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the write site: writing resources © copyright James N. Watkins. All rights reserved. From www.jameswatkins.com; hosted by GospelCom.net Dear Jim, I want to do everything you are doing, just to know how to get started. Anthony (December 20, 2003) Hi Anthony, Are you sure you really want to do that?! I spend twelve hours a day banging away at a keyboard for just a bit more than minimum wage. When I'm not doing that, I'm cramped back in 'coach' (or sitting in an airport) flying off to speak to a fairly small crowd. All this after a degree in Theology, graduate work in Communications, and twenty years experience as an editor and professional writer. In fact, if my wife wasn't a pastor with a parsonage, company car, health insurance, and a good salary, I'd be writing from a cardboard box. However, the benefit of getting emails and cards saying I've made a difference in someone's life makes all the above worth it! So, if you really want to do what I do, here are some suggestions . . .
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how to break into a publisher's office
It is hard "breaking into" the writing market, but not impossible.
One problem is supply and demand. There are simply more articles being
written than the market can bear. (About 1 percent of articles and book
proposals submitted to publishers are actually printed.) But you can break
through if you will work at the craft of writing: 1. Read. Read. Read. Read "how to" books on writing
at your public library. My book, The Persuasive
Person: Communicating More Effectively in Person and in Print,
is available by calling Wesley Press at 1-800-4-WESLEY or returning to
my "home page." It includes advice on the proper form and etiquette
for submitting manuscripts. Also read books that contain good writing such
as Annie Dilliard, Madeline L'Engle, and C. S. Lewis, and Philip Yancey. 2. Take a course at a nearby college or university. You'll receive
the kind of feed-back and critique that is so necessary. 3. Attend one of the regional or national
writing conferences. "It's not what you know, but who you
know" in writing also! Conferences allow you to show your writing
samples to some of the top magazine and book editors in the country. Plus
the workshops are invaluable. 4. Join a writer's club or critique group. Your public library
should know the active groups in your area. You'll receive helpful critiques
and encouragement. 5. Research what the market is buying. Writer's Market
(Writers Digest Books, annual), which is available at most public libraries,
lists hundreds of markets. Always send for a writer's guide and sample
copy before submitting. Magazines are much easier to break into. In fact,
I'd suggest you do not attempt a book until you've established a good publishing
track record in magazines. 6. Don't quit your day job! If you want to make money, become a greeter at Wal-Mart rather than a writer. Fewer than 5 percent of writers
actually make a living at it. Writing offers great satisfaction, but little
money. 7. Most of all, be persistent as well as patient. Persistent
because the majority of your (and my) articles and proposals will be returned.
But, because I'm persistent I've had over 1,500 articles and fourteen
books published--in spite of hundreds of rejection slips. And be patient.
Most magazines take up to three months to respond; books up to six months.
Editors, unfortunately, are too busy to be able to tell you why they can't
use your material, so don't ask. I realize that is frustrating--to new
and old writers! And remember, it takes ten years to become an overnight
success! Copyright © 1997 James N. Watkins. All rights reserved.
top ten great thinks about being a writer
(From Jim's weekly newspaper column.)
November 15 is national I Love To Write Day, so I have in my right hand, direct from my home office today's top ten list. Today's category . . .
Ten great things about being a writer
10. No heavy lifting. Since no physical skill or strength is required to be a word jock, your career isn't over by age 30 like most major league athletes.
9. It's cheaper than collecting antique cars or Longaberger baskets. For the price of a ream of paper ($3.95 at Office Depot) you can write an epic novel or two nonfiction books. (Lincoln's Gettysburg Address was written on the back of an old envelope.)
8. It's one of the few occupations you can perform in your underwear without the vice squad breaking down your door.
7. You can get your picture in the paper without being charged with crimes and misdemeanors.
6. A chance to speak your mind long after you're dead. All those authors from American and English Literature class had met their final deadlines long before you read them (or scanned the Cliff Notes).
5. It's a great soapbox. Instead of annoying just your family and friends with your rants and raves, you can annoy thousands of people with your rants and raves.
4. On election day, you can vote more than once - legally. An editorial, a letter to the editor, even an email note, can sway readers' votes, so get out and vote - repeatedly.
3. You can receive notes like this email from last week: "I am a 38 year old mother of four: two teenagers and two under the age of nine. I am writing to let you know how much your writing has lifted my spirits."
