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Showing posts with label creating fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creating fiction. Show all posts

Thursday, February 18, 2016

What a Writer Can Learn from an Editor

SANDRA D. BRICKER was an entertainment publicist in Los Angeles for 15+ years where she attended school to learn screenwriting and eventually taught the craft for several semesters. When she put Hollywood in the rearview mirror and headed across the country to take care of her mom until she passed away, she traded her scripts for books, and a best-selling, award-winning author of LIVE-OUT-LOUD fiction for the inspirational market was born. Sandie is best known for her Another Emma Rae Creation and Jessie Stanton series for Abingdon Press, and her 2015 novel Moments of Truth has been nominated for a 2016 Inspy Award. Sandie took home ACFW’s Editor of the Year award last year for her work as managing editor of Bling!, an edgy romance imprint for Lighthouse Publishing of the Carolinas. As an ovarian cancer survivor, she also gears time and effort toward raising awareness and funds for research, diagnostics and a cure.

What a Writer Can Learn from an Editor

I’m often asked when I knew I wanted to be a writer, and my reply is often the same: “At birth.” The answer is only partially tongue-in-cheek because I truly can’t remember a time when I didn’t know writing was part of my DNA. I wrote my first short story in the 6th grade; I was published for the first time as a high school senior; I submitted my first novel before the age of 23; and I’d optioned four screenplays before my 30th birthday. Since finding my Christian faith, I’ve taken great comfort in the idea that, at time of creation, my Father already knew who I was going to be. I’ve often imagined Him whispering “Writer” into my ear before I even emerged from my mother’s womb. That calling was never really in question, and I’ve spent most of my adult life chasing it. First through screenwriting, and then through publishing as well.

For the last two years, I’ve floated a little. Frustrated by the many challenges and conundrums in my own writing career, I turned my focus to the careers of others. After corporate and freelance editorial work over the years, I accepted a position with Lighthouse Publishing of the Carolinas to start a new imprint of romantic fiction for them called Bling Romance. I’ve always been excited about the opportunity to mentor and assist aspiring authors when the chance arose, so playing a part in someone’s road to publication was almost too appealing to resist. But the problem with taking a side trip from our calling is that, when you’re knee-deep in the new adventure, losing sight of your purpose is a very real possibility.

I’ve come to firmly believe that everything that happens in life is part of God’s plan for that person. He certainly doesn’t inflict the terrible things – like sickness, the death of a loved one, or even a traffic accident – but in His ultimate wisdom and omnipotence, I know He can and does use those situations to shape and teach us. Case in point: When I look back on my experience with ovarian cancer, I know for certain that everything I went through at that time changed me for the better. Strange but true.

Once I came up for air and started to hear the whispering in my ear again – “Writer” – I spent some significant time in prayer to figure out why I had turned away from what I knew to be my purpose … which led to the inevitable questions: What should I do next? and What have I learned from this time?  

The first one was easy. What do I do next? Write something! That’s what writers do. They write. With the third and final installment of my Jessie Stanton series – From Bags to Riches – due out in March, I’m now free to concentrate on several exciting new writing projects … and I’ve already started. The experience is exhilarating and I’m reminded why I’ve always loved it so much.

What have I learned from the experience that will help me in following my calling? That one’s not quite as simple, but I’ve come up with three primary things that I’ll be keeping in mind as a writer, things I might not have been quite so “enlightened” about two years ago. Want me to share?

1.  Taking on the role of managing editor has given me a perspective that a submitting writer can never fully gain without stepping into someone else’s shoes. Writers – especially fiction writers! – are prone to creating scenarios in their own minds to explain delays, incomplete communications, and rejections from editors at the houses they’re chasing. Very often, an editor’s delays and distractions have far less to do with that writer than about simply managing their own workload.

2. Not every writer is also gifted with the ability to edit and, if not, they shouldn’t be afraid to get some help … and those of us who are natural editors need to make the most of it. Spelling mistakes, typographical errors, lack of punctuation – If we take the time to pay special attention to these issues before submitting to an agent or an editor, they’re going to appreciate the effort. And yes, they will notice! 

3.  There is so much more to the publishing process than writing a great story. There are production schedules, editorial mishaps, cover design challenges, even political hiccups within the publishing house, all of which have the potential to make the road to publication a bumpy one. My editorial experience has spoken to the writer in me, and I think I’ve learned to be far more understanding, to keep my expectations in check, and to allow for U-turns when they’re thrust upon me.

