Posts Tagged ‘Writing’

This writing life

Friday, May 28th, 2010
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Ira Glass, host of radio’s “This American Life,” talks about the building blocks of a great story in a series of four videos on YouTube. His advice on crafting a compelling story works for any format, print, audio or video: start with an anecdote, not just a theme. Have one thing happen after another. Then let someone reflect on the importance of what they’ve just experienced.

Perhaps Glass’ most crucial piece of advice is the most obvious and over-looked: trial and error leads to success. Or as Glass puts it, “The most important thing you can do is do a lot of work.”

The art of optimism

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010
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“Optimism is earned from a track record of overcoming obstacles. I’m a problem solver, not a problem evader. I’ve been resourceful over and over again in such a way that I know I can handle what life throws me. Whenever I have a tough challenge, I say to myself, ‘When I get through this, it will be a great story.’”

Dr. Terry Paulson, quoted by Erika Liodice at Beyond the Gray

Rules of engagement: author Laurie King on marketing, Twitter and the power of social media

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010
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The author of The Beekeeper’s Apprentice is buzzing over social media.

With a website, author and character blogs and a presence on Facebook, MySpace and Twitter, Laurie R. King is a champion of social marketing. She posts in the voice of one of her characters, runs several writing contests for fans and invites readers to discuss the books among themselves. Her efforts go beyond promoting the work to promoting engagement with readers. That reveals an understanding of the collaborative nature of social media many corporations should envy.

“Mostly what I use the social networking sites for is to tie together my readers—I set up a site, or suggest an approach, and then more or less stand back while they play with it,” she told me in an email that previews the interview here. But first, some background on the Californian who has become famous for portraying the life of perhaps the world’s most-famous detective, and the woman who has become, some would say, an equal or better.

LaurieRKingCreating a voice
Over the past 20 year Ms. King has written 20 novels, including two series, one featuring San Francisco police detective Kate Martinelli and a second with Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes. Her first book, A Grave Talent (1993), received the 1994 Edgar Award for Best First Novel and a 1995 John Creasey Memorial Award. She followed with the 1996 Nero Award for A Monstrous Regiment of Women and the 2002 Macavity Award for Best Novel for Folly.

Her books about Russell and Holmes have been applauded as “the most successful recreation of the famous inhabitant of 221B Baker Street ever attempted” (Houston Chronicle) “with the power to charm even the most grizzled Baker Street irregular” (New York Daily News). The first in the series, The Beekeeper’s Apprentice, appeared in 1994. The tenth, The God of the Hive, will be published on April 27.

She has more than 2 million copies of her novels in print.

Creating a buzz
To highlight the 20 books she’s written, and the publication of her newest novel Mary Russell/Sherlock Holmes novel, Ms. King embarked this year on what she calls “Twenty weeks of buzz.” In addition to the traditional methods of promotion—book tours, radio and TV appearances—Ms. King has taken to the Internet with a passion usually reserved for her characters.

Her presence on the Internet is considerable. She created a website and a blog about her activities called Mutterings. She also created another blog, this one in Mary Russell’s voice, on MySpace. Mary, in character, posts regularly on Twitter (@mary_russell)—a technique used effectively by Helen Klein Ross (@AdBroad) to promote the TV show “Mad Men.” Ms. King writes as a guest blogger on other sites and runs a Yahoo! Group. She has a page on Facebook. She’s even posted author interviews and scenic footage of the British landscape where Mary Russell first met Sherlock Holmes on YouTube.

King beekeeper coverTo share her tastes in literature, Ms. King created an account on Goodreads, where some 3 million members recommend books, compare and discuss books.

She has also bolstered reader engagement with the creation of twin writing contests. To celebrate the publication of The God of the Hive, she authorized the 2010 Mary Russell Fan Fiction Writing Contest. The contest is also sponsored by the Letters of Mary Yahoo! group. Contestants are asked to write about a character in one of the Russell novels as a teenager. The second contest, to celebrate National Library Week, invites readers to create their version of the ideal library, complete with drawings.

She even runs contests for artwork about Russell, Holmes, and their world where fans submit and judge the works.

I interviewed Ms. King (who goes by LRK online) through a series of email exchanges on April 11 of this year. Here’s her reaction to the question about her social-media efforts, and their results.

