Hello, you wonderful group of followers! You guys are absolutely amazing!
I've had this blog for close to five years now and I can't tell you how much your support has meant to me. It's been a long journey, one I've shared openly, of the many ups and downs to becoming a YA author. And now, as my release date approaches and I try my hand at self marketing (NOT as easy as it sounds!), I thought I'd share with you some of the social media posters I've been creating and sharing EVERYWHERE I can.
If you follow me on social media and you're already sick of seeing these, I apologize. I'm trying really hard not to be THAT author who just bombards you with their crap. I'm trying to mix it up by still posting my usual stuff and sneaking in my commercials on the side.
So here we go, my fabulous whatever-they're-calleds...
If you feel so inclined to share them, thank you! I love you! You're my hero!
Check out the fan made "SEEK Saga" fan page!
It's pretty friggen awesome and I stop by from time to time.
Showing posts with label Publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Publishing. Show all posts
Saturday, April 9, 2016
Sunday, February 28, 2016
Writing Your Way Out of Hibernation: Don't Quit!
Behold! I have emerged from the Writer’s Den refreshed
and at long-last finished with phase 3-million of the major rewrite. I’ve sent it to beta readers, received
their approval and now my baby lies in the more capable hands of my outstanding editor, Heather Webb (check her out, she’s
fabulous!).
My apologies for being gone so long. I had to really commit myself to finishing this
project. As I mentioned in Digging up The Dead: The Tale of The Manuscript That Wouldn’t Die, reviving the dead is
no easy project and this manuscript was DEAD! It still looks something like this...
But that is what I’m writing this blog about…
As writers, we hear it all the time, “Just stick that horrible manuscript in a drawer
and write something else.”
So I did that, right? And my ghostly characters called
me back. They swore they weren’t dead and they wanted their story told. So I've slogged away for months and
here’s what I’ve learned in the process.
1. Writing improves with time.
2. It’s extremely difficult to correct a billion mistakes in one manuscript.
3. It’s hard letting go of writing that you once thought you loved.
4. Remember to NOT make the same mistakes in the future.
5. Every character has a mission (or should) and at least one that you love must be sacrificed.
6. It’s worth the effort of rewriting a manuscript just to see how far you can go.
I know this manuscript is far from perfect
(cough-cough UNDERSTATEMENT), really. I still see a lot more that needs to be
addressed (enter the last round of edits) and I’m sure my editor is
finding a gazillion more issues for me to fix (which is exactly why I so desperately need her
expertise). Because when I’m done, though I still won’t have a perfect book –
and when this old story finally sees the light of day I’m sure it will have its
fair share of criticism – but the point of doing this is that I didn’t quit!
It wasn’t easy to pick up that mess of an old
manuscript and face my own poor writing demons, but I did (okay, there are a few
still in there, but I’m really hoping Heather will exorcise them!) and I’m
glad I did. It gave me a chance to look at my writing objectively, the
same way I look at someone else’s work-in-progress and think wtf? What was I
thinking? I was finally able to see what everyone else was trying to tell me
(yes, Heather, I know. I hate chapter two also).
And that’s why I am so glad that I’ve committed to
finishing this project, no matter how painful. This is the learning experience
of a lifetime (one my degree could never teach) and even if this series won't be
perfect, they’ll be something I can be proud
of simply because I didn’t quit. Now, the next time I write from scratch I
won’t make the same mistakes I made before (I’ll make new ones) and all of my
future writing will be better because I suffered and slaved and patchwork quilted
this thing back together.
![]() |
After ripping her apart and stitching her back together so many times this is pretty much how I see my beautiful heroine now. |
My advice to you, if you’re just beginning this writing
journey, is to really make sure the project is dead TO YOU, before locking it
away forever. The manuscript might still never see the light of day, or maybe
it will, but it doesn’t make the best-sellers-whatever, the point is…if that
manuscript is still calling your name, then it has something more to teach you.
Pick it up, dust it off, and give it another coat of elbow grease before you decide to let it die. You’re the only one who can truly know your manuscript and what you’re capable of accomplishing with it. If you don’t want to give up, yet, then don’t. That way if it still ends up without a pulse, at least you’ll know you did everything you could to save it and hopefully you learn some new CPR tricks.
