Author: Babs Mountjoy on
Thursday, February 28, 2013
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Meadville Market House, Second Floor
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A Workshop Presented by the Meadville Council on the Arts
No matter what genre you write in, good fiction comes from the basics.
Multi-published and award-winning authors Babs Mountjoy and Kathy Otten,
will lead this workshop, full of discussion, models, exercises and fun,
too!
Sessions will include—
INTRO TO CREATIVE FICTION-WRITING - Bring a short piece to share, and we'll learn each other's writing inspirations. DIALOGUE- We'll look not only at how to write believable conversations, but how they enhance your story.
INCREASING CONFLICT AND TENSION IN YOUR STORY- Do you want to write a
story your reader can't put down? We'll examine what conflict is and how
it drives the story. DIVERSITY IN YOUR FICTION – We’ll use
exercises like those in Nisi Shawl and Cynthia Ward's, Writing the
Other, and other sources to expand your thinking about using characters
of other race/class/ethnicity in your stories. PACKING AN
EMOTIONAL PUNCH - We'll talk about ways to show how a character feels
through visceral reaction and fresh description that will ramp up your
reader's investment in the story. WEAVING AN ALTERNATIVE
SETTING INTO YOUR STORY- Learn how transport your readers to another era
or alternate world without sounding like a text book. Classes will be held on Tuesdays, At the Meadville Market House March 26th through April 30th 2013 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm Members-$60.00 Non-members $65.00 For more information contact Meadville Council on the Arts Phone & Fax (814)336-5051 Or to reserve and mail in your payment before the limited seats are gone, send to: Meadville Council on the Arts P.O.Box 337 Meadville PA 16335 Questions? artscouncil@zoominternet.net
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Category:
Alana Lorens,
author,
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fantasy,
flash fiction,
Kathy Otten,
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Mountjoy,
paranormal romance,
Pennwriters,
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science fiction,
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writing
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Author: Babs Mountjoy on
Monday, October 29, 2012
Yes, folks, NaNoWriMo is just around the corner. We're all getting out outlines, plot bunnies and other assorted necessaries in line before the big day.
I'm writing a romantic suspense set in the Montana forests with ecotage! And pagans! And Native Americans! (no elves, tho....that's another series.)
So stay tuned...you can check my progress at the site under my nickname babs1e....wish me luck!
Category:
Alana Lorens,
author,
book,
clan elves of the bitterroot,
editing,
elves,
love story,
Lyndi Alexander,
manuscript,
Montana,
NaNoWriMo,
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novelist,
publishing,
reader,
romance,
writer,
writer conference
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Author: Babs Mountjoy on
Friday, May 21, 2010
All my life, I've wanted to be a novelist. From the time I sat in the window seat of an Indiana farmhouse and wrote a blow by blow description of my cat chasing down and eating a mouse, other people have commented on my work and how they liked it.
In a few short months, I'll be a novelist. Not a newspaper reporter; that I did in the 1980s in south Florida. I interviewed governors, senators, drug dealers and won awards for my series a Day in the Life. In 1998, I had a book on divorce published called 101 Little Instructions for Surviving Your Divorce, a book with thought-provoking statements about mental health and wellness during the process. I didn't know very much about what an author was expected to do to promote a book in those days, though I sent out copies and did some radio interviews.
Since then, I've had many other pieces published, online and off, newspapers, magazines, even two stories in the Cup of Comfort Volumes for Divorced Women and Adoptive Families. Most of those stories promoted themselves for as far as they went. I didn't have to do much.
But I've come to the conclusion that after twenty years of really pushing at it, trying to score that agent and hit that big sale just isn't going to happen for me at this time. I want people to read my writing. I could just post it all here. But realistically, I'd like to make some money off it too.
In looking at small press, I've met several editors who deal right with the authors, no go-between needed, and even discouraged! Marketing support, suggestions for promotion are shared, and we get the chance to one-on-one with people who share our enthusiasm. It's wonderful. It's creative. It's....time consuming....
At the same time, consider, that at this moment I have five manuscripts IN THE HANDS of an editor.
Not lying around some agent's slush pile. Not waiting for some spring intern to find that I have no references to fashionable shoes in chapter three, so the entire book should be tossed. Not waiting for the interminable back and forth of mail exchanges. I am blessed and fortunate, and by using this, my best shot at contact with a live person, I have in fact been offered and signed a contract for my first novel. I have two unique promotion ideas that we'll be fleshing out as we're closer to the book release in September, in addition to all the items the publisher has already created.
It's happening. Along with her request for the rest of the series to be known as The Clan Elves of the Bitterroot. But I'm still trying to connect with other editors, find homes for my other "children." It's happening. I have no time to sleep any more. *L* But maybe I'll catch up on that later, between stops in the book tour, hmm?
Category:
agent,
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book,
editor,
interviews,
manuscript,
promotion,
publisher,
publishing,
small press,
The Elf Queen. marketing
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