Creating a community
“I have to say, it’s funny to be considered a ‘champion of social marketing’ since I never feel I know much about what I’m doing!” she wrote. “Mostly what I use the social networking sites for is to tie together my readers—I set up a site, or suggest an approach, and then more or less stand back while they play with it. I’m kept in the loop of course, and I’ll drop in regularly, but making use of enthusiastic volunteers means that I don’t have to do all of the day-to-day work, while at the same time letting a group of key readers—‘fans’ if you will—have the fun of working with a writer they enjoy and making her job just a little bit easier.

King God of the Hive cover“I think a number of writers do this in some form or another—Dana Stabenow’s ‘Danamaniacs’ are a powerhouse of networking, for example—and so long as it is kept fairly clear which is the author speaking and which is one of the administrators, I find people are happy.

“Mostly I write and post my blog ‘Mutterings’ and stop in once a day on both the personal and fan Facebook pages. I visit regularly on the Virtual Book Club [a community on her site], reading the discussion and dropping in on some of the other threads, but I don’t tend to post a lot there unless I have something in particular to contribute—the VBC is a place for the readers to freely discuss and get to know each other, and I don’t want to give the impression that I’m in charge of what they say. A great side-effect of the VBC is that whenever LRK readers meet at an event or a conference, they often already know each other remarkably well, even if they have never met in person.

“As for Twitter, Russell’s MySpace page and Goodreads, those I work with volunteers on, answering letters sent to me (or to Russell) through the sites, helping promote things like the recent Twitter Party (I helped set this up beforehand but, being in a far distant time zone, I had very little to do with it at the time.) That last, by the way, was an absolute gas—you can see the transcript of its silliness at What the Hashtag.

“All in all, I probably average an hour a day on this stuff, more when I’m producing something like ‘A Case in Correspondence’ or working up to a book launch. [“Case” is a series of communications between Mary Russell and other important people, a running mystery of sorts on Ms. King’s various sites, the significance of which won’t become clear until readers finish The God of the Hive.

“As for results, who can tell? Last year we put a lot of effort into online venues and I came onto the New York Times’ bestseller list at #9. This year, we shall see.”

TinEye not picture-perfect but it’s a bright start

Thursday, April 8th, 2010
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Ever find a photo and wonder about its origin? There’s a search engine for that. It’s called TinEye, billed as a reverse image engine that uses image identification technology rather than keywords, metadata or watermarks. According to the company, “You can submit an image to TinEye to find out where it came from, how it is being used, if modified versions of the image exist or to find higher resolution versions.”

How does the beta site work in the real world? Well, with some limitations.

TinEye

I tried it with a representative sample of images—people, objects and logos—with mixed results.

The first search, using a portrait of John F. Kennedy, yielded 81 results, including partisan blogs, poster suppliers and dating-gossip sites. (The link to the Slate online magazine did correctly identify the former president.) The search engine also led to the correct identification of singer Lady Gaga (through mtv.com), novelist John D. MacDonald (through blogs in the U.S. and Russia) and Dilbert, even though the comic strip contained three frames and multiple images. TinEye showed no results for personalities such as magazine finance writer Dyan Machan.

A search using the Leaning Tower of Pisa turned up 31 results, including several postings on the photo-sharing site Flickr. A search using the image of a bottle of Coca-Cola yielded a 2009 blog post about one of the company’s marketing campaigns, along with 19 other results.

For the final search I used the logo from one of my agency’s business-to-business clients, GGB. TinEye found the image on a French industry-directory site, correctly identifying the company as the manufacturer of metal-polymer plain bearings.

The conclusion? TinEye is good at finding images of popular people, objects and brands. In my limited sample it did not lead to official sources, so if you need to annotate research reports, the service may lose some value. I also could not consistently find information about image location, use or version, but that may apply only to certain types of images.

As an image search engine, TinEye isn’t picture-perfect but it could have a bright future, especially as it enlarges its database. On the whole, the service is a fast way to identify common images, and a fun way to view the Web.

The Craft of writing

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010
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In the business world, the old saw goes something like this: the secret of success is not what you know but who you know. In the world of writers, we might adopt the phrase that educators have used for centuries: it’s not what you know but whether you can apply that knowledge. As prima facie evidence I’d like to nominate Kathryn Craft, whose brilliant summary of Jim Frey’s workshop at the Write Stuff writers’ conference stands as Exhibit One:

“Every good story starts with a character at the extreme end of the bell curve, we learned from our ‘How to Plot Like the Pros’ workshop leader Jim Frey, and in his own persona Jim provided a great character for the story of this year’s Write Stuff conference. As for plot, the dialectic would go something like this: ‘the wannabe author insists on writing by the seat of her pants,’ meets opposition by Jim Frey—‘that’s not going to work’—creating a new situation in which the wannabe author embraces outlining and actually feels that writing a salable novel within a reasonable time period might be possible.”

