Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing. Show all posts

Hop Over to My New Site!


Did you know that I'm now writing at JessConnell.com? MakingHome still contains 7 years of articles on marriage, Bible study, sex, family, womanhood, and more, but since 2014, I've been writing on my own self-hosted website. Please come visit me there!

Here's a great place to start: my Top 25 Articles on JessConnell.com.


Grace & Peace,
Jess

Stay Connected & Get My FREE Book

I've heard from a number of you that you keep forgetting to visit my new site: jessconnell.com, and add it to your feed. I'm writing there every Mon, Wed, and Fri, so take this as your friendly neighborhood reminder! :) 

Come see me; I want to hear from you!



ALSO: Go grab your free copy of the book I released last week! It's called One Thing: Top Tip (From a Mom of 6). Or, it is now available for purchase at Amazon.com


Please, let's not lose touch with one another! Subscribe to JessConnell.com (if you don't read blogs via RSS feed, there's a link on the side of my site where you can sign up to receive an email every time a new article is published to help you remember to check in). 

Let's keep growing together!

Blogging Somewhere NEW

Here's my NEW news:

I'm blogging at jessconnell.com now! 

Yes, after over seven years writing here, I've decided to move to a self-hosted website with just my name, so that all of my writing-- blogging, fiction, non-fiction, can all be in one spot:



You'll want to update your RSS feed & adjust your links. Be sure to check it out and pass it along to friends. I'm posting there, beginning today. 

I'll have one more major announcement later this week… so check back for more info at JessConnell.com.



Details: All posts and archives will remain here, at least for the time being. I am in process of moving over classic & favorite blogposts from the last seven years over to my new website. If you have favorite posts you'd like to see over there, please comment on the post or send me an email!

Thanks for continuing to read & grow alongside me. 

Blessings to you & I hope to see you over there, at jessconnell.com!

"Now We Remember"

Merry Christmas to loved ones, far and near
Whether a great or a terrible year,
Lovely reasons exist to celebrate:
The One for Whom all the world did wait
Indeed, the whole of creation groaned
For the One who could rightly for sin atone.

Our good and glorious God above
Sent Jesus to offer the world His love
After birth, life, and death, He rose to the sky.
Gave the gift of the Spirit to guide us by.

Now we remember, rejoicing, elated
Each year His birth will be celebrated!
Whether a great or a terrible year,
It's a Merry Christmas: Emmanuel is here!



~Jess Connell, 12/25/2013



Book Review: How I Write by Janet Evanovich

In the outset, I need to admit that I've never read a Janet Evanovich novel. I gather that they are somewhat-steamy romantic books with fun-loving, self-deprecating main characters who are always in a lovable bind. I'm not a romance book reader, and actually have serious concerns/disagreements with the way these books are written, and the way they often lead to unrealistic, physically-founded male-female relationships rather than promoting whole (spiritual, mental, emotional, physical) & God-honoring relationships between a man and woman.

However, when I came across her tome on writing at Half Price Books, How I Write: Secrets of a Bestselling Author, I knew I needed to get it and read it. As with people I encounter in real life, no one is "out of bounds" as a person that I can learn from (whether that is what TO do/be, or what NOT to do/be).

Janet Evanovich is a delightful and inspirational person who has written fiction that resonates and continually draws humans to read, so despite the fact that she writes in a genre I eschew (and do not desire to emulate), the general disciplines and attitude she brings to writing are valuable and worthy for examination and learning. Her tips on character and plot development, editing and refining, and pursuing publication are encouraging and honest. I highly recommend the book.