Pick it up, dust it off, and give it another coat of elbow grease before you decide to let it die. You’re the only one who can truly know your manuscript and what you’re capable of accomplishing with it. If you don’t want to give up, yet, then don’t. That way if it still ends up without a pulse, at least you’ll know you did everything you could to save it and hopefully you learn some new CPR tricks.
What's next for me? I’m tentatively planning to do a cover reveal for Search (SEEK Part 1) on April 1st (depending on how bad my edit letter is) and a May 1st release (of course, those dates might change! *bites nails*).
You can find updates on Goodreads, Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, right here at Addicted toWords, and candieleighcampbell.com
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Sunday, September 20, 2015
The Writer’s Maze: Survival Tips for Writers
It’s that scaretastic time of year again, when zombie writers
emerge from their dens after a long summer’s hibernation. What are they in
search of? Editors, agents, and publishers—OH MY! I’ve already talked about the
Writer’s Maze to traditional publishing, but there’s something more you need to
know about Fall for Writers.
Besides the cornstalks of wonderful query-writing fun, there’s
another correlation between this time of year and being a writer. Halloween for
writers can be terror incarnate with the assembly of freaks on the prowl.
For example, the scarers, the creeps in costume who hide in
plain sight and don’t yell boo until you’re not looking. The ghosts, friends who
only bring their crazy out on the internet. Then there are the goblins, the
creepy men who stalk you on Facebook and Twitter and pretend they’ve read your
book - which hasn’t been published yet – so they can flirt with you. The
witches, self explanatory. And the trolls, the people who stalk you on the
internet leaving bad reviews and rude comments, the schoolyard bullies who’ve
grown old but haven’t grown up.
But there are those people who are even scarier than all
those others put together. The clowns. The clowns are those who pretend to be
your close friend, but who don’t really have your best interest at heart (and
no, this isn’t a vengeful post to take a stab at someone who’s wronged me).
This is a collaboration of stories real-life friends have told me, rumors I’ve
heard at writer’s conferences, and mixed-in tidbits of my own personal
experiences.
In a self preservation fashion, I’ve compiled this silly,
yet gloriously satisfying, Fall for Writer’s Survival List. Complete with
descriptions, curses and cures. Keep this handy by your desk for your own
protection.
The Scarers: Are
people whom you don’t consider a friend, but rather a trusted acquaintance, can
be a professor, a freelance editor under your employ, a book-cover designer, an
author, or anyone else considered an expert in their field whom you trust to
give you honest advice about your career.
Note: I am not a scarer because I am
not considered an expert by any stretch of the imagination.
Curse: The scarers are so named because
of their gift for crushing a writer’s dream with their own tales of “Getting
published is hard and can take years” or “Not everyone who wants to be a writer
gets published.”
WARNING: Actual sayings have been
paraphrased for the general audience as an example of what a scarer might say,
but be warned any person who utters a phrase meant to discourage you is a
scarer.
Cure: Play deaf immediately. The
scarers only power is just a scare tactic and their curse only works if you
listen to them. The curse works like a tapeworm planted in your ear, designed
to gnaw through your brain until it’s devoured every drop of courage, resilience
and confidence you once possessed. If you encounter a scarer, plug your ears and
hum, “Just keep writing, just keep writing. Just keep writing-writing-writing. What
do you do? You write, write.”
The Ghosts: The
ghosts are the people you know in real life, who are perfectly charming and
lovely in person, but they get online and suddenly they’re Debbie-downer.
Everything sucks and the whole world is out to get them…and you, why? Because
they’re paranoid narcissists with nothing better to do with their lives than
dream up scenarios (which probably makes them good writers) of literary global
doom and publishing world conspiracies. You know the ones who claim they had
the idea for Harry Potter or To Kill A Mockingbird first? Yeah, them.
Curse: The ghost’s only hope of scaring you from another realm is if
you follow them through the looking-glass. That’s right stay away from all mirrors
in which you relate to or resemble their delusions at all. That is what the
ghosts want, company in their haunting pity party.
Cure: Focus on reality. In the realm of
the living, the ghosts can’t hurt you. If you remember who you are and what’s
real, you’ll survive a ghost attack no problem.