OK, big sentence but you get the point. While most of us were blogging about the wonderful job Kathryn Craft did as chair of the annual conference by the Greater Lehigh Valley Writers’ Group, Kathryn busied herself applying what she’d heard in class.

Now that’s craft.

‘In the field of writing, shame has no place’

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010
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The conference wanted Molly Cochran to talk about finishing a novel. We’d expected her to list the things that get in the way of completion and provide a few tools to get the job done. Instead she started her talk at the Write Stuff with a bit of life-coaching: “In the field of writing, shame has no place.”

Then the author of Grandmaster (which won an Edgar Award) and other novels dug into the details: schedule a time to write every day, create an outline, write fast and be willing to write badly. A lot of us ignore this kind of advice because it’s overly familiar. What caught my attention was her opening line, that nod to years of turmoil, the kind that plagues writers of all ages and abilities.

MollyCochran“We all struggle at one thing or another,” she writes on her website. “I procrastinate, I get sidetracked, I write things that are meaningless, I wallow in indecision and despair. I really am convinced that most writers lie. They don’t like to say how hard it is to write a novel. They like for people, especially fans, to believe that it just blows out of them like a song on a spring day. And so when new writers attempt a book, they freak out when things get difficult and conclude that they personally must be deficient in some way, and then give up.”

And that, Cochran says, would be a shame.

“The truth is, ALL of us feel like that at some point in a book, and sometimes during the entire book. But we don’t tell other people that because we think we’re the only ones who are personally deficient.”

Her philosophy for dealing with feelings of defeat comes from The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron, who says that “Anything worth doing is worth doing badly.” “I wish every insecure writer in the world would recite those words at the beginning of every work session,” Cochran says. “What holds us back is the desire to be brilliant. But brilliance doesn’t occur on the first draft. Crud occurs. If you can write it badly, you can fix it. If you insist on only writing wonderfully, it’ll never get done.”

That’s a message whose time has come.

The art of the pitch

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010
the-art-of-the-pitch

Authors Christie Craig and Faye Hughes of Write With Us Online have created a funny but pointed video (“How To Make The Perfect Pitch (Without Striking Out)”) for aspiring authors who want to sell their book ideas to agents and editors. Thanks to Kathryn Craft of the Greater Lehigh Valley Writers Group for providing the lead.

The buzz on buzzwords

Monday, March 8th, 2010
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There’s a fascinating site for straight-talkers called BuzzWhack, dedicated to “bursting the bubbles of the pompous.” BuzzWhack defines words and lets you submit your own candidates. And for those who can’t get enough of the new lingo, the site will email a new entry to you each day.

Here’s a sample:

  • news snackers: People with short attention spans who primarily get their news in short bursts from things like Twitter and RSS feeds.
  • urban Amish: A city dweller with no cell phone, no laptop, no iPod, no Blackberry, etc.
  • reinventing the flat tire: To make the same mistake made before despite extended debate and a formal vote.
  • jitterati: What the digital generation becomes after sipping one too many cups of Starbucks.
  • leveraging knowledge capital: Stealing someone else’s work or idea, then changing a few things to make it your own—kind of what I’m doing here.

I guess I need a personal stimulus recovery plan, aka a vacation.

dilbert buzzword bingo color

Sarasota Noir: the laughing gull

Sunday, February 21st, 2010
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They had a clean flight from Allentown into Clearwater-St. Pete, less than two-and-a-half hours in the air. A warm front had pushed into the Northeast, with temperature hovering in the 40s. They walked off the plane in 60-degree sunshine, palm trees hugging the airport, ans were diverted through plywood corridors, past workers hammering at tile floors.

The crowd dispersed quickly. The luggage sat on the carousel where it was supposed to be. The woman at the rental counter surprised him when she didn’t try to sell all of those worthless things like upgrades and extra insurance.The Pier web

It was now 1:30 p.m. so they drove to the Pier off Second Avenue NE, an inverted pyramid with shops, a tubular aquarium and a franchise called ChaCha Coconuts. It’s on the rooftop deck where every table in the bar and grille comes equipped with a water-filled squirt bottle labeled “Bird B Gone.”

