Monday, September 24, 2007

Writing versus Bloggin

My excuse for not posting blog entries is that I have been writing. That is generally a good thing when claiming to be a writer, even if the writing is not for money.

My quandry is that, like many writers, I struggle between ways to market my writing, get it noticed, versus simply creating. It is the irony of many creative arts that ultimately one needs to be a better business person than artist. I tend to disagree with the pundits of writing, most who are "published," but few who are truly successful. Their thought that "write a good book" as the first step toward success is trite. There are a lot of "good books" written out there that will never get published, never get discovered, and will molder on the hard drive.

I have been looking at the industry and thinking, "how can one get past the walls created by agents and publishers?" without resorting to simply self publishing and have that molder.

My ideas are coalescing. What I need are some creative writers who want to devote some real time and effort to the cause. Especially, those with web development (B2C, B2B, etc.) experience. Being in the Seattle area, one would think that is not too hard, but the risk tolerance of many is much lower than I expected.

So now I am balancing writing with creating a startup.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

PNWA - Conference

The Pacific Northwest Writer's Association Conference, in Seattle. This was my second time for this conference. There is a temptation to compare to the Writer's Weekend, but the truth is that the audiences are different.

Two presenters, Louise Marley (or on blogspot) and Caitlin Kittredge were at both Writer's Weekend and PNWA. I attended these at Writer's Weekend, but did not repeat at PNWA. I know Louise's was fundamentally the same at both.

Louise focused on point of view (POV) and she has some good examples from literature and film. POV can be troublesome for many of us. I don't have problems with understanding POV, nor with making that transition, but I tend to like multiple POVs and many authors and readers dislike too many POVs. I tend to drift to the Robert Jordan way of writing (not as good, of course, but the multiple POV and complex characters). (Side note, Jordan is, in his own words, Still Kicking. I wish him the best in fighting of his illness).

I digress. Louise has a well done, polished, set of thoughts on POV.

Caitlin looked tired at PNWA. The problem with writing is that it is easily a FTE position on its own. Caitlin is burning the candle at three ends. At Writer's Weekend her presentation was freeform, but a lot of fun. She is up front and honest about her recent (and upcoming) success. It is refreshing to have an author not be coy about some things. She focused on Urban Fantasy and some of the world building aspects.

The PNWA, like all writer's conferences, exists for a number of reasons. One is to allow editors and agents to network. The meetings with editors help boost the writer's feeling of hope, but the editors are pretty up front that the odds of them picking up for publication one of your manuscripts is close to zero. One told me she "almost took one once in seven years" and six conferences a year. Given that each conference leads to probably ten to twenty submissions, that is a "one almost in 360." Another admitted that he has never had a manuscript that was published come out of a conference. All this is to say, editors are there for other reasons, not to get your writing. Reality bites, but knowledge is good.

Last year, as part of my informal poll, almost every agent that heard a pitch would say "send me the first 50 pages" ... this year from informal polling that is not even true anymore. I heard many say that the agent told them no thanks, or you need to change your work. (I am paraphrasing of course).

There are a host of other presentors, many worthwhile. However after four conferences, I think I have reached the saturation point. I think poor Joseph Campbell is rolling, spinning, in his grave. His Hero of a Thousand Faces ... taken to the Hero's Journey ... is beaten to death and yes you can shoehorn every story in that model, if you break a few toes and don't mind that you are walking with a limp. What did the people who taught popular fiction do before Bill Moyers and George Lucas brought this to the masses?

Off to do something productive.

Monday, July 2, 2007

Writer's Weekend - Seattle

I finished my second Writer's Weekend this past Saturday and Sunday. This is a small affair, which is one of its main attractions. It is, not surprisingly, also one of its potential flaws. After two years the workshops are starting to resemble themselves.

The good thing is that the quality of writers stays high and the unpublished to published writer ratio is great. I attend something like this for small gems, not the big bang.

If you have never attended a writing conference, this is a great one to get started. It does not intimidate and everyone is approachable. The main genre focus is fantasy, science fiction, and all sub genres of romance. While there is not a literary fiction focus, you will find other literary authors here and the core information for writing and getting published remains the same for all genres, even non-fiction.

Note, the quality of a blog does not indicate the quality of fiction writing! Blogs have the beauty of ignoring the bane of all writers: edit, re-edit, do a final edit, start editing over, throw it away and start again.

As new media continues to heat up some of my older ideas on startups for businesses for writers seem not just viable, but potentially over ripe for trying out.

Initial Post

Despite too many years of technical experience I have done my best to avoid the time sink of a regular blog. The battle has been lost. The war remains to be fought.

I expect these ruminations to focus on my fiction writing, my rants on politics, and the general rants of anyone paying attention. As the bumper sticker states: If you are not outraged, you have not been paying attention.