlet.  (Pick a starlet, any starlet…)  But Billy refused to be jammed into the closet.  In fact, he told Mayer that he’d drop his longtime boyfriend, a former Navy man named Jimmie Shields, only if Mayer would divorce his wife.  Mayer said, “That’s outrageous!”  And Billy agreed.  In the end, he walked away from his movie career – and went on to spend the rest of his life in an out and honest relationship with his beloved Jimmie.  (They both died in 1973, after Billy lost a battle with lung cancer.)

When Billy left the world of movies, he didn’t look back.  He started a new business – and became the biggest, most successful interior designer in Southern California, with Jimmie always at his side.

Joan Crawford described Billy and Jimmie’s relationship as the happiest marriage in Hollywood.

Can you imagine?  Billy and Jimmie’s story is a romantic tale for the ages – a true American love story.  And I’d lived for a full forty-four years before I first caught wind of it.

As the mother of a gay son, I wanted to shout this story of love and commitment and courage – incredible courage – from the rooftops.  This is the type of man I hope my son Jason will find and marry.  Someone who prioritizes love over fame and fortune and career.  Someone who is willing to walk beside him, openly, in sunlight.  Someone like the truly remarkable Billy Haines.

As a writer, I took hold of that desire to tell Billy’s story and I wrote this stage play with music and dance — choosing a storytelling-vehicle that’s vastly different from my usual romance novels.

(And just a heads up -Looking for Billy Haines isn’t about Billy and Jimmie, although there’s a subplot that tells their story.  The play focuses on a 20-something young gay actor who lives in New York City, who gets an audition for a biographical movie about Billy Haines.  In the course of finding out who Billy was, the young actor begins to question his own relationship with a closeted man.)

My adventure into professional theatre is ongoing.  Looking for Billy Haines runs seven shows a week, through May 22nd at Theatre Row’s Lion Theatre, on 42nd Street in New York City.  It stars my talented and brilliant son, who not only grew up to be a terrific young man, but also a wicked great tap dancer and actor.

If you’re planning to come to town, and would like to see the play, you can use discount code STAR to get $39 tickets (regularly $49) from www.TicketCentral.com

And be sure to stick around after the show to say hi.  I’ll be the one beaming with pride.

Suzanne Brockmann is the award-winning, New York Times bestselling author of fifty books, and the mother of two wonderful, grownup children.  She usually lives in Sarasota, Florida, but is currently a resident of New York City.

www.SuzanneBrockmann.com

www.LookingForBillyHaines.com

Friend me on facebook, or join my facebook group, Suz Brockmann’s Troubleshooters World!

NOTE TO COMMENTERS:  Suzanne’s play opens today (Thursday) so it may take her a day or two to get back to respond to comments. Please check back on Friday or this weekend!

Categories : MamaHood, special guests
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