Permalink Reply by Shannon Celebi on June 23, 2009 at 10:08pm
Permalink Reply by Kit Crumb on June 24, 2009 at 6:43am
Permalink Reply by Haley Baldwin on November 2, 2009 at 6:43pm Hi Kit,
I personally feel that it is important to write with passion first and worry about marketability later. It is not necessarily the tale you tell but how you tell it that makes it fresh and interesting and sparks an editor or agent's eye.
I can’t speak for all, of course, but I don’t think I’d be capable of working on two novels at once, although I do like to keep a few short stories brewing while the novel percolates and dust them off when the novel writing doesn’t flow as I’d like it to.
Hope that helps!
Shannon
Permalink Reply by Kit Crumb on November 3, 2009 at 8:38am
Permalink Reply by Kit Crumb on November 3, 2009 at 8:46am Hi Kit,
I personally feel that it is important to write with passion first and worry about marketability later. It is not necessarily the tale you tell but how you tell it that makes it fresh and interesting and sparks an editor or agent's eye.
I can’t speak for all, of course, but I don’t think I’d be capable of working on two novels at once, although I do like to keep a few short stories brewing while the novel percolates and dust them off when the novel writing doesn’t flow as I’d like it to.
Hope that helps!
Shannon
Permalink Reply by Shannon Celebi on November 3, 2009 at 9:04pm Hello Shannon
I was kind of fishing when I asked the question. What kind of FIction? Are you in middle of writing at this moment.
My ideas flow like water everyday,(I file them away) and I usually work between three books getting each one up to about 15 or 20 thousand words then one takes off and it gets finished first.
The reason for the fishing trip ( asking the probing question) is that I've been writing in a kind of a vacuum and was wondering what other fiction writers were doing.I've decided that it is time to share some of my methods as well as contacts I've made and would love to hear what other fiction writers are doing.
Also I'm putting together a little writer's camp up in the mountains where I live,and am searching for an interest level. This would be an idea camp, covering the craft of fiction writing kind of a fiction writer's brain storm,how to get ideas, determine if they can be turned into a book, and finding the best way to assemble the manuscript. No fee for this just the gathering of talented fiction writers with a common cause.
Permalink Reply by Shannon Celebi on November 3, 2009 at 9:18pm Hello Shannon
Right you are about writing with passion. I simply have a lot of passion for my plots and characters. Writing more then one book a year is nothing I work at, it is just the way my writers mind works. On a different line of thought. The agent, publisher role has changed a bunch in the past 12 months and what got you picked up by an agent then and now has changed. It is no longer enough to have a good story written well.It is at least as important to write something that sells yet as a writer you can't write with that in mind. Any thoughts on this.
Kit
PS my statement about the change in the role of the agent publisher is based on current trends and talks with dozens of agents and publishers.
Shannon Celebi said:Hi Kit,
I personally feel that it is important to write with passion first and worry about marketability later. It is not necessarily the tale you tell but how you tell it that makes it fresh and interesting and sparks an editor or agent's eye.
I can’t speak for all, of course, but I don’t think I’d be capable of working on two novels at once, although I do like to keep a few short stories brewing while the novel percolates and dust them off when the novel writing doesn’t flow as I’d like it to.
Hope that helps!
Shannon
Permalink Reply by TJ Askren on November 19, 2009 at 10:08am
Permalink Reply by Kit Crumb on November 21, 2009 at 11:30am
Permalink Reply by Shannon Celebi on November 29, 2009 at 10:07pm I hope everyone attended the Southern Oregon Book fair I had a booth but am on a writing writing project. My publisher has a book he wants me to co-author on the Amelia Earhart mystery based on some new facts, this plus my own books for next year. I'm putting together a January date for a writers camp, a brain storming good time. This is not the usual, you read my manuscript and I read yours. The gatherings are to explore the fiction writers craft and discuss the state of the publishing world.
I hold the camp at my house, 4,500 feet in the cascades. Yes there will be snow but the drive will be worth it. And of course all is free. The January camp will be focused on the fiction writers mind, and as always the craft itself. Where you write and when (should be everyday) to much fun. It's a full day, sorta, 10:00 am to 4:00 pm.
Hey Shannon, maybe some of the folks that meet at the library would like to attend.
Kit
PS I'll be taking on one person and helping them complete a manuscript.
KC
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