Let me share a few things I loved:
  • It is immensely READABLE. This is not professorial, heady language; you will not struggle to stay awake. She writes like you would expect her to speak to you over a nice dinner. Evanovich offers specific answers and good writing advice, but delivers it with wit and cheer.
  • She EFFICIENTLY offers advice. She answers the questions, but does not shilly-shally about, or belabor her points. 
  • Examples are given to lend CREDIBILITY to her advice. Her book is thoughtfully peppered with passages from her books in order to display how to write a memorable character, how to up the ante when writing a tense scene, how to braid together backstory and plot advancement in a clever dialogue. She also offers helpful, detailed visual aids for query letters and standard manuscript formatting.
  • Evanovich is TRUTHFUL. While she offers plenty of encouragement TO write, this is no pie-in-the-sky "you can do it" motivational speech. She shares about her ten years of rejection letters, and continually points back to a "sit down and start typing" approach to getting the job done.
A few favorite quotes:
  • "When people ask what you do, tell them you're a writer. Put yourself on the line."
  • "All writers are people watchers. If you want characters that ring true, take a really close look at the people around you... then let your imagination run wild."
  • "Nothing is more tedious than reading a story where every character uses identical speech patterns.
  • "I don't get writers block because I don't believe in it. I believe you sit in front of the computer and force your fingers to get something on the screen."
  • "I construct a small outline before I begin, but the book comes alive as I'm writing, and I generate  ideas as I go. I know where the story will go and how it will end, but the details happen as I write."
  • "Lots of times I'm not crazy about the writing, but I keep moving ahead and somehow it gets better. The important thing is to move forward."
  • "I like knowing that I have a day ahead of me and at the end of that day I will have created something that did not exist that morning."
If you're a writer, or a writer-wanna-be, you'll want to buy her book.  It's an excellent source of wit and wisdom from a bestselling author who has done it, and is doing it, day in, day out.

RESULTS ARE IN: Making Home 2013 Reader Survey Results

I recently invited you to participate in a survey so that I could learn more about Making Home blog readers.

It was so encouraging to receive your feedback.  You guys are very kind & yet still gave me specifics when I asked for ways to improve the blog.  Thank you for sharing your thoughts... it has helped Doug & I to think through how I should be spending my time, and where blogging/writing ranks among my priorities.

First, let me share the basics I learned about YOU:
  • Nearly 95% of Making Home readers are married females.  
  • Nearly 2/3 of you are under 34.  (Makes sense-- I'll turn 34 next month.)
  • Nearly 70% of you have a baby 1 or under. (More than I would have guessed.)
  • More than 1/3 of you have been reading for 4-5 years.  Another 1/3 have been reading for 1-3 years.  (I am so thankful for you long-time readers that have stuck with me through blogging lulls!!)
  • About 1/2 of you come to my blog to read, and about 1/2 of you read through RSS feeds.
  • 2/3 of you said you have recommended my blog to others. (THANK YOU SO MUCH!)
Here are the blog topics in order of appeal (it was a multiple-choice question, so the percentages won't add up):
  •  75% chose Child Rearing & Discipline
  • More than half of you chose Biblical Womanhood & Feminism
  • More than half of you chose Homeschooling
  • More than half of you chose Marriage & Sex
  • 40% of you said Discipleship & Spiritual Growth
  • 30% said Suffering & Contentment
  • 20% said Bible-Study
  • 20% said Politics
  • 15% said Newborn sleep & breastfeeding
  • 7% said Writing/Honing talents
This information is extremely helpful for me, as I want to write about things that are useful to you.  Here at Making Home, my goal is to write about:
  1.  Topics within the sphere of what God is teaching or has taught me, and 
  2.  Topics within the sphere of things YOU want to read & hear about.
Now that I've heard from you, my goal is that those two things will line up more often than not.

And then, more than 50 of you left me personal comments about specific ways to improve my blog.  Some of the helpful comments left were:

