Tuesday, 25 August 2015

30 Days to First Draft

This week, I'm approaching the end of a writing marathon for my 365 Adventures in Writing and Entrepreneurship... 
 


Why wait for NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month)? There's no rule that says the only time you can try to write a novel in a month must be November.

I knew that August would be a fairly quiet month for me and I really want to get the last book in the Sheridan and Blake Adventure Series written so I set myself the challenge of completing the first draft of 'Garbriel's Game, Part 2: The Black Knight' by the end of August.
The first part of the final book in the series, 'Garbriel's Game, Part 1: The White Queen' came out a few weeks ago.


Read more on the blog on my website: 

30 Days to First Draft



30 Days to First Draft 1

I share my 9 top tips to get that first draft written in a month - Why is August a better time than November? ... a bonus extra day in August!

 As I approach the end of the month, I must confess, I am behind on my word count but I'm quietly confident that I can finish the first draft of 'Garbriel's Game, Part 2: The Black Knight' at the start of September and I'll be very happy with that!

Here are a couple of quotes from the book:




What helps you to get that first draft written? 


Please share your tips in the comments.

Tuesday, 11 August 2015

5 Non-monetary Reasons to Love Crowdfunding




 My latest...

Adventures in Writing and Entrepreneurship 




After successfully completing a crowdfund last year to publish Solomon's Secrets, when I was asked to join the organising committee for Bristol Festival of Literature this year and we talked about how we would finance such a monumental project to host a fantastic city wide event; crowdfunding was my first thought.

But crowdfunding is not just about money - there are plenty of other reasons to consider it to boost your business.

Here are 5 non-monetary things I love about Crowdfunding:
  1. Building Community. You can mobilse the support of your fan base and give them a hook to share with their networks
  2. Social Proof. It’s a very public way of showing that people support what you are trying to achieve
  3. Marketing Platform. It’s a great excuse to embark on a sustained marketing campaign to raise awareness.
  4. Newsworthy. A crowdfund is a newsworthy activity and makes better editorial copy than an advertisement
  5. Telling Your Story. People don’t just buy people, they buy stories. A crowdfund campaign can provide a great platform to share your story and engage people
Support Bristol Festival of Literature by sharing this link to the crowdfund:
Follow on Twitter: @BristolLitFest
Use the hashtag: #Unputdownable2015

Saturday, 25 July 2015

If You Write... You are a Writer

I met a friend and fellow writer, Anita Mccallum, recently in Margot May Tearooms in Bristol and we shared a lovely pot of tea and scribbled on some bunting while we were talking.

Here's Anita's excellent 'Louder than words' blog: http://loud-word.co/ 

Anita had recently written a blog post about her experience on an Arvon retreat and in it she writes; 'How do you know when you are a real writer?'

My response was; 'you write don't you? It's what you do?... well then you are a writer!'




I need to remind myself that first and foremost; I'm a writer.   


I've been spending so much of my time cultivating my business support business, that I've forgotten to protect my writing time.   

With one final book in the Sheridan and Blake Adventure Series, I am close to the end of one writing project but need to finish it before I move on to the next.   

Something that always helps me to find my mojo is positive affirmations and inspirational quotations:   

This one seems fitting as it reinforces my vision for my business... 

daydream 

This is one I often write inside books when I sign them for people... 

worth writing 
This one reminds me that I can write the story in my head but I need to get it onto to the page if I want to share it... 

write it down 
This one reminds me that the most important thing to do, even if you don't feel like it, even if you are in a fug of self doubt, is to just write... 


never wrote quote 

This one, similarly reminds me to just write, until I show it to anyone, no one is judging it...

 wrong or write 

And finally, this one reminds me that I have to write, that it keeps me sane and that in order for me to move forward I need to empty all the bumf from my brain out onto the page... 

papervoice 

 So... now I'm going to sit down and just write!

What are your favourite motivational 
mantras and quotations?

Wednesday, 22 July 2015

Amy on the interwebs this week...

I've had a busy week sharing, creating and curating content on the intwerwebs this week:



Join me in my 365 Adventures 

in Writing and Entrepreneurship... 


My Pinterest boards are filling up with lots of blogging, and business tips. 
Here's the 'Authorpreneur Almanac' board of my content:

Follow Amy Morse - Authorpreneur's board Authorpreneur Almanac on Pinterest.


