My obsession started in December 2011 while I was on vacation. I decided to compile my grandmother's writings. The more I read the stories of my grandmother's past, the deeper my passion grew to learn more about my ancestry. After all, Grandma had already started the research on the Bauman and Williams family lines, compiling notes, copies of census records, and vital documents. In her research binders were newspaper articles on her parents' marriage and her father's illness and death. She even went as far to hunt down her parents' marriage certificate, as well as an agreement of adoption for her father when he was a boy. I could not help but be inspired by how my mother's ancestors survived the trials and tribulations of their time.
After learning more about my mother's side of the family, I started on a quest to discover details about my father's side of the family. I browsed genealogy sites, conducted general web searches for family trees, and came across some amazing people who helped me find out more. I found a very distant cousin, who put me in touch with Kenneth Haughton, a family descendant who has written an entire book on our family ancestry. In my genealogy library, I now have a 1200 page book on CD on my family ancestry. Since, I have corresponded with two distant relatives who have sent me family information.
I am still researching and coming up with information on my family tree five generations back. This evening I found the marriage certificate at ancestry.com of my great-great grandparents. I mean, what could be better than that?
While there are many triumphs in my family research, there are also false leads. For example, my mother's great-great grandfather descended from Germany. In fact my grandfather's father came from there in about 1885 or thereabouts. I thought I had found the immigration passenger list with him and his young wife. After tracking down a family history my grandmother (my mother's mother) had tucked away, I realized I had been tricked by the names being the same. Later on, I found more information on his arrival to the United States.
My adventures in family research have led me to wonder what their lives were like back then. Most people didn't have luxuries, and if they did they were not the same kinds of things we have today. Two hundred years ago you might have found wealthy people with a fancy house, fancy clothes, and maybe nice outhouses and a shower house.
As I continue my research, I look forward to writing some stories about my ancestor's lives..The nice thing about fiction is that you can write about real people, put them in circumstances of their day, and build some great stories. There is no reason to know the exact details of a person's life, facts and imagination are enough to come up with a good story.
Meanwhile, I have my query letter out to agents and have heard back on a few. Most are standard rejections, but a few agents have provided compliments on my writing. I will keep querying, writing, and researching family history.
Happy writing!
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Thursday, December 8, 2011
History and Family Records
A few years after my grandmother passed away and my
grandfather decided to move in with my aunt and uncle, I was given a large box
containing Grandma's belongings. In the box were several binders and papers in
loose folders containing her writing. Grandma loved to write.
Grandma was a woman strong in what she believed, grounded in her Christian
faith, and never afraid to speak up when she thought someone was doing
something to hurt themselves. One of the
things I loved most about her was her love of life and her ability to make
delicious lemonade out of the rotten lemons that life sometimes delivered.
This week while on vacation, I have had the opportunity to
archive Grandma’s writings, all 500 or so pages. One volume contains her typewritten memoirs about
growing up in the twenties and thirties.
Her biological father died when she was eleven months old, leaving her
mother to try and raise Grandma and her siblings on her own. In Memories
of Past Times, my Grandmother wrote:
My father built the house we lived in,
which sat near the river in Georgetown, Illinois. He was a carpenter and also worked on the
railroad repairing tracks. He made all
the furniture in the home. Each piece
was done with tender loving care and finished just right, as it was a gift to
his family. He also made the cradles we
slept in as babies.
When my father passed away, my mother
lost the house my father had built because of back taxes, and had to go to work
in a second hand store to provide food, clothing and shelter for her
family.
In addition to pages of her memories, my grandmother left
behind two wonderful treasures. The
first is an undated handwritten letter titled To all our Grandchildren. Even
though I had perused these same writings when I was first given her writings,
this was the first time I actually saw this soul-revealing letter. She talked about the difficulty of her own
life and her spiritual journey and then provided her own advice to living a
good life. I transcribed this letter and today sent it to all my cousins.
The second treasure has to do with a story my grandmother told her children
while they were growing up. From what I
understand, it was a serial story that she spread over several nights, maybe
even months. My aunts all loved to listen to Grandma's adventure and were disappointed that she never wrote it down. Well, just yesterday I found a faded handwritten
copy of Leilani in the Jungle. It is
difficult to read but I think I can transcribe it for future generations.
When I was asked to be the family historian, I was not sure
how to organize our family history. Now,
I have created a small library containing stories, poetry, and Grandma’s genealogical
research, as well as other things that were special to her. I hope that my family will find as much joy
from reading her memoirs as I do.
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Fall and Writing
Today was beautiful with dark skies and intermittent rain. Wind sent the wind chimes hanging from my eaves into a musical dance. My therapy today was sweeping the yellowed maple leaves from my deck and carport. As soon as I had the driveway cleared, a gust of wind came along and sprinkled more leaves on the concrete. Such is life with so many things out of my control.
I have been working with diligence on my query letter for my novel The Man and the Mandolin, but I have been having great trouble getting it down to the bread on top, the bread on the bottom, and then all the story-meat in the middle. I have posted numerous versions of my query letter at the Absolute Write forums. Their feedback has been helpful and informative.
Right now, I am fine-tooth reviewing my manuscript to make sure it is as error free as I can get it. One fellow member of Absolute Write suggested I write out lists of (1) ten places where the reader might not be able to put my book down, (2) ten places where my protagonist’s mind is messed with (because I have deemed my novel’s genre as psychological thriller), (3) ten problems my protagonist has to overcome, (4) ten problems and why they are obstacles, and (5) what the protagonist must do to solve the problems. Once I have these lists, I choose the strongest ones and build my query. I will also have all the main points in which to construct my synopsis.
I have also been working on my other work in progress, which is a paranormal mystery. I have written about 20,000 words, which means it is about one-quarter completed. My goal is to write this as an 80,000 word novel.
My fiftieth birthday was yesterday, which I celebrated with the man I love. It’s amazing that I have reached a half-century of life. I as if I have acquired some kind of wisdom from being on this earth so long, yet I feel as young as I have always felt. I am not willing to put up with stuff that I tolerate when I was younger. Maybe these are all lessons about growing up.
Thanksgiving is just around the corner. This will be one of the first Thanksgivings I have not spent with my aunts and uncle and at least once grandparent since the passing of my grandfather in April. I miss him every single day. I also understand the need of my family to do something different on Thanksgiving. Change is inevitable.
My goals for this fall are to write as much as I can and to get that query letter out the door to more agents. I want to complete my synopsis. I want to be completely prepared in case for when agents request my synopsis and full manuscript.
In the meantime, have a wonderful Thanksgiving. I will try and not go so long between blog entries.
Sunday, August 7, 2011
Writing World
When you sit down to write, what is the place you write from? I don’t mean the physical place, such as the office, coffee shop, or library, but the place within yourself. Do you write from your external world living in your mind, or from that secret garden in your soul where nobody else has been? Or, maybe you even write from the in-between with one foot in your head and the other in your heart.
For me, writing from the external world means I look for my subject matter in magazines, newspaper articles, and the life experiences of other people. It means research, learning new things, and creating stories from experiences that I have never been through.
When writing from that secret garden, I go deep within myself for the almost forgotten memory or a universal feeling to create a story. This is not the same as a memoir, which is writing about the truth as you remember it during a certain time period. It means taking a fact, such as a childhood experience or something that happened yesterday, and creating a story around that one thing. It means remembering that feeling of abandonment, which we have all felt at some time in our life, and using it as a story theme.
For me, writing from the external world means I look for my subject matter in magazines, newspaper articles, and the life experiences of other people. It means research, learning new things, and creating stories from experiences that I have never been through.
When writing from that secret garden, I go deep within myself for the almost forgotten memory or a universal feeling to create a story. This is not the same as a memoir, which is writing about the truth as you remember it during a certain time period. It means taking a fact, such as a childhood experience or something that happened yesterday, and creating a story around that one thing. It means remembering that feeling of abandonment, which we have all felt at some time in our life, and using it as a story theme.
The in-between is where I write from both worlds. For example, I read an article about someone who has been kidnapped only to live and tell the story. This inspires me to write a novel about a woman who has been kidnapped by a stranger and must fight to survive in order to reunite with her children. While I have not been kidnapped, I do know that universal feeling of fear and the need to survive.
What do these worlds look like to you? Which one(s) do you write from?
What do these worlds look like to you? Which one(s) do you write from?
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Finding Time to Write
I work 37.5 hours in a law office where my brain often spins into the vast outer space of the legal world. I run and weight train four times a week, spend quality time with those I love, give lots of attention to my cats who think they own me, and just live life in general. With my love of writing added into my busy schedule, I am a busy girl!
With all that I do, it is often challenging to find time to write. At the writers’ forums I frequent, I understand many writers who do not write for a living also have to carefully maneuver their time with the pen and paper (or computer). It is not easy to find the extra time, but it is essential if you want to finish anything.
For awhile, I was working on two novels: revisions on one, the other a work in progress. I divided my time equally between the two in hopes of finishing revisions first, and then going full force on novel two. This did not work well for me.
Now, I have decided to finish the revisions on novel one so that I can start sending out query letters again. Once the revised work has been edited and is ready for submission, I will start sending out query letters again. During the “novel one in drawer process,” which comes before hard editing, as well as during the query process, I will continue writing on my second novel.