2. It's the closest thing to God's "creation ex nihilo" - creating something out of nothing; using words to bring order out of chaos.
1. And now writers have their very own holiday.
Yep, my friend John Riddle has single-handedly created the national I Love To Write Day (www.ilovetowrite.com).
Apparently it's not that difficult to create your own holiday since this month also celebrates Saxophone Day (6), National Bittersweet Chocolate With Almonds Day (7), National Pizza With The Works Except Anchovies Day (12), Operation Room Nurse Day (14), Use Even If Seal Is Broken Day (24), and Square Dance Day (29). And don't forget Veteran's Day (11), Thanksgiving (fourth Thursday), and my wife's birthday (24).
Unfortunately, we writers have to share the 15th with National Clean Out Your Refrigerator Day.
According to the official press release, over 11,000 schools nationwide have already signed up to celebrate the day. Riddle writes, "One million authors, writers, editors, reporters, journalists, teachers, librarians and other volunteers will help celebrate I Love To Write Day. On that day people of all ages will be encouraged to write something: a poem, a love letter, an essay, a letter to the editor, start a novel, finish a novel...the possibilities are endless."
So don't forget to celebrate national I Love To Write Day on November 15. But, please, if you serve refreshments, avoid anything from the National Clean Out Your Refrigerator Day!
(c) 2002 James N. Watkins Note: November is also National Novel Writing Month. Check out their inspiring and informational website.
top ten column-writing secrets revealed
(From Jim's weekly newspaper column.)
Writing a weekly column isn't exactly like creating something that high school students will be required to read 100 years from now. It is, however, a challenge coming up with a fresh, insightful essay every seven days--or at least some ink spots to fill 10 inches of column space.
So, I have in my right hand, direct from my home office, today's top ten list: Top Ten Column Writing Secrets.
10. Eat cold pizza for breakfast
Wash it down with large quantities of Diet Pepsi. After three cans, I can type 500 words per minute but unfortuwythdly nonr ofit makerigh anv senze aftcher tke thirddddddd . . .
9. Travel
I had great fun filing these columns from India ("The Land Without Toilet Paper"), as well as southern Africa and the Caribbean.
But some of my best ideas have come while stuck in traffic in downtown Chicago in August with a stick shift with no air-conditioning and two kids in the backseat waging a fight to the death.
And, of course, anytime I fly, I always come back with new column ideas. You can read "Top Ten Things Not to Say at Security" at www.jameswatkins.com.
8. Get married, have kids
Dave Barry provides positive proof that marriage and raising children is a source for hundreds of columns, thousands of dollars, and even a Pulitzer Prize. However, he's also on his third or fourth marriage and is buying baby diapers with his AARP discount card.
That's why you won't find Lois mentioned in many of my columns. I love my wife and I want to stay married to her.
Kids, on the other hand, provide a great--and printable--source of humor. (You can read all about them at www.jameswatkins.com)
7. Read
Read everything: fortune cookies, warning labels, airline magazines, junk mail, movie credits, etc. etc.
Recently, I was waiting in the foyer of a restaurant and noticed a marker board sign that should have read PLEASE WAIT TO BE SEATED. Someone had erased the second S, making me wonder if I was on the menu.
The best comedy, however, comes from the Department of Political-correctness. After reading about Native Americans being offended by use of "Redskins" and other "Indian" terms in sports, I got thinking, where will this end? Is my state going to be forced to change it's name to "Native Americana"?
6. Pass a kidney stone
I keep reminding students at writers conferences, "nothing terrible happens to authors, just terrific anecdotes."
So, when I experienced the sensation of having a Greyhound bus overloaded with passengers on their way to a Weight Watchers convention parked on my lower back, I knew I had a great column. You can read it all about it at www.jameswatkins.com.
5. Tackle a home-improvement project
For example, I don't believe in paying a repair technician $50 per hour when I can fix it myself. What do I have to lose? It's already broken, so I really can't do too much more damage.
Such was the case with the "simple"--watch out for that word--task of removing the bathroom stool so the tile crew could install new floor covering. And I'd save $50 by doing it myself!
Eventually I had to bring the City Water Department in on the project, but it did make a great story which has appeared in several magazines and in a book. You can read about it at www.jameswatkins.com.
4. Use your column for shameