These have been around for a while. I just figured out how to do them for my own covers. Now it's time for Amazon et al to accommodate these animated GIFs for ebooks on their sites.
Saturday, October 18, 2014
Friday, October 10, 2014
A Short Monologue on Writing Dialog
Oh, yes indeed we do! |
I worked with a really great editor at
Wag's Revue several years ago while prepping my short story,
“Mourning Jimmy Crooks,” for publication there. We had a lengthy
discussion about dialog in which he told me that sometimes it is
useful to write dialog as if the parties to the conversation are not
talking to one another. In other words, no one is responding to what
the others are saying. He seemed to think that this was a good way to
end up with realistic dialog, even if the process seemed somewhat
counter-intuitive.
At first I thought this quite odd.
Logical flow, give and take, is the whole point of dialog after all,
and the best practitioners of written dialog in my experience, Elmore
Leonard in virtually everything he wrote and George V. Higgins in TheFriends of Eddie Coyle, didn't write like that. Then I got to
thinking about many actual conversations I have had in my 65 years on
the planet. Yeah, I know. You too, right?
What the editor had suggested is in
fact an excellent way to portray realism. It is the way people
actually talk to one another. In any event, it is the way that people
talk to me. I've always thought of it as a problem, but maybe, just
maybe, it's not my problem alone.
One of the reasons I took up writing
was so that I would be able to express a complete thought before
someone hijacked the exchange to take it in a different direction.
When I talk, hardly anyone pays any attention to what I have to say.
What they do instead, while I am weaving conversational brilliance
all around them, is to work out what they want to say next. When they
have got it firmly in their minds, they just jump in wherever I may
be to tell me what they think about whatever it is that they just
thought. I don't really need to be there except for people to be able
to say things later like, “I had a really great talk with Jonah the
other day. He seems really smart . . . and nice too. Don't remember
what he said, but I told him . . .”
Here is an example of what I'm talking
about from a recent dinner party at our house. Feel free to jump in
anytime.
Me: I watched Gotham
on TV the other night. I thought it was pretty good, but it's been
getting panned all over the Web.
Wife: There sure are a
lot of shows based on comic books lately.
Adult Son's GF: My
favorite is Iron Man. I just love Robert Downey, Jr.
Granddaughter: I'm
getting a new tattoo to fill in this empty space on my side. I'm
thinking Daenerys Targaryen from Game of Thrones because, you know,
she's got dragons! No, wait . . . dragons. That's it. I'm gonna get a
dragon. I'll be that other girl with the dragon tattoo.
Sister1: I found these
shoes on sale at Steinmart last week. Aren't they cute?
Granddaughter: Maybe a
direwolf would be better than a dragon. I don't know. It's so hard to
decide. The girl with the direwolf tattoo?
Wife: This mango key lime
pie is wonderful, isn't it?
Adult Son: Speaking of
Iron Man, can you all get the ESPN coverage of the Honolulu
Triathalon?
Adult Son's GF: I'm
trying to find a good recipe for flan.
Bean (my greyhound): Rrr.
Rrrr. Mmmh? [translation—is it time to feed the dog yet?]
Me: I just don't think
Gotham is that bad. I think it's the best Batman derivative .
. .
Brother: I think
everyone's interested in comic book style entertainment because Obama
has screwed the country up so bad it's gonna take a modern day
superhero to fix things. People just wanna get back to good old
fashioned good versus evil because, you know, Obama is evil and we
need to believe there's some good out there.
Bean: Rrr. Rrrr. Wooo.
[Some dinner would be good.]
Sister2: Did you all see
where somebody hacked naked pictures of Jennifer Lawrence off of the
iCloud? What a nightmare for that poor girl. She had to tell her dad
about it and everything.
Sister1: She's so cute. I
wonder where she gets her shoes.
Me: . . . that ever made
it onto TV. Sure, it's not . . .
Brother: I blame Obama
for that too.
Adult Son: Wait . . .
what?
Bean: Rrr. Rrrr. Argh?
[Hey, did you guys know it's Talk Like a Pirate Day?]
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
10 Surefire Ways to Carve Time out of Your Busy Life to Write
It's hard to find time in a busy life
to write. If you've got a job and children and a spouse who doesn't
pull their own weight, the odds of you cracking the best seller lists
are slim to none - unless of course you know some tricks and life hacks to
carve out the time you need to practice your craft. Here are ten that work for me. Please note: I don't have a job or children at home
or a spouse who doesn't pull her weight, so I probably don't have to find as much time as those of you who do. Still, I'm occasionally
challenged by my schedule and have difficulty making my planned daily
word count. So, admittedly, these may be more tailored to my lifestyle than yours, but my guess is that they apply to more of us than
they ought. If you recognize yourself, take heart. You are not alone.
- Write every day. Pick a time to write and a word count goal. Make a schedule and stick to it.
- Get off of Facebook.
- If you have trouble staying off of Facebook, turn off you computer and write with a pen and paper until you reach your goal.
- Seriously, get the hell off of Facebook.
- Tweeting about getting off of Facebook does not count. If you think it does, you need to get off of Twitter as well.
- If your pen runs out of ink, refill it. If your pencil gets dull, sharpen it. Do not Tweet or update your Facebook status about your ink and pencil lead deficits. What you have is an attention deficit and you need to get right off of Facebook.
- No one on LinkedIn cares that you are not feeding your Facebook or Twitter Jones. If you think they are, get off of LinkedIn. Stay off of Facebook and Twitter. Honestly. I can't stress this enough.
- Ditto Instagram, Pinterest, and Google+. If my use of the word 'ditto' just made you nostalgic for Ronald Reagan or furious about Barack Obama, then you need to quit listening to Rush Limbaugh too. Turn off the radio. Get off of Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, Pinterest, and Google+. Do it now.
- Did I mention that you need to get off of Facebook? You really do. I think this is crucial.
- Of course none of this will be very effective unless you actually get off of Facebook. Of all the advice I could give you about finding time to write, I think that one is probably the most important.
If you want to know more tricks, hacks,
and secrets to a productive writing life, you should friend me on
Facebook and like my page.
Labels:
facebook,
finding time to write,
time sink,
wasting time,
Writing
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