Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Judging writing competitions

Recently, I co-judged a short story writing competition and had it been my decision alone, I would not have awarded a prize to any, because this gives the wrong message about their writing. Winning an award infers the work is of award winning standard and this was not the case with any of the entries I read. All except one lacked the accepted Australian style of single quotation mark for dialogue, formatting in most was abysmal, and the majority failed to meet the expected elements of short story writing. I found it difficult to move beyond the first page on most of the entries as I was bombarded with telling the story and a marked absence of descriptive showing.

As there was no set theme for this competition, I can only conclude many entrants belonged to the same community writing groups as there appeared to be themes emerging in the entries; alcohol and other substance abuse, pregnancy, and writing, so I assumed the stories began their life from a writing prompt. I have no problem with this, but it does create an assumption on my part about the value of writing groups where there is no honest and planned critique of work. I can imagine these stories being read aloud to a group and the accompanying oohs and aahs of the ego strokers, while the writer bypasses all reasonable story ‘writing’ in favour of their ‘spoken’ version of their work. I have found that writers reading their own work to a group, read it quite differently than the punctuation would have it - knowing a story well enough the writer often reads what they know rather than what is on the page in front of them.

With errors dotted throughout the entries, there appeared to be an obvious lack of proofreading and editing, leaving most looking like first drafts. What disappointed me the most was seeing the potential in some of these stories and knowing that, without honest comment, there would be minimum creative development for the writer. I appreciate the competition organiser did not offer style guidelines for the entrants, and that is another issue entirely, however, any would-be-writer is capable of researching the internet or local library for advice on presentation and formatting. There is more to being a writer than throwing words at the computer screen and printing it off.

I have seen some ordinary competition entries over the years. I have also experienced those where the shortlisting process has been a difficult task by virtue of the high quality of the entries, but this lot was the worst I have ever seen.

In the next few days I will create and post a generic style guide for short story competition entries.




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Tuesday, March 13, 2012

From Hornsby to New York: how an erotic e-book became a $1m blockbuster

David Marr
March 12, 2012


SO MUCH has happened to Amanda Hayward in the past few weeks she admits to feeling a little disoriented. An erotic novel published by her Hornsby company, the Writer's Coffee Shop, has hit the No.1 spot on The New York Times e-book fiction best-seller list and been sold for more than $1 million to Random House.
This is a publishing triumph of an entirely new kind. You haven't seen stacks of Fifty Shades of Grey, by E.L.James, in your bookshop. Hayward has never had her name in the Australian press. Until The New York Times broke the story this weekend, she and the Writer's Coffee Shop were the unknown unknowns of Australian publishing.
"We were going to appear the other day on the Kyle and Jackie O Show [on 2Day FM]," Hayward told the Herald. "But we cancelled out of consideration for the author until the deal with Random House was finalised."
HaywardPublishing triumph … Amanda Hayward. Photo: James Brickwood
There is no coffee shop and the only address in Hornsby is a post office box. Everything that matters in this story happened on the net. There, a few years ago, Hayward and a partner in the US set up a site where amateur romance writers could publish their work free to all readers.
Early last year Hayward noticed that E.L.James, a London television executive, was attracting "a lot of readers" with the erotic adventures, posted chapter by chapter, of a young student, Anastasia Steele, and "dashing but damaged" entrepreneur Christian Grey.
So an e-book version was launched in May. Despite having a US partner, Hayward says: "I was the one who invested the money, so it started in Australia." A few paperbacks were printed for the trade only in England and the US. It hit the spot.
In high demand ... the erotic novel, Fifty Shades of Grey.In high demand ... Fifty Shades of Grey.
The New York Times reported: "Fifty Shades of Grey, an erotic novel by an obscure author that has been described as 'mommy porn' and Twilight for grown-ups, has electrified women across the country, who have spread the word like gospel on Facebook pages, at school functions and in spin classes."
Critics on blog sites were cruel but it made no difference to sales. "It's sold 250,000 copies, most in the last couple of months," Hayward says.
Some of the success may be due to an unconsidered advantage of e-books: they can be so discreetly downloaded.
James rapidly provided two sequels. Fifty Shades Darker appeared in September and Fifty Shades Freed was launched in New York in January.
Though now more than 1000 pages, the story of these star-crossed lovers may not be over. "Just when it seems that together their love can conquer any obstacle, misfortune, malice and fate combine to make Ana's worst nightmares come true," reads the blurb for volume three. "Alone and desperate, she must face down the poisoned legacy of Christian's past."
Meanwhile, author and publisher are enjoying their fortune from the Random House deal in which 750,000 copies of the trilogy will hit US bookshops from next week. In April or May Fifty Shades of Grey will at last appear in bookshops in Australia.
It has been a strange journey: a book that made its mark first on the internet, then as an e-book, will finally appear as books always appeared, in print. It's how Hayward would have wished it all along. ''Unfortunately, print doesn't look as though it's going to survive much longer," she says.
The Writer's Coffee Shop has a long list of e-books on the market - not all erotica. Hayward says a little of the windfall may be spent setting up a coffee shop for writers and readers, not on the net but down here on the ground - maybe in Hornsby.


