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Monday

Organizing your office – The right writing space

 Is it time to clear the decks?

 Writing requires a clear head and a clear desk. Is creativity-killing clutter driving you to distraction?  Are piles of paperwork threatening to topple your technology in your office?

 


Here a few simple ways to make room for more writing:

  •  Remove everything from your office counter or desktop. Neatly bundle all computer, peripheral and accessory cords with rubber bands. Rubber bands are the best, because they do not conduct electricity. Tuck these tidy bundles out of sight. (I keep mine behind my desk.)
  •  Empty out all desk drawers. Sort working pens and sharpened pencils into cups or drawer-dividers. Throw away dried-out markers and pens.
  •  Toss all non-office-related items into three or four small boxes or baskets, so they may be carried to the appropriate rooms (kitchen, garage, kids’ rooms, school, etc.).
  •  Realign printer cartridges, and resupply printers with paper.
  •  Dust around and under all electronic equipment.
  •  Put stacks of books into bookshelves. (Most writers have hundreds of books.) Install inexpensive wall shelves, or purchase economical shelving units.
  •  Sturdy wood folding bookcases are widely available. These tend to go on sale at the end of the summer, as college students head for the dormitories. Why not grab a few bookcases when you spot a deal?
  •  Install a bulletin board or corkboard over your desk. Place a calendar on it for deadlines, appointments, editorial queries, and manuscript submissions.
  •  Sort through all of your loose papers and files. All paperwork should fit into one of these categories:

 

NOTE: Written by this author, this copyrighted material originally appeared on another publisher’s site. That site no longer exists. This author holds all rights to this content. No republication is allowed without permission.

 

Are you ready to share your work with the world?

 If you have been collecting clips and tidbits for new article ideas, why not whip up a query letter today? Place your notes and research in file folders, assigning one for each potential piece. (See below.)

 Have you been intending to revise and send that manuscript or article draft, based on an editor’s favorable response to an earlier query? This is the time to do so.

 

Save your best samples.

 If hard copies of published items need to go into your professional portfolio, then grab the rubber cement and page protectors! Get these items off your desk and into your portfolio. You never know when an editor might request writing samples.

 

File resources for future use.

  •  Article ideas: Create a separate folder for each article, story, or book you plan to write. When you are ready to compose a query letter, this will be invaluable. Even better, once an editor expresses interest, you will be ready to write!
  •  Clients & contacts: If you don’t keep addresses and contact information online, you will want to obtain a Rolodex or business card file. Contacts are the bedrock of a writer’s business, and these must be updated often!
  •  Financial items: Check stubs, invoices, receipts, and other documentation must be filed where you can find it. Stashing such items in a box or basket atop your desk is distracting and dangerous. Timely billing, accurate tax filing, and audit preparation are vital for a freelancer.

 

Get rid of the evidence.

 Be ruthless here. If you don’t really need a piece of paperwork, then toss it. If the file is on your hard drive or online, toss the hard copy. (Often, I will even scan a receipt or invoice and keep it on my computer, rather than create clutter piles in my work area. In a pinch I have even snapped smart phone photos of documents to save them digitally and toss the hard copies.)

 Most freelancers receive dozens of periodicals each month. If we kept all of these issues, we could build room dividers in our homes with the stacks. Consider donating these to your local library or to a school, especially if they are recent.

 Old drafts of published items, outdated financial papers, and other irrelevant materials should be destroyed. Shredders are affordable these days, and they make a wonderful therapy for writer’s block! Kids love shredding items as well. Maybe the loud grinding noise makes us feel powerful, but there is something inherently rewarding about running the shredder.

 Write on!

 

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Image/s:  Image by upklyak on Freepik

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Tuesday

Aspiring authors: Is it OK to ask a writer friend how to get published?

 Do you dream about writing a book? Maybe you’ve already started one. Either way, you may be looking for a super-secret about how to get your book published.

Here’s the super-secret: There is no secret.

That’s the truth.

Ask any published author, and you’ll likely hear about piles of query letters, scads of publisher rejection letters, and the long-awaited acceptance of a prized manuscript. The process can take years and years.

 Sure, we’ve all heard stories of celebrities and otherwise famous folks whose books were immediately scooped up by paying publishers. In lots of these cases, those people were actually approached by publishers (and possibly offered ghostwriters).

 But for the rest of us, the road to publishing is lengthy, requiring patience and perseverance.


  Authors: Stop me, if you’ve heard any of these.

“Hey, I heard you are an author. I’m writing a book. Can you tell me how to get it published?”

 “Since you’ve written several books, can you look at mine, and tell me if it’s good enough to publish?”

 “I want to publish my life story. Will you write it for me?”

 “My son wrote his own memoirs. Can you publish it for him?”

 “My aunt writes lots of poetry. Will you help her make a book out of it?

 “I just wrote a book. Can you edit it for me?”

