My first article will be available in late December.
Thursday, December 08, 2011
Recently Red Books
Friday, September 23, 2011
All Girls Allowed
This is not cool. I always wanted to adopt a Chinese girl, but it is 20-30 thousand dollars. So while I stand by helpless, one million Chinese girls are being aborted, abandoned and trafficed every year.
http://vimeo.com/allgirlsallowed/37seconds
http://www.lifesitenews.com/news/video-remember-37000000-girl-babies-lost-to-chinas-one-child-policy
http://vimeo.com/allgirlsallowed/37seconds
http://www.lifesitenews.com/news/video-remember-37000000-girl-babies-lost-to-chinas-one-child-policy
“On September 25th, 1980, the Chinese Government instituted its one-child policy, to be in place for 30 years. But it’s still enforced today.
“Since the day the policy began, horrible things have happened. When families can have only one child, they choose boys. Mothers who give birth to baby girls are condemned within their culture and are often rejected by their husbands or in-laws. Trying again for a boy is dangerous. Second-time Mothers face exorbitant fines or a forced abortion.”
etc. etc. You get the picture.
“Since the day the policy began, horrible things have happened. When families can have only one child, they choose boys. Mothers who give birth to baby girls are condemned within their culture and are often rejected by their husbands or in-laws. Trying again for a boy is dangerous. Second-time Mothers face exorbitant fines or a forced abortion.”
etc. etc. You get the picture.
Monday, July 11, 2011
Gone in fifteen minutes
I went from awesome day last week to slight disapointment today. Today my garden lies at the bottom of a hail graveyard. My summer schedule just opened up.
Monday, June 13, 2011
Blog, you have become a stranger
Why do I not post anymore? Social networks like facebook and goodreads have sucked all the screen time tolerance from me. I'm going to read a book now...
Saturday, March 26, 2011
Jay's Jesus Audition
I thought I'd post this here to show you what Jay has been up to.
Thursday, March 10, 2011
The Agent Scam
- SFWA has a great post about Agent Scams that I want to Re-Post It is some strong advice from mega- writer A. C. Crispin to us newbies who are thinking of publishing. Thanks to Dagga for linking me to this!
- If an agent charges a fee, they are highly suspect. I don’t care what they call it: reading fee, processing fee, contract fee, whatever … any kind of fee is bad. If an agent charges more than $50.00, I suggest you run away. Agents who charge fees in the hundreds of dollars make their money off charging writers, not by selling their manuscripts to publishers. It’s very likely that after you pay the large fee, the agent will never even submit your manuscript to a real publisher.
- If an agent refers you to a “book doctor” be very wary. Any agent that says your ms. needs editing should provide you with a list of a number of independent editors, and then allow you to pick the one you want to use. There should be NO financial connection whatsoever between the agent and the independent editor.
- If an agent refers you to a co-op or subsidy press, run away. No reputable agent will do that.
- If an agent you’ve never heard of solicits your work, that’s not a good sign. Real literary agents have to fight off clients, not go out looking for them. If an agent advertises via direct mail, the internet, or in writers’ magazines, back off!
- If an agent has an office in some out-of-the-way place like Bumpass, West Virginia, be very suspicious. Most real agents operate out of New York or California. There are exceptions, particularly on the East Coast; but if Agent X from Bent Fork North Dakota writes to you and begs to see your ms., chances are excellent he’s a crook. Be smart!
- Any reputable agent should be willing to provide you with a list of sales and clients. Go to a bookstore and verify that these books and authors exist. Check references. If an agent claims to be an AAR (Association of Authors Representatives) member, go to the AAR site and look him/her up. Fake agents have lied about this before.
- If an agent tells you you’re brilliant, and your book is sure to be a bestseller, be wary. Real agents don’t make statements like that — at least not to unknown authors.
- Never pay a vanity press or subsidy publisher to publish your book. This includes “co-op” publishers. If you must get your book published and have exhausted all professional, commercial avenues, check into self-publishing with a reputable printing company. Many poets, for example, self-publish their books. Your money will go a lot further that way. Go to your local bookstore and get a book on self-publishing. Check a printer’s references before you sign any contracts. You will not receive the distribution and other services normally expected of a publisher, but you will get the books — after they are printed they will be shipped to you. Be aware that most bookstores will not stock self-published books.
- Having a poor agent is frequently worse than having no agent at all. If you can’t find a reputable agent to submit your manuscript, go ahead and submit it yourself. Most sf and fantasy publishers will still read unagented manuscripts these days. Check out the market reports in the SFWA Bulletin or Speculations. Even the ones who say they won’t may still read manuscripts from writers who impress them with a well-crafted, dynamic query letter.
(There is more information that may prove helpful at: Writer Beware and Preditors and Editors)
Friday, January 21, 2011
Here are some important things to remember when writing a blog:
- Articles don’t have to be extremely long- most are a few hundred words. Shorter is better—it’s all about putting in the maximum amount of information in the least amount of words. Average blog posts are between 500-750 words.
- Don’t be too sales-focused or talk all about the company and services.
- Make sure the info is interesting and relevant. Readers don’t like boring information. Sometimes adding a personal touch can help so put some of your own POV in.
- Use links. Support your post with links to sites that are contextual to your post.
- Use lists. (Top 10 lists, 10 things you don’t know about the industry etc.)
- Make sure to remember WHO you are writing for and to write like you are speaking to them.
- Make up a catchy headline and use KEY WORDS. (Key words are words that appear often and are the main focus of your blog. These help make Search Engine Optimization easier.)
- Spell check and edit!!
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