The Goblins: If
you haven’t had the unfortunate encounter with a goblin yet, count yourself
lucky. For me personally, goblins came as a surprise because no one warned me
of their existence. Goblins are like dirty old men (though age really isn’t a
requirement to be a goblin) groupies for authors on social media. There are a
few ways to recognize a goblin. One, if they POKE you on Facebook. Two, if they
Instant Message you saying things like “You’re prettier and younger than I
imagined you would be from your book” or “I think you look sexy, Beautiful, we
should totally talk.”
Curse: Freaky nightmares in which you imagine yourself having to
hide on the internet because you’re too afraid to be in the public’s eye any longer.
You feel isolated and alone because there’s no way this is happening to your
friends too. They would’ve mentioned it, right? Well, not necessarily, a goblin
attack is embarrassing and not everyone wants to discuss it. Some writers find
it easier to cope by simply taking a shower and never mentioning goblins again.
Cure: Expose the goblins. A goblin loses his power in the
lime-light. That’s right, many goblins are married or in committed
relationships and don’t want anyone to know that they’ve been IMing and POKING
around with writers. Screenshot your goblin attack and show the world what’s
really going on.
NOTE: I don’t really recommend the
screenshot thing, only because I myself am too chicken to do it. I have been a
victim of a number of goblin attacks and I merely run and hide. But if you’re
braver than I and decide to do so, please tag me in the post so that I might
revel in your courageous glory.
The Witches: Although this title pretty
much speaks for itself, let’s review. Witches always seem to be around, a part
of their magic I suppose. They brew up their potions of trickery and
manipulation. They might even disguise themselves as a friend in need, only to
feed you a poison apple of sabotage.
Curse: A witches curse can be hard to spot because you may not know
that you’ve encountered a witch until you’ve hung yourself on the clothesline
in the town square and the villagers have come to watch you swing. The witch
may tell you to query an agent that clearly doesn’t even represent your genre,
or they might suggest you enter your work in a contest even though it’s obvious
your work isn’t ready. Or worse yet, a witch may read your work and steal your
ideas.
Cure: Sadly, there is no foolproof cure
for witches, they’re magic remember? But you can always arm yourself in
knowledge and guard yourself well. Make sure you’re not being gullible. You
must know for certain when your stuff is ready, and when it isn’t. And most importantly, if you’re
worried someone else (who is maybe further along in their career than you)
might steal creative mojo from you, don’t share your ideas and stories with
them until you’re ready to publish so at least you’ll get the credit for being
original.
The Trolls: Everyone’s got trolls and it
doesn’t matter what you do professionally, there’s always someone who wants to
knock you down and tell you what a giant piece of crap of you are. Actors,
singers, producers, publishers, editors, writers, everyone—everyone has known a
troll or two in their lifetime. The hardest thing about a trolls right now is
the ease at which they can bad-mouth their victims. The internet is one giant
playground for a troll to find people to bully and putdown.
Curse: The only power a troll has is if you start to doubt yourself
and believe in what they say. If you for one second begin to see yourself
through the troll’s eyes, then he’s won and you’ve lost a piece of yourself to fear.
Cure: The best defense against a troll
attack is to know who you are. I’m not suggesting that you maintain perfect
confidence about yourself and your writing abilities throughout your career. I’m
saying admit who are to yourself before you put yourself out there for the
world to pick you apart, be okay with who are and arm yourself with that
knowledge. If you know who you are and a troll tries to tell you you’re
something else, you’ll know better than to believe him.
The Clowns: The
clowns are the scariest predator of all if you ask me. These clowns are meant
to be serious, knowledgeable experts in their fields, but once you get up close
to them you can see their makeup and then they squirt you in the face with the
plastic flower in their lapel. They discourage you with words like “only five
percent of writers find success” or “you shouldn’t write because you want to
make a career of it, you should only write because you love it.”
Curse: If you’ve encountered a clown you’ll know because you’ll lose
your nerve and quit the game before you even have a chance at winning.
Cure: Laughter is the best medicine to
fight off a clown. Though they claim they want to be taken seriously (they even
advertise how smart they are with their degrees and accomplishments in their
bios) their nay-saying is evidence of their cynicism and you should never –
under any circumstances – succumb to the skeptical intimidations of a clown. Laugh
at them and walk away.
Now you know, don’t be a writer that falls for tricks this fall,
be a writer who’s well informed and stand tall when you submit your work. And
if that doesn’t work, throw the book at the monsters and run like hell, there’s
always another path to success.
Happy Halloween!
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