  • Many of you said I need to write more consistently/more often-- I have adjusted my schedule and priorities and I am now posting every Sunday night & every Wednesday morning (with an occasional bonus post at some point in the week).  I hope this will help you all know more of what to expect... every week, the same routine, rather than my sporadic writing habits of years past.  And-- I am enjoying the blogging frequency.  Doug says it's good for me, and he can tell a difference in me when I'm regularly writing.  So for you as a reader, and for me as a writer, this one is a win/win.  :)
  • Many of you suggested specific blogpost topics.  I have those saved in my blogger dashboard & will try to address those in coming weeks/months.
  • EASIER NAVIGATION was another comment.  Can you tell I've been tweaking my blog?  I'm kind of in love with the new, simple design.  I increased the font size for easier readability.  So I changed the blog to a two-column format, and have listed out "most popular articles" in one sidebar feature.  For how to search past articles, there is now a search box embedded in the side bar.  Simply type in the subject you're interested in.  I am also working (this will take longer) to simplify my categories (there are nearly 600 articles on Making Home, stretching over 7 years, so while I want to keep things simple, I also want the specific categories to serve you well, so that relevant information is accessible to you).
  • Two of you said you wish I'd keep sharing links on the blog.  :( I'm sorry.  While I may *very* occasionally share a video or link here, I will no longer do those mega-link posts.  I've moved to Twitter and Pinterest.  Feel free to follow me...  I am sorry to let readers down, but I just can't devote the time here to that anymore, when it is so easy and immediate to share links in those two places.
  • One of you suggested that I make contacting me more simple.  So I've put my e-mail address right by my picture in the sidebar.  
I hope these changes will improve your experience as a Making Home reader.  I greatly enjoyed hearing from you all!  You had some good ideas, and now that we've done one, I'll look forward to hearing from you in surveys in the future.


One final thought: 

YOU GUYS (AHEM, YOU *GALS*) ARE THE BEST READERS!  

I felt so encouraged after sifting through your comments... so many kind encouragements, but also lots of ideas for new topics.  I'm excited to keep writing & growing alongside you all.  Thank you for your feedback!


Image courtesy of: 89studio/FreeDigitalPhotos.net

How To Find Thought-Provoking Links & Ideas

I'll just come out with it: I finally bit the bullet and joined Twitter.  

Something I said I'd never do, haha.

And yes, I really meant "never" when I said it back then.  The whole thing sounded so stupid and self-absorbed.

But since joining a few weeks ago, I'm finding it to be quite useful as a tool for keeping up with news events and theological rumblings.  I can cut out the "noise" of news I'm not interested (hello, sports world, entertainment "news", & celebrity newsies, I'm talking to you... no, Twitter, I do not want to follow anyone named Bieber, Kardashian, or Timberlake), and listen to more of what's happening from folks I do like to listen to (people like Randy Alcorn, Mary Kassian, Al Mohler, James Scott Bell, Russell Moore, &a Sally Clarkson).

An additional benefit of Twitter-usage for me is that instead of creating mega-posts filled with 8 gazillion links, I can share thought-provoking links with readers in real time.  

That's where you come in.

I've decided to stop putting together my massive link-fest Show & Tell posts.  They served their purpose for a season, but with six kids to educate and chicken coop-building and novel writing, I am no longer willing to commit the time to storing up links and putting those posts together, when I have a much more immediate option available to me.

So this will be my last official "Show & Tell" post.

Instead, I'll just share direct to Twitter.

TWITTER
Many readers used to tell me the Show & Tell posts were your favorites, so, in lieu of me putting those out, you can just hop onto Twitter and follow me if you're interested in continuing to see those.

I even made a Pinterest board called "Figuring Out Twitter" for myself and others who may be (understandably) gun-shy about using Twitter.  There, I've pinned a few quick tutorials on how and why to use Twitter.

PINTEREST
I also share my favorite links and ideas through my Pinterest pins.

You know me, I'm an ideas and words girl.  While Pinterest is fun for house fix-up ideas and DIY tutorials, I love to use it as a place to spur myself and others on toward spiritual and intellectual growth.

My most popular Pinterest boards for sharing ideas are:


So there you have it.  Now that I've upended my views about Twitter, those are the places to catch the links to my favorite articles & ideas.

Please follow me on Twitter and jump into the stream of thought-provoking links and ideas.  I'd love to see you there.


The Stay-at-Home Mom's Guide to NaNoWriMo

"One day, I'd like to write a novel."  

Millions of people have likely spoken those words (whether out loud or in their own heads).  And yet, few accomplish it.