Oh yes, I have not told you how I find time to write. I allot at least an hour during the weekdays and anywhere from one to four hours on weekends. I try to write something every single day (email, responses at writers forums, and Facebook postings do not count, but my blog does). I have made creative writing my priority during my off-work hours.
If you want to publish, you must make time to write. You must stick to a certain schedule, and perhaps even create guidelines and deadlines for yourself. Finally, pay attention to rules Robert A. Heinlein created :
1. You must write.
2. You must finish what you write.
3. You must refrain from rewriting, except to editorial order.
4. You must put the work on the market.
5. You must keep the work on the market until it is sold.
2. You must finish what you write.
3. You must refrain from rewriting, except to editorial order.
4. You must put the work on the market.
5. You must keep the work on the market until it is sold.
Meanwhile, when you have a break in your writing schedule, read what Mark Twain has to say on writing.
Now, I would love to hear how other busy people make time to write or, if you make a living, what your writing time is like for you.
Happy writing!
Thursday, May 12, 2011
Stuff and Editing
These last several weeks have been difficult. My grandfather became very ill and passed away. Grandpa lived one month and four days past his 95th birthday. On March 26, we gave him a bang-out birthday party where family and friends came from far and wide to celebrate. Grandpa died exactly one month later. I felt blessed to have lived close enough to visit him once a month. He was one of my dearest friends, and I miss him very much.
When tending to personal matters, something usually is put on the back burner. In my case, I was not able to keep up with my blog. However, I am back now and thinking about the many aspects of writing. Some of the writer’s forums I frequent have long and heated discussions on editing and the pros and cons of hiring professional editors prior to publication.
Some writers say you must always send your manuscript to a professional editor before submitting to an agent or publisher. Others say you must forget about professional assistance and learn how to edit your own work. In these discussions, I have seen more members teeter on either side of the fence than tread the gray area in between. I, of course, have my own opinion.
Freelance editors are expensive, charging anywhere from $300 to $1,500 or more to edit a manuscript. In the editing business, experience, expertise, and success rate cost even more. We all want our manuscripts to be in pristine condition before we start the submission process. I don’t know many writers who have the money to spend on freelance editing. Besides, the cardinal rule in writing is that money flows to the writer, not away.
Editors are invaluable. When an agent chooses to work for you, then somewhere in that process is an editor. It is part of the package of landing an agent, or at least having one interested in your work. However, I believe there is one situation where retaining a freelance editor prior to publication can work for a writer.
For example, if you want hands-on assistance to learn how to edit properly, a freelance editor might be the right professional for you. If you utilize this experience properly and pay someone who has a good track record with editing, then your money has been spent well. Once you know how to edit, whether you learned it from a freelance editor or a book such as Self-Editing for Fiction Writers, you have skills necessary for a writer.
Please do not hire a freelance editor if you just want someone to edit your work. You are wasting your money. Think of it this way. Say you hire someone to do this work for you, and then you submit it to agents and publishers, Said agent or publisher asks for changes, but you don't know how to properly edit, because you had the freelance editor do it for you. Face it, you are stuck. If you don’t understand the principles of successful editing, how can you make a decision on which changes to make and which to leave alone?
As mentioned earlier Self Editing for Fiction Writers by Rennie Brown and Dave King is an excellent resource. I also like Strunk and White and good old fashioned books on grammar.
Get to work on that editing now and.....
Happy writing!
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Query Halt
Screech!
I have halted the query process based on feedback from my beta reader and a critique group colleague. While I feel secure that my typos and spelling errors have been cleaned up, I have learned that I have problems with characterization.
My beta reader told me she would love to hang out with my main character but cannot connect with him. “Can you give him something outside of work to do?” She asked. “Maybe make him a dog lover or something?”
My critique colleague said my main character did not seem to have much depth, that things seemed a little too easy for him.
When I put this feedback side-by-side with what two prior agents said in wonderful rejection letters, I instantly knew I had written a cardboard character. I had the choice to either trunk the novel or do a rewrite.
I chose to fatten up my paper-doll, because I am a firm believer in finishing what I start. Therefore, I have stopped the query process while I rewrite to give my main character more substance and depth.
I am also working on a second novel, which my critique group seems to like. I have never worked on two large projects at the same time. I am learning how to prioritize my time so I do not get behind on one or the other. Believe me, working on two novels can be challenging.
This is it for now. Happy writing!
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Hello, Everyone! I am throwing out a reminder to followers of this blog that I have launched a new website which I am now maintaining at w...
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A few years after my grandmother passed away and my grandfather decided to move in with my aunt and uncle, I was given a large box containi...
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I have completed one hard copy edit of my novel, including major revisions and a few cuts. I am now twenty pages shy of completing a ...
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I have learned some hard lessons over these last few months. Number one is that it often takes several editing sessions for a novel to b...