So there you have it. The next time you come across a reference to Romans 8:28, I hope you’ll read it with the fresh perspective of a writer. “And we know that God causes everything to work together for the good of those who love God and are called according to his purpose for them.”
                                                                                                    
If you have the talent and the drive to write, I believe it’s probably because God put it into your heart to do it. In fact, quite possibly if you really think about it, you can recall a surreal moment when you’re almost certain you heard a soft, distinct whisper from a familiar voice: “Writer.”

From Bags to Riches
Jessie Hart worked so hard to put her Louisiana roots in the rearview mirror and her Adornments boutique on the map. So when renegade “husband” Jack turns up again, the new and improved Jessie catches his attention. As he fights through his residual legal battles, he makes every effort to win her back and marry her for real this time... before Danny gets the chance.

When a celebrity stylist with her own reality show makes Adornments a hot spot, Jessie’s hard work is finally paying off. But amid award shows and photo shoots, Jessie’s beloved grandfather is diagnosed with cancer and she’s nudged back to the Louisiana roots she worked so hard to escape. Now, in her quest to find the success, true love, and faith that has always eluded her, will God really lead her right back home?

Friday, November 14, 2014

The Deeper Magic of Writing

by Allen Arnold

One of my favorite passages in The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe occurs when Susan and Lucy are bewildered by how Aslan has come back to life. The lion gently reveals to them “that though the Witch knew the deep magic, there is magic deeper still which she did not know.”

There is also a deeper magic to writing that will determine your destiny as a writer. Yet few know it.

It goes deeper than the business aspects of getting your story published.

Deeper than an Indie / Trad publishing conversation.

Deeper than anything technique or craft can offer.

Deeper than the discipline of hitting a daily word count.

And deeper than any social media success.

This deeper magic comes down to one simple word.

With.

Are you actively writing with God? This is radically different approach than starting your writing time with a simple prayer or asking God to bless your work once you’re done.

This is a much deeper invitation. An offer to be so intimately focused on his presence that you quite literally create together. It involves knowing God’s rhythm. Sensing his suggestions. Playing together in the realm of imagination. Following and waiting on his cues as tangibly as you would a skilled dance partner.

There’s a passage in Exodus 33 where Moses has a rather passionate conversation with God. He basically says to God “If you’re not going on this journey with me, let’s call the whole thing off.” He demands God’s presence.

Are you so hungry for God’s involvement in your writing that you’re willing to call it quits until you sense his presence? Because what you most need – and your readers hunger for most in story – is the eternal spark of life that comes only when you create with the Creator.

Can a writer experience success without that fellowship? It depends on how you define success. You can certainly hit your word count. You can relentless hone your craft. You can build a better social media platform. None of those things are bad. But none are the main thing. And notice how so many of those last sentences focused on you and your definition of success.

The deeper journey isn’t about you.

It’s about you and God experiencing the creative dance together. And that kind of rare, shared journey transcends all of the typical measures of an author’s success.

It’s like taking a road trip where you are so consumed with getting to the destination that you forget to enjoy the journey. And you miss that you have a companion who is the most creative, wise, enjoyable, funny, comforting presence imaginable. He also just happens to be the driver. He knows where you are going. He knows why you are going. Even more – he knows you inside out. You thought the road trip was your idea. But it was his. And the primary reason is for the relationship and the transformation (yours not his) that will happen along the way. Miss that and you’ve missed the entire purpose of the trip.

Believe me, I’ve seen it with hundreds of authors. Better to call the whole trip off like Moses was willing to do than to get to your destination successfully – yet still be empty and alone.

God gave you your gift of creativity as something the two of you could experience together.

That is the deeper magic of why God invited you to write. 

Allen Arnold loves the epic adventure God has set before him. From the mountains of Colorado, he leads Content & Resources for Ransomed Heart Ministries (led by John Eldredge). Before that, he spent 20 years in Christian Publishing - overseeing  the development of more than 500 novels as founder and Publisher of Thomas Nelson Fiction. He was awarded the ACFW Lifetime Achievement Award in 2012. But that doesn't really describe the man. Allen savors time with his family, craves the beach, drinks salsa by the glass, is hooked on the TV series "Once Upon a Time" and is passionate about helping storytellers tell better stories from an awakened heart.