If you've got "write a novel" on your bucket list, but haven't ever done it, NaNoWriMo-- National Novel Writing Month-- in November of each year is an opportunity for you to change that.  It's a fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants global event with the goal of writing a 50,000 (or more) word novel in 30 days or less (by the end of November).  

"But I'm a lowly/ tired/ overworked/ underpaid/ busy/ overwhelmed/ barely-keeping-it-together stay-at-home-mom," you might say.  Maybe you're the mom of toddlers.  Maybe you're a homeschool mom.  Perhaps you have multiple preschoolers clamoring for your attention (phrases like "color with me" and "help me go potty, mommy" fill your days).

All of these are truly challenging, you'll get no argument from me about that.  I've been in each of those scenarios, multiple times over, and-- trust me-- I get it.  

Nonetheless, here I am, encouraging you to consider participating in 2013's NaNoWriMo.  

WHO SHOULD PARTICIPATE?
A few caveats, first:
(1) If you have a newborn, please don't think I'm aiming this at you.  Snuggle in and nurse your newborn and take in these irreplaceable moments, and don't feel the least bit guilty for resting and bonding and sleeping and barely-keeping-your-head-above-water for as long as you need to.  
(2) If you're not a writer-- and by that I mean something akin to this quote by Sylvia Plath, "I write only because there is a voice within me that will not be still"-- there is no shame in just being who you are and not taking on extra commitments and guilt for something that's not how God created you to be.  Please don't think I'm aiming this at you.  
(3) If this isn't the right season of life for you to participate (and only you can be the judge of this-- I passed by a half dozen years of NaNoWriMo before the time came for me to participate), please don't take on a lick of guilt.  Pass right on by this article and seriously, don't make this part of the cacophany of voices making you feel guilty for not doing or being enough.  

To all of you, I say: Go in peace.  

But for the rest of you... 

To the stay-at-home mom who has been bursting to get a story out onto paper, the woman who used to write but hasn't lately and feels the loss of it, the gal who wonders if she can do it, the girl who loves a good gauntlet thrown down and feels the adrenaline rushing the minute there's a goal to achieve... whoever you are, and whatever your reasons are for participating, you may be wondering, Can I really do it?  

Read on, sister.

WHAT SHOULD I WRITE?
A novel.  

While some people use NaNoWriMo to propel them forward in their short story or poetic writings, the main thrust of NaNoWriMo is novel writing (thus the "No"-- standing for novel).


Never written a novel before?

Neither had I.  Until NaNoWriMo 2012.  With 5 kids in tow (and our 6th in utero), I jumped in with both feet, wrote like crazy, and got to 53,000 words in the month of November.  

But (in Cat-In-the-Hat phrasing), that wasn't all, oh no, that wasn't all.  

Because I was a NaNoWriMo finalist (meaning, I reached that 50,000 word goal), I earned the right to receive 5 professionally-printed copies of my novel from CreateSpace (an incredible prize!).  But though I'd written 50,000+ words, I hadn't actually *FINISHED* my novel.  So in June, I took time to finish up my novel (bringing it near 75,000 words) and then ordered my printed copies.

What a wonderful prize!  

And even though I knew they were coming, it was utterly delightful, and overwhelming, to hold a copy of my novel.  I couldn't stop smiling.  I'd done it.  What's more, I knew I wanted to do it again.

So, my advice to you this: WRITE. YOUR. NOVEL.  It's the one only you can write.  

WHEN CAN I WRITE?
Here's a list of ideas specifically crafted for the busy stay-at-home-mom to participate in NaNoWriMo:

