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# 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
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Monday, December 10, 2007 11:23:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Friday, December 07, 2007
PROJECT 20/20: BUILD MY BLOGROLL WEEK 17 ADD!
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,
It’s Friday and that means it's time to announce my 17th add in my Project 20/20: Build My Blogroll contest (you can find details and many of the nominated writing blogs on the left navigation).

This week’s add is an ambitious young blogger/writer, who focuses on the teen writing scene at:  
Innovative Teen: a word for the wri-teen
by Gabrielle Linnell


Gabrielle posts weekly magazine-style features including interviews with Teen writers—she’s scored some impressive interviews. And she also posts on craft and inspiration for Teen Writers.

Here’s a post Gabrielle did recently on facing burnout:
Burnout is different from inspiration-loss. Look, if you wait to write until you're inspired, you'll be waiting a long time. You won't write, actually. The discipline of writing is writing anyway, always, whenever, however. Burnout is when you are really empty, not just tired.
But fear not! Burnout is neither forever, nor untreatable. The best cures, I've found, are below.


-Take a short break
-Throw yourself into your book or short-term project.
-Listen to lots of music.

-Take long nature walks.
-Read an article you really disagree with

-Eat really good food.
-Watch a lot of cheesy, feel-good movies
-Or watch one gripping drama

And the best way:
Read a really, really, really badly written book.


Gabrielle, I use that last one—reading a really, really really badly written book works wonders for me for some reason (although I will not divulge those books). I think this is counter-intuitive yet practical advice for writers you have here.

Here’s a big Writer’s Perspective welcome to my favorite new up-and-coming blogger and writer—Gabrielle Linnell.

Only 3 more weeks/ 3 more blogs to go so keep the nominations coming!

Keep Writing,
Maria





blogs and online writing | publishing news and views | the writing life
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Friday, December 07, 2007 9:20:38 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2]
# 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





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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   



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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







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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


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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
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Friday, November 23, 2007 10:40:57 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Gifts for your favorite writer
Posted by maria

Hi Writers,

Well, the holiday season is upon us and it's time to start dropping subtle hints to our loved ones about what we might actually like to receive in gift-form. As a service to your loved ones, I've spent the last week combing the Internet looking for stuff you might actually not want to return.

And here I present: Cool gifts for me writers.   

Have I ever mentioned to you how much I love old typewriter keys? And silver? And bracelets? Here's a gift that combines all three: Vintage typewriter keys bracelet from The Library Shop at The New York Public Library.

Word lusters, let your freak flag fly with a fabulous purse fabricated from a Webster's dictionary. They're made to order, so you need to get orders in early. Find the dictionary purse, along with other literary book purses at Rebound Designs: Webster’s New World Dictionary purse

Next a budget-conscious selection. It's a sad thing when a good writer is without a handy notepad. Get your favorite writer pal this cool, slim 2008 calendar/planner with space for notes: Moleskine 2008 Pocket Soft Cover Weekly Planner + Notebook week-at-a-glance, plus notes

If your favorite writer is a chess lover, check out this sweet set: American Authors Chess Set from Barnes & Noble. Mark Twain, Emily Dickinson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Edgar Allan Poe and Walt Whitman battle for dominance on the chess scene. Will Mark Twain put Edgar Allan Poe in check? Well, we'll see.

At $1,500, this is a gift for the writer who has everything. But just for fun, check out these gorgeous handmade keyboards made of brushed aluminum, copper, brass and chrome. The Das Keyboard model has a wooden faceplate and resembles an old typewriter keyboard, and I think I already mentioned how much I love old typewriters. Custom Keyboards: Made to Order

I can't think of any good reason why a writer would actually need this, but it amuses me, nonetheless, so I'll share it with you: Write No Evil Pewter Pen Holder and Pen (see below).

Please share your own writer's wish list here.

Keep Writing,
Maria
Happy Thanksgiving to my American readers and cheers!


the writing life
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Tuesday, November 20, 2007 7:00:38 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [7]
# 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






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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
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Wednesday, November 14, 2007 3:55:20 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
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