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# Friday, September 26, 2008
So long ... farewell...
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I wanted to let you all know that I'm leaving my position as editor of Writer's Digest effective October 10. I'll be checking in and trying to chat more before I leave.

The reason I'm leaving is that they've appointed a new editorial director (Jane Friedman, editorial director of Writer's Digest Books) and we have very different visions for the direction of the magazine, so it seemed like a good time for me to check out.

I don't have a plan B yet, but I'll be sure to let you all know if I do figure it out.

Hey, if nothing else there's always writing, right?  ;)

I've always said, I was a writer when I took this gig and I'll be a writer when I leave. It's turned out to be more than just a decent gig, though, it's been an amazing ride. Thanks to all of you for sharing the ride with me.

Keep Writing,
Maria




publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, September 26, 2008 2:06:19 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [35]
# Thursday, September 18, 2008
Announcing: The Great WD Writing Prompt Contest
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
One of the most fun, creative and productive writing exercises I know of is coming up with writing prompts, so I thought I'd hold a little contest here on "The Writer's Perspective" and on our forum, to come up with the best writing prompt.

So if you've come up with a good writing prompt, let's hear it. You can post it here in the comments section, or on our forum.

The only rules are keep the prompts PG-13 and fewer than 100 words.

This contest is open until end-of-day Wednesday (September 24). I'll chose my five favorite prompts and put them up on our forum for a popular vote. The winner will be announced Monday (September 29). [please note: the voting is being postponed until October 13. Brian A. Klems, our online managing editor will be choosing his favorite five prompts and posting them on our forum so please check our forum October 13.]

The winner will receive this very cool 2009 Writer's Digest Weekly Planner and be featured in an upcoming issue of Writer's Digest magazine!



Let the prompts begin!

Keep Writing,
Maria




Inspiration | the writing life | Writer's Digest news | writing books
Thursday, September 18, 2008 3:29:59 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [63]
# Monday, August 04, 2008
Announcing: WD Live author interviews
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Writer's Digest is pleased to announce the debut of WD Live, a series of free live video interviews with top-name authors from ThrillerFest 2008.

Just to give you a taste of what's to come, here's an entertaining segment with authors Steve Berry, Brad Thor and James Rollins, discussing how they quietly began writing each others characters into their respective books.

We'll be rolling out more in the next few weeks, so stay tuned! And, as always, I'd love your feedback.

Keep Writing,
Maria

the writing life | Writer's Digest news | writing conferences
Monday, August 04, 2008 9:53:29 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [2]
# Friday, July 18, 2008
Mary Feuer's New York trip to meet agents
Posted by Maria

Hi Writers,
Remember last month when I was blogging about my trip to New York to accompany our annual contest winners to meet literary agents? I asked our winners to sum up the experience for me, and here's Mary Feuer's experience in her own words:

It's hard to believe it's been an entire month since we were in New York. Time has been more than flying over here on the Left Coast--I think it's passing the speed of light. I apologize for not writing my promised blog sooner, but I have an excuse: I've been busy shooting my original web series, "With the Angels," for Strike.TV.

Anyway, it's never too late to share observations with the blogosphere, where words seem to live forever, so here are mine.

Let me say up front that I think tag-team pitching should be the standard. Having Alegra (and of course Maria)  there, being able to bounce off of someone after getting out of a particularly interesting or challenging pitch, made the whole thing not only less stressful but - dare I say it? fun.  The chats we had in cabs or walking down sidewalks in between meetings about each others work were probably the best, most enlightening moments of the trip for me: I felt, by the end of two days, that Alegra, Maria, and I had become collaborators, a de facto writing group strolling the streets of New York. It was a nice feeling.

What impressed me most over the course of our two days of meetings was the way in which both Alegra's and my pitches subtly and not-so-subtly changed with feedback and discussion. I could almost feel that lightbulb go off over my head, and see it go off over Alegra's, when a challenging or insightful question was asked. I know I reconsidered the story I was planning to tell more than once, each time getting  a deeper understanding of what's important about it to me.

Ultimately, though, our agent meetings reinforced and illustrated one of the most fundamental truths of what we do: writing, and all creative pursuits, are so completely, totally subjective, even on the business end. One agent would tell us to forget the idea of "literary fiction"--would just reject that moniker wholesale--and then the next would tell with absolute certainty that literary fiction was all the rage. One would respond to the more plot-driven aspects of a story, and the next would be nudging us toward a character study. The lesson, for me, was: Write what excites YOU. Chances are it will excite someone else--you'll just have to find the right someone else. And if it doesn't, that's what rewriting is for!

The New York trip made me thirsty for the kind of immersion, the kind of without-a-net high fiction gives me. It made me want to  wish plunge right into my novel, but unfortunately, more immediate concerns have already pushed it to the sidelines of my mind.

Still, coming back to Los Angeles, back to my life, I realize how lucky I am that I make my living writing. it's not always the most satisfying stuff, or the deepest, or the closest to my heart, but still.. I get paid to put words in a certain order, an order that makes them mine no matter who's signing the check. That's an incredible gift. Thanks to Writer's Digest for letting me live out one more part of that fairy tale life, even if only for a few days.


I'll keep you posted on Mary and Alegra's progress in getting their novels published!
Keep Writing,
Maria


the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, July 18, 2008 7:12:18 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5]
# Tuesday, July 15, 2008
The final thrill
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
If you want to get more of an idea of what ThrillerFest was all about, here are my (almost daily) newsletters that went out to our e-newsletter subscriber list during and just after the conference.

So, if you didn't get enough thrills already, here are links to even more from ThrillerFest ’08. If you’d like to sign up to receive e-newsletters from Writer’s Digest, you can find a sign-up link on writersdigest.com.

ThrillerFest Day 1

ThrillerFest Day 2

ThrillerFest Day 3


Keep Writing,
Maria
p.s. I'm getting ready to head out to the Pacific Northwest Writers Association conference in Seattle. I'll be doing more blogging from that conference so be sure to check back.






Writer's Digest news | writing conferences
Tuesday, July 15, 2008 6:28:20 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [6]
# Monday, July 14, 2008
...and the thrills go on!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I hope you've enjoyed coming along the wild ride of ThrillerFest with me. I'm back in Cincinnati and wanted to thank all of the great people at ThrillerFest for putting on such a fabulous conference and for inviting Writer's Digest to co-sponsor their event.

Since I don't often get to post visuals, it's been really fun to hone my photojournalism skills, and I have a few more photos to share with you today.

I had the best time with Steve Berry, Brad Thor and James Rollins: Three bestselling novelists and also friends who write each others characters into their books. Also of note: Thor, whose book is currently leading the NYT bestseller lists with The Last Patriot, is under heavy security because he's had a fatwa declared against him due to his novel's questioning of the origins of Islam.

Here's a picture of me with David Baldacci, taken just after I interviewed him. He is just the nicest, most intelligent and eloquent person--well deserved of his phenomenal success. He also was honored with the Silver Bullet Award at ThrillerFest for his work with the advancement of literacy.

And finally, here's a picture of me at the award's banquet and two of the attendees who won seats at our table: Joan Johnston and Andrew Marino. You may recognize Joan as the author of 50 novels, with 10 million copies of her books in print!

There will be video streaming of many of the best sessions from Thrillerfest available on writersdigest.com starting August 1, so be sure to check back soon!

Keep Writing,
Maria








Writer's Digest news | writing conferences
Monday, July 14, 2008 6:21:50 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5]
# Saturday, July 12, 2008
ThrillerFest and Sandra Brown
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It's my final day at ThrillerFest and the thrills just keep coming. Today I did video interviews with Lee Child, Sandra Brown, David Baldacci among others. Those videos will be available on our website in a few weeks, I'll let you know when they're up.

Here's a picture of me with "ThrillerMaster" Sandra Brown--not only is she incredibly prolific, she is utterly gorgeous.

More to come!

Keep Writing,
Maria
pictured below: Sandra Brown and yours truly



Writer's Digest news
Saturday, July 12, 2008 6:33:19 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5]
# Friday, July 11, 2008
AgentFest and the after-party
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It's day 3 here at ThrillerFest and I'm getting ready to head back down to the the conference to take in sessions from Brad Thor, Gayle Lynds, Joseph Finder and more. You literally cannot walk down the aisles of this conference without running into a celebrity author.

I wanted to post some of my pics from yesterday's AgentFest speed dating with agents as well as the party after. I got goosebumps when I saw this author--guess who?

More to come tomorrow—thriller writers never rest, you know. Yes, I lead a very glamorous life as Scott B. commented on my last blog (I'm lying).

Keep Writing,
Maria

pictured here:
Agent Kimberly Cameron
Agent David Forrer
R.L. Stine
Agent Peter Miller and Jay Bonansinga
Joan Johnston, Jon Land and Sandra Brown












Writer's Digest news
Friday, July 11, 2008 3:25:26 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Thursday, July 10, 2008
I'm at ThrillerFest!
Posted by Brian

Hi Writers,
I'm in New York reporting live from the Thrillerfest/Craftfest writing conference we're sponsoring. There are so many famous writers here, it's unbelievable. The first day of the conference was yesterday and I met Lee Child, James, Rollins, Eric Van Lustbader, Steve and Liz Berry, Kathleen Antrim and more.

I'm getting ready to go back and cover the show today, but I wanted to post some pics from the conference.

Funniest quote overheard at the conference so far: "What's the difference between a mystery and a thriller? About $100,000." This is attributed to Tess Gerritsen, one of the sponsors of the conference and a founding member of the International Thriller Writers organization.

More tomorrow!

Keep Writing,
Maria

pictured below:
(these are all from the evening reception/cocktail party)
Victoria and Eric Van Lustbader
Steve and Liz Berry
our super-cool ad director Guy Gonzalez and conference chair Kathleen Antrim






Writer's Digest news
Thursday, July 10, 2008 3:48:00 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [13]
# Tuesday, July 08, 2008
Digital Voice Recorder Recommendations
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I'm all set to travel to New York tomorrow to cover the Thrillerfest writing conference. I'm going to be writing live from the conference on this blog as well as special show dailies for our e-newsletter subscribers (sign up via writersdigest.com if you're interested.)

Alas, as I've been preparing to be the ace reporter at Thrillerfest, I've discovered that my voice recording devices are oh-so-last-century, as in, they *gasp* use tape.

Imagine interviewing people who spend their days dreaming up stuff like watches that detonate bombs and pens that are really surveillance cameras and—oops! (@#$#!)—ace reporter has to stop and flip the tape!

So I'm shopping today for a digital voice recording device. I've just about talked myself into an iPod classic with microphone attachment, but I was wondering if any of the other ace reporters out there have recommendations.

Let the recommendations begin! And don't forget to join me all week long for the inside scoop from Thrillerfest!

Keep Writing,
Maria



journalism | Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, July 08, 2008 3:54:14 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [11]
# Wednesday, July 02, 2008
New CD from WD
Posted by Brian

My workday is pretty standard: I spend 95% of it writing/editing and 5% trying to convince Maria to put my face on the next issue's cover, to which she always says no. So when she asked me to post about our new CD, I wasn't sure if I was the right pitchman for the job. I'll let you be the judge:

All of our blood, sweat and ink from 2007 have been put together on one disc—yes, one disc—that's now up for purchase. The Writer's Digest 2007 Compilation CD is filled with all six issues from last year, including the WD Interviews, software guide and, most important, my Q&Q column! How could you pass on that? Now I could continue to entice you with all the other can't-miss material on the disc, but instead I'm going to show you a video of the staff giving it an unprecedented rating of 5 thumbs up:



So take a minute to swing by our site to pick up your copy of The Writer's Digest 2007 Compilation CD. And, if you'd be so kind, ask Maria to put me on the cover. The more comments below, the better.

Take care of yourself and your writing,
Brian


Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, July 02, 2008 4:27:08 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [13]
# Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Alegra Clarke on her New York trip to meet agents
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I asked our annual competition winner, Alegra Clarke (see posts below) for some decompression notes from her New York trip to meet agents and she sent me this lovely little essay. She's promised to send me updates on her progress in selling her novel and I'll post future updates here.

Here's Alegra:
My husband and I arrived back onto New Zealand soil yesterday morning. After 30 hours of travel, lost luggage, four plane flights that were delayed so that we almost didn't make it home to New Zealand, I now find myself sitting at my desk feeling as though I left some part of myself on the other side of the planet. This morning I took down the calendar that has been up in the kitchen, marking down the days from when I first recieved the 'Congratulations!' from Brian Klems to the date for the NYC trip. So much has happened in this last year, and as I took down the old calendar and put up the new one, really all I could do was smile. For a person usually overflowing with commentary, I have found myself unusually challenged in trying to sum up this experience. 
 
What has struck me most about this nearly year's worth of effort and dreaming, alternating moods of self-doubt, gratitude and inspiration, is that while it was a life altering experience to finally recieve that 'break', to feel as though my dream had come striding up to me, tapped me on the shoulder and shook my hand, telling me to 'Go for it! Write!', it is what I have gained in the experience of the generosity of others in supporting this dream that has made the process so full of magic. Starting with a close group of friends, including my dear friend Kemari who was cheering me on as I submitted Salamander Prayer to the competition last year, I began to understand the intimate process of writing, not only in the usual idea of a writer pouring herself onto the page, but that a piece of writing, whatever form, gets into print through a process of relationships. It is not just the writer who is invested in the work, it is a collective effort of people who fall in love and face similiar risks as the writer does. It gave me humility and courage to understand this - the risk of heartbreak is not a solitary one and the writing itself really does take on a life of its own.
 
This time has reminded me again and again of the saying that providence moves when commitment is present. In the last year I have found myself in experiences I could have never imagined for myself, and they all arose out of the generosity of other people, the apex of this being the moment I found myself sitting in Joel Gotler's office, having him share his wealth of experience and insight with me. I walked away from that meeting so full of gratitude that I repeatedly said to my family and friends (and when I say 'repeatedly' I mean for at least six weeks after the meeting), 'Look from here on out, I can only do my best, I have been so blessed already.'
 
The meeting with the agents in NYC brought this theme to completion for me - not only did I receive invaluable insights into the realities of the publishing business, but I was also honored with being able to meet these six talented, passionate, fascinating people, who were willing to sit down and share with us, not just as agents but as people who are passionate about what they do. I was impressed by the way that they each listened, communicated with honesty, and responded with enthusiasm. It was a thrill to watch them speak about books that had done well, stories they had risked believing in, writers that they were deeply committed to, the time they put into making sure a book has the greatest chance of being met with success in the world - listening to each agent's opinion and experience, I realized that an agent is not a gatekeeper, but a companion willing to invest, risk and believe in what we as writers have created. The NYC trip has inspired me to continue to do my best to write authentically, to listen to the advice of those further along on the path and to take strength in knowing that the path ahead is not a solitary one. No matter what the final outcome, I am in fine company every step along the way.

Keep Writing,
Maria



publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, June 25, 2008 3:06:23 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [8]
# Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Come to Thriller Fest!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I'm psyched about an upcoming conference we're co-sponsoring especially for thriller writers: Thriller Fest 2008. It's July 9-12 in New York.

Sandra Brown is the Thriller Master this year and will be delivering a keynote speech. I'm getting the chance to interview Brown, as well as Brad Thor, M.J. Rose, David Baldacci and more, and we'll be offering free videos of those interviews soon.

We'll also be making available a series of pay-per-view video downloads of many of the craft workshops and sessions. They'll be available on our website next month. I'll be sure to let you know when they're up.

I'm also reporting live from the show on this blog, so stay tuned. And if you're at Thrillerfest, please be sure to say hi.

Keep Writing,
Maria


Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, June 24, 2008 4:31:56 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [2]
# Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Our New York trip to meet Literary Agents
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I'm near the end of my trip to New York City. As mentioned in my previous post, I'm accompanying our 2006 and 2007 Writer's Digest annual competitions winners Mary Feuer and Alegra Clarke to meet literary agents.

I've met so many great agents on this trip and learned so much. But I've decided to let Mary and Alegra give you the full rundown in their own words. They're going to be contributing to this blog later in the week when they've had a chance to decompress, so stay tuned. In the meantime, here are some pictures of our adventures in agent land.

Keep Writing,
Maria

pictured below:
1. Alegra pitching Michelle Brower
2. Mary, Alegra and Jennie Dunham
3. Mary, Donald Maass and Alegra
4. Mary, Alegra and me at our hotel
5. Annelise Robey, Mary and Alegra lunching





publishing news and views | Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, June 18, 2008 2:39:17 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [3]
# Tuesday, June 17, 2008
I'm in New York!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I’m reporting live from New York City, where I’m accompanying our annual competitions winners Alegra Clarke and Mary Feuer.