  • Wake up an hour or two (or even three) before the kids wake up.  Write like the dickens, or write like Dickens.  Either way works.
  • Write while they eat.  Choose & prepare easy things for you (power bars, salads prepped the night before that you can just pull from a plastic tupperware in the fridge) so that while the kids are eating, you can use that 20-40 minute time slot to write like mad.
  • Write while they nap.  If your kids don't nap, implement a one or two hour quiet time each day where looking at/reading books or quiet drawing/coloring are the only options.  They'll be the better for it, and your novel will be the better for it.  
  • Write while they play.  Set them up with toys near you (within 5-10 feet of you) each on a separate blanket, or in a separate spot, and let them play with one toy set at a time.  You could even set a timer, where they can trade out to a new set every 20 minutes or so.  Then, write as much as you can while they play independently.  
  • Write while they run around in the backyard or at the park.  Let them run out their craziness while you write seated nearby.  If you're at the park, you'll only want to do this if you're the only one at the park at that particular time, but in your backyard, shut the fence and let them run like wild banshees while you crank out a few scenes.
  • Write after they go to bed.  Get them in bed by 8.  Even the sleepiest among us can afford to stay up until 10 to get in two hours of writing.  Or, you could stay up until 1 or 2 and get a crazy-huge amount of writing in.
  • Write once your husband gets home from work.  Assuming he's on board with this thing, ask him to pitch in extra during this one month a year and take over for you once he gets home.  You hop on back to your bed and write like mad.  
  • Write while they read/color/listen to audiobook/watch a movie.  I'm loathe to suggest that last option.  TV-watching/movie is not something you want to make a habit of, and yes, I realize I'm talking to moms living in a crazy screen-addicted nation.  Nonethless, NaNoWriMo may be a good reason to allow a little extra TV viewing.  (And there are EXCELLENT programs like The Magic School BusNational Geographic videos about animals, MathTacular!, and Liberty's Kids that would actually be beneficial.)

WHERE CAN I WRITE?
Of course, I just gave you a slew of ideas.  Here's a few more:
  • Seated on a stool at the kitchen counter.
  • At the dining table while the family eats.
  • On your couch while they play around you.
  • Propped up in your bed while your husband snores.
  • At your local coffee shop (although this is too distracting for me, some people find it productive)
  • While you take one kid to play rehearsal/music lesson/sports practice

HOW CAN I WRITE?
This one usually pertains to, "I'm so busy", "the kids are so wild", "the house will be a wreck", "what will we eat?" sort of reasons.   
  • Let the house go to pot.  Yes, this is particular meant for you, house-cleaning-nazi mom (this would not be me).  For you, you have permission to let the house go a little haywire for a month. It could mean the difference between holding a lovely printed copy of your novel in your own hands, and not.
  • CUT BACK on things that will make more work for you.  Let the kids wear pajamas all day to cut back on laundry.  Use paper plates.  For the month of November, don't buy the granola bars that have the little bits of oats that the kids inevitably spill all over the floor.  Structure your life with more intentional simplicity this month.
  • CONVENIENCE FOOD.  This doesn't have to mean no nutrition, mind you.  But your food choices need to be faster and more leftover-friendly this month.  Consider meals like: a big pot of soup that can last for 2-3 meals, frozen pizza stashed away to use in a pinch, salad & fixings that can be prepped all at once and left in the fridge to grab and use for the next 3-5 days, etc.  
  • STOP the Candy-crushing.  STOP the Pinning.  STOP the mindless habitual Facebook browsing.  STOP the blog-hopping.  Cut out the unnecessary and unhelpful.  Don't even go there.  Exercise a massive amount of self-discipline and don't even go there.  OR, set a daily goal with these things as your "carrot" for reaching the goal (i.e., "Every time I reach an increment of 5,000 in my word count, I can browse Pinterest for an hour.").
  • STOP using the internet function on your computer.  This is another means of disciplined self-control.  You can turn off your wi-fi or just not open your web browser.  It only takes a few days for your habits to shift & you'll be off and writing!
  • Get your spouse on board.  You'll get so much more accomplished if they agree that this is a fruitful use of your extra time for the month of November, and agree to help out more than normal.  Ask for their support in not griping about the house going to pot and the meals being less fancy, and perhaps even for some full-time solo parenting while you write in solitude.
  • If you're a homeschool mom, consider not schooling for the month of November, or at least doing less schooling.  Perhaps you're in a state that requires you to do it.  Fine, no problem-- get after it!  And write at other times.  Or, assign work they can do independently, and take a break from read-alouds with mom during this month.  Older students can join you in the Young Writer's Program of NaNoWriMo as part of their writing/language subject matter.  Last year, I started schooling in July so taking a break in November was no big deal.  There were still days when they asked to do it, and so I went ahead and put together their work so that they could be productive in school while I was productively writing.  But at least consider how you can creatively shift their schooling around to allow for your writing to be most productive. 
  • Keep your Thanksgiving plans in a tight box.  It doesn't mean you can't celebrate, but don't let it consume days and days and days of your time.  If it's important to you, treat it like a weekend "off": set aside a day to cook, and a day to celebrate, but then GET BACK to writing.  
  • Jump on my NaNoWriMo Pinterest board, get yourself a quick visual peptalk, and then get back to writing!
  • Set goals.  Goals help you along.  On the NaNoWriMo user dashboard, there's a wonderful little bar chart that lets you visually track your progress toward the 50k wordcount goal.  Use it.  Set daily goals.  "Before I go to sleep tonight, I'll hit 6,000."  "I'm going to crank out two scenes before I go get groceries."  And set overarching goals.  "I'm going to write 5 days a week and each day I'm going to write at least 2,000 words."  "If I fall behind one day, I'm going to work to get ahead the next day."  Goals will help you make forward progress, and ultimately make you a NaNoWriMo finalist.
I'm publishing this in time for you to clear your calendar, talk it over with your spouse, and ready yourself for a crazy-fun crazy-fast month of November.