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/books/from-hornsby-to-new-york-how-an-erotic-ebook-became-a-1m-blockbuster-20120311-1uso5.html#ixzz1owepcQyP

Henry Miller and the Process of Writing a Novel or Screenplay - Roland's Creative Writing Blog - The Writers Studio offers creative fiction writing courses and classes live at our Sydney studio or online writing classes on the internet, online novel writing courses and online film script writing courses..

For most people, writing a good story, whether it be a novel or screenplay, requires a step-by-step process.
There are many different facets to the process. Broadly speaking, they are - planning, writing, re-writing and editing.
One mistake many aspiring writers make when starting out is that they mix the tasks up and then find it very hard to move forward to completion.
In order to realise the full potential of any story you are writing, it makes a huge difference if you have a process and that you follow it through to the end.
This is something we stress in all our classes, particularly to those in the Novel and Script First Draft class. Nearly everyone doubts their story at some time or other when writing it.
However, you must keep going until your story is finished. Often, it is only when writers complete the full process that they see their stories really come together and work as a unified whole.
In the early 1930s while working on his hugely influential book, Tropic of Cancer, Henry Miller wrote the following list of 11 Commandments:
  1. Work on one thing at a time until finished.
  2. Start no more new books, add no more new material to Black Spring.
  3. Don't be nervous. Work calmly, joyously, recklessly on whatever is in hand.
  4. Work according to Program and not according to mood. Stop at appointed time!
  5. When you can't create, you can work.
  6. Cement a little every day, rather than add new fertilizers.
  7. Keep human! See people, go places, drink if you feel like it.
  8. Don't be a draught-horse! Work with pleasure only.
  9. Discard the Program when you feel like it - but go back to it next day. Concentrate. Narrow down. Exclude.
  10. Forget the books you want to write. Think only of the book you are writing.
  11. Write first and always. Painting, music, friends, cinema, all these come afterwards.
Here are a few comments about the power of process from people who have recently completed our Ten Month Novel and Script First Draft Course that reflect some of Henry Miller's principles.
"The process of writing a first draft has been a revelation to me, sometimes slow and painful but the many 'aha' moments have kept me going. While I am still sometimes too self-critical and hard on myself, I and my character have both learned to let go and trust and have faith that the universe will help us out." Claire
"To allow the story to emerge with creativity, spontaneity and 'juice' you have to surrender to the process. Creativity walks through the doorway of the formal story step process." Gilbert

"I've spent a very enjoyable 10 months exploring the importance of structure in the creative process. What at first sounded like a total contradiction actually made complete sense by the end; it made everything fall into place." Rachel

"I have learned that writing takes commitment and persistence. It also takes courage and a willingness to grow through the process.
"When there is this willingness it is very rewarding. The joy of not knowing what will appear next in the story and seeing new characters reveal themselves makes facing that blank page worth it." Satyam

Friday, March 9, 2012

Editing and Proofreading

JI have now completed eleven out of twelve subjects completed. Even though I have a diploma in Professional writing & editing, I have found this course invaluable for filling in the gaps and keeping skills current.