So Alegra and Mary and me are making the rounds to meet literary agents. This is part of their prize for winning our annual competition for the past two years. I was so happy to meet these two great ladies, really I couldn’t imagine this happening to two nicer, more deserving, talented writers.

Even though she won the contest in 2006, Mary has been tied up as a screenwriter on location in Hawaii for the TV series “Dante’s Cove.” Mary’s working on a novel length work stemming from the great “House on Fire” she won our competition with two years ago.

Alegra, who won our competition in the memoir category for her “Salamander Prayer” has completed a novel since she found out she won our competition less than a year ago, and she’s already working with a L.A. based screenplay agent Joel Gotler on the screen rights.

We have two days of meetings with literary agents lined up. Yesterday we met with Annelise Robey of the Jane Rotrosen Agency and Mollie Glick of the Jean V. Naggar Agency.

Both Annelise and Mollie were so enthusiastic and positive about the prospect of finding new talent, the meetings were really delightful; I got quite a charge from it.

A lot came out of these meetings and I learned quite a lot about the current state of the market. I don’t have time for a full report but here’s a bit of what each had to say.

Annelise Robey says literary fiction is selling, especially if it’s accessible, not overly intellectual and has crossover appeal.

Mollie Glick had each writer give her “elevator pitch.” She told Mary if you have a choice between writing the book as a series of linked short stories and a novel, definitely go with the novel as short story collections, even linked short stories, are incredibly difficult to sell.

We have four more meetings lined up today so I have to run, but I’ll report back tomorrow, with visual aids!

Keep Writing,
Maria





publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news | writing technique
Tuesday, June 17, 2008 3:06:17 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [7]
# Wednesday, June 04, 2008
101 BEST WEBSITES FOR WRITERS
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I've included a handy link in the left navigation to our 2008 101 Best Websites for Writers.

We've been running this list annually for 10 years now, and we're quite proud to be able to spotlight these great resources. As you can imagine, weeding through the thousands of nominations we receive each year is a difficult, time-consuming process. Our online managing editor, Brian A. Klems took on this monumental task once again this year, and he put together yet another phenomenal list.

Of course, when we publish this list each year, we inevitably get questions about how we choose because it's become quite competitive. So to help out, here are 3 things you should know if you want to get your website in the running for our 2009 list:

1. The website must be nominated (you can nominate your own website or another favorite website by submitting to writersdigest@fwpubs.com.) We collect nominations throughout the year, and publish the list in our June issue (June deadlines hit in early January).

2. Although some of the websites we choose do have paid elements, it's essential that there's a substantial amount of free content of value to writers.

3. We judge our advertisers websites no differently than we would any other nominated website; the criteria are the same.

If you have any questions or comments about our 101 Best Websites for Writers, please post them here. Brian and I will be happy to answer.

Keep Writing,
Maria


blogs and online writing | Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, June 04, 2008 2:38:37 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [8]
# Thursday, May 29, 2008
Brian A. Klems went to L.A. and all I got was this dumb video
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I sent our online managing editor (you know him, you love him) Brian A. Klems out to L.A. to cover BEA (Book Expo America) and the Writer's Digest Books/BEA Writers Conference (which happened yesterday). I'm sure you'll agree this was pretty nice of me to send Brian to L.A. while I sit in my cube in Cincinnati holding down the Writer's Digest fort.

All I've gotten out of Brian so far is a link to this (admittedly hilarious, delightfully short) You Tube video, "Book Launch 2.0." Check it out. And let's hope that Brian at least brings us back T-shirts.

Keep Writing,
Maria



the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Thursday, May 29, 2008 6:12:02 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5]
Our August cover: Diablo Cody
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Hot off the presses: our August issue featuring cover girl Diablo Cody. Our fab Script Notes blogger Chad Gervich interviewed Cody a week before she won the Oscar for Juno.

If you're a subscriber, this issue—packed with material about breaking into screenwriting—will be hitting your mailbox any day. And if you're not, it hits newsstands 6/17.

I think this is my favorite Writer's Digest cover so far (my previous favorite was Sebastian Junger, December 2006). Anyway, I wanted to share it here with you. Let me know what you think.

Diablo Cody is such a fresh new voice and I'm so pleased that we had the opportunity to share her inspring story on breaking into the world of screenwriting.

Keep Writing,
Maria 


Writer's Digest news
Thursday, May 29, 2008 3:16:59 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5]
# Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Send Us To Your Site!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Now is the time to bring your website to the attention of the WD editors. We're taking nominations for the best writer's website to feature in the October issue of Writer's Digest.

Here are the details:
We’re looking for the writer with the best personal website or blog that was created and is maintained without outside help. Sites will be judged on presentation, ease of use and marketing effectiveness. Send your nominations—and don’t be shy; you can nominate your own site—to writersdig@fwpubs.com with “Best Writer’s Site” in the subject line. The deadline is June 10.

Sites will be judged by Writer’s Digest editors. The top 10 sites will be listed in our October issue, in our e-newsletter and on WritersDigest.com. The writer with the best site will receive a one-year subscription to writersmarket.com and a subscription to Writer’s Digest; the nine runners-up will receive one-year subscriptions to
Writer’s Digest.

If you post a link to your website in the comments section of this entry, I'll make sure your website ends up in the running. So let's see your sites!

Keep Writing,
Maria


blogs and online writing | Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, May 13, 2008 2:54:10 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [40]
# Wednesday, April 02, 2008
(Fore)going Postal
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Please excuse me for abruptly ending My Archival Wanderings without proper closure, but I have a wonderful excuse: Our managing editor (and contributor to this blog) Kara Gebhardt Uhl had a baby this weekend. Congratulations Kara!

I'll keep posting My Archival Wanderings occasionally, when the spirit moves me.

But just to let you know, I'm now serving as de facto managing editor in addition to my regular gig as the Editor of Writer's Digest. And well, I'm busy. Really, really busy. The managing editor is the key person on staff responsible for all of the editorial trains coming in on time, so to speak.

One of the responsibilities I've had to take over for now is overseeing our general submissions including a two-foot high stack of good-old U.S. mail queries and submissions. Well, to make a long story short, I've had to confront how truly inefficient this system is.

Now because Writer's Digest has been taking mail queries since the days of the pony express, this wasn't an easy decision to make, but I've decided to change our editorial guidelines to state that we're now exclusively accepting e-mail queries. You can read our updated submissions guidelines here.   

Here's the list of pros and cons I made to come to this decision:
Pros:
• E-mail queries are faster and more efficient to process
• E-mail queries save writers money (stamps and stationery)
• E-mail queries are better for the environment
• E-mail queries won't make me the victim of a tragic envelope-licking accident

Cons:
• Hmmm...can't think of anything to write here

OK, good decision or bad? Feel free to yell at me in ALL CAPS!!! I can take it--just don't mail it.

Keep Writing,
Maria






publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, April 02, 2008 9:00:37 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [10]
# Thursday, March 27, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: W. Somerset Maugham
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Today, I’m sharing--from our world-renowned archives (see my previous posts)--an excerpt from a piece W. Somerset Maugham (Of Human Bondage author) wrote entitled “Write About What You Know” from the December 1943 issue of Writer's Digest.


The fact is that when you write about things you don’t know, you fall into ludicrous errors. Of course, a writer cannot have a firsthand knowledge of everything, but his only safety is to find out everything he can about the subject he proposes to treat. Sometimes he thinks himself to fake things; but to do that with plausibility needs skill and experience, and it isn’t really worth doing, for it is seldom completely convincing; and if the writer cannot convince his readers successfully, then he is done.

Now, the only way I have ever discovered he can do that is to tell the truth, as he sees it, about what he knows; and the point of this statement lies in the words as he sees it. There are no new subjects… but if a writer has personality, he will see the old subjects in a personal way, and that will give them interest. He may try his best to be objective, but his temperament, his attitude toward life, are his own and color his view of things.



So, with all due respect, what do you think? Do you, like W. Somerset Maugham, believe writers should stick to writing what they know?

Keep Writing,
Maria



Writer's Digest news
Thursday, March 27, 2008 9:40:52 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [7]
# Wednesday, March 26, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Gay Talese
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Here’s a very recent entry to the WD archives, excerpted from one of my favorite interviewees of all time—Gay Talese. This is from an interview I conducted with Talese and it appeared in the August 2006 issue of Writer’s Digest.

If you were a young journalist starting out today, what would you be doing?
Well, I’d be doing what I’m doing, which is to try to write really well and trust that there are people who appreciate writing that’s very well done. My father, who was a craftsman with a needle and thread, said, “If you do good work, you’ll find that there are people who are going to support it.” Now, you’re not going to get rich necessarily; I mean, maybe you will, but if you’re a craftsman or an artist, you may not be recognized right away. But there are going to be enough people around who are going to appreciate the craft, who are going to appreciate quality work. So if you make a beautiful pair of shoes, a beautiful dress, a beautiful painting, there are some people who are going to have the eye and discernment to say, “Ah, this is quality work.” They’re going to buy it and appreciate it. They’re going to tell you they understand why you took the time, because it’s worth it to do quality work.

Keep Writing,
Maria




Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, March 26, 2008 1:29:35 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Monday, March 24, 2008
Our New Website!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It's my great pleasure to announce the launch of our new and vastly improved writersdigest.com website. The new site is light-years ahead of our former website in terms of navigability, searchability and overall design. Check it out and have fun with it. We're going to start posting new content on a daily basis, so you'll want to check in frequently.

If you've linked to this blog or any other writersdigest.com blog, there are new URLs. This one is now: http://blog.writersdigest.com/writersperspective.

Also, on another happy note, there's a wonderful article about Writer's Digest running via the AP wire. Thanks to AP writer Hillel Italie for his thoughtful portrayal of our legacy magazine.

The AP story is running all over the place. Here are a few of the links:

International Herald Tribune

Yahoo! News
 
MSNBC
 
The Boston Globe

San Francisco Chronicle

The Town Talk (Louisiana)

The Oakland Press (Michigan)
 
Real Cities (Kansas)

I'd love to know if the story runs in your hometown newspaper. Please leave me a comment.
And I'll get back to my archival wandering tomorrow as scheduled.

Lots of great things happening!

Keep Writing,
Maria




Writer's Digest news
Monday, March 24, 2008 2:52:33 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Thursday, March 20, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Kurt Vonnegut
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I was heartbroken when one of my favorite writers of all time, Kurt Vonnegut, died last year. He was a real friend to writers and he granted several interviews to Writer's Digest over the years.

In my archival wanderings, it was especially rewarding to come across this WD interview with Vonnegut (from the November 1985 issue of Writer's Digest; by Michael Schumacher).

It was difficult to choose just one short excerpt because Vonnegut was/is infinitely quotable, but here's one I think especially pertinent to writers. Enjoy.

WD: How do you see yourself?
VONNEGUT: I’ve customarily responded to life as I’ve seen something that made me very much want to write about it—not that it made me very much want to get into the writing profession.

WD: You’ve said that you have to have an ax to grind—
VONNEGUT: Well, you’ve got to have something to write about. I’ve taught writing at Iowa, Harvard, and City College in New York. One big problem is that people don’t have anything on their minds. They’re not concerned—which isn’t to say they need an ax to grind. Usually, a person with an ax to grind is kind of a crank of some kind, or a partisan of some kind. So I reject the ax to grind. But you must be passionate about some aspect of life, because it’s a high-energy performance to create something the size of a book. It takes energy and concentration—not an ax to grind. You should have something on your mind. You should have opinions on things. You should
care about things.

So keep caring about things.
And Keep Writing,
Maria


Writer's Digest news
Thursday, March 20, 2008 7:13:03 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [7]
# Tuesday, March 18, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Upton Sinclair
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It would be an understatement to say that I learn something new every day that I comb through the WD archives, and today was no exception.

Today’s exhibit: an excerpt from a 1938 essay by Upton Sinclair. A prolific nonfiction author of his day, and—to go along with our running theme for the past few posts—a social crusader.

Did you know Upton Sinclair self-published nearly all of his work? Apparently he had to because of the confrontational subject matter of his writings—exposing injustices and other inhumane activity.

Anyway, here is an inspiring excerpt from his essay entitled: "Changes I have Seen," which expounds on Sinclair's writer as social crusader belief.


Now, again, America is taking heart, and dreaming of some kind of society in which there can be security and freedom for all the people—something which not even the rich can enjoy today. There are millions now who do not believe in money-accumulation as the end and goal of human life. Good reason, you say, because they have no chance to succeed at it. But bitterness about one’s personal fate is the first step to thinking and trying to understand a world in which one-third of the population is condemned to misery, no matter how hard they work and scheme and struggle.

In short people are reading and thinking and talking about economics today. New writers are appearing, and fighting for the right of independence, and to say what they think about the system of exploitation, which has thrown some ten to twelve millions permanently out of work, and is making it necessary for us to heap up a deficit of four billions of dollars a year to keep the ratio of unemployment from doubling itself. Thoughtful books and honest books, fighting books for the cause of social justice are pouring from the presses, both here and in England, and in all the countries where freedom to think and to speak survives. I believe that America and the other democratic lands are soon to see a new birth of freedom, and I believe that the literary critics of that happier time will look back upon this age and call it the time of golden opportunity in the history of literature.
   
Among those who read these words are young writers who will thrill to the idea that their books may be read and their names be listed in that roll of honor. Get something vital to say, and learn to say it with power and appeal. You may help to make the future of humanity happy and noble.



How's that for inspiration...
Keep Writing,
Maria


Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, March 18, 2008 3:51:02 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Monday, March 17, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Erica Jong
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Welcome to my wild rumpus through the Writer's Digest archives, in which I'm posting an excerpt each day throughout March.

Today's exhibit: a circa June 1981 WD Interview with poet/bestselling novelist Erica Jong, who had no Fear of Flying (interview by John L. Kern).

WD: What are the differences in disciplines between writing poetry and prose?

JONG: They are very different and they don't conflict with each other. There is a sense that poetry comes from the intuitive part of the brain. It is much more pleasurable and euphoric than writing a novel. You feel that you are tapping into the source of unconscious creativity. Nearly every poet that you talk to will tell you that it is, in a sense, an automatic process.
  
Writing a novel is a much more conscious thing. It's a daily job. You go to your desk at nine in the morning and work until three or four. I would say that one day out of ten you feel euphoric and the words just fly off of your fingers. The other nine days you wonder how the hell you are going to move your heroine from one place to another and what adventures will take place along the way. You find that a good part of your day is taken up inventing and devising and that most of the time you don't think it is any good.


Join me tomorrow when I realize why my job description listed: "must be able to lift 20 lbs."

Keep Writing,
Maria



Writer's Digest news
Monday, March 17, 2008 7:56:11 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Friday, March 14, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Eudora Welty
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Welcome to my month-long journey through the WD archives, in which I'm posting (almost) daily offerings from the history of our magazine. There's no rhyme or reason to my choices.

As one loyal reader pointed out, there's been a lack of female voices so far. And sadly, my wanderings have led me to conclude there was a lack of attention given to women writers up until the ‘70s in the magazine—a sign of the times, I suppose. 

Ironically, I was able to find a wonderful essay by Eudora Welty, published in the February 1970 issue of Writer's Digest, entitled "Must the Novelist Crusade?" It's about the writer's social responsibility, especially in regards to writing about racism and other forms of prejudice.

Here's a short but entirely lovely excerpt to ponder:

And so finally I think we need to write with love. Not in self-defense, not in hate, not in the mood of instruction, not in rebuttal, in any kind of militance, or in apology, but with love. Not in exorcisement, either, for this is to make the reader bear a thing for you.
    Neither do I speak of writing forgivingly; out of love you can write with straight fury. It is the source of the understanding that I speak of; it's this that determines its nature and its reach.


What do you think? Should writers be social crusaders?
Keep Writing,
Maria






Writer's Digest news
Friday, March 14, 2008 3:43:22 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [9]
# Thursday, March 13, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Mary Hemingway
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Managing Editor Kara Gebhart Uhl here—Maria and Brian are wrapped up in HTML coding right now, gussying up our new website for its upcoming launch. So I took a break from reading Your Story entries to find today’s exhibit from the WD archives, a fascinating 1972 interview with Mary Hemingway who gave up a successful journalism career when she married Ernest Hemingway. I’ve skipped around a bit in order to share with you some of the more interesting questions—and answers.
 
 
“An Afternoon With Mary Hemingway”
 
by Marjorie Vandervelde.
 
Interviewer: Didn’t you ever hesitate to give up your own writing career?
 
(Mary Hemingway punched the air with her cigaret-holding fist.) Women take their careers too seriously. Don’t they know it is a great privilege to give their men affection, support, admiration? These things are more important than any woman’s career.
 

 
Interviewer: What were a couple of your assignments?
 