WHY WRITE?
Write because you can't NOT write.

Write because the story is inside you and keeps churning until it spills itself out on the page.  Write because you have a perspective on life, the world, God, family, adventure, or love that only you can tell.  Write because you have always said you would, and now's your chance to try.  Write because you are an interesting gal who takes risks and loves the challenge.  Write because you need to.  

Write for your own reasons.  

But, my friend, write.  



Will you be joining me for NaNoWriMo this year?  Check out my NaNoWriMo Pinterest board.  And please share your thoughts, excitement, feedback, or literary successes in the comments below.  

Just Keep Writing!

Any mom of a roughly 10-15 year old kid right now likely remembers Dory's little song (from Finding Nemo) "Just keep swimming, just keep swimming..."  It's an apt motivation for writing.  Sometimes you have to "just keep writing."

I recently got overwhelmed thinking about writing my second novel.  It seems so daunting... almost like labor the 2nd time around.   The first time you go into labor, you're flying blind.  Even if you have head knowledge about "first this will probably happen, then I'll feel something like that," etc., it is still all only a theoretical understanding.  But after that first time, there is more awareness of what it takes to actually birth a child.  

Now that I've done it once, I'm more aware of the cost- the difficulty of actually following through and finishing an entire novel.  I know approximately how much time it will take.  I know what "writing 75,000 words" really means.  I know about the fast-and-furious times, and the slow, wish-I-didn't-have-to-edit times.  
The difference is that, once you're in labor, you really can't stop it; the baby is coming.  But once you start writing your second novel, you can procrastinate like wild and opt not to birth the baby.  I don't want to opt for that, but right now, any writing at all is taking consistent acts of the will to get over that "I don't wanna" hump.  The anticipation, and the analysis of it, has led to stagnancy in my writing.

Today I had an epiphany.  I realized that part of why I've been putting off writing lately is because of a self-created pressure to say something brilliant-- the idea that I need to come up with a stellar plot, with cleverly-built theologically significant underpinnings, that will support a whole novel.  

Well, yes.  And no.  If this particular story that I'm working on only wants to become a 20,000 novella, is that OK?  Yes.  Giving myself permission to just write- not "only write x#-word-novels"- felt very freeing this morning.  Perhaps it will give other writers out there a bit of encouragement too.  

And finally- as a confessed lazy procrastinator, I love this Geoff Dyer quote: "Have more than one idea on the go at any one time. If it's a choice between writing a book and doing nothing, I'll always choose the latter.  It's only if I have an idea for two books that I choose one rather than the other.  I always have to feel like I'm bunking off from something."

