The contest runs until May 26, so get your submission ready and head on over to Chuck's site for all the rules and regs. It's easy, and someone gets to win.
-Sonja
The contest runs until May 26, so get your submission ready and head on over to Chuck's site for all the rules and regs. It's easy, and someone gets to win.
-Sonja
1. Look toward future events and write books that WILL BE WANTED in two or three years. Example: in 2012, the Mayan calendar ends. It's also the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic. Two different authors pitched books based on these two upcoming events, and both books will be published in late 2011 or early 2012.
2. Be willing to enthusiastically jump on trends. If you can write a great Amish Romance, you will be published!
3. Use Writer's Edge (an on-line listing) to get your fiction noticed. (Note: Nick said he looks at this site--and others like it--all the time. But other editors don't bother with it. This one's a stretch, in my opinion.)
4. Once you finish writing a novel, send out queries and diligently work on getting it noticed. Then start writing your NEXT novel. Keep a healthy career plan, and have plenty of books in your arsenal. Maybe your writing style will catch an editor's eye, but he doesn't like the story you sent him. You'll have a lot of others to pitch to him.
5. Self-publish your excellent book, sell 10,000 copies, then approach a royalty publisher. Numbers like that catch their attention.
6. DO NOT WRITE message-driven novels or memoirs. They don't sell. (There are exceptions, like "The Shack" and "In His Steps," but they are few and far between.)
7. Next huge wave in the CBA: Southern Historical Romance. Write one of these and you'll have a good chance of getting published.
Some of these tips, like #1 and #4, are valuable to me. Unfortunately, I couldn't write an Amish romance or a southern historical romance if my children's lives depended on it, so I won't get to take advantage of tip #2 or tip #7. Hopefully you'll find something in here to help your career!
For what it's worth,
-Sonja
To quote the conference brochure, Brandilyn is a leading force in Christian mystery fiction. She's the Seatbelt Suspense Lady (as in, "put on your seatbelt before you pick up the book, otherwise you'll jump right out of your chair") and the founder of the Big Honkin' Chicken's Club (a club for wussies who don't think they can read the scary books Brandilyn writes but want to take the chance, anyway). She also blogs (Forensics and Faith), Twitters, Facebooks, and hostesses great Fourth of July parties. In other words, she's a stick of dynamite in a petite package who successfully does absolutely everything.
During her keynote address, Brandilyn talked about her ten-year struggle to break into print and the lessons she learned along her journey. Two points really stuck out to me:
1. People don't read your books to learn about God, they read them to be entertained. In other words, tell a really great story! If it happens to contain truths about God, that's fantastic, but it's the remarkable story that will stick with people and prompt them to pick up more of your books in the future.
2. The pre-published days in an author's life are a true gift, and Brandilyn encouraged us to find joy in them. It's okay to quit writing during this period, because if it's a true calling from God, you'll pick it up sometime in the future and keep going. Once you're a published author and under contract, there's no option to quit or take a break or get lazy. So cherish the pre-published phase of the journey and use the time to truly learn the craft of writing. Because when the inspiration deserts you and you're under contract, your knowledge of the craft will carry you through the deadlines until you re-discover your creativity.
Tomorrow I'll share content from the three classes Brandilyn taught.
-Sonja