Mary Hemingway: I did a cover story for Time Magazine about Winston Churchill. Later, I covered the “Blitz.”
 
Interviewer: Wasn’t it difficult for a girl to be covering a man’s war?
 
Mary Hemingway: If you mean was it a matter of flirting to get stories, let me tell you it was not. Stories cam the hard way: by using your head, working hard, and being more alert than your competition. And, by staying healthy! It took plenty of hard work to cover the Munich Agreement. And, Hitler’s march into Czechoslovakia!
 

 
Interviewer: The occasional writing you did on your own, after you were married … what did Ernest think of it?
 
Mary Hemingway: Ernest liked my writing. And he approved of my doing it. Of course he also approved of a wife who was, above everything else, a wife.

 
As a writer I think it would be extremely difficult to marry a well-known writer and give up my own career in order to support his work. (Perhaps this is why my husband is a web developer.) Yet often, the writer-writer partnership works. Check out this 2002 New York Times article, “Making Books; Two Writers Under One Roof

Are you married to a writer? Or has your partner given up their dream of writing to support your work? I’d love to know your thoughts.

Kara


Writer's Digest news
Thursday, March 13, 2008 6:36:21 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Wednesday, March 12, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Jack Kerouac
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Today’s exhibit from the WD archives, typing which put me in the mood to write very stream-of-conscious and use lots of run on sentences, is by everyone’s favorite beatnik, Jack Kerouac, from the January 1962 issue of Writer’s Digest; so here it is, dig it man:

Are Writers Made or Born?
by Jack Kerouac
Writers are made, for anybody who isn’t illiterate can write; but geniuses of the writer art like Melville, Whitman or Thoreau are born. Let’s examine the word “genius.” It doesn’t mean screwiness or eccentricity or excessive “talent.” It is derived from the Latin word gignere (to beget) and a genius is simply a person who originates something never known before. Nobody but Melville could have written Moby Dick, not even Whitman or Shakespeare. Nobody but Whitman could have conceived, originated and written Leaves of Grass; Whitman was born to write a Leaves of Grass and Melville was born to write a Moby Dick. “It ain’t whatcha do,” Sy Oliver and James Young said, “it’s the way atcha do it.” Five thousand writing class students who study “required reading” can put their hand to the legend of Faustus but only one Marlowe was born to do it the way he did.
    I always get a laugh to hear Broadway wiseguys talk about “talent” and “genius,” but the genius, the originating force, really belongs to Brahms; the violin virtuoso is simply a talented interpreter—in other words, a “Talent.” Or you’ll hear people say that so-and-so is a “major writer” because of his “large talent.” There can be no major writer without original genius. Artists of genius, like Jackson Pollock, have painted things that have never been seen before. Anybody who’s seen his immense Samapattis of color has no right to criticize his “crazy method” of splashing and throwing and dancing around.
    Take the case of James Joyce: people said he “wasted” his “talent” on the stream of consciousness style, when in fact he was simply born to originate it. How would you like to spend your old age reading books about contemporary life written in the pre-Joycean style of, say, Ruskin, or William Dean Howells, or Taine? Some geniuses come with heavy feet and march solemnly forward like Dreiser, yet no one ever wrote about that America of his as well as he. Geniuses can be scintillating and geniuses can be somber, but it’s that inescapable sorrowful depth that shines through—originality.



As Kerouac writes at the end:
“But it ain’t whatcha write, it’s the way atcha write it.”

Keep Writing,
Maria


Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, March 12, 2008 8:52:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [3]
# Tuesday, March 11, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Ray Bradbury
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Welcome to the archives of March, in which I'm posting an excerpt a day (more or less) throughout March.

Today's exhibit: A brief but exquisite excerpt from a February 1976 WD interview with science-fiction writer Ray Bradbury (interview by Robert Jacobs). Enjoy.

WD: You're terribly prolific, but a lot of writers produce one book in a lifetime. Would you advise young writers to spend all their time polishing one piece or to go for quantity?

BRADBURY: It simply follows that quantity produces quality. Only if you do a lot will you ever be any good. If you do very little, you'll never have quality of idea or quality of output. The excitement and creativity comes from a whole lot of doing; hoping you'll suddenly be struck by lightning. If you only write a few things, you're doomed. The history of literature is the history of prolific people. I always say to students, give me four pages a day, every day. That's three or four hundred thousand words a year. Most of that will be bilge, but the rest ... It will save your life!


Keep Writing,
Maria

Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, March 11, 2008 6:29:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [5]
# Thursday, March 06, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Truman Capote interview
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It’s the 2nd week in my archival excavations and I’m beginning to worry, just a little, about booklice ... but it’s well worth it for all the great stuff I’ve been finding.

Today’s exhibit: An excerpt from a 1966 Q&A with Truman Capote [from the January 1966 issue of Writer’s Digest. Interview conducted by Roy Newquist]

Newquist: What obligation, if any, do you feel the writer owes the subject matter he works with and the public for which he writes?
Capote: I think the only person a writer has an obligation to is himself. If what I write doesn’t fulfill something in me, if I don’t honestly feel it’s the best I can do, then I’m miserable. In fact, I just don’t publish it.
    The only obligation any artist can have is to himself. His work means nothing, otherwise. It has no meaning. That’s why it’s so absolutely boring to write a film script. The great sense of self-obligation doesn’t enter into it because too many people are involved. Thus the thing that propels me, that makes me proud of my work, is utterly absent. I’ve only written two film scripts and I must admit that in a peculiar way I enjoyed doing them, but the true gratification of writing was completely absent; the obligation was to the producers and the actors, to what I was being paid to do, and not to myself. The only really gratifying thing is to serve yourself. To give yourself free law, as it were.

Newquist: If you were to give advice to a young person intent on a literary career, what would that advice be?
Capote: People are always asking me if they believe that writing can be taught. My answer is, “No—I don’t think writing can be taught.” But on the other hand, if I were a young writer and convinced of my talent, I could do a lot worse than to attend a really good college workshop—for one reason only. Any writer, and especially the talented writer, needs an audience. The more immediate that audience is, the better for him because it stimulates him in his work; he gets a better view of himself and a running criticism.
    Young writers couldn’t get this even if they were publishing stories all the time. You publish a story and there’s no particular reaction. It’s as though you shot an arrow into the dark. You may get letters from people who like or didn’t like it, or a lot of reviews that really don’t mean anything, but if you are working in close quarters with others who are also interested in writing, and you’ve got an instructor with a good critical sense, there’s a vast stimulation.
    I’ve never had this happen to me, but I know it must be so. I’ve given various readings and lectures at universities, so I have had some first-hand observation of it, though I never attended such a workshop myself, but if I were a young writer I would. I think a college workshop would be enormously helpful and stimulating.

Newquist: In looking at today’s creative arts, literature in particular, what do you find that you most admire? Conversely, what do you most deplore?
Capote: I find that a very hard question to answer. I really don’t deplore anything, because I like all creative actions just as actions themselves, whether I personally enjoy them or not. I can’t deplore them just because I don’t think they are right. Now, none of this “beat” writing interests me at all. I think it’s fraudulent. I think it’s all evasive. Where there is no discipline there is nothing. I don’t even find that the beat writing has a surface liveliness—but that’s neither here nor there because I’m sure that eventually something good will come out of it. Some extraordinary person will be encouraged by it who could never have accepted the rigid disciplines of what I consider good writing.
   

This excerpt was pulled from a much longer interview. I really do wish I could share the entire piece with you, it's amazing, but there are rights issues I need to be careful about. I’ll explain further at the end of my archival wanderings in late-March.

Check back tomorrow for the continuation of my big dig.

Keep Writing,
Maria


Writer's Digest news
Thursday, March 06, 2008 6:29:21 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [5]
# Wednesday, March 05, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: 1958 Rod Serling Q&A
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Today's exhibit in my month-long dive into the Writer's Digest archives is a Q&A with screenwriter Rod Serling. This ran a year before The Twilight Zone debuted on network TV. I apologize for my lack of sticking to any sort of logical or chronological order with these excerpts. I guess I'm not that linear after all.

Anyway, here is Rod Serling for your reading pleasure:

[from Writer's Digest June/July 1958: one year before The Twilight Zone first appeared on TV)

Question: Do you ever write your story with a particular actor or actress in mind?
Answer: No. There are simply too few top-rate actors and actresses around to be able to do that. Usually, I have as many as three or four of one type of actor or actress to fill the part.

Question: You had only two or three credits and were able to start right in with a top agent. How?
Answer: I started writing for TV in 1949 when even the large networks weren’t sure what a TV writer was. An impressive list of credits was not required to work with a smart agent then.

Question: Are you able to write, well, anything you wish?
Answer: Fear keeps you from writing just anything. You can’t fight a story out. I guarantee that if you sweat and worry, you’ll never make it.

Question: What are some of your weaknesses?
Answer: Plotting and writing about women. I can’t get close up to a woman and study her emotions and what she thinks. I can’t write a love scene without blushing. I feel that I’m barging in without being invited.

Question: Does the beginning writer have a better chance to sell the ½-hour show, the hour show or the 1 ½-hour show?
Answer: The ½ hour show is easiest for the beginner, because there are more of them. The 1 1/2 show is almost impossible to break into for the beginning writer.

Question: How many credits must a writer have today before being able to work with a top agent?
Answer: God only knows. Of course, magazine credits are good and the more known the magazine to which you contribute, the better become your chances.

Question: Will producers read unsolicited scripts?
Answer: If a writer doesn’t have an agent, it’s definitely best to query a producer before submitting a script, even an outline. Another point to remember in preparing your TV script is to leave the directing to the directors if you are not familiar with the business directions. A story is used if it has something good, regardless of the lack of technical TV knowhow.

Rod Serling is not overly enthusiastic about the controlled effect TV has on writers (the restrictions sponsors demand and the reluctancy of TV producers to produce controversial shows). However, he says, “There’s something opiatic about TV. When people take off their shoes and relax in their living rooms, it’s difficult to prod them into thinking. Yet, if there’s any art form that can influence people everywhere, it’s TV. It’s so constant in its existence. It’s always there.”


More of my archive digging finds tomorrow, so stay tuned.
Keep Writing,
Maria




Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, March 05, 2008 2:15:43 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Tuesday, March 04, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Erle Stanley Gardner advice
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I'm dedicating the month of March to my excavations of the Writer's Digest archives.
Today's exhibit: this excerpt from a 1931 piece by Erle Stanley Gardner, author of the Perry Mason series.


What Chance has the New Writer?

By Erle Stanley Gardner
(January 1931 Writer’s Digest)

After you’ve written a story, the thing to do is sell it. Sounds simple, and it is, if one will follow certain basic principles of salesmanship.

The real trouble with the writing game is that no general rule can be worked out for uniform guidance, and this applies to sales as well as to writing.

In the course of six years of more or less intensive study, I’ve seen every rule laid down by a prominent author contradicted by some other equally prominent author.

“Write of something you know,” says one man, and make it sound reasonable. Then along comes another and says, “You’re writing to get away from the humdrum and take other people away from the humdrum. If you know Fifth Avenue and nothing else, for Heaven’s sake write of the South Seas. If you know Kansas, write of the wild west. Your work will have a freshness of viewpoint and treatment you’d never get from writing of humdrum subjects.”

“Revise, revise, revise,” harps another. “You’re up against stiff competition, and you’ve got to be certain that the work that goes in over your name is as nearly perfect as you can make it. Write your first draft, then cut it, polish it, check it over for trite words, crisp it up, polish it until it sparkles like a jewel.”

And there’s a lot to be said in his favor.

Then along comes some other man and says: “This revision is the bunk. You polish your work, yes; but you polish all the life out of it. Fiction has got to be created at a white heat. What’s more, when you get to writing action fiction for the wood pulps, you’ve got to turn out a quantity if you want to make any money. It’s better to write a new story than revise an old yarn.”

And the name of the man who makes that statement will be the name of a man who sells his stuff right and left.

And so on, ad infinitum. I could cite examples by the hundred. One man claims the average writer jumps at his machine too soon. He hasn’t got all the plot worked out. He should take more time with plot before he starts in on story. Then along comes an H. Bedford Jones with an easy smile and says: “Put a piece of paper in a typewriter. Think of an interesting opening situation. Write it down. Then go on with the story. The characters will take care of developments.”

The bewildered student-writer (in which category is numbered every writer who is worth his salt, whether he’s selling or not) is doomed if he does, and damned if he doesn’t.

Now far be it from me to add to this contradictory mass of advice. It relates to the sales as well as to every other phase of the writing profession. Some man says “Mail out your story, don’t write a letter.” Another chap chirps, “Always write a personal letter to the editor, telling him what you’ve tried to accomplish in the story.” One writer claims that a story should never be sent out more than three or four times without revision. Another says “perseverance and postage will sell anything.”

In short, there simply aren’t general rules. There are basic principles, but no hard and fast rules.



Geez, the more things change the more they stay the same.
Check back for more tomorrow.

Keep Writing,
Maria






Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, March 04, 2008 3:31:05 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [6]
# Monday, March 03, 2008
Do you deviate from the norm?
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I have a confession: I don't really think about the official demographic data when putting together the editorial content for Writer's Digest. I prefer to think our magazine appeals to writers who cut a wide swath across the age, gender, income spectrum.

At any rate, our marketing department recently surveyed our readers and this is what they came back with:

Age:
74% 41 and Over
47% Over 50

Gender:
37% Male
63% Female

State:
18% FL, NY, TX (6% each)
12% California

Education:
64% College Degree
27% Master's or higher

Experience
31% Published writer
55% Serious aspiring writer

67% are primarily interested in writing fiction
40% also interested in writing screenplays
39% also interested in writing non-fiction
25% also interested in writing memoirs
24% also interested in writing poetry

71% primarily use Windows XP
75% primarily use Microsoft Word

26% read The Writer
18% read Poets & Writers
10% read Publisher's Weekly
 
51% visit WritersMarket.com
13% visit Publisher's Weekly (pw.com)
9% visit MediaBistro.com

So please let me know where you fit—or don't fit—into this survey.
Are the marketing folks way off base, or right on target? As always, I appreciate your feedback.

Keep Writing,
Maria
P.S. In my quest to get my bosses to yell "uncle" and let me digitize the WD archives, I'm going to post cool stuff from our archives all through March. So if you're a lover of literary ephemera come back for more.


Writer's Digest news
Monday, March 03, 2008 6:30:49 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [17]
# Friday, February 29, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: WD Covers of the 70s
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I wanted to share more of my WD archival excavations with you.

Today's exhibit: Writer's Digest covers from the '70s, which are, shall we say, expressive.
For propriety's sake, I'm restraining my own commentary, but I encourage yours. Enjoy.

Keep Writing,
Maria


the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, February 29, 2008 4:01:15 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [8]
# Thursday, February 28, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: a Norman Mailer letter
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Thanks very much to all who are supporting me in my quest to get the WD archives digitized. It's starting to gain some momentum here, so please spread the word to your fellow writers and keep the good karma coming.

Today, I'm pulling out old magazines for an AP photographer to accompany the story I mentioned in my previous entry. Well, I was having quite the blast when I got ever so rudely kicked out of our company library for a meeting. The nerve.

Anyway, for your reading enjoyment, I found this hilarious letter Norman Mailer wrote to the editor in our March 1970 issue:

Dear Editor,
Regarding the interview you printed with me in the December issue done by Oriana Fallaci—Miss Fallaci is a talented journalist with a gift for making people talk more than they care to talk as she runs them through an interview. Her English however is uncertain, so uncertain that she uses a tape recorder, not as she confesses for the record but because she cannot understand exactly what you say. The use of a tape recorder is probably excusable, especially by a foreign journalist, but what is not altogether forgivable is that Miss Fallaci has the habit of rewriting the transcription with a freedom matched only by her ability to spurn the word you did use.

Since she was writing for an Italian audience, she took pains to convert my answers into Italian, which is to say that she rephrased my dialogue in such a way that it would make sense to Italian readers. The result, now translated back into English from the free translation into Italian, is a first-rate piece of surrealism. Nearly all the ideas I expressed to her find some place in her work, but it has become
her work. It may even read like Oriana Fallaci interviewing Oriana Fallaci. My words, my style, my very clumsiness of speech—which any friend can testify to—have been converted into the spoiled and petulant tones of an Italian intellectual loved somewhat too much by his mother and I protest, fellas, I protest. Whatever my vices—they are many—I am not quite so bright an ass as Miss Fallaci would have me.

Norman Mailer
Provincetown, Mass.

Ahh, rest in peace, Norman. You were a spirited one.