I have two workshops coming up in Bristol in September 2015 on:


  • Introduction to Social Media and Content Marketing


  • Blogging for Beginners 

Social Media and Content Marketing


Blogging for Beginners
The workshops feed neatly into each other.
£40 each or £70 for both
(Includes tea, coffee and cake!)

To book email me: Amy@tomcatdesigns.co.uk
Or book via Eventbrite
 
It's not necessary for you to be a business to benefit from these workshops.
Network with others, invest in yourself, invest in your business.


While I've been on the subject of blogging I have feature published in Prowess Women in Business on my '10 reasons to love blogging'


Reason to Love Blogging



I have also been playing with videos this week. 

I have entered the Small Business Saturday Small Business 100 competition and had to create an about me video for it. I've added the video to my website:




 

Keep checking my website and I'll post here periodically too.

What marketing activities have worked for you this week? 

Monday, 13 July 2015

Coffee Shops: Office or Playground?

Follow my adventures in writing and entrepreneurship on my website and read more blog posts offering; tips, advice, inspiration and ideas for freelancers and small business:

www.AmyMorse.co.uk

 

I am self employed, but I'm also a social person and gather energy and inspiration by being around other people. 
 
It means that one of the greatest challenges I face is struggling with the isolation that working at home can bring.

I find a reason to go out every day and like to conduct business over a coffee with people, when people meet me, they are more likely to want to work with me.

As a writer, it's easy to lose an entire day tapping away at a keyboard and not see another person until my husband gets home from work.

I like to take my laptop out with me and work in coffee shops. I find that just the babble of voices around me feeds my creativity and motivation to write, and it gets me out of my pyjamas and out of the house!

I live in the fantastic city of Bristol UK. 

A city that has won awards for its cuisine and its independent spirit.

A city that celebrates diversity and does so through food and drink. 

I am spoiled for choice for places to eat and drink and all within walking distance.

But Bristol is a different animal in the daytime during the week, when most people are at work. 

As you would expect in a family friendly city; during the week most of the coffee shops are filled with mums.

At this point, I need to add a caveat...

I'm in my late 30's, I'm very happily married (and have been for 12 years) and I have no desire to be a mum.

This is the part where most people look at me with either; fear, disgust, mistrust, horror or sympathy. 

I am a social pariah by virtue of the fact that I am childless and I choose to be. Even my own family (especially my own family) don't understand it.

I'm a proud aunt, most of my friends have kids - I don't hate children. I'm not some weird Cruella DeVille character who wants to make a child skin jacket. 

Kids are fine, they can be fun to be around, but at the end of the day I want to come home to a quiet house and minimal responsibilities.

Frankly, I'm amazed I've managed to keep myself alive for this long, let alone another person!

My husband and I are very happy in our family unit of 2 (+ cat) thank you very much.

I can work in a noisy, child filled environment but I don't want to. When I told this to my sister (who has 2 small children) she said that was "depressing".

Is it? Is it not okay for me to want to have a public space to work in that is not filled with children? (Without having to pay to book a room - the whole point is to be around people, not in a room on my own!)

Picture this: You're trying to have a professional meeting with another freelancer and you have to raise your voices over the sound of children screaming and make sure your bags, coats etc. are out of reach from sticky fingers.  

In a city as eclectic as Bristol with its, literally, thousands of coffee shops it should be possible to find one to take a laptop into or meet a client in, without feeling like I'm sat in an adventure playground?

This is my challenge.

Over the next few weeks, I plan to work in a variety of coffee shops in the city and rate them for their useability as a mobile office.

I've constructed a short survey, so that I measure each establishment against the same criteria.

My questions include:
  • Do they have Free WiFi?
  • Value for money - Not 'cheap', I'll pay more for a good coffee.
  • Friendliness of staff
  • Noise/Environment

I'll score each place and report my findings.


Have your say...

Am I out of order to seek this?

 

Should there be places where adults can find sanctuary from other people's children?

 

Are there enough child friendly places?  


What's it like where you live - how child friendly are public spaces?


(Please comment)





  





Monday, 29 June 2015

The Cocktail for a Perfect Holiday Read

While the sun is shining, thoughts inevitably drift towards relaxing by the pool or on the beach with an engrossing book and a cocktail...


What makes a perfect holiday read?