Which means I need to come up with another idea, so I can "bunk off" from one of them.  What do you need to do today to get remotivated and moving with writing?

Happy writing!

Learning from Fiction #1: Writing Tips Gleaned from Clive Cussler

Lately I've been committing myself to learn more about writing.  One of the ways I've decided to  do that is to read a variety of "successful" fiction authors to try to gain broad principles and writing tips as I observe how they tackle story-telling in their works.  (Note: My selections are what I have on hand and am interested in... not necessarily literary greats or must-reads.  But I am choosing from best-selling fiction.)

Clive Cussler is the ultimate modern-day adventure novelist.  I've read perhaps half a dozen of his novels, and always enjoy the immediate, swept-away-into-danger feel of his writing.  His work is globetrotting, history-delving, and hero-creating, even if requiring a good bit of suspension of disbelief.

When reading his work, I find that it brings up the same feelings as when I watched Alias.  As I read about heroes traversing the Himalayas, motorboating up African rivers, and researching fossils in Indonesia, I feel like I *am* a Sydney-Bristow-esque spy, figuring it out, fighting the bad guys, and unraveling the mysteries.

This book, Clive Cussler's The Kingdom (A Fargo Adventure), centers around a history-loving independently-wealthy couple (the Fargos) who trek the globe in search of a long-lost centuries-old Asian relic that they learn may point to the actual location of the storied Shangri-La.

Here are the best writing tips I gleaned from Cussler's writing in The Kingdom:
Clive Cussler

  1. For action writing, use directional language to bring about a sense of setting.  In one short passage describing a horse chase, he uses sixteen descriptive words or phrases to paint a clear picture of what danger the central character is facing.   These words are also used to give insight into where he is looking-- "ahead", "behind him", "over his shoulder", etc.  This language gives visual imagery while keeping the pace and tension high during a fast-and-furious chase scene.
  2. As James Scott Bell often talks about, the characters leap off the page.  Specific, memorable traits are assigned to new characters to get them clear in the reader's mind.  Descriptions like "cat-like", "impassive", "stoic", and "as though she were an automaton" give Cussler's unsettling antagonist a definite creepiness and amp up the fear factor.  
  3. Consider using thematic vocabulary.  On page 1 of the prologue, in just one paragraph came these words: mission, sacred, holy relic, reverence, spirited.  This of course was the paragraph introducing the central artifact of the book.  The larger point: use vocabulary to give a sense of the theme (this was done even with the chosen verb: "spirited away").
  4. Take time to set the scene.  He doesn't skimp on place descriptions.  The city of Kathmandu is given a full page, just for introduction, in addition to smaller details he later weaves into the story line.  Smaller locales (smaller in the sense of importance to the story) are given a paragraph or two.  But the accuracy and visualization is significant and dealt with up front, so the reader has "feet on the ground" in the location before jumping back into the story.
  5. Use special language, then explain it.  Foreign words, scientific gadgetry, obscure abbreviations-- Cussler uses these freely when necessary, but then immediately explains their meaning.   
  6. Don't be afraid to twist language and make up words to suit your purpose.  He doesn't do this willy-nilly, but occasionally, non-traditional words like "stoop-walked" or "squelched" may be just the right fit to describe an action or sound that will communicate clearly to the reader even though your choice isn't a dictionary-found word. 
  7. Use the outlandish if it gives a clear visual.  At one point, the protagonists find themselves in a mining area, and this is Cussler's description: "The sides of the pit were perfectly vertical, ...as though a giant had slammed a cookie cutter into the earth and scooped out the center."  While this type of description would be absurd if used repetitively throughout the novel, occasionally, an unusual description can be just the right thing to clearly paint a picture of what you as the author want the reader to see.
  8. Amp up tension through unexpected challenges.  Conflict is where it's at.  And don't just go with foreseeable challenges, but let unseen obstacles crop up to further frustrate your poor protagonist.  Just when they're about to have a break through, throw in another problem to overcome.                                                                                             
  9. Let the "worst possible scenario" happen.  And set it up... have your protagonist somehow speak or imply what the worst possible situation would be, and have it look as if things will work out differently, but then, lo and behold, the worst happens.  
  10. Mention what the best case scenario would be.  It shows the protagonists analyzing their problems, and gives the readers a gauge for what "the perfect ten" would look like in a given situation.  He also used this approach once to set up a slightly less-than-perfect, but still fairly great outcome (a 7 or 8 out of 10), so that it didn't seem quite as perfect of a solution.  
  11. Keep the story moving through goals.  Beyond the mega-goal of the novel (whether that's an Amish love story, globetrotting spy mission, legal settlement), let your characters set mini-goals that will keep the story moving.  Better yet, let the mega-goal rest on the success of the mini-goal.  No job, no love story.  If this particular artifact isn't found, the mission is destroyed.  If the deposition doesn't go well, the case is lost.  He continually links these smaller goals to the mega-goal.
  12. Cussler doesn't shy away from humor.  But his understated humor works.  Embedded in a paragraph describing a forgotten, ramshackle, out-of-the-way museum in Bulgaria, he included this gem: "The interior smelled of old wood and cabbage..." Or when describing a Nepali hostel's decor: "Hollywood western chic sans the chic."
  13. Let your characters utilize different skill sets than you yourself possess, and when you do, offer enough information to seem authoritative.  Cussler takes time to describe actions like rigging the ropes for cave spelunking, or setting up lamps and a light box for taking archival photos.  These details give an authority and specificity to his writing that pulls the reader in and makes the story infinitely more believable than just skipping over the specifics, or assuming that "we all know" the protagonist would do it the right way.
  14. Find a way to humanize complex data.  When measuring distance, "half a kilometer" is such an unknown quantity to the average American reader.  So Cussler's woman protagonist expresses her inability to gauge distances, and her husband explains "imagine a standard running track."  He communicated the information in an understandable way (dumbing it down for us readers in the process) without only expressing it in the simplest manner.
I found it helpful to read through his novel this week with a learner's posture, and plan to continue doing this with a variety of novels and authors.  My hope is that by consolidating writing tips from seasoned, best-selling authors, it will help you too.