Keep Writing,
Maria



Writer's Digest news
Thursday, February 28, 2008 3:18:12 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Tuesday, February 26, 2008
The WD Archives—and my new pet project
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Last week, we hosted an AP reporter who flew in from New York to spend two days combing through the Writer's Digest archives. He's writing a feature on the history of the publishing industry and found plenty of fodder for his piece here—in fact 88 years of writing and publishing advice.

Last year WD Books published a book featuring some great pieces from our archives, you can read an article about that here.

As you can imagine, there's amazing stuff in our archives—interviews and first-hand essays and advice pieces written by just about any literary luminary you can think of from the past century.

And as we were shuffling those crumbling, leather-bound magazines around—we're talking actual bound copies of the original magazines going back to 1920—I realized that wow, we really need to get our archives digitized. And soon, before all that history crumbles away with the low-grade paper it was printed on.

I've known this for awhile, of course. But as often happens, preserving the past takes a backseat to the pressing needs of the present. Like hitting deadlines for the next issue, and building a better website and blogging and hitting circ numbers to keep our publisher happy, etc., etc. etc...

So, I've got this awesome task ahead of me. It's something I've charged myself with, and something that I know in my gut I have to do.

But the sheer size of this project is overwhelming—we're talking months and months of scanning hundreds of thousands of pages of historical content. It's a big, big job. And I'm now in the process of convincing my bosses that not only does this need to be done, but that people might actually pay for CDs of our archives.

You could really help me build my case to get this done by saying sure, I'd buy that. So if you're into this pet project of mine, please leave me a comment here. I'm assembling reader feedback for my proposal now, and I'd sure appreciate hearing from you all.

Keep Writing,
Maria





Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, February 26, 2008 3:41:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [24]
# Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Laurell K. Hamilton on her fantasy series
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
There seems to be some blogosphere chatter surrounding a quote from the Laurell K. Hamilton interview in our April issue. So I'm posting that particular Q&A here. The full interview will be available on our website next week.


Do you work on only one series at a time?

Yes, especially when the Merry series was new. I'd written five Anita books in a row so Anita's voice was very strong. Merry's voice was hard to stay in and the Anita voice kept intruding. So I had to be very careful at the beginning. When I was working on Merry I had to not be thinking about Anita and vice versa.
    A Lick of Frost is number six. Sometime around book four, the world begins to solidify and it's not as much work to do the voice of the characters. Book four seems to be the magic number for me. And somewhere between books six and eight, it just gets to work.    
    One of the things I did before I started Merry was research mystery series, because at that time there were no fantasy series that had gone past five books. A lot of writers seem to get bored with their own series between books five and eight. One of the reasons I didn't do a straight mystery series is because I thought I'd get bored. That's why I have fantastic elements; I thought it would keep me interested, and it has.

Stay tuned for more.

Keep Writing,
Maria


publishing news and views | Writer's Digest news | writing technique
Wednesday, February 20, 2008 6:55:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Laurell K. Hamilton quote
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
In celebration of our April 2008 issue dedicated to Pop Fiction hitting newsstands this week, here's a quote from our cover subject Laurell. K. Hamilton:

I've been writing stories since I was 12. Writer's Digest was one of my first teachers, actually. In the high school library, there were stacks of them. My teacher handed them to me by the armload; she knew I was interested in writing. This is how I learned to submit professionally.

Keep Writing,
Maria


the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, February 20, 2008 3:26:38 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Tuesday, February 19, 2008
WD announces celebrity author columnist lineup
Posted by maria

Writer’s Digest magazine is pleased to announce the addition of four famous writers to its Writer’s Workbook line-up: Steve Almond, Susan Shapiro, Dorianne Laux and M.J. Rose. Writer’s Workbook is a popular eight-page section of Writer’s Digest magazine that offers lessons and tips for working on specific aspects of writing, including fiction, nonfiction, poetry and marketing.

Steve Almond is the author of two story collections, My Life in Heavy Metal and The Evil B.B. Chow; the novel Which Brings Me to You (with Julianna Baggott); the nonfiction book Candyfreak; and his new essay collection, Not That You Asked. His provocative how-to fiction advice first appeared in Writer’s Digest’s February 2008 issue.

Susan Shapiro is a Manhattan-based journalism teacher who has written for The Washington Post, The New York Times Magazine, The Nation, Glamour, People and Salon. She’s the author of the memoirs Five Men Who Broke My Heart; Lighting Up and Only as Good as Your Word: Writing Lessons From My Favorite Literary Gurus. Her tried-and-true nonfiction lessons debuted in Writer’s Digest’s April 2008 issue.

Celebrated poet Dorianne Laux’s poetry commentary debuts in Writer’s Digest’s June 2008 issue. A poet-in-residence at North Carolina State University in Raleigh, she’s the author of Facts about the Moon as well as three collections of poetry from BOA Editions: Awake, What We Carry and Smoke, and co-author of The Poet’s Companion: A Guide to the Pleasures of Writing Poetry.

M.J. Rose, the newest addition to Writer’s Workbook, shares her savvy marketing tips in Writer’s Digest’s, beginning with the August 2008 issue. The bestselling author of nine novels, including The Reincarnationist, she founded the first marketing company for authors, AuthorBuzz.com, and writers flock to her popular marketing blog, Buzz, Balls & Hype.

Writer's Digest is the world's leading magazine for writers, founded in 1920. Writer's Market, the bible for writers seeking to publish their work, was first published in 1921. Together, they form the foundation of a wide range of informational, instructional and inspirational offerings for writers. Today those offerings include books, magazines, special-interest publications, educational courses, conferences, websites and more.


Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, February 19, 2008 2:05:00 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [3]
# Monday, December 31, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: BUILD MY BLOGROLL WEEK 20 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I'm back, shamelessly two-days late for this, the wrap-up of my Project 20/20: Build my Blogroll Project. I apologize to anyone who worried I'd  given it all up to join a roving mime troupe. I've been on holiday, celebrating with family and doing good deeds involving small children and their pets.

But in being late, I did violate one of my own best blog practices: if you say you're going to do something, do it. For that I apologize.

As many of you who've been following this project know, I've been diving in the deep seas of the web for 20 weeks now in search of the best writer's blogs to add to my roster.

Thanks to all who have followed my blogroll project, who have nominated a blog or complimented other writer's blogs. It's been an amazingly educational journey for me and I hope you've found something useful along the way, as well.

For my 20th blogroll add, I wanted to spotlight one of the hardest working, most talented and most deserving writers I know. If you're a Writer's Digest reader, you're surely familiar with the copious work of this writer. I think you'll find this blog a darn good read.

Jordan's Muse
by Jordan E. Rosenfeld

Jordan recently released her book Make a Scene and she's been posting on her book and blog tour. Jordan's blog covers a lot of different subjects--she uses it as a journal of sorts. It's an excellent entree into the everyday life of a working writer. Check it out, you'll be glad you did.

And although this is the 20th and final blog I'm adding for my Project 20/20, I'm going to continue to hunt for the best writer's blogs on the web and spotlight them from time to time, so don't be shy about leaving me a comment with a link to your blog or recommending another writer's blog.

I'm off to Florida for a 7-day vacation with my family. My fearless editing team: online managing editor Brian A. Klems and managing editor Kara Gebhart Uhl, will be posting here on The Writer's Perspective next week, so stay tuned for some new voices, insights and opinions on the writing world.

In two weeks, I'll be sharing 20 tips every blogger should know, much of which is what I've learned from all of you during my Project 20/20.

I sincerely appreciate your readership. I wish you all peace, happiness and publication in 2008.

Keep Writing,
Maria


blogs and online writing | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Monday, December 31, 2007 2:46:44 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [3]
# Saturday, December 22, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: BUILD MY BLOGROLL WEEK 19 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Well, you didn’t think I’d forget about my Project 20/20: Build My Blogroll, just because it’s the holidays, did you?

This is the 19th Friday in as many weeks in my project to add 20 writer’s blogs to my blogroll and now we’re counting down to the home stretch. I started a two-week vacation today, and I’m taking a bit of break from the blog next week. But no worries, I’ll definitely be back to post my final blogroll add.

I’m glad to see there’s still blogs getting added to the nominations (see many of the nominations in the Project 20/20 thread in the left nav). All told, I’ve received about 100 nominations and have thoroughly enjoyed exploring all of the great writer’s blogs.

But alas, I have to chose just one a week. Anyway, as I’ve stated numerous times, I want to have a well-rounded blogroll. I want my writer’s blogroll to be the definitive writer’s blogroll. I decided it was high time to add a good go-to blog for the times when we’re not really in the mood to write; when we just want to explore the work of other writers. With that I’d like to announce my week 19 add: 

Bluestalking Reader: Weblog of Lisa Guidarini - Book Critic, Library Grad Student, Avid Photographer and Editor-at-Large of her own life.

Here’s a post Lisa did on a recent blogument she found herself in.

Shazam!

It's been one of those weeks. Early in the week I engaged in a fairly public argument over on the NBCC blog with a disgruntled self-published writer with some very strong opinions on the subjects of publishing and bookselling. After a couple rounds I realized if you put that episode in perspective it's truly the proverbial tempest in a teapot. Like there aren't a few hundred thousand disgruntled writers out there looking for a scapegoat. Phooey.

Hardly worth the time and aggravation, though the opinions expressed are definitely ones held near and dear to me. I guess I should really thank the woman for helping me sort those out. It was some very cheap therapy. Considering the fact I saw how it impacted her, I think I also got off fairly easily. One more example of me blowing off steam and coming out of it okay.

Phew.


You're a sassy one Lisa! Not to mention witty, charming, and skilled in serving up good topical information for writers—what more could you ask for in a blogger. (That was a rhetorical statement—don’t try to engage me in a blogument.)

Lisa, I appoint you the official book critic of my blogroll. Every good blogroll needs a resident critic.

Have a great holiday everyone!

Keep Writing,
Maria
P.S. check out my cute staff, below. : )


blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Saturday, December 22, 2007 12:19:10 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2]
# Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Seasons Greetings!
Posted by maria

Wishing you Peace and Joy this Holiday Season

-From the Writer's Digest magazine family (Art Director, Kathleen DeZarn; Editor, Maria Schneider; Managing Editor, Kara Gebhart Uhl; Online Managing Editor, Brian A. Klems).



 


Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, December 19, 2007 10:01:04 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Tuesday, December 18, 2007
And the Winners are…
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
All good writing starts with a goal, either modest or lofty. I issued a challenge last week on this blog—to post your writing goals for 2008.

80 writers answered my goal call. With the help of my editors, I’ve picked 10 of those lists to highlight. The following 10 writers win a Writer’s Digest subscription! And their 2008 goals follow: 


My Writing Goals for 2008:
PUBLISH SOMETHING.
That sounds very simplistic. Like I could step out the door and throw pages into the wind and have them show up at Barnes & Noble printed and bound. I have the stories written, now I need to keep myself in the chair to edit them. Then, terror of all terrors, I have to let go of my babies and let someone else take them, first an agent then an editor. Discipline is the key, it's time to buckle on the armor and toughen my resolve. A good friend told me the other day that I have to play to win. I think she meant the lottery but the statement goes along with writing. So my goals are as follows.
1. Edit
2. Submission
3. Move to the next story.
4. Rinse and repeat.
-Terri Kleinberg


My writing goals for 2008 are:
1. To write like there's no "tomorrow" or "sometime" or "later"
2. To recognize that a writer living in her comfort zone is not experiencing new things and has little or nothing to write about
3. To FINISH the myriad projects that are written, planned or hiding in my desk drawer or imagination
4. To take the advice of my brilliant daughter, whose birthday message to me was, "If you don't write your story, no one will ever read it".
5. To be courageous in the face of my Internal Editor (that picky, over-critical bitch) and write because I cannot not write
-Sandre Moore


My goal to 2008 is to write something non-academic. I've been working on my MLIS for over a year and all I ever seem to write is term paper after term paper. I have 1 1/2 more years to go and wonder if I'll ever write creatively again. I want to find my creative voice that disappeared deep inside somewhere. When I find some free time I love to pick up a WD issue and dream about writing like I used to. I'd like to write poetry again and start a play I have been working on in my head. I love that WD offers writing prompts...If only homework didn't have to come first.
-Kalyn Shubnell


My goals:
1. Finish what I've started! I've let 20+ years of procrastination, another load of laundry, a research question to answer draw me away from my writing. I can't let another 20 years drift. I'm on chapter 7 of my romance novel and oh by gosh, by golly...it's time for mistletoe, holly and me to type THE END.
2. Stop thinking that because I've done research or bought a new journal or picked up the latest How to write book that I've written! It's fun buying that new journal and following research leads, but baby...got write!
3. Keep up my confidence level. I am good. I am good! I have something to say in a unique way!
4. I've asked Santa for a Writer's Digest subscription—winning one would be a great surprise!
Thanks! Happy Holidays!
-Trish Glavin


My goals are more about attitude. I'm already on board with discipline, so I vow not to give materials away or write for free any longer—there must be some quid pro quo with whatever I do.
1. To not be obnoxious with marketing and promotion (I can't stand those pushy authors,) so, be circumspect about self-promotion and use it with the utmost taste whether that is at conferences, online or in e-list groups.
2. Network more but with the intention of making true relationships. I do this now, but this year I will really listen instead of poised waiting my turn to speak.
3. Edit my student's (I teach e-courses) work kindly, by always providing a plus before I stress the minuses and needed corrections.
4. Lower the bitching quotient around my husband and up the "good things" comments about this career. He's making more sacrifices than I am.
-Andrea Campbell


Goals for 2008:
1. Find ten minutes every day to daydream. No pen or paper allowed.
2. Take myself out on a date every Tuesday night. Agenda: explore my creativity in new, interesting and solitary ways.
3. Subscribe to and support the literary magazines I like best, and who I hope will support me.
4. Read every story in the Best American Short Stories of the Century.
5. Begin, fearlessly, to write my novel.
6. Write more letters to friends and family.
7. Call my Gran whenever I think about her, and ask her to tell me her stories.
8. Be mindful of my physical health, and treat my body like the instrument it is: if I feel like crap, I probably won't be writing.
9. When there is a social engagement I *really* don't want to go to, I'll go anyways, and take a pocket size moleskin and a pencil stub with me.
10. Show up at my writing desk every day, keep my eyes open, and try to be useful.
-Christie VanLaningham


My modest goals:
1. Win a Nobel Prize for Literature (for my unpublished works that the Nobel Committee hears about and requests to see)
2. Top the New York Times Bestseller List for the last six months of the year (need to get the book rushed to publication for its brilliance in the first six)
3. Chat with Oprah about how much she loves my book
4. Build my custom-designed writing retreat in Colorado overlooking the mountains.
5. Get a law passed that flays alive anyone who thinks it's okay not to pay writers, claiming they should work for free to get "quality clips." Later amend law to pouring lemon juice on them after flaying.
6. Hire someone to talk to all the people introvert me does not deign to speak to now that I have much moolah from #2. I vant to be alone to create art my dahlings.
7. Pull a J.D. Salinger at the end of the year and refuse all interviews. I need no stinkin' publicity.
8. Allow myself to be coaxed out of Salingerhood to do another interview with Oprah.
-Tricia D. Grissom


Whenever I was depressed in 2007, I would go to the library and pick up Writer’s Digest. Getting a subscription would be a monthly gift of hope for my dream of becoming a writer. My writing goals for 2008 are in two categories, SAFE- writing I know how to do, and RISKS—writing that makes me sigh and scares me.
SAFE:
1. Start a monthly newsletter for my company.
2. Write and Field Test a new curriculum to train direct support staff.
RISKS:
1. Read two bestsellers every month by different authors. Then analyse each for overall plot, character development, surprises, twists, complexity of the storyline, voice (written in first, third person...), dialogue, beginning and closing chapters....
2. Stop rewriting the first chapter of my current novel and either throw it out and start something new, or finish at least chapter two by February 1st and the entire book by May 1st.
3. Lose 50 pounds. Don't laugh! This is a writing goal because I will write for one hour and then actively walk and process for the next hour. Two hours on actively working toward my goals will definitely be therapy for my body and soul.
4. I will actively market my work.
-Mary Ulrich


1. Write regularly.
2. Revise ruthlessly.
3. Release repeatedly (i.e., submit for publication).
-Sherrie Lorance


My writing goal before the curtain closes on 2008 is a rejection letter. Just one simple, beautiful rejection letter and my year will be a complete success. How? That letter would have been made possible by a series of events that started with my organization (finally) of all those seemingly random bits of story and unformed characters in my “Ideas” folder and ended with a completed work of fiction in my hands.

A work of fiction that formed during the course of the year because of a disciplined adherence to a daily writing routine, regular input from fellow writers, and constant revision. A work of fiction that finally appeared “good enough” to send out into the wide world like a kindergartener walking to the bus stop on the first day of school. And like so many hopeful school children making their inaugural school bus rides only to run afoul of the class bully, my work of fiction would have its lunch money stolen and receive its first official black eye.