That didn’t fool the birds. They huddled in gangs, white gulls with their black do-rags and voices like rusty hinges and their co-conspirators, sleek brown rockets with sharp eyes and sharper beaks. She left her salad for a minute and the sleek one swooped in to steal a wonton noodle, lifting it effortlessly from the bowl like an expert mugger slicing through purse straps. The gulls were pickier: they’d eat onions but not lemon wedges. A Japanese couple tried squirting them. The gulls flew a few feet then walked the roofline, heads pulled back, laughing at the tourists. Thugs who’d mug you for a fry. Life is cheap in the tropics.

Time to move on. They fired up the GPS device and set the language to British English and a woman named Emily. Her pleasant voice guided them south on the Sunshine Skyway Bridge over Tampa Bay, its yellow cables burning in the light, two teens casting off the nearby pier. They drove through Pinellas County, through Palmetto and Bradenton and finally into Sarasota, Emily sounding only a bit annoying when she insisted on calling an exit ramp a “slip road.”

She led them across Fruitville Road and onto the Ringling Bridge, the humped-back highway that connects the city with Lido Key. Past a marina bobbing with boats and into the jaws of the roundabout at St. Armands Circle, the upscale cross between a park and a lifestyle mall and easily one of the most congested spot on the Gulf Coast. Then south for nearly a mile to the resort, a 14-story tower perched on the white sands of Lido Beach.

SAR sunset day 1 webTwo pools, a tiki hut thatched with palms by one of them, another hut on the sand. Two restaurants inside. The public spaces done in rattan and bamboo, the rooms in tile and Danish modern, the furniture blond wood with wave-like handles. Kitchen, hand-held shower wand, paddle fans, paintings of palm trees extending over surf.

Back home, it had snowed in November or December. He couldn’t remember when but knew it had been early for the season. Followed by that cold snap with a week of frigid mornings, eight above some days. Winter in the North, a time as Garrison Keillor says when you discover Mother Nature is trying to kill you.

The air felt cool in Sarasota, light-jacket weather. Before heading out he’d checked the GPS device: 2,600 mi. from home and a world away. The locals were talking as if temperatures in the mid-60s were a harbinger of the next Ice Age. To them it felt like an early spring. They ignored the critics and walked the beach, taking pictures of the sunset, letting the sand absorb the tension of the trip.

Gull webSuddenly they spotted him, the thug by the Pier in St. Pete. He was in disguise, wearing dress gray, pecking the backwash, pretending not to see them, yet all the while tracking their movements with one red-rimmed eye. Suspicious looking. Probably carrying a heater. As he cocked his head there was no mistaking that rusty voice: it was the laughing gull.

Above the frost line

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010
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I’ve always heard it’s another world in Tobyhanna, Pa. Now I know why.

It felt cold Saturday morning but the sun was shining for the first time in a while. It lit the snow in the woods, the trees like hands raised toward heaven for that life-sustaining glow. The house had started to feel small and airless, fairly typical after the holidays. We like to hike the state parks with our cameras, and since the plows had long since scraped the roads clean, we bundled up and drove the 40 minutes north to Tobyhanna State Park.

Tobyhanna State Park snowbank 72Route 611 was bare all the way through Mount Pocono. We crunched over an inch of cinders on Main Street in Tobyhanna, twisting past the Church of St. Ann on the corner with its white statues and turreted stone wall, but the roads were still clear. It was when we passed the entrance to the Tobyhanna Army Depot on Route 423 that we noticed the snow. Near the park entrance it had drifted across an otherwise barren road. Picnic benches straddled heaps of white that used to be green. The boat dock, the rental shack, the lake itself—all were deserted. Trails and roads, blocked by metal gates, were swollen with snow.

With hats and hoods in place, we got out of the car and walked to the lake. A hard wind, the kind you feel along Lake Shore Drive in Chicago, blew ice crystals sideways in clouds so thick we couldn’t see clearly. The snow on the lake bore the waffled tracks of vehicles and, in places where the wind had cleared its surface, the ice glowed, its color plunging from frosty white to blue-gray the deeper it went.

After a few photos we headed back, watching the temperature gauge on the dashboard rise a degree for every mile we drove, amazed at the contrast in weather between the southern part of the county and the Pocono Plateau.