 I could go on and on. If authors agreed to any of these requests, we’d soon run out of time to keep up our own writing. Besides that, we’d be spending countless hours working on projects that might or might not prove fruitful.

 And how are we supposed to tell our colleagues, friends, neighbors, or family members, if we’ve read their treasured book and found it probably wasn’t worth sharing with the world? I’ve spent plenty of years working as a book editor and also as a book reviewer. I've even taught creative writing classes. One thing I’ve learned is that nearly anyone can blog, journal, or write. But not everyone can be an author. Or not everyone ought to be one – at least, not overnight.

 That may sound tough, but it has to be.

 Early on, I learned to turn down such requests. After being burned a few times, either taking on quick-read projects that snowballed into huge time-suckers or carrying on my own internal conversation about whether to practice tough love with dear ones about the quality or marketability of their books. It was time to set some clear boundaries.

As a rule, I don’t edit or review book proposals or manuscripts as favors. I don't ghostwrite for friends or relatives. And, although I have given professional seminars on writing and publishing (for book groups, classes, and similar audiences), I do not accept personal requests for related questions. I'm not being mercenary about this. I'm simply sticking to professional endeavors, when it comes to editing and reviewing manuscripts or books. There just isn’t time, and there are no easy answers.

Book publishing can be a complicated endeavor. That's especially true now that many books come out in printed and digital formats. Plus, in our up-to-the-minute world, readers are easily distracted by other media, electronic entertainment, and real life. A book has to attract, appeal, and hold the attention of readers, if it has any chance of making it in the marketplace.

 Here’s the book publishing process in a nutshell.

 Somebody writes a book. Or at least, somebody writes the first couple of chapters and outlines the rest.

 At this point, that wannabe author has a few choices:

  •  Traditional publishing – This generally begins with the hiring of a literary agent. If a publisher accepts the book (offered via the agent), the author may receive a negotiated advance and eventually royalties.
  • Vanity publishing – Here the author pays upfront and in-full for the book’s publication and possibly some marketing services. If a book succeeds (read: “sells”), the author may receive a percentage of the sales (as royalties). That can take time, but it can continue indefinitely, as long as the book remains in print.
  • Self-publishing – Here the author edits, formats, designs, and markets his/her own book, either through an online publishing service or via his/her own website (or both). Depending on the arrangement, the author may receive royalties on book sales or proceeds from his/her own direct sales.

 Sounds complex, right? Indeed it is.

 We’ve all heard stories of famous folks being approached by publishers, seeking to tell their life stories. We’ve read about insiders to newsy drama who’ve been asked to provide juicy tell-all gossip. And we could recount instances in which notorious criminals told their stories, which became books.

 Those stories don’t fit the experience of most aspiring authors.

 There’s no secret shortcut to getting a book published. – even if you know someone who wrote a book or two.

 Image/s:  Adapted from public domain image

 

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Recap: My 2022 reading list -- Finished 105 of 100

A confessed bibliophile (Read: book addict), I set a personal reading goal for 2022 to get through 100 books. My actual year-end total turned out to be 102.

This total did not include books I wrote, children's books I read (again and again), the Bible (which I read cover-to-cover with a few friends), devotionals, Bible studies, cookbooks, reference books, magazines, newspapers, etc. It's just full-length, cover-to-cover reads for the past year. 


 

Following is the complete list of titles I read in 2022. Inclusion in this list does not necessarily imply recommendation or endorsement. It only indicates completion of each read.

 Books are listed alphabetically (by title) and unsorted (by genre). 

