Category Archives: writing

Writing Aids

The other day I was sitting in a pick-up truck parked in a field, waiting on someone. Rather than waste gas, I turned off the engine and rolled down the windows. As the heat and humidity rolled in and crushed the once-chilled air, a hopeful breeze followed (along with a grasshopper that quickly left when I showed an interest in catching it). The smells, buzzes, sweat, and other stimuli reminded me of a scene I needed to write for the novel I am currently working on. I keep a Moleskine with me as much as possible, with a mechanical pencil tucked in its pages just in case an idea hits me in situations like these, so I quickly whipped it out and jotted down pages of words inspired by the sticky and uncomfortable situation.

Yesterday I lucked into a songwriter on the internet when I did a search for something entirely different. After searching through her stuff and listening to some music that was very nice and some that was okay, I hit upon a beautiful song that seemed to perfectly capture the mood of a character. The more I replayed it, the more I was determined to add it to the soundtrack. I often listen to music while I am writing (I don’t necessarily hear the music if I’m really working, but having it flow in the background seems to help the words flow) and sometimes I create a soundtrack or compilation of specific songs that repeat in random order while I’m working on a particular story or novel.  Finding pieces that reflect the mood of certain parts of the story, or the character’s temperament, definitely works well for me.

So what about you? Do you have any methods to your madness (writing madness, that is) that aid you in your endeavors to put in words the stories that whirl around in your imagination? If so, please share.

Writing News

Ladies and gentlemen, keep your hands and feet inside at all times and enjoy the ride.

Yes, the anthology is done and should be published soon, unless the beta readers have major issues. What is a beta reader? To me it is someone who has volunteered to read a story (or anthology) of mine and let me know how they liked it or didn’t like it. They are not editors, but the people who can let me know if I have left a stone unturned by not explaining a story properly, etc.

So I feel like celebrating! But I actually have work to do.  There is a novel that I would dearly love to finish this year and it is begging me to work on it.

What do you guys do in celebration when you finish something? Find more work to do? Or go out and celebrate?

Meanderings

So by now you guys have figured out I don’t usually have much to say. I did manage to meander around the web the other day and came across some links you might like:

The Top Ten Books People Lie About Reading

14 Ways to Tick off a Writer

Should You Enter a Writing Contest

The top two are funny. As for the third, I include it for anyone wanting to try their hand at some writing competition. I actually have entered a couple of contests before but there was a snafu with the first entry (they never got it) and the second contest had fine print I did not read that said I had to promote my work by emailing or tweeting everyone I knew to garner votes from all my friends (which means I lost as I obviously am lacking when it comes to self promotion). So if you do enter contests, remember to read all the instructions!

I have been finishing up the anthology of short stories and should be publishing it through SmashWords soon. By soon I mean July (depending on what my test readers say and my final edits). It will be a freebie book – my gift to anyone out there who likes short stories and needs some entertainment.