Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Five Things Roger Sterling Taught Us About Writing

I'm a huge fan of the show Mad Men, and was so sad when it ended last year. I loved the character development and dialogue, and one of my favorite characters in the show was Roger Sterling. He showed up more for "quips" than conversations, but he was one of the most quotable characters in the entire series.


 So, without further ado, here are five things Roger Sterling taught us about the writing life.

"Nobody knows what I'm doing. It's good for mystique." (S2, E5)

The takeaway: Yes, you want to be a writer. Own it. Tell the world. That doesn't mean you have to give away your secrets. You don't have to tell Aunt Ida every last detail about your work in progress. In fact, I wonder if we don't lose some of the magic of the story every time we give a little bit of it away. There will be a time to promote yourself and talk about your work; I'm just not sure if that time is in the middle of writing it. Keep your words close to you.

The exception: This doesn't apply to brainstorming with fellow writers or agents or editors (i.e. people who can legitimately help you).  

Otherwise, assure them you're working hard and let their minds fill in the blanks. Writing novels is rarely as exciting as outsiders think it is. 
 
"I'm going to count to three, and then I'm gonna start saying a lot of words you don't like, sweetheart." (S4, E7) 

The takeaway: Spew the crap. All of it. Get your story onto paper as fast as you can and don't look back. Count to three and let it all out. Write now; revise later. 

"What do you think Accounts does, besides limit your brilliance? (S3, E9)

The takeaway: You know that old saying about too many cooks in the kitchen? I think enlisting the help of friends, family members, writer's groups, editors, beta readers, etc. can be a good thing. With too many differing opinions, however, there are potential hazards. Feedback is great, but not at the expense of losing your story or voice. If you don't feel comfortable with a suggestion or see how it will make the story better, let it go. At the end of the day, it's your name on the cover. 

"My mother always said be careful what you wish for, because you'll get it, and then people get jealous and try to take it away from you." (S4, E6) 

The takeaway: If you're a writer, there's plenty drama going on in your head at any given time. Don't compound this by letting outside drama in, too. There are too many haters and not enough creators in the world. Stay away from the people who want to bring you down.

"Not to get too deep before the cocktail hour, but do I need to remind you of the finite nature of life?" (S2, E7)

You've got one life--one opportunity; don't squander it. If there's a book inside you, get it out. Don't look back five, ten, or fifteen years from now wishing you picked differently. Take the smallest, most manageable first step today. Your future self will thank you.

Be Brilliant!
~Katie~

Friday, June 24, 2016

Random Acts

A few nights ago we drove down to the river about thirty minutes away to walk the boardwalk, check out the wildlife, and watch the sunset. 



It was a warm summer evening made better by the little boy who thought enough to offer us two pieces of bread from his bag--one for each of my kids--so they could feed the turtles, too.

I thanked him several times, just so he would know how much this seemingly insignificant random act of kindness meant to us.

The world can be a beautiful place. :D

Be Brilliant....

~Katie~

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

To Be A Writer You Must. . . .

be observant   
be curious
daydream
make connections
challenge yourself 
take risks
work hard
persist

What does being a "writer" look like to you and what small task can you accomplish today that puts you one step closer to achieving your dream?

Be Brilliant!

~Katie~

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

FYI--Free ebook from Steven Pressfield

I don't usually blog on Wednesdays, but I just HAD to drop by to let you know that you can get the e-version of Steven Pressfield's new book at his website.

There's nothing to fill out or sign up for--just click and download.

Last summer I read his book The War of Art (I even blogged some of my favorite quotes). It was a fantastic read, and I think this one could be just as great.

I'm not sure how long it will be free, so head on over to Steven's website and snatch it up.

It's called: 


Nobody Wants to Read your Sh*t 
(Why that is and what you can do about it)


See? I love it already. :D

I hope you're having a fabulous week!

~Katie~

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

air and light and time and space


"--you know, I've either had a family, a job, something
has always been in the
way
but now
I've sold my house, I've found this
place, a large studio, you should see the space and
the light.
for the first time in my life I'm going to have a place and
the time to
create."
no baby, if you're going to create
you're going to create whether you work
16 hours a day in a coal mine
or
you're going to create in a small room with 3 children
while you're on
welfare,
you're going to create with part of your mind and your
body blown
away,
you're going to create blind
crippled
demented,
you're going to create with a cat crawling up your
back while
the whole city trembles in earthquakes, bombardment,
flood and fire.
baby, air and light and time and space
have nothing to do with it
and don't create anything
except maybe a longer life to find
new excuses
for.

~Charles Bukowski~

Monday, June 6, 2016

Contest Winner

Thank you *so much* to everyone who helped make my birthday weekend special, and congrats to Ellie Sterling for winning my b-day prize pack on FB!

Time to get back to writing! :D

~K~

Friday, June 3, 2016

Birthday Weekend!

Hi Everyone!

FYI--

So . . . it's my birthday weekend (yay!), and to celebrate I'm dropping the prices of Cross My Heart and Collateral Damage on Amazon from $3.97 to $.99 all day Saturday (6/4) and Sunday (6/5).

This is my gift to YOU!

Enjoy!

~K~




CROSS MY HEART

True love can blossom in unexpected places. This is Jaden pretending not to notice. . . .  

Jaden McEntyre and Parker Whalen are a wrong fit from the start. Jaden is driven and focused, Harvard Med School within reach. Parker has a past—a reputation—and the rumors about his mysterious habits abound. So there’s no reason why, when they're assigned to work together on a project in English, they should discover they have anything in common, or even like each other, and they definitely shouldn't be falling in love.  

As they bond over Edith Wharton’s tragic novella, Ethan Frome, the “bad boy” vibe Parker plays begins to dissipate. Soon, Jaden finds herself shedding her own “good girl” image: sneaking around to be with him, confiding in him, and ultimately falling hard for this leather-wearing, motorcycle-driving loner who plays into the rebel stereotype.  

Still, Jaden can't shake the feeling that there's more to Parker than he's letting on. He's hiding something from her, and discovering the truth means reconciling the Parker she's grown to love with the person he really is. Because it's possible that his life inside the classroom—everything Jaden knows—is one, massive lie.  

CROSS MY HEART, told from Jaden's point of view, is a 76k-word/300-page contemporary romance for young adults. Bonus features include the official playlist and an interview with the author.  

* In addition to spending more than 100 days on the Amazon Teen Top 100 Bestseller List in its first year of release, CROSS MY HEART was also a 2011 Goodreads Choice Awards Nominee for Best YA Fiction.




COLLATERAL DAMAGE

True love can blossom in unexpected places. This is Parker pretending not to care. . . .  

Parker Whalen and Jaden McEntyre are a wrong fit from the start. Jaden is driven and focused, Harvard Med School within reach. Parker has a past—a reputation—and the rumors about his mysterious habits abound. So there’s no reason why, when they're assigned to work together on a project in English, they should discover they have anything in common, or even like each other, and they definitely shouldn't be falling in love.  

What they have? It isn't real. Because the truth is, Parker Whalen is a liar. This has never mattered…until now. Because lying to someone you care about—someone who matters, someone who believes in you—that's when people get hurt. And Parker is about to hurt Jaden in the biggest way imaginable.