Thursday, October 15, 2015

Revisiting My Book

It has been 8 years since I wrote The Five Notebooks.   I was recently asked to submit a "horror selfie" to a website put up by the Horror Writers Association (HWA) to feature photos of a pet in costume, or "reading" horror, or with a sign supporting a local animal shelter. I couldn't come up with anything - there is no way I could get costumes on Willow and Beauregard and I have grown tired of those "face in hole" sites. So, I've submitted the following (below)  in hopes that they will publish it. I think it's pretty frightening....

                            

I had to fill out a form that included links to my social media websites as well as an author website. Since I don't have an active author website, I though I'd paste these two photos from 2008, when my novel first saw publication. It is still in print, available on amazon.com in both trade paperback and Kindle formats, and I'd be delighted to use this opportunity to give it some publicity.

From Outskits Press


from amazon.com




Do I have another book in me? I haven't attempted to write for publication since The Five Notebooks came out. Perhaps renewed interest in this first effort will give me the impetus I need to awaken my muse and write again.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Paul Dale Anderson, How DO you do it?

I just read Paul Dale Anderson's blogpost for today on Wordpress: (link below) and felt inspired to leave a comment. Here's the link to his post: How I Do It

and here is a corrected version of my lengthy response, which I didn't know how to edit, since I'm not a power Wordpress user. So, to get it right, here it is on my own blog, but please read his first!



Lizza's musings: I didn't know what a "pantser" was! I had to look it up.  (https://thewritepractice.com/plotters-pantsers/) I like to think I'm a plotter, but there is something pansteresque about my process. I think I wrote about five different endings for my novel, and submitted it with a plot twist that came right out of that weird space we all inhabit when we're exhausted and suffering from severe "Magic Number Seven Plus or Minus Two.” With regard to your post, I am still mulling over our conversation today over pizza, in which we compared our thoughts on how we are drawn to a book - from mild interest to a compulsion to read. I agree that marketing is an energy drain. Anything that takes a writer away from writing had better be worth it. So how to self-promote, in today's publishing world where midlist authors have to cultivate the art of essentially saying, "READ MY BOOK!?" I think a recommendation or blurb from a major author is a plus. I will read a book that is praised by Curtis Sittenfeld or J. Courtney Sullivan or Chris Bohjalian or Diana Gabaldon---who else? Wally Lamb. Liane Moriarty or Laura Moriarty (who, in fact, are not related to each other). Diane Chamberlain, Meg Wolitzer, Donna Tartt (when is she ever going to write another book?) -- and, yes, Jodi Picoult.

So now that my response to your post has turned into a personal digression and a list of my favorite authors, here is a plug for you, Paul Dale Anderson.  Take a good, long look at who I read. Anyone who reads my response, consider my list... And YET--- I firmly believe that those with my reading preferences would also not only enjoy but become addicted to the Winds series --- and I daresay that even though they are by no means chick lit, they are definitely literary fiction within the realms of genre-bending. They are marvelous. I asked you yesterday, in that phone call about a review for Amazon, "HOW am I supposed to review your books?" And this segued into my question, "Paul Dale Anderson, how do you do it?" How indeed do you do it? I see your workflow above; I am more than honored to be one of your deviations. (smile) But you simply have an extra chip, rather like the individual who can replicate music by ear with no sheet music. You write by ear. By soul. And yes - by discipline. But you have a great gift. Yup, I'm your girlfriend, but I'm also a fierce critic and I am extremely fussy about what I will read. You get it right - the tone, the cadence, the storytelling. And sadly, I'm not the person to promote you. I want to hear you interviewed on "All Things Considered." I want to read an article about you in a scholarly book selection periodical. You've already nailed it with a great review of Light from Kirkus. I want a blurb from Stephen King to appear on the jacket of your next book. I want every indie bookseller in the country (how many are left?) to hand-sell your book, and every librarian to talk it up.

So - anyone from the Rockford area reading this, do show up at the Nordlof Center on October 28 for the event you listed: a talk followed by a showing of the movie Psycho. I promise you that this panster will scare the pants off you, and leave you wanting more!