A comment by a friend got me to thinking. He said that it
appears you spend more time marketing your work then you do creating it. My
immediate reaction was telling him it was not true, but then I got to thinking
about what he had said. I have a tracking program left over from my days
working as a consultant. The results are interesting and I will not bore you
with the list of hours and other small detail. It turns out my friend was
almost correct. However, I need to back up here and tell you what I considered
marketing efforts to be. This blog is a marketing effort. It is almost demanded
in today’s world that you have one. My website is obviously another marketing effort.
The other major time-consuming effort in marketing is keeping up with my email
about my novels and writing questions. I only considered time actually spent
either in writing or marketing writing and not time spent with my family or
other normal day to day to day routine items. The breakdown between writing and
marketing splits in round numbers to 51% to writing and 49% to marketing. It
was a surprise to me. After thinking about the results, I have come to realize
that an individual writer has no other choice to spend time marketing. A
mainstream author has a house with a publicity and marketing group to do that
work. Any thoughts?
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Sunday, November 23, 2014
Trigger events
People rarely make great changes in their lives unless
triggered by some event. It can be happy such as getting married or the birth
of a child. It can be a sad or hurtful event such as the death of someone close
to you or having a serious accident. Think of events that have triggered
changes in your life. Without that event occurring, would you have made those changes?
The same is true of characters in a novel. Events in
their lives trigger changes which in the case of a novel drives the storyline.
Think of your favorite novel and think of how the storyline was driven by
changes.
Friday, November 21, 2014
The work of writing
I have been asked how I go about doing the actual writing
of the novel. Do I know when I sit down in front of the computer but I will be
working on? The answer is yes. I never finish all I know about a scene or bit
of action the day before. It gives me a quick starting point. I realize that is
not entirely true. Sometimes I will finish is scene, but I know what the next
scene will be and leave it until the next day. It seems I only have so much I
can do in one day. It varies from as little as 250 words to sometimes as much
as 1000 words per day. I find I am most creative in the morning. In the
afternoon, I switched into the editor mode and go over material that is a few
days old. If I tried to edit material that is too fresh, I find I do not do a
good job. It would never pay to try to edit the morning’s writing on the same
day. There were some other questions that I will share another day.
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Lack of trust
In the second novel, Vir is struggling with who he can
trust. While it will be illustrated by what he does, I emphasize the fact by
him verbalizing his feelings to another character. I think this is the most
effective way to achieve this. What do you think? Any suggestions?
Sunday, November 16, 2014
A good character?
Somebody asked me, “How do you know if a character is
going to be a good one?” In roughing out a novel, I find I sometimes do not
recognize the importance of a character until I am getting words on page. For
you who have read the Bringer of Justice,
Gula is an example of that type of character. For the second novel in the
series, I have not gotten far enough for any character who I originally
considered unimportant to come forward.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)