Come back soon to read more from my "Learning From Fiction" series.



Image courtesy of FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Show & Tell: All About Writing

Well, I've written here at Making Home for nearly 7 years now... and last month, I completed my first novel (and am preparing to jump into my second), so I'm spending time these days learning and thinking about writing.  Writing fiction, in particular.

That picture ---------> is from last weekend, when I received the five printed copies I'll use for in-house editing before I try to shop it out to publishers.  Definitely a thrilling moment!!

I pursued a writing minor in college, and while I did a little creative writing (mainly poetry), I most enjoyed editing and business writing (grant writing, proposals, professional presentations).  Novels weren't my "thing", or so I thought.  Until very recently, I had spent basically *NO* time thinking about writing elements like pacing, character development, plot, and conflict.  But now I'm playing catch-up.

Here are some links I've found helpful as I think about writing.  I hope they also encourage you, whether you are a writer, or just a person who loves to learn about interesting things:


Hope this is helpful for you.  I always love pointing people in the direction of great resources!

I Finished NaNoWriMo 2012!!!

I did it!  I actually wrote a 50,000-or-more-word novel in less than 30 days.

I finished today- Nov 27- and there were 2 days (before and on Thanksgiving) that I wrote nothing at all.  Now, the caveat is, I'm not actually finished with the novel yet.  :)  It'll take probably another 15,000 words to finish things up, but I am getting closer to that goal.

BUT... at least I'm done with this goal-- I'm at 50,027.  Which means... among other things... I'll get 5 free printed copies of my novel from a company that does that as a promo for all NaNoWriMo winners.  :)


If anyone's curious, my novel is about the church and religious persecution in Central Asia.  Here's my "cover photo" for now... a Turkish tea glass:

Just wanted to share my happy news.  

Hope you've had a great month, full of things to be thankful for!