Then I’ll rework it and put it right back on the bus. And that will be a great success, indeed.
-Karen O'Brien


Feel free to keep posting. And remember to stay true to your writing goals in 2008!
Keep Writing,
Maria
"To thine own self be true" -William Shakespeare


the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, December 18, 2007 7:46:21 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [9]
# Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Win a Writer's Digest subscription!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I know it's a crazy time of year, and you probably have your writing career set in neutral at the moment, but it's time to put the credit card away for a few minutes and start thinking about what your goals are for 2008 (just 20 days away—eek!).

To get the creative wheels turning forward, I want to make you an offer you simply cannot refuse.
I have 10 Writer's Digest magazine subscriptions to give away over the next two weeks, and here's what I decided to do to motivate you.

Post your 2008 writing goals here in my comments section. I'm going to choose my favorite 10 and post them here on "The Writer's Perspective." So not only do you have a good chance of winning a one-year subscription to Writer's Digest, you get me, the Writer's Digest editor, digitally nudging (okay, bugging) you to make sure you're accountable to your own writing goals next year.

So writers—let the goals begin!

Keep Writing,
Maria
"The world is always ready to receive talent with open arms."
-my favorite quote from a fortune cookie


blogs and online writing | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, December 11, 2007 3:40:39 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [80]
# Monday, December 10, 2007
Writer's Digest on Facebook
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I'm on Facebook now, and so is our beloved Writer's Digest, so stop by and say hi if you're a Facebooker!
Maria Schneider on Facebook
Writer's Digest on Facebook

Keep Writing,
Maria


blogs and online writing | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Monday, December 10, 2007 11:23:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Tuesday, December 04, 2007
Is Copyright Now Necessary?
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Wow, I hate to be a buzz-kill over the holidays, but I read an alarming report in Publishers Weekly and thought it was important to share with you: Court Voids Settlement in Tasini v New York Times

Here's an excerpt:
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals has thown out a settlement between freelance writers and publishers reached after a 2001 Supreme Court ruling that publishers had violated the copyright of freelance writers by using their works in electronic databases without their permission. The 2001 Supreme Court decision was reached in Tasini v. The New York Times, a case involving Jonathan Tasini, then president of the National Writers Union, and five other plaintiffs. The appellate court ruling voids a settlement that created a pool of $18 million that was to be paid out to freelance writers in an associated class-action suit.

In the 2 to 1 decision, the appellate court ruled that only writers who had registered their works with the copyright office were eligible to file claims for damage. Since the overwhelming majority of freelance writers did not register their works, the appellate court reasoned that the courts did not have jurisdiction over the dispute and were wrong to approve the class action suit as well as the subsequent settlement. However, in a dissenting opinion, Chief Judge John M. Walker, argued that registering for a copyright was more of a “claim-processing rule,” rather than a “jurisdictional prerequisite.”


If so inclined, you can read background on the case here: Tasini vs. New York Times.

Also, it currently costs $45 (ouch!) to copyright a manuscript. To learn more about copyright, here’s the U.S. Copyright Office website

Until now, Writer's Digest hasn’t recommended writers getting their own copyright, since it was deemed both costly and unnecessary. Unfortunately, we may soon have to change that stance.

Here’s my question for you: In light of this new threat to writers' rights, is it now necessary for writers to get each and every manuscript copyrighted?

Keep Writing,
Maria





blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, December 04, 2007 7:05:49 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [11]
# Friday, November 30, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: BUILD MY BLOGROLL WEEK 16 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Here it's week 16 in my Project 20/20 Build my Blogroll contest and the nominations for writers' blogs keep rolling in. If you've been following along, you know I've chosen a very wide ranging collection of writer's blogs for writers of all stripes—from the purely whimsical to the downright practical.

This week's add, I must say, is a quite sensible selection. It's the little black dress of my blogroll. It's a blog dedicated to educating and communicating with freelance writers.

I'd like to announce my week 16 add:
Words on the Page: Advice and Ramblings on the Writing Life
by Lori Widmer (who's a frequent visitor and commentor on this blog)

Lori's been freelancing for 15 years and she's witnessed first-hand the changes unfolding in the industry. Here's an excerpt from a very recent post:

The Changing Face of Freelancing
Time for some frank talk - we've been in this business long enough to see the trends unfolding before our eyes, right? Even if you've been in freelancing a year, you've seen it. You may not recognize it yet, but you're definitely experiencing it.

It's the way we find our projects. For a few years now, I've lamented, cajoled, moaned and shouted about how project employers are requiring more of us and paying us a damn sight less than in previous years. Numerous reasons exist - and I'm not going into them here. I've fussed about them endlessly in previous posts. Just read backwards, please.

It used to be we could log on to Craig's List or About Freelance Writing and find tons of work that paid decently (and Anne Wayman does an excellent job of searching for job listings for us, so kudos to her). Even the paid job sites used to do good by us. But the evolution taking place online right now is depressing, maddening, sickening and not doing anyone any good. The jobs that are there pay squat. If we secured 20 gigs a month, the pay still wouldn't add up to enough to bring home KFC for dinner (or tofu kabobs for us vegetarians).

Lori's encouraging other freelancers not to take this lying down though, she's taking a proactive approach, which I really admire. Beginning next Monday, she's leading a charge to learn or re-learn the age-old art of the cold call—something freelancers seem to now bypass. Go visit Lori's blog next week and learn how to do some hands-on marketing for the good of your writing career.

So Lori, good luck with your project and thanks for using your time and experience to help out your fellow writers. It's my honor to welcome you to my fabulous blogroll.

Keep Writing,
Maria   



blogs and online writing | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, November 30, 2007 8:35:15 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [7]
# Thursday, November 29, 2007
The Best of WD Interviews CD
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,

I've never made a secret of the fact that the WD Interviews are my favorite feature in Writer's Digest. It's a rare privilege to get first-hand advice on the craft and business of writing from some of the finest writers of our times.

We've done some amazing interviews over the years, if I must say so myself. When I went back through our archives recently, I compiled a list, and it was like a who's who of the bestseller lists, including:

•Jane Smiley •Jennifer Weiner •Alice Hoffman •Ted Kooser •Po Bronson •Gay Talese •Jay McInerney •Anna Quindlen •Sebastian Junger •Alexander McCall Smith •John Searles •Augusten Burroughs •Mark Winegardner •Fannie Flagg •James Rollins •Melissa Bank •Michael Connelly •Bill Bryson •Jack Kerley •Caroline Alexander •Margaret Atwood •Marian Keyes •Dave Eggers •Jeffrey Eugenides •Michael Chabon •John Updike •Tom Clancy •Joyce Carol Oates •Janet Evanovich •Ann Brashares

The friendly, fearless editors here at Writer's Digest are pleased to offer our newest venture into the digital divide: The Best of WD Interviews CD

A few of my favorite quotes from past WD interviews:

John Updike: "We're past the age of heroes and hero kings. If we can't make up stories about ordinary people, who can we make them up about?"

Jeffrey Eugenides: "Stay in touch with the first impulses that made you start writing—the pleasure of it and the interest of the story, and not so much the professional side of things. Remain close to that—when you began writing and were intoxicated with it. If you do, the rest will come."

Joyce Carol Oates: "I suggest to my students that they write under a pseudonym for a week. That allows young men to write as women, and women as men. It allows them a lot of freedom they don't have ordinarily."

This is an online-exclusive offer. The Best of WD Interviews is just $14.95 and it's the perfect holiday gift for your favorite writer—even if it's you!

Keep Writing,
Maria







publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news | writing technique
Thursday, November 29, 2007 6:58:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Pay me for my content?!!!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
If you're trying to write for a living, I don't need to tell you what a volatile industry writers are facing right now, with the Internet rising quickly as the dominant media force.

I'll leave it up to Chad Gervich to fill you in on the nitty-gritty of the screenwriter's strike—which has vast implications for all writers' rights—on his Script Notes blog.

But on a separate but related note concerning writers' rights, please read this Op-Ed from The New York Times Pay Me for My Content, by Jaron Lanier.

Lanier, one of the early Silicon Valley Internet pioneers, wrote the following:

Like so many in Silicon Valley in the 1990s, I thought the Web would increase business opportunities for writers and artists. Instead they have decreased. Most of the big names in the industry — Google, Facebook, MySpace and increasingly even Apple and Microsoft — are now in the business of assembling content from unpaid Internet users to sell advertising to other Internet users.

This is a brief, but really provocative (and potentially depressing) essay. Read it in full if you have the chance. The gist of the piece is that writers and artists really get (pardon the expression) screwed (he says it more politely than that) with the current model of the Web 2.0, because people now have the expectation that content (read: your writing) should be free.

Free content is a lovely ideal, as Lanier asserts, but who's then paying writers for their work? Is it too late to re-make the system and ask people to charge for what they're now, in many cases, getting for free?

Please leave your thoughts, concerns and crazy visionary ideas here.

Keep Writing,
Maria


blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, November 27, 2007 3:43:14 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [5]
# Friday, November 23, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: BUILD MY BLOGROLL WEEK #15 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
This is week 15 in my Project 20/20 Build My Blogroll project
Please follow the link for details about the project where you'll find many of the writer's blogs nominated in the comments section of that original post.

There's still no shortage of great writer's blogs to add to my blogroll, as you'll see with this week's add: Kelly Spitzer

There's a lot to admire about Kelly's blog, including helpful book reviews and journal recommendations. But one of my favorite features is her Writer Profile Project in which Kelly profiles writers and also editors of small literary magazines and journals.

I love literary journals, but admittedly have a difficult time keeping up with them all. Kelly's blog is going to be my new go-to source for information on what's new and happening on the journal front.

Kelly's also an editor herself. She's the submissions editor of Smokelong Quarterly an online journal featuring flash fiction “about a smoke long.” I'm embarrassed to admit I hadn't heard of Smokelong, but I'm definitely going to become a regular peruser there. The art is striking and they're publishing some recognizable names, including our new fiction columnist himself, Mr. Steve Almond.

So Kelly, welcome to my blogroll, and thanks for doing such great work on behalf of the indie press.

Keep Writing,
Maria 




blogs and online writing | language issues | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news | writing contest announcements
Friday, November 23, 2007 10:40:57 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Friday, November 16, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: BUILD MY BLOGROLL WEEK 14 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Well, it's week 14 in my undeniably ambitious, slightly insane quest to add one writer's blog to my blogroll each Friday for 20 weeks. A time consuming project, yes, but definitely worth it.

I've been regularly perusing many of the blogs nominated for my blogroll. As I've mentioned before, it's been quite inspiring to watch new-ish blogs grow and develop over a period of time. You can find the majority of nominations by following the link in the left navigation here (Project 20/20 Build my blogroll link). And feel free to keep nominating blogs.

My week 14 add is another blog that I've been watching for awhile now, I do like to see that they're being consistent over a period of time, which as any blogger will tell you, is challenging.

Becoming a Writer Seriously: Tools and Trade Secrets for Aspiring Writers
By Tom Colvin

Tom is seriously doing a fabulous job of being both an aggregator of news and resources for writers, as well as writing his own reviews of tools of the trade.

Here's one helpful post: A comprehensive review of word processors. Tom has done lots of good posts on marketing and self-publishing. One other thing I find particularly interesting, in Tom's bio he mentions that he plans on turning his blog posts into a book. I'm curious to hear more about, so Tom please get on here and explain more about this project of yours—I think it's something a lot of writer/bloggers consider.

Congratulations Tom, my newest add. A warm welcome to my online stomping grounds.

Keep Writing,
Maria






blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, November 16, 2007 8:12:06 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Literary Hot Spots
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
We're compiling a state-by-state guide to literary hot spots.
Please stop by The Literary Hot Spots forum and let other writers in on:

• that cozy cafe with free wi-fi
• your favorite nightclub with poetry open mic night
• indie bookstores sponsoring local author readings

If it's a spot writers go to write, mingle or just hang out—we want to know about it!

Keep Writing,
Maria


the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, November 14, 2007 3:55:20 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Friday, November 09, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: BUILD MY BLOGROLL WEEK #13 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,

It's oh-so-lucky week #13 in my unstoppable quest to add one writer's blog to my blogroll each week for 20 weeks.

And without further adieu, I'd like to announce this week's add:

The Renegade Writer: A Totally Unconventional Guide to Freelance Writing Succes
by Linda Formichelli

If you're trying to break into freelancing, make this blog your go-to source for advice, resources, and just plain chutzpah that's necessary to establish a freelance writing career. I'd pay attention to anything Linda had to say—she's a real pro.

Check out the Renegade Writer’s FAQ advice archives, for lots of sassy, saucy advice for the working writer.

Here's one post I found especially useful in that renegade writer way:

The sneaky way to e-mail a magazine editor:
If you want to e-mail an editor, but don’t have her address, don’t fret — I’ve compiled the e-mail formats of some of the bigger publishing companies. Of course, there are always variations, such as when an editor has a hyphenated last name…but this list will still help in many cases.

The Renegade Writer’s blog even shares some real query letters that won assignments here. I think this is quite useful to help illustrate what editors are really looking for in a query.

Congratulations Linda, you renegade you. My blogroll is charmed by your rebel spirit.

I'm still taking nominations—7 spots to fill!

Keep Writing,
Maria
P.S. A correction: All apologies for neglecting to mention Diana Burrell in my original post. Diana and Linda co-blog on the Renegade Writer site.


blogs and online writing | language issues | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, November 09, 2007 7:44:09 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [6]
# Thursday, November 08, 2007
OFF THE PAGE: Laurell K. Hamilton
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I adore having this blog. For one thing it gives me infinite space for all of the things I'd like to fit in the magazine. But of course, there are space constraints we magazine editors are up against.

With that I'd like to bring you an outtake of an interview I conducted with horror/fantasy writer Laurell K. Hamilton, author of the Anita Blake vampire series and the Merry Gentry fantasy series. Our WD Interviews often involve 2 or more hour long phone conversations. When transcribed  this translates into more than 10,000 words and a 6-page feature typically clocks in at about 3,000.

So here's what won't make it into print. For the complete interview with Laurell K. Hamilton, you can pick up our April 2008 Genre Fiction issue, available on newsstands next February (I know, it's crazy how far ahead we magazine folk work).


Here's what Laurell K. Hamilton has to say about blogging:

You have a great blog. Why do you blog, and how do you fit it into your routine?
The blog is something I do first thing in the morning before I’ve done any writing, or last thing at the end of the day after I’ve done my writing. If I make a commitment to do something I try to do it well. I can’t just say well, there’s not time for writing today, the blog included. But I was a little confused about the blog when it first started. It feels private like a diary. It’s a very interesting form of writing. I went back to read essay writers. E.B. White is one of my favorite writers, he was an early influence on me. He’d done a series of essays for The New Yorker, I got that collection. I look at the blog as a collection of essays.

So you hadn’t done any essay writing previously?
Oh, I hate writing essays! They’re one of the hardest things for me to write because I have trouble writing short. Writers usually have one kind or another that they’re good at. Some people are absolutely amazing essay writers and a short piece is where they shine. Other people are good at short stories and novels. Novels are where I’m comfortable; I like huge works. So the blog was very difficult at first. But I’ve gotten better at it and more comfortable with it. I think having to do the blog on a regular basis, has helped me have more economy with language, which I think is always a good lesson for a writer to re-learn—especially a writer who has been successful, because they don’t edit you as you become successful. So it’s up to the writer to re-learn that economy of form.

What was the purpose of starting your blog: To keep in touch with your fans? Or was it more of a personal thing for you?
The helping the writing was an unexpected side-effect. It truthfully helped with writing the comic version of Guilty Pleasures and my husband Jonathan and I had a comic script. That actually helped me with the economy of language because you only have so many pages, but it was additionally to give something to the fans. Something that they could look at in between books. And also it was to help promote and keep the name out there. I cannot put a book out a month. So the blog is a way to let people know what I’m doing, to keep interest up, and also to give them something in between book releases so they can get a glimpse into it. Some fans said I write more detail about how I write the books than other people do.

I’d agree with that. There’s a lot about your process in your blog.
That’s how I learned, by reading other writers talk about how they write. It’s not a competition. There’s never enough good books out there. So if it can help people learn how to do it then great. But the writing process is individual. The fans seem very interested, though, even if they don’t want to write. They’re interested in how people write—it just fascinates people. To me it’s my job. But because I understand that since that’s the question I get asked most, I try to put in the blog what I’m writing, my schedule, etc. and I also try to explain how I come up with unique ideas. And that is the hardest thing actually: uniqueness. There are two things I don’t think can be taught, and those are the things you need most if you’re going to have a career. You need to find your unique voice and you need a unique vision.