Here's my recipe for the Holiday Read Cocktail:


1.  Into your solid, well contained plot; blend a complementary mix of tasty characters

2.  Add a generous shot of action

3.  Drop in a dash of violence

4.  Sprinkle in some sensuous sex

5.  Shake vigourously to mix in all the subtle flavours of sub plot

6.  Finally, serve chilled with a twist

 

I'll always prefer the smell, texture and feel of a print book, but for holidays, an eReader is a much more convenient thing to pack than all those heavy books.




Make sure your eReader is fully loaded with lots of great books.




You can get all three of my novels; The Bronze Box, Solomon's Secrets and Gabriel's Game; Part 1, for less than the cost of a bottle of suncream.


What holiday reads would you recommend?

Saturday, 13 June 2015

Writing: A Space Between Pleasure and Pain

In the great scheme of things, the struggles that writers have are a very first world problem, but still, when you are in the thick of it, being a writer is wrought with frustrating challenges.

http://authorpreneur.amymorse.co.uk/

I can certainly relate to this:




I found this image on Pinterest from The Write Practice

I recently read this feature by the super talented Brian A Klems:

http://www.writersdigest.com/online-editor/top-10-normal-struggles-when-writing-a-novel?et_mid=759276&rid=235241213

About the struggles we face as writers. Nice use of the word 'normal' - It's good to be reminded once in a while that you're not the only one!

In it, Brian shares 10 struggles writers can relate to:
  1. Title dilemmas
  2. Giving up part way through
  3. Being a recluse
  4. Choosing between creativity and money
  5. The time spent researching
  6. Deciding how your novel will end
  7. Insomnia, as you think about the next page
  8. Interfering editors
  9. Constantly re-writing
  10. Characters going off on tangents

Most of these are familiar to me, but we all have our own creative process and our writers brains are all wired up a bit differently.

Here's my response to these struggles and how I tackle them so I can press ahead and stay motivated:

1. Title Dilemmas

It's not immediately obvious from my books, but this helps me to catalog them in my brain; I have a reason for using BB, SS, GG alliteration for the books in the Sheridan and Blake Adventure series:

The Bronze Box (Bronze)


Solomon's Secrets (Silver)


Gabriel's Game (Gold)



There is space for a PP (Platinum) but I intend for Gabriel's Game to be the last in  the Sheridan and Blake Series.

Tom Sheridan and Sasha Blake will make cameo's again in future books but after the final installment; Gabriel's Game, Part 2: the Black Knight - I need to give poor Tom Sheridan and Sasha Blake a rest, I've tortured them enough!

With everything I write, I always go through multiple incarnations of working titles before I make a decision. Often the process of writing the story starts to reveal what the most appropriate name should be.

Solution:

Jot down a few ideas and ask the opinions of others to help you make a decision

2. Giving up part way through

A stark example of this is the first time I ever set my mind to writing a book. I was about 15 at the time. The book was called 'Running Free'.

I started, chopped and changed and ditched it on and off for 15 years before I picked it up again as a serious project. But even then, I had the book in my head but couldn't find the means to write it. So the first novel I wrote was a sequel to this unwritten book. I then wrote the sequel to that, before I actually wrote the book that had been marinating in my brain since I was a teenager.

I had to write those three books to learn how to write a book, and it was my fourth novel, The Bronze Box, that I eventually published.

I have plans to re-write and publish those first four books, but I need to sort Tom and Sasha out first before I let any other characters get comfortable in my imagination.

Solution:

It's OK to give up on a particular story, but no writing is ever wasted. Keep all of it, you never know when you might be able to re-purpose it into a another story 

3. Being a recluse

I'm generally a pretty sociable person, it's my poor husband who suffers when I disappear into my writing bubble.

Having said that, I've done NaNoWriMo (write a novel in a month) for the past two November's, but I more than make up for it in December by muscling my way into as many Christmas parties as possible - 'Tis the season to be jolly', after all!

Solution:

Strike a balance.

As creatives we all have periods of immersion. Communicate this to friends and loved ones and by and large they accept it, as long as you don't neglect them for too long.

4. Choosing between creativity and money

This is one I've not really faced. I'm going to be creative anyway. I am a relentless writer and if I make some money from my work, bonus!

Solution:

Go with your gut.

Money is not a dirty word, we all need it, so have a portfolio of ways to earn so that you minimise the risk of compromising your integrity for the next pay cheque.