  • Introduction to editing and proofreading
    • Introduction to your course
    • Grammar: part 1
    • Making a living as a freelancer
    • Mistakes people make
    • How the course is structured
    • The industry of editing and proofreading
    • Introducing proofreading marks
  • Proofreading marks
    • Creating the perfect environment
    • Proofreading marks: part 1
    • The successful career of a freelance proofreader
    • Welcome to the wonderful world of proof correction marks
    • Computers and editing
    • Test your knowledge
  • Structural editing
    • Structural editing of novels
    • Structural editing of non-fiction
    • Editing versus proofreading: an update
    • The spelling debate
    • Language is going global
  • Continuity
    • The importance of consistency and continuity
    • Looking out for continuity
    • The importance of reading
  • Copy editing
    • How to get started in the freelance editing and proofreading industry
    • What is copy editing?
    • Becoming a copy editor
    • Freelance and editing rates
    • Publishers' requirements
    • Standards of punctuation
    • The copy editor's task
    • Proofreading tips
  • The editor and the author
    • Establishing a good relationship with an author
    • Who has the final say?
    • The editor and political correctness
  • Editing notes and colloquial speech
    • Presentation of editing notes
    • How to mark editing notes on a document or manuscript
    • Understanding colloquial language
    • What is colloquial language?
    • Colloquial language is essential to many documents
      General knowledge and playing with words
      • What is general knowledge?
      • Case study
      • How do you fact check a document?
      • Grammar part 8: compound verbs and adverbs
  • Computer editing and electronic publishing
    • Editing using a computer
    • Making editing corrections on-screen
    • Electronic publishing and e-books
    • Test your general knowledge
    • Grammar part 9: what is a split infinitive?
  • Copyright and author's style
    • Protecting your work
    • The pitfalls of copyright and defamation
    • The difference between defamation, libel and slander
    • When is a document out of copyright?
    • Are titles of songs covered by copyright?
    • How does an editor protect himself or herself from breach of copyright?
    • Australian standards for editing practice
  • Proofreading and design
    • Proofreading
    • Design
    • Welcome to the efficient world of computers!
    • Illustrations, photographs and graphics

******************************************************************
Still to go:
  • Getting down to business
    • Tutorial review
    • Reference guide
    • Parts of speech
    • Setting yourself up as a freelancer
    • Starting out
    • Getting paid
    • Promoting yourself

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Falling into March

Whew! I have just finished updating writing and poetry competition details for March, April, May 2012 so be sure to check these out.

I am pleased to say I have now completed the digital photography course with a final grade of 97%. This course taught me so much about my camera and its various functions that I don't think I would ever have learnt on my own - manuals being printed in the smallest type they are almost impossible to read.


What I learnt:


Lesson 1 What Is Digital Photography?

Digital technology evolved from and is related to the same technology as television cameras. The Bing Crosby Laboratories and a research team funded by Crosby created the first videotape recorder.

Lesson 2 Understanding Your Camera

Digital cameras have opened up a world of artistic expression not possible with conventional film photography. For this reason, the more you understand about the sophisticated parts of your camera, the better a photographer you will become.

Lesson 3 Digital Photography and Your Desktop Computer

At a minimum, your computer should load your pictures onto its hard drive and print them out onto a higher grade paper. This is pretty simple and requires minimum practice to perfect the techniques.

Lesson 4 The Power of Light

Daylight photos taken indoors are challenging for the best of photographers. You can improve your daylight photos by keeping a few things in mind.

Lesson 5 Still Life, Group, and Landscape Photography

Still life has been described as a composition of several lifeless objects brought together by a certain theme. It can include arranging things on a tabletop and using lighting techniques or other still life methods.

Lesson 6 Exposure and Shutter Speed

In this lesson, we will focus on the technical knowledge necessary for you to take professional-looking pictures. The digital camera, as a technical device, brings many functions into play. One function is digital camera metering.

Lesson 7: People and the Environment

Think about what happens when you page through an album of photos. Those photographs grab your attention if they have a subject and interesting surroundings.

Lesson 8: Magical Water Photography

We all love to see a rushing stream, a cascading waterfall, or the silky white look of rushing water. There are many layers involved to shooting a great water picture, or for that matter, any great picture.

Lesson 9: Improving Your Camera Techniques

You have owned a digital camera for quite a while, yet you are just not satisfied with the way your photos are turning out. You think it could have something to do with your camera techniques.

Lesson 10: Understanding Image Quality

Some of you are probably thinking, "What the heck are CMYK and RGB?" To explain, this is something you would need to be aware of if you decide to become a professional photographer and have a need to deliver "press-ready" digital photos.

Lesson 11: Black and White Is Back

In a digital camera world, if you do not want the sky to be plain blue, you can change the color in a digital imaging program. There are photographers who would not even consider using camera filters as an option.

Lesson 12: Portraits

Portrait lenses are designed for the photographer who is passionate about people. Before you set out to buy a portrait lens, you need to own a digital single lens reflex (SLR) camera.

Lesson 13: Creative Tips for Your Photography Hobby or Career


I  have also learnt not to undertake too many different courses of study at the one time when I have so many other tasks to complete, because it is important to me that I enjoy the study process and not feel under the pump all the time. A downside of networking is the time one must put in to be effective - and to respond to the reaching out by others - having social networks linked is a time saver, but this can never take the place of a personal comment or acknowledgement of appreciation of the efforts of others.