Keep Writing,
Maria






blogs and online writing | Off the Page: author interview series  | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Thursday, November 08, 2007 3:53:09 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2]
# Tuesday, November 06, 2007
feelin' blue in a red state...
Posted by maria

...or seeing red in a blue state

Hi Writers,
On this election day, it seemed appropriate timing to make a statement about the so-called political leanings of Writer's Digest. Well, I hereby declare Writer's Digest independent and neutral territory—the Switzerland of the publishing world, if you will.

We've been getting a lot of flack recently about our "On the Edge" column, in particular, and I wanted to clarify a few things.

In the December issue we featured Alternative Fare, an article on Gay and Lesbian writing markets. We're doing, I think, a great job of providing analytical reports on publishing niche markets. In the past year we've covered markets for street lit, erotica and spiritual writing among others. These are potentially heated topics and—depending on what the topic is—we get called right wing wackos, left wing hippies, crazy liberal freaks and on, and on.

These are writing markets, pure and simple. We're not endorsing any lifestyle or religion or political party. We're not taking a stand on any particular issue. There are certainly plenty of places on the Web and on the newsstand to find political commentary. But there aren't many sources for fair, objective reporting on writing markets, and that's what we strive to bring you.

We're reporting on industry trends—sometimes these trends fall within the realm of heated political topics. You have my word that we're going out of our way to maintain fair, unbiased reporting.

If you think we cross the line into the realm of political commentary, I'd like to hear it, please leave a comment here.

Keep Writing,
Maria











blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, November 06, 2007 2:52:25 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [5]
# Friday, November 02, 2007
PROJECT 20/20 BUILD MY BLOGROLL: WEEK 12 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It's Week #12 in my Project 20/20 Build my Blogroll contest (see left for more details). If you haven't been following along, I'm spotlighting one writer's blog and adding it to my blogroll each week for 20 weeks.

One of the most amazing things about this project is due to the long scope of it, I've been able to watch many of the nominated blogs blossom. Many were relatively new-ish when this all started 12 weeks ago. And if there's one thing good blogging requires, it's continuity—you have to continually feed the blog monster, so to speak, if you want to keep a lively site that people will actually visit.

With that I'd like to announce my Week #12 add:
LEFT BRAIN WRITE: Musings on Writing and the Mind...
authored by one of my favorite WD forumistas Dr. Linda Simoni-Wastila

Linda is a psychology professor by day, writer by night. And she brings both of her passions together in this blog. Who better to help us figure out the connection between our crazy writer brains and creativity?

Here's an excerpt from Linda's most recent post "Creativity, it's all in your head."

Editing and revising sometimes feel like glorified secretarial work: typo annihilation, grammar correction, formatting perfection. It’s easy to let the mechanics of writing override the rest of the process, to get so stuck on the getting the words exactly right that you miss the message. At least, this is the way I feel of late, revising Brighter Than Bright for the 8th time (yes, the 8th full revision; my friend Jimmy’s discovered enough ‘ouches’ to cause anemia). Editing gets old. Real quick.

I missed writing new stuff. Waking in the morning, cup o’joe steaming by my side, the full moon blaring through the window, the rest of the world asleep, greeted only by a fresh white piece of paper daring me to write… anything my mind desired. It gives me shivers just thinking about it…brrrrrr… The revision process removes me from my characters and their sticky, complicated, crazy lives. It has to, because this stage requires the entrance of distanced critic, not the emotional writer. In other words, the polishing stage requires the left hemisphere of the brain, the home of language and linear thinking and logic and laterality, to assert control of the creative process.

Left-brain thinking, though necessary, is not sufficient. My right brain, where images and patterns and spatial relations reside, is where the ideas flow from, where the brilliant bon mots and the realization that your protag sports a ying-yang tattoo under the right shoulder blade originate. It’s the imagistic, intuitive, FUN side of creativity.

As I mentioned in the intro, Linda's site was one of the blogs that was really brand new when I kicked of Project 20/20 12-weeks ago. I didn't feel that I could recommend such a new blog then, because, as I said, consistency is such an important trait in a blogger. Well, Linda's shown her stuff.

Congratulations Linda, on being the latest addition to my blogroll. And I promise I won't even ask you for discounted psychiatric services.

Keep your nominations coming. There are still 8 spots left! 

Keep Writing,
Maria





blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, November 02, 2007 8:32:22 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [6]
# Thursday, November 01, 2007
Welcome Screenwriters!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
WD is going Hollywood. That's right, today we're kicking off a fabulous new blog Script Notes to keep you in the know about writing for the stage and screen.

Please welcome writer Chad Gervich. Chad is a television producer, published author, and award-winning playwright who spent five years as a development executive and producer with the Littlefield Company, former NBC president Warren Littlefield's production company with Paramount Television (now with ABC).

Chad created and produced the Style network’s hit comedy/reality series, Foody Call, and recently executive produced Celebrity Drive-By, a talk show pilot for E! Entertainment. Last fall, Chad developed Dirty Laundry, an internet soap for FOX TV Studios, and wrote and produced on Wig Out, an online sitcom for Warner Brothers.

Most recently, Chad’s book Television: A-Z was sold to Random House/Crown for an August, 2008 release.

Chad has also worked in development at NBC Studios, Sony Pictures, CBS Production, and Twentieth Century Fox. He’s been worked on countless series and pilots, including "Malcolm in the Middle" (FOX), "Love, Inc." (UPN), "Keen Eddie" (FOX/Bravo), "Do Over" (WB), "Time Tunnel" (FOX), and "Star Search" (CBS).

And, yes, this is an especially timely topic, in a rather ironic way, since there's a looming screenwriters strike. Here's an article from today's Los Angeles Times for the latest on the seemingly inevitable strike: Studios, writers quit talks at deadline; strike looms.

I can't wait to see what Chad has to tell us about the strike, and all other script-related news and views.

Welcome Chad, we're so glad you're here!

Keep Writing,
Maria





blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Thursday, November 01, 2007 1:03:37 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Saturday, October 27, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: BUILD MY BLOGROLL WEEK 11 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Wow, we're on week 11 of my Project 20/20 Build my Blogroll Project (see all the details in the left navigation). I've been adding a writer's blog to my blogroll every Friday for 11 weeks now. More than 75 writer's blogs have been nominated so far. I encourage you to check them out in the comments section of the Project 20/20 link.

This week's add is all about the subject writer's hate talking about but really need to know.
And that subject is—you guessed it—MONEY!

I've been acquainted with this writer for a while now. She provides such a valuable service to writers by tracking down grants and making the listings readily available.

Please check out this great resource/ blog by C. Hope Clark:
Funds For Writers

This blog will give you a great boost toward getting funds to enable you to write.

Thanks for all you do on behalf of writers, Hope.

Keep the nominations coming, there are still 9 spots to fill!

Keep Writing,
Maria




blogs and online writing | language issues | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Saturday, October 27, 2007 1:21:15 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Wednesday, October 24, 2007
WD Presents: The Writer's Ultimate Resource Guide 2008
Posted by Brian

Hi Writers,
I wanted to bring to your attention this fab new Writer's Digest product:

Writer's Digest presents: The Writer's Ultimate Resource Guide 2008

This essential CD is filled with oodles of helpful information and hyper-links to:

• top writing websites
• 100 best markets for book and magazine writers
• a state-by-state guide to local writing clubs and organizations
• writing and publishing FAQs
• literary agents who want your work
• annual writing contests
• and more! (please follow the link above for the full lineup)


This is the first CD project brought to you by yours truly with the help of the fearless Writer's Digest editing team (special thanks to our wunderbar managing editor, Kara Uhl). We're very pleased to make this available to our readers and hope to follow up this project next year with The Writer's Ultimate Resource Guide 2009.

Enjoy!

Keep Writing,
Maria


Writer's Digest news
Wednesday, October 24, 2007 7:30:40 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5]
# Friday, October 19, 2007
PROJECT 20/20 BUILD MY BLOGROLL: WEEK 10 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It's the 10th week in My Project 20/20 Build my Blogroll Project. You can read all about the project and nominate a writing blog in "Project 20/20" in the left navigation.

This week's add is all about the power of friends.

I've been noticing a trend lately, in the form of multiple writers gathering together to form a blog collective. This makes a lot of sense when you realize the time and commitment it takes to put out a quality blog on a continuous and relenteless basis. And when you consider the exponentially increased audience a group of writers can reach, well, a group blog really starts to make a lot of sense.

One of the first writing collective blogs I came across is this fine blog that was nominated at the beginning of my project. Congrats to our friendly writing neighbors to the north:
The Canadian Writers' Collective
hosted by the following writers:
  • Melissa Bell
  • Anne Chudobiak
  • Tricia Dower
  • Steven Gajadhar
  • Tamara J. Lee
  • Antonios Maltezos
  • Andrew Tibbetts
I'm guessing with 7 regular writers and specical guests, it's easy to keep the blog fires burning. Not to mention the fun factor of blogging as a group experience.

This blog is a bit of everything you'd want in a writing blog, really. Yesterday they posted a Halloween Haiku contest. There are posts from one writer's "Journal of a Wannabe Novelist" to advice on which writing books to invest in.

I'd love for any or all of the members of the Canadian Writers' Collective to stop in and tell us what it's like to be part of a group blog. I'd like to get into one of those myself!

Keep Writing,
Maria




blogs and online writing | language issues | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, October 19, 2007 8:58:53 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [3]
# Thursday, October 18, 2007
The 15th Annual WD Self-Published Book Awards Winner
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
A big congratulations to Norma Lehmeier Hartie, winner of our 15th annual Writer's Digest Self-Published Book Awards. She took home the prize (including $3,000 in cash) for her book Harmonious Environment: Beautify, Detoxify & Energize Your Life, Your Home & Your Planet, which was entered in the Inspirational category.

You can read an interview with Hartie on the Ecolibris blog, where she discusses the process of self-publishing her book, and how to be a "green" author. A fascinating read.

Here's what one of our judges wrote about the book:

"This is a beautiful looking, very well organized and thoughtfully written book. The author obviously has thoroughly done the necessary study/homework as she writes with an authentic voice, one of experience. The cover is especially lovely, evenly designed and inviting to the potential reader to open the book and go further. In reading we can only be inspired to beautify our lives, make the necessary changes that would make us happier, healthier, more at peace—on a personal, group, community or global level. I found myself drawn in to clean out my cluttered basement and give things away, as well as to get out my pendulum again for special use, and to be more conscientious about my cleaning products or home purchases. The benefits for clearing out, cleaning, and adjusting energy are explained succinctly and reasonably, and these tips are therefore encouraging and convincing. A lovely book to keep and refer to often. So many answers therein – if lots of people would accept this wonderful holistic approach."

Our interview with Hartie, along with the list of top winners in each category, will run in the April 2008 issue of Writer's Digest.

Keep Writing,
Maria


blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news | writing contest announcements
Thursday, October 18, 2007 3:01:39 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Friday, October 12, 2007
PROJECT 20/20 BUILD MY BLOGROLL: WEEK 9 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
You may or may not know, I've spent the past nine weeks lurking around the blogosphere perusing writers' blogs, for my Project 20/20, in which I'm spotlighting a writer's blog each week for 20 weeks.

Now, at week #9 I'm almost at the halfway mark and still getting lots of great nominations for my burgeoning blogroll. You can check out many of the nominations—and nominate a blog—on the Project 20/20 Build My Blogroll link on the left navigation.

As I've mentioned several times here on The Writer's Perspective I have eclectic tastes, I read widely and try to not pigeonhole myself into a genre. And I'm really proud of the diverse range of writers assembled so far on my blogroll. So I was looking over the blogroll today and realized, wow, I don't have a poet yet.

Of course, every good blogroll needs its own Poet Laureate. With that, here's my Week #9 add, who I hereby decree the official Poet Laureate of The Writer's Perspective blogroll:

Sage Said So by Sage Cohen

I was charmed by the asthetics of Sage's blog and website, which I think makes such a positive statement about her and her work. It's clean, elegant and makes good use of white space. The simple line drawings add personality and match the graphics on her new book of poetry, Like the Heart, the World. Sage just started her book tour and shares the experience on her blog, which is a wonderful way for writers to promote their work without seeming overly self-promotional.

I loved this recent post: "From Stopper to Striker" in which Sage compares the evolution of her writing career to lessons learned on the soccer field.

Sage, congratulations on being my newest blogroll add, and on your new role as the official Poet Laureate of The Writer's Perspective blogroll.

Have a lovely weekend. And, of course...
Keep Writing,
Maria





blogs and online writing | language issues | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, October 12, 2007 6:15:47 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [3]
# Friday, October 05, 2007
PROJECT 20/20 BUILD MY BLOGROLL: WEEK 8 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It’s week 8 in my Project 20/20 Build my Blogroll contest and yes, it's still hard for me to choose from all the great writing blogs out there.

I came across this week’s pick a couple of weeks ago when I was editing a feature this writer wrote for us on how online dating is similar to editor/ writer relationships (to come in our February 08 issue).

As I mentioned before, I like to get an idea about the freelancers who contribute to us. That’s when I found this charming fellow's blog, my week 8 add:

Wordlustitude by Mark Peters.  

I don’t really even know what to call what Mark does on his blog, which takes a screwball look at modern English usage. I suppose you could say he's building a sort-of dictionary for fringe elements (note: I include myself as a fringe element).

Maybe you could call Mark a loopy linguist? A loony lexicologist? At any rate, check it out, he’s hilarious (note to the sensitive among us: I wouldn't exactly call this a G-rated site).  

Here’s one recent post:

megastitious

noun. This describes you if black cats and other evil portents give you the heebie-jeebies, the creeps, an ulcer, and the wiggins. Boooooooo!

Related term: stitious.

Real citation: “My mom's not just superstitious, she's megastitious. She's emailed my sister and I this chain mail today. My sister has multiple email accounts so mom emails it to her many mnay times...so she gets enough people in so she doesn't end up having bad luck forever, or whatever. Anyway, I thought this one was very funny and had to share.”
(Sept. 3, 2007, Post Punk Kitchen, http://www.postpunkkitchen.com/forum/viewtopic.php?pid=682545)

Made-up citation: "Despite my atheistic ways, I can be megastitious. If you gave me thirteen cupcakes made of gold and rainbows, I think I'd run the other way."


Mark, I welcome you to my vicious (blog) circle.

Check out wordlustitude, a daily laugh for word nerds everywhere. And I'd like to encourage you all to leave your made-up words here in my comments—I have a feeling that will get Mark’s attention.

Keep Writing,
Maria
P.S. There is some risque subject matter in this blog, so please be advised!


blogs and online writing | language issues | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, October 05, 2007 6:26:50 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Friday, September 28, 2007
PROJECT 20/20 BUILD MY BLOGROLL: WEEK 7 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Another Friday, another opportunity to add yet another writer's blog in my project to spotlight and add one to my blogroll each week for 20 weeks. So many great blogs, so little time...

This week, I'm adding lucky #7 to my circle of blog buddies. And without further adieu, it is:

Writer Mama: How to Raise a Writing Career Alongside Your Kids
by Christina Katz

You've probably heard publishing types using the eponymous and somewhat terrifying word "platform." As in, "We're looking for writers with an established platform..."

Well, Christina could write a book on that. She's been brilliant at establishing a grass-roots community for parent/writers through her blog. And great blogs sometimes lead to great books. Christina's book Writer Mama came out this year.

To promote her book via her blog, she's been hosting a Back-to-School book giveaway—a book a day for 31 days. There are still 3 more days left if you'd like to enter.

Also check out Christina's "Creative Manifesto," which I love, and not just because I love to use the word "manifesto" whenever possible (but it's true, I do.).

Here's #4 of the "Creative Manifesto":
"When good things happen, slow down and savor the moment. It takes effort to make good things happen, so you must have earned it!"

Ah, so true. Christina please get on here and tell us a little more about how you've use your blog to build your platform and get a book deal.

Finally, I have a writer mama confession to make. Once, when I was attempting to conduct a phone interview at home, I locked myself in the car with my cellphone to escape my three fighting children.

Oh, the guilt! Nice to know there are other struggling writer/parents out there. Keep up the good work Christina!

Keep Writing,
Maria




blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, September 28, 2007 7:10:55 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [14]
# Friday, September 21, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: BUILD MY BLOGROLL WEEK 6 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It's FRIDAY! the most exciting day of the week in writing blogdom. It's the day of the week I add another writer's blog to my ever-expanding blogroll in my Project 20/20: Build my Blogroll contest. I'm adding one blog a week, each Friday, for 20 weeks.