5. The time spent researching

I spend many hours poring over websites, reading books, visiting places and talking to people in the name of my writing. I have used my 'I'm a writer' ticket to get access to some pretty cool archives and archeological sites.

I enjoy researching, it gives me an excuse to indulge my many fascinations and a reason to spend countless hours on Pinterest.

I find Pinterest an invaluable tool for collecting, collating and curating research links. Here are my boards:

Visit Amy Morse - Authorpreneur's profile on Pinterest.

But it can be a struggle fitting it all in and sometimes research can stray into the realms of procrastination.

Solution:

Establish a writing routine for yourself and be disciplined.

Experiment with different ways to manage your time until you find something your are comfortable with.

6. Deciding how your novel will end

Brian's; comment: "If I ever knew the ending of a novel in advance, I wouldn’t write it" really intrigued me, because my writing process isn't like that.

I've tried lots of techniques, but my default style is to; write the beginning and the ending (loosely anyway) but I then let my characters grow, develop, go through conflicts and interact with each other throughout. I poke them, link them in unplanned ways, mess with their heads, but ultimately; their journey will always take them from point A to point B. The way they choose to get there, however, is always unexpected.

Solution:

There is no right or wrong. We all have different writing routines and styles. Don't beat yourself up if you don't know the ending, let it flow and see where it takes you.

Be open to experimenting and remind yourself that you can change it as many times as you like before you publish.

7. Insomnia, as you think about the next page

I don't write in a linear fashion, so it's never about the 'next page' for me. It's about the scenes and the personalities. Only once I've written a few scenes can I start to stitch them together and see where they fit in the journey from A to B.

My insomnia is; daydreaming my characters traumas, passions, adventures, emotions, interactions and snatched conversations.

Solution:

I wish I had a solution to insomnia!

A note book, as Brian suggests, is a great way to empty your brain so you can make space to sleep. Keep one by your bed. I've snuck off into the next bedroom a few times in the middle of the night to frantically write stuff down without disturbing my long suffering husband.

8. Interfering editors

I independently published my books and haven't yet dealt with editors. However, I have listened to opinions and critiques and changed whole characters and scenes that I have later regretted because I was inclined to trust voices that were more experienced. But by the same token, my beta readers and critique partners have spotted massive plot holes and implausibilities that I'd not noticed.  

Solution:

Have the courage of your conviction. It's your book. Take advice, get opinions - yes absolutely, you'd be a fool not to - but ultimately it's your book so you need to decide what you want to keep in, remove or change. Do what feels right to you.

9. Constantly re-writing

Even professional writers don't write a prefect first draft. The editing, proofing and re-writing process can sometimes seem endless. I recently updated a post I wrote on editing with my 'ultimate tips', here it is:


http://authorpreneur.amymorse.co.uk/?p=277

Remind yourself of this fundamental fact:

Perfection is a fallacy.



Your work can only ever be good enough at that time in your life. Inevitably your work will improve over time, but it will only improve if you get feedback and continue to work at it. 

Solution:

It can never be perfect, perfection is an unattainable goal so don't set yourself up to fail by aiming for it. It's OK. Accept it. Move on.

Only by releasing your writing into the wild and getting feedback can you improve.

10. Characters going off on tangents

I view this as a positive thing - the moment your characters start finding their own way is the moment they became realistic.

People are inherently unpredictable, yes our personality will determine our behaviour, but when we're tested, when the unexpected happens, we react in unexpected ways.

Like Brian, I too get heavily invested in my characters and it's taken me a while to find a comfort zone in deep POV.

In Solomon's Secrets in particular, Tom Sheridan has more of a voice and as I was writing I really felt I got to know him well. I'm now a bit in love with him (despite the discovery that he's a smoker)!

Solution:

Let your characters breathe, really get to know them, sketch out biography's, collect images, the more real they seem to you the more real they'll seem to your readers.

To help me picture my characters I find actors that I imagine would play them if the books ever became a movie. I collect images with the actors in various poses, pulling different faces and dressed in different ways on Pinterest boards and find it a really useful reference point when I'm describing an expression on their face, a look in their eyes etc. I look like a bit of a celebrity stalker, but it helps my writing process. 

Here's the board for the lasted book, Gabriel's Game:


  Follow Amy Morse - Authorpreneur's board Gabriel's Game: Characters on Pinterest.

Read more of my tips, advice, inspiration and actions for writers and entrepreneurs here:

 

What struggles do you face as a writer?