  1. A Mercy, Toni Morrison
  2. A Thief of Time, Tony Hillerman
  3. A Thousand Voices, Lisa Wingate
  4. All He Ever Wanted, Anita Shreve
  5. Beloved, Toni Morrison
  6. Beyond the Soiled Curtain, Beth Grant and David Grant
  7. Big Lies in a Small Town, Diane Chamberlain
  8. Caleb’s Crossing, Geraldine Brooks
  9. Circling the Sun, Paula McClain
  10. Close to Home, Lisa Jackson
  11. Covenant Child, Terri Blackstock
  12. Criminal Mischief, Stuart Woods
  13. Dead Sea Rising, Jerry B. Jenkins
  14. Discerning the Voice of God, Priscilla Shirer
  15. Divine Disruption: Holding on to Faith When Life Breaks Your Heart, Dr. Tony Evans, Chrystal Evans Hurst, Priscilla Shirer, Anthony Evans, and Jonathan Evans
  16. Double Minds, Terri Blackstock
  17. Eat the Cookie … Buy the Shoes, Joyce Meyer
  18. Everything We Didn’t Say, Nicole Baart
  19. Fierce Jesus, Lisa Harper
  20. Fifteen Minutes, Karen Kingsbury
  21. Find Her, Lisa Gardner
  22. Forgiving Paris, Karen Kingsbury
  23. Forgiving What You Can’t Forget, Lysa TerKeurst
  24. Girl Forgotten, Karin Slaughter
  25. Greenwich Park, Katherine Faulkner
  26. History Decoded, Brad Meltzer
  27. Horse, Geraldine Brooks
  28. House Rules, Jodi Picoult
  29. It Ends with Us, Colleen Hoover
  30. Light on Snow, Anita Shreve
  31. Limitations, Scott Turow
  32. Local Woman Missing, Mary Kubica
  33. Look for Me, Lisa Gardner
  34. March, Geraldine Brooks
  35. My Sister’s Keeper, Jodi Picoult
  36. Necessary Endings, Dr. Henry Cloud
  37. Night Road, Kristin Hannah
  38. On Girlhood: 15 Stories from the Well-Read Black Girl Library, Glory Edim
  39. One Step Too Far, Lisa Gardner
  40. One True Thing, Anna Quindlen
  41. Peace Like a River, Leif Enger
  42. People of the Book, Geraldine Brooks
  43. Plain Truth, Jodi Picoult
  44. Point of Origin, Patricia Cornwell
  45. Pretty Baby, Mary Kubica
  46. Red Swan, P.T. Deutermann
  47. Reminders of Him, Colleen Hoover
  48. Revolutionary Road, Richard Yates
  49. Riding Freedom, Pam Munoz Ryan and Brian Selznick
  50. Riven, Jerry B. Jenkins
  51. Rules of Civility, Amor Towles
  52. Run Rose Run, Dolly Parton and James Patterson
  53. Shattered, James Patterson
  54. Shunned and Dangerous, Laura Bradford
  55. Something Wicked, Lisa Jackson
  56. Something Worth Doing: A Novel of an Early Suffragist, Jane Kirkpatrick
  57. State of Terror, Louise Penny and Hillary Rodham Clinton
  58. Sunflower Sisters, Martha Hall Kelly
  59. The Book of Fate, Brad Meltzer
  60. The Book of Lies, Brad Meltzer
  61. The Burning, Jonathan Kellerman and Jesse Kellerman
  62. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, Mark Haddon
  63. The Death of Mrs. Westaway, Ruth Ware
  64. The Family Remains, Lisa Jewell
  65. The Fifth Assassin, Brad Meltzer
  66. The First Lady, James Patterson & Brendan DuBois
  67. The Flying Angels, Danielle Steel
  68. The Girl Behind the Red Rope, Ted Dekker and Rachelle Dekker
  69. The Girls in the Garden, Lisa Jewell
  70. The Hidden Child, Louise Fein
  71. The Horse Dancer, JoJo Moyes
  72. The Horsewoman, James Patterson and Mike Lupica
  73. The Inner Circle, Brad Meltzer
  74. The It Girl, Ruth Ware
  75. The Kommandant’s Girl, Pam Jenoff
  76. The Last White Man, Mohsin Hamid
  77. The Lincoln Highway, Amor Towles
  78. The Murder House, James Patterson and David Ellis
  79. The Night She Disappeared, Lisa Jewell
  80. The Nightingale, Kristin Hannah
  81. The Other Mrs, Mary Kubica
  82. The Palm Beach Murders, James Patterson
  83. The Paris Apartment, Lucy Foley
  84. The Paris Wife, Paula McLain
  85. The Pilot’s Wife, Anita Shreve
  86. The Prayer Box, Lisa Wingate
  87. The President’s Shadow, Brad Meltzer
  88. The Priestly Sins, Andrew M. Greeley
  89. The Right Kind of Strong: Surprisingly Simple Habits of a Spiritually Strong Woman, Mary A. Kassian
  90. The Rumor, Elin Hilderbrand
  91. The Secret Chord, Geraldine Brooks
  92. The Secret Letter, Debbie Rix
  93. The Templar Legacy, Steve Berry
  94. The Tenth Circle, Jodi Picoult
  95. The Third Grave, Lisa Jackson
  96. The Traitor’s Wife, Kathleen Kent
  97. The Wife Upstairs, Rachel Hawkins
  98. The Winter Guest, Pam Jenoff
  99. Three Sisters, Heather Morris
  100. Upright Women Wanted, Sarah Gailey
  101. Verity, Colleen Hoover
  102. Where the Light Fell, Philip Yancey
  103. White Lies: Nine Ways to Expose and Resist the Racial Systems That Divide Us, Daniel Hill
  104. Wish You Were Here, Jodi Picoult
  105. Year of Wonders: A Novel of the Plague, Geraldine Brooks

 

Titles are hyperlinked to Amazon. (Disclaimer: I'm an Amazon Affiliate, so I may earn a very small commission from orders placed through links on my sites.)

What books did you read in 2022? Which were your favorites? 

Do you have any super reads to recommend for 2023?

Image: public domain photo

Feel free to follow on Twitter. Please visit my Amazon author page as well.