And today I'm announcing sweet number six, which belongs to a writer who is also a Writer's Digest frequent forumista. In fact, we've been having the most interesting conversation about writing blogs on the forum. Another frequent forumista, Ultimate Cheapskate, seems to think that writing a blog, a.k.a. giving away your work, is pointless. We had a really fascinating, slightly controversial subject about it, of course we had to point out to Cheapskate the error of his ways. Please check it out and add to the discussion you writer/bloggers.

With that I'd like to introduce my next blogroll add: A Writer's Edge
by Georganna Hancock.

Georganna has been blogging since 2004. Three years seems like an eternity in blogdom, doesn't it?

I liken blog years to dog years: 1 year blogging = 7 regular years.
21 years blogging! Amazing!

Georganna is perhaps even more obsessive/compulsive than I am in keeping up on publishing industry trends and news, and she shares freely, along with her own writing tips for success.

Please join me in welcoming Georganna to my lovely blog circledom.

Please note: I've added my original post about Project 20/20, which includes many of the blogs that have been nominated (in the comments section), in the left navigation here.

Keep nominating your favorite writing blogs--there are still 14 weeks to go!

Keep Writing,
Maria





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Friday, September 21, 2007 7:37:49 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [6]
# Tuesday, September 18, 2007
History and the Future
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
In the October issue of Writer's Digest, we featured an essay called "Literary Legends." Phil Sexton, who recently wrote the book Legends of Literature, wrote this essay for us based on his experience of combing through the Writer's Digest magazine archives—87 years worth.

Some of the treasures Sexton discovered on his journey: articles by A.A. Milne, H.G. Wells, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Isaac Asimov and Stephen King. An announcement of the arrival of "hot, new writer" F. Scott Fitzgerald. An interview with Ernest Hemingway that hadn't seen the light of day in 40 years. And on and on and on.

I loved reading this piece. Yes, I'm a literary geek so I get into this sort of ephemera.

But the weight of editing a magazine with this much of a legacy behind it can be daunting. A magazine is, necessarily, in continuous evolution. It has to be contemporary in order to appeal to the next generation of readers. And balancing the legacy with the need to move forward is always a challenge.

It's kind of like living in a historic house. If you own an old house, you soon realize the house doesn't truly belong to you; it belongs to the families who lived there before, the families you'll pass it along to, and to the community.

Taking care of a magazine during a tenure as editor is similar. You have to honor it, care for it, and modernize it enough to move gracefully into the future.

So community, tell me: How would you like to see Writer's Digest move into the future? Let me know. I'm the caretaker and I'm paying attention.

Keep Writing,
Maria   
   



publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, September 18, 2007 3:26:00 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [6]
# Friday, September 14, 2007
PROJECT 20/20 BUILD MY BLOGROLL: WEEK 5 ADD!
Posted by Maria

Hi Writers,

It's week 5 in my ambitious Project 20/20. My goal is to spotlight one writer's blog each Friday for 20 weeks and add it to my ever-growing roster of online writing buddies.

It's always a pleasure to find out one of our freelancer writers for Writer's Digest keeps a blog. In case you're wondering whether or not editors actually read that stuff, I admit, yes I do check in on blogs when we're looking at giving an assignment to a writer who's new to us.

One of my favorite new freelancers to work with is Jenny Rough, and she writes the blog I'm adding to my blogroll this week: Roughly Speaking

If you're a Writer's Digest reader, you may recognize Jenny as the author of one of our October cover features entitled Off the Dole: How to stop depending on other's to support your freelance writing career.

Jenny has a great voice and writes in a down-to-earth style about the nitty gritty of establishing a freelance writing career. Here's a recent blog post she titled "Weekend."

Full time freelance writing often means that one day runs into another into another into another. Instead of “work days” and “weekends” I simply have days. At least, that’s my approach. I realize some writers compartmentalize (on x days I must write x many pages in x many hours), but I tend to go with the flow (well, to the extent that I can while working within the bounds of my assignment deadlines). This often means I might be grocery shopping on Monday morning, but then working late Friday night (or Saturday or Sunday).

As a former freelancer myself, Jenny, I can relate—there is no such thing as "weekend" to the freelancer.

Another thing that really impresses me about Jenny is the consistency of her blogging. Jenny, please tell us how do you keep up the pace? Do you ever get blog burnout? And do you have a yoga move for that?

Roughly Speaking will now, forever and ever, be enshrined on my blogroll hall of fame.

Keep Writing,
Maria


blogs and online writing | language issues | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, September 14, 2007 6:42:17 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Monday, September 10, 2007
My Manifesto
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
A writer friend of mine pointed out a particularly harsh remark about Writer's Digest on Scott Oden's blog that I'd like to respond to here. 
 
Here's a passage from his post:
I started writing and submitting in 1984. Back then, you had to do some serious legwork to discover not only where to send stories, but what editors were on the lookout for. There was no Internet, at least, not for mass public consumption, so market research involved hoofing it to the library—which had an impressive array of periodicals—and jotting down info from the masthead, or browsing their old and battered copy of Writer’s Market. This was back when Writer’s Digest was actually a useful resource and not a mouthpiece for the vanity press industry, as it is today.

Since these remarks show little knowledge of Writer's Digest or the magazine industry, I'd like to point out a few relevant facts and let you judge for yourself.

Writer's Digest magazine has been in existence since 1920, and "vanity press" advertising has been included since its inception.
• All of the writing magazines (our competitors) also include "vanity press" advertising.
• A typical magazine has an editorial/advertising ratio of 60/40.
• The editorial/advertising ratio of Writer's Digest is 80/20. (80% editorial content/20% ads).
• All magazines rely on advertising to help cover the enormous costs of production and shipping.
• Without advertising revenue, subscription and newsstand prices would be prohibitively expensive for readers. The price would have to double (at least) in order for the magazine to continue to exist.
• Without advertising, it would be impossible to continue providing such a wealth of free online content.

Finally, as the editor of Writer's Digest, it's difficult for me not to take Oden's remark personally because it calls into question the integrity of our editorial staff, as journalists and editors. I can speak for my entire staff when I say that we are no one's mouthpiece. Everything in the 80% of the magazine that's editorial content is chosen by our editorial staff. And we do not do advertorials.

Nobody tells me what to say, what to think, what to write or what to include in Writer's Digest—not our publisher, not our advertising rep and certainly not our advertisers. The only people I listen to when it comes to our editorial content are my editors and our readers.

I've read just about every piece of Reader Mail that's come to Writer's Digest in the four years I've been on the masthead and I communicate with our readers on a daily basis, on our forum and through this blog.

I spend most of my time thinking about the magazine—how to continually make it better and how to serve our readers better. I would confidently and proudly put Writer's Digest today up against the Writer's Digest of any era, even the one Scott Oden waxes poetic about. I think it's a disservice to other writers that Oden disclaims the very resource that he admits helped bring his success in the first place.  

If you have any questions or concerns about any of this, please don't hesitate to leave a comment here, or you can find me on our forum in the WD Editors section.

Keep Writing,
Maria Schneider
Editor
Writer's Digest


blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Monday, September 10, 2007 3:08:53 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [8]
# Friday, September 07, 2007
PROJECT 20/20 BUILD MY BLOGROLL: WEEK 4 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It's the fourth week in my ongoing quest to add one writer's blog to my blogroll each week for 20 weeks.

If you've been following my Project 20/20, one thing you've probably noticed is that I have eclectic tastes. After last week's choice of J.A. Konrath's blog A Newbie's Guide to Publishing, there was some discussion on our forum about whether a writer's blog should offer entry into their personal/writing life.

I think there is a place for it. If you're able to craft scenes from your life into writing for your blog that's relevant to others, I say go for it.

The number one problem I see though, is that many writers, when writing for their blog, seem to forget the number one prerogative for all writers: respect your reader.

They're including lots of mundane, undigested, stream-of-conscious type stuff that doesn't make a lot of sense or have relevance to anyone outside of their circle of acquaintances. I'd strongly recommend that if you're keeping a blog as a highly personal journal or diary—keep a password on it so it's out of the public domain. You don't want to offer the world a poor reflection of your writing.

There are some writers, however, who are doing a spectacular job of incorporating their personal/writing life into their blogs.

Here's a good example of a writer who's doing it well. The Week 4 add to my blogroll:
Shanghai Adventures of a Trailing Spouse by Kristin Bair O'Keeffe

This link takes you to the home page of Kristin's website, which is stunning. This is one great looking website/blog. But lest you writers think I'm choosing style over substance, check out her blog. Her posts are well-crafted and offer great insight into her adventurous writing life as she writes her first novel.

There's much here to offer inspiration to other writers. I especially love this post she did recently, Writing: On Process. The Novel as Pie Crust.

Kristin, please tell us: Did you design this site on your own? Do you take these beautiful photographs? And has keeping the blog helped motivate you to keep pushing forward on your novel?

Shanghai Adventures of a Trailing Spouse is now, forever and always, emblazoned on my blogroll hall of fame.

There's still 16 weeks/16 blogs to go, so keep the nominations coming!

Keep Writing,
Maria


   


blogs and online writing | language issues | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, September 07, 2007 3:08:28 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [3]
# Wednesday, September 05, 2007
AN ARSONIST'S GUIDE + VISUAL AIDS!
Posted by Brian

Hi Writers,
As I wrote a few posts ago (see "the memoirizer" post below), I just had the opportunity to interview writer and fellow Cincinnatian Brock Clarke about his new novel An Arsonist's Guide to Writers' Homes in New England.

This novel is such a delightful skewering of the literary world, I think it's a book you writers would enjoy and quite possibly relate to.

Here's one of my favorite excerpts from An Arsonist's Guide:

I took my leave of the women (mostly) and the cafe and began wandering through the bookstore proper, making my way to the memoir section. I didn't take too long. The memoir section, it turned out, was the biggest section by far in the whole bookstore and was, in its own way, like the Soviet Union of literature, having mostly gobbled up the smaller, obsolete states of fiction and poetry. On the way there, I passed through the fiction section. I felt sorry for it immediately: it was so small, so neglected and poorly shelved, and I nearly bought a novel out of pity, but the only thing that caught my eye was something titled The Ordinary White Boy. I plucked it off the shelf. After all, I'd been an ordinary white boy once, before the killing and burning, and maybe I could be one again someday, and maybe this book could help me do it, even if it was a novel and not useful, generically speaking. On the back it said that the author was a newspaper reporter from upstate New York. I opened the novel, which began, "I was working as a newspaper reporter in upstate New York," and then I closed the book and put it back on the fiction shelf, which maybe wasn't all that different from the memoir shelf after all, and I decided never again to feel sorry for the fiction section, the way you stopped feeling sorry for Lithuania once it rolled over so easily and started speaking Russian so soon after being annexed.

Interesting meta-fiction aside: The Ordinary White Boy is Brock's first novel. You have to respect a writer who makes fun of his first novel in his second novel.

Anyway, in the spirit of being a good bloggess, I'm attempting to bring you more relevant visual aids, which are not easy to come by when you're writing about writers, let me tell you.

Brock did a photo shoot for us yesterday and here's a picture of Brock and me, taken right after I talked him into my convoluted scheme of shooting him on the front porch of a fenced in burned-out-shell of a house with a "No Trespassing" sign prominently displayed.

Just for your own safety, you might want to make a mental note of this in case I ever interview you. Thanks for being such a good sport Brock (and thanks to Lisa Wurster for the lovely photos).

Keep Writing,
Maria 






 
 

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Wednesday, September 05, 2007 4:12:41 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5]
# Tuesday, September 04, 2007
Announcing a new series: OFF THE PAGE
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Anyone who still doubts the rising significance of blogs—especially in the publishing world—needs to check out this article from the Sunday New York Times.

The Author Will Take Q.s Now

It's a lowdown on the new age of book tours via blogdom. Here's an excerpt:

Bloggers have written about books since, well, the beginning of blogging. But a blog book tour usually requires an author or publicist to take the initiative, reaching out to bloggers as if they were booksellers and asking them to be the host for a writer’s online visit. Sometimes bloggers invite authors on their own. In an age of budget-conscious publishers and readers who are as likely to discover books from a Google search as from browsing at a bookstore, the blog book tour makes sense.

Anyway, this article got me thinking that I'd really enjoy opening this blog up to author interviews, and I think you writers would enjoy that, too.

There's never quite enough space in the print version of Writer's Digest to include all of the interviews I'd like to include. So I'm starting a new series here on The Writer's Perspective:

Off The Page: The unbound WD Interview

I'll be kicking this series off next week, so stay tuned. Authors, publicists, agents, if you'd like to pitch me an interview, please send press releases to writersdigest@fwpubs.com with "Off the Page" in the subject line.

And writers, please drop me a comment and let me know who you'd like to see on "Off the Page."

Keep Writing,
Maria



blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, September 04, 2007 2:37:44 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [3]
# Friday, August 31, 2007
PROJECT 20/20 BUILD MY BLOGROLL: WEEK 3 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It's the third week in my Project 20/20. My goal: to add one writer's blog to my blogroll each Friday for 20 weeks.

I have a personal favorite to add to the blogroll this week, because it's a blog I really think you will all enjoy and take something away from:
A Newbie's Guide to Publishing by J.A. Konrath, author of the Lt. Jack Daniels thriller series.

I find a lot of what's on Joe's blog helpful to writers, especially in terms of learning how to market your work. Joe's written several great marketing articles for Writer's Digest and it's really been my pleasure to work with him for the past few years. He's so gracious in terms of sharing what he's learned about the publishing world with other writers, and he does so in a way that's always refreshing, down-to-earth and positive.

Of course, he's figured this whole blogging thing out, too. Joe really knows how to cut to the chase and give you something meaningful to think about at the same time. Here's an especially pertinent post:

Blogging is not temporary
Blogging, like newspaper and radio, is often mistaken for a disposable form of information. Yet I get lots of hits from Google on old blog posts, and many of them continue to accrue comments.

Pay attention to what you're posting today, you bloggers of blogland. Because it will still be around tomorrow. If your posts are without purpose, you're not doing yourself a service.

Let me repeat that: Blogging Isn't Temporary. What you do now may one day be surfed by someone who isn't even born yet, and that path will lead back to you. Do you want that path to result in interest or apathy?

Think about why you blog, and what purpose it's serving. Look at your last fifty entries. Will they be of any interest to someone in 2017? If not, why do you think they are of any interest to anyone now?

That's why I don't do memes. That's why I don't blog about personal stuff. That's why I don't push my own books constantly—no one ever seeks out ads. And that's why, except on rare occassions, I don't blog about events, peers, friends, family, or what I watched on TV last night.

Your blog is a tool. But too many people are using hammers to scratch their asses rather than drive nails. If you blog as a form of entertainment, that's no problem—have fun. If you blog to increase your name recognition, you may be doing more harm than good.


A Newbies Guide to Publishing
is the 3rd writer's blog to be forever carved into the trunk of my blog tree. I raise a shot of Jack to you, Joe Konrath, on behalf of writers everywhere!

Keep the nominations coming. There are still 17 blogs to add!

Keep Writing,
Maria



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Friday, August 31, 2007 8:14:24 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Friday, August 24, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: WEEK 2 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I had another fabulous Friday scanning through the many great writing blogs that have been nominated for my project.

Brief but potentially interesting sidenote: Many, many writers have cats, and post multiple photos of cats on their blogs. Kind of made me want to get my own feline to be part of the club. Peer pressure, you know.

Anyway, back to my blogroll project. For various reasons having nothing to do with this project I was feeling a little blue today and really needed a good laugh. Well, I'm so glad I found this blog because it gave me exactly what I needed:
Screw You!: Daily (or thereabouts) diatribes of a frenzied freelancer by Kathy Kehrli.

Irreverently innovative, hilariously hostile and frankly funny, this is your go-to blog to blow off a little steam with your writing buddy Kathy, as she sounds off on the dastardly deeds of her clientele. She also has a straight-up, buttoned down website The Flawless Word and blog for her freelance business with very solid information. Check out both. You may find yourself wondering: Is this really the same person? I do wonder what happens if one her clients inadvertantly stumbles upon her Screw You! blog. Kathy, please get on here and tell us: How do you keep from getting caught, and/or what do you do when you get caught?

Also, I realize this is an unfair advantage, but I gave Kathy bonus points for being from Scranton, PA, the fictional setting of my favorite TV show The Office.

Screw You! is now, forever and always inscribed on my blogroll. Could yours be next? Find out next Friday. Keep nominating your favorite writing blogs right here in my comments.

Keep Writing,
Maria
P.S. As you may have noticed, I tend to over-use alliteration when I'm down. All apologies for that.


blogs and online writing | language issues | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, August 24, 2007 7:16:37 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Friday, August 17, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: AND MY FIRST ADD
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Wow, thanks for all of the nominations for my Project 20/20: Build my Blogroll. I had a wonderful day sifting through the 50 or so blogs nominated. If you get a chance, go check out some or all of the blogs mentioned in my comments section below, there's some great stuff there.

But alas, I had to choose just one for today. And it is:
The Urban Muse: Adventures in Reading, Writing and Living the Creative Life by Susan Johnston

Copywriter by day, freelancer by night, Susan is a young writer who's chronicling her professional writing life, as well as offering resources for her fellow writers. She has some great interviews with industry insiders as well as lots of helpful tips. One of my favorites posts is: Five Ways to Promote Your Blog. Susan's tone is personal yet still polished and professional. The design is clean and readable. There's so much helpful information on her blog, really, I think I'm going to have to get her to do some writing for Writer's Digest. Susan, please do stop by and tell us how you find the time to put this all together.

Susan's URL is now inscribed on my blogroll, which is going to be filled by the end of this year. 20 blogs in 20 weeks. Be my BFF* (blog friend forever). Keep the nominations coming.


Keep Writing,
Your Bloggess (aka "The Pit Boss")
Maria
P.S. you should try to get a job where someone pays you to look at blogs all day, it's really quite entertaining.

* apologies for the lame yet ironic use of IM-speak.
 



blogs and online writing | language issues | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, August 17, 2007 7:54:59 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [12]
# Friday, August 10, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: HELP ME BUILD MY BLOGROLL
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I'm kicking off a new project here on my blog: Project 20/20. No, this is not an attempt to solicit funds for my Lasik© surgery (although, if you like, send c/o Writer's Digest, 4700 E. Galbraith Rd., Cincinnati, OH 45236).

This purpose of this project is to build my blogroll. I've been thinking, you know, blogging is all about sharing and connecting and being part of larger and larger circles now, isn't it?

Now, look at my blogroll. I know, except for the (entirely awesome) WD Blogs, it's skimpy. Not being a very good bloggess now am I? (Correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure I just made up the word "bloggess").

So here's the deal: There are 20 Fridays left in 2007. Starting next Friday, I'm going to highlight one writer's blog each week then add it to my guaranteed-to-be-fabulous blogroll.

I'm looking for blogs that:
• are dedicated to the topic of writing and/or publishing
• are updated frequently
• are owned and maintained by private individuals

So if you want me to check out your blog, drop a comment here.

Keep Writing,
Maria
p.s. there's still a raging debate on the f*** word going on in the forum.
Thanks to all who expounded so eloquently on the f*** word, especially Jay, who wrote a Master's thesis on the topic in my comments section. This is for you Jay: u*********.





blogs and online writing | language issues | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Friday, August 10, 2007 6:04:41 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [88]
# Friday, August 03, 2007
BEA/Writer's Digest Books Conference Sessions
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Remember way back in June when I was writing about being in New York at the BEA/Writer's Digest Books Writers Conference?

We videotaped some of the sessions and are making them available online. You can find the information at writersdigest.com/bea. There are three sessions available pay-per-view and the wonderful keynote address by Jodi Picoult is available free of charge.

And coming soon there will be free audio downloads of a few of the sessions, including a talk on writing for magazines by yours truly.

Check it out and let me know what you think.

Keep Writing,
Maria

Writer's Digest news
Friday, August 03, 2007 3:23:29 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Friday, June 29, 2007
Welcome Poets
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
I'd like to officially welcome aboard our newest bloggers, Nancy Breen and Robert Brewer, who are coauthoring Poetic Asides. In addition to being poets themselves, Nancy and Robert are part of the Writer's Digest brain trust as the editors of Poet's Market and Writer's Market, respectively.

Nancy wrote a great piece for Writer's Digest in April, The 21st Century Poet.

The dynamic poetry duo made their first posts this week, and they already have a healthy debate going on. It's an interesting mix of their personal experiences in the poetry world combined with their expertise as editors covering these same markets.

Allow me to share a poetic aside of my own. I just finished editing a piece on sestinas for our October issue. Question: How many lines are there in a sestina?

Keep Writing,
Maria
p.s. There are 39 lines in a sestina. Six, six-line stanzas followed by a tercet. Don't say I never teach you anything.


Writer's Digest news
Friday, June 29, 2007 9:22:22 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5]
# Thursday, June 07, 2007
We made the NYT!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
The New York Times posted an article about our conference/ pitch slam, if you want to know how a pitch slam goes. This reporter was actually in the room Kevin and I moderated, "Tough Sell for Writers at NY Literary Speed-Dating."

Here's an excerpt:
Several dozen agents and editors were taking pitches at Wednesday's "pitch-slam" at the end of a one-day seminar that also included workshops on writing the perfect book proposal.

"Don't feel like you're a failure if you don't come out of here with a contract," Lauren Mosko, editor of writers' guide "Novel & Short Story Writer's Market," told her workshop.


Brief note to The New York Times: I know you're busy covering world affairs and such, but it would have been lovely if you would have mentioned in this piece that you were at the BEA/ Writer's Digest Books Writer's Conference.

You know that whole Who, What, When, Where, Why thing you learned in J-School? The Where part is kind of important.

Keep Writing,
Maria


publishing news and views | Writer's Digest news
Thursday, June 07, 2007 2:08:08 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [3]
# Tuesday, June 05, 2007
Post-Conference
Posted by maria


Chuck Sambuchino, Me, Kevin and John Warner cutting loose
after the Writer's Digest conference

publishing news and views | Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, June 05, 2007 7:34:39 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [6]
# Monday, June 04, 2007
BEA WRAP-UP
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Well, I'm back home in Cincy where the lights are a little less bright than NY, but at least they let you sleep occasionally.

This was my third trip to BEA and I have to say, the crowds seemed more enormous than ever this year. This bodes well for the publishing industry, I suppose. But it was difficult to grab the galleys I wanted including Tom Perrotta's new book, The Abstinence Teacher and Alice Sebold's new novel, The Almost Moon. Oh well, made for a lighter suitcase on the trip home.

I ran into lots of agents at the show this year including the always delightful Katharine Sands, agent and author of the book Making a Perfect Pitch.

I also got to meet bestselling author Luanne Rice, who showed up at the TOW book signing to support her lovely assistant Sarah Walker. Sarah was signing the galleys for her upcoming Really You've Done Enough, a book of satirical advice for parents of "grown-up" children. Also signing was Jason Roeder, author of Oh, the Humanity, a book of humorous advice for the socially inept.

As I mentioned previously, whiskey shots were served at the signing and yes, many shots were imbibed along with the literary offerings. I did not, as promised, drink enough whiskey to encourage me to start showing my Strunk & White tattoo. But I did indulge in one small, baby shot to show my support of Sarah and Jason's literary efforts. At any rate, both of these books are hilarious and they'll be available in the fall, so stay tuned. I'll let you know when they're for sale.

After the show, Sarah, Jason, Kevin Alexander, John Warner (TOW Books bigshot and editor of McSweeney's Internet Tendency) and I all walked down to the nearby Chelsea district, mostly because I wanted to go to Sebastian Junger's restaurant, the Half King Bar.

Here's the scene from our table: Two writers tossing about clever bon mots about male models, one is nodding and smiling ironically, one completely ignoring the conversation in favor of the televised baseball game, and the last has eyes glued on the door, waiting, hopelessly for Sebastian Junger to walk in.

I'll let you guess which one I was.

Until next time...

Keep Writing,
Maria









publishing news and views | Writer's Digest news
Monday, June 04, 2007 7:00:04 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Saturday, June 02, 2007
Hi WritersDay One Of The Show I Spent Some Time Hanging Out At The FW Booth FW Is Writers Digests
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
Day one of the show. I spent some time hanging out at the F+W booth (F+W is Writer's Digest's parent company.), chatting with the authors before their signings. Another shout out to Christina Katz, author of Writers Mama, Scott Francis author of Monster Spotter's Guide to North America (HOW Books) a must-read for all monster fans and Phil Sexton, author of the fall release Writer's Digest Book, Literary Legends. I'm especially psyched about the Literary Legends book since it's a walk through the archives of Writer's Digest magazine (close to my heart, of course).

And I nabbed a nifty, black Writer's Digest/ Literary Legends canvas tote bag, which took a bit of finagaling on my part since they went going fast. For those of you who haven't been, BEA is free-giveaway land and many publishing houses were giving out free totes (ours being the coolest.)

I sat in on a great panel with the editors of new imprints: Jonathan Karp, editor of the nonfiction imprint Twelve; Pamela Dorman, editor of the new Harper Collins imprint for women over 35, Voice; Karen Murgalo, editor of Springboard Press which focuses on narrative nonfiction for baby boomers; and Julie Grau, co-editor of Random House imprint Spiegel & Grau, focusing on edgy, literary fiction; and conservative punditrix Mary Matalin was there too talking about her imprint, although she's not functioning in a true editorial capacity.

First of all--wow, how cool would it be to have your own literary imprint, and how do I get one? According to the panel, you do this by having a track record of proving you have a "nose" for what's going to sell in the marketplace. I've heard about having a "nose" for perfume, and wine but apparently a select few are especially gifted for sniffing out good books, as well.

Second, how and why does a new imprint come into existence? Because editors see an opportunity to publish books in a market that's being under-served. New imprints mean new opportunities for writers, because editors without a backlist need to actively seek out the new. Anyway, this session was a refreshing breath of optimism that publishing is always evolving, and these editors were  passionate about seeking out great, new writers, which makes me happy.

One more serendipitious moment for me at the show was running into a fabu photographer, Sally Wiener Grotta, who's doing a series of author photos called the Wordsmith Project to raise money for the Writers Emergency Assistance Fund. Sally's asking for nominations of writers to photograph for the project, you can find more info at www.WordsmithsProject.com. That very day, I was complaining about not being able to find good photos of writers for the magazine, and here I meet Sally. You never know who or what you're going to find at Book Expo America--that's the fun part.

Keep Writing,
M
(p.s. New York is like a sauna right now, and no offense, New York, but you're very cheap with the A/C)

 
 




publishing news and views | Writer's Digest news
Saturday, June 02, 2007 4:01:25 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [2]
# Friday, June 01, 2007
On the Scene from BEA
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
All apologies for my lack of promised, non-stop communication this week. The only admittedly lame excuse I can offer you is that I'm too cheap to pay 9.95 for Internet access in my room. But I got over it, charged the fee to the company credit card so here I am.

The BEA/ WD Books Writer's Conference went by in a fabulous whirlwind. I finally got to meet our columnist Jodi Picoult in person, as she was the keynote speaker. She's so down-to-earth, funny and extroverted and delivered a wonderful, anecdote filled talk about her writing life. She spoke about her writing process, and I have to say, she's a writer who really knows how to break down the difficult process of writing a novel into manageable parts. Her ability to demystify and distill her writing process is remarkable.

By the way, we're trying a new project this year. We videotaped Jodi's speech and several other speakers as well as audio recording many of the other speakers. And in a few weeks (exact date TBA), the sessions will be available on our website at writersdigest.com/bea so check back there for the details. I'll also announce it here, on the forum and in our e-newsletter.

I also met many of the other WD Books writers including Christina Katz, author of Writer Mama--hi Christina!

I gave a speech on breaking into magazines early in the morning, and had a great crowd. They had lots of questions, which I always appreciate when I give a talk so it's not just me going on... and then you write the query letter, and then you e-mail it... blah, blah, blah. I always prefer to have more of a conversation, so when the audience got on my wave length and started asking  questions, it went well.

But the highlight of the day by all accounts was the Agent Pitch Slam. We had a huge number of agents participate this year--more than 60 in fact, thanks to editor extraordinaire and major playa Chuck Sambuchino, editor of the WD Guide to Literary Agents 2007 (out this fall). I got to meet many of the agents as I was in charge of passing out their badges. I know many writers are intimidated by agents, but really, you couldn't ask for a more friendly, helpful group of people. And they all seemed into the pitch slam concept, although the three minute time limit presents a fun challenge to the writers and the agents. Since there were so many agents this year, the lines were quite short and many writers were pitching to five or ten agents.

I was in charge of a pitch slam room. The agents in my room were Michael Murphy, Peter Miller, Meg Leder, Sheree Bykofsky and Jackie Meyer. It went really smooth after the first ten minutes or so while we scrambled to figure out the right way to configure the room and get the lines moving in the right direction. Kevin Alexander was in there helping me keep things running, being the timer, talking to people about their pitches, trying to calm down the nerves. He was a champ, really, but I'm sure he'll tell you all about how great he was on his own blog. And don't believe it when he tells you that I slacked off toward the end and started chatting with John Warner, WD author and editor of the new WD Books humor imprint TOW Books. I can't help it, much like Jessica Rabbit, I'm a sucker for a funny guy.

Well, today is the first official day of BEA so I'm off to the show. I'm keeping notes, and picking up as many galleys as I can. The giveaways at the show are always unbelievable. For a compulsive reader, it's the equivalent of getting the keys to the candy shop.


Keep Writing,
M
(I've decided, like Macy's, to change my ticker symbol to simply "M")



publishing news and views | Writer's Digest news
Friday, June 01, 2007 2:27:12 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Friday, May 25, 2007
I'll Take Manhattan
Posted by maria

Well, maybe a little sliver of it, anyway...

Hi Writers,
I’m getting ready to head off to the annual BEA/Writer’s Digest Books Writer’s Conference. It's next Wednesday, May 30 in New York. By the way, if you’d like to go (and, come on, why wouldn’t you?) you can register at the door. If any of my loyal readers here are at the conference, please say hi. See, that’s me in the left hand corner of this blog page (btw that nimbus doesn't always follow me around.)  

Our lovely columnist Jodi Picoult is the keynote speaker. And I’ll be speaking at the conference on breaking into magazines. Then in the afternoon, I get to be a bell ringer/ bouncer for the Agent Pitch slam, where Kevin Alexander will be helping out, too. If you’ve never been to a pitch slam, let me tell you, they’re thrilling. We have more than 60 agents fielding 3-minute pitches—it’s sheer, exquisite, hyperventilating, invigorating chaos.

Then I’m covering Book Expo America—one of the book industry’s premiere events. I’ll be working the floor, meeting authors, editors and other industry bigshots to provide you with on-the-scene reportage until Saturday evening, when I’ll have one too many whiskey shots at the reception for TOW Books (F+Ws new humor imprint), start showing off my Strunk & White tattoo, and get escorted to the door.

I know—you can’t wait. Neither can I. It's going to be great.
I LOVE NY!

Keep Writing,
Maria


publishing news and views | Writer's Digest news
Friday, May 25, 2007 2:04:13 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Tuesday, April 03, 2007
Help Me Christen My Blog
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,

As this is my first ever blog posting, it seemed appropriate to set it off in the right spirit with a christening of sorts, so here goes:

The world is always ready to receive talent with open arms.

This fortune cookie wisdom has been taped to my computer monitor for the past four years I’ve been an editor here at Writer’s Digest. It was left behind by the editor before me, and it helps motivate me when I’m getting ready to write.

It’s rather ironic that I’m just now entering blogdom, since I wrote an article on blogging when it was the hot new thing, way back in the dark ages of 2001 The Art of the Blog. It was difficult to even find bloggers to interview back then, let alone someone who could speak quotably on the subject.
 
So here I am, editrix of Writer’s Digest, blogging for the first time. You’d think I’d have my hands full trying to keep Brian Klems, Kevin Alexander and all of the WD forumites (who call me “the pit boss”) in line.

But the thing is, I’m a lifelong obsessive-compulsive reader, and I like to share what I read. In fact, on a neurotic note, I think I may have hyperlexia: “A condition in which the main characteristics are an above average ability to read accompanied with a below average ability to understand spoken language. The symptoms are closely related to those of autism.”

And possibly even hypergraphia: “An overwhelming urge to write. It is not itself a disorder, but can be associated with temporal lobe changes in epilepsy and mania.”

(Thank God for the Internet, how else would we research our obscure psychological disorders?)  

Anyway, disorder or not, I do a ridiculous amount of reading. Lucky for me, I finally landed a job where they pay me to read. But it occurred to me that you writers may not have fallen into a gig where someone pays you to do what you’d probably do for free (shhh… don’t tell my bosses).

So here’s the deal, let me do the scanning for you. I’m going to keep an eye on the publishing industry and other writerly news and report back to you by providing links you might be interested in, along with commentary. Agree or disagree, I’d love to hear from you either way. The WD forumites will tell you that I enjoy verbal sparring as long everyone’s having a good time--so let’s mix it up.

And to kick things off, I’m asking anyone dropping in to help christen my blog properly by posting the quotes you have taped to your writing desk or computer. Until next time...

Keep Writing,
-Maria   


blogs and online writing | language issues | publishing news and views | the writing life | Writer's Digest news
Tuesday, April 03, 2007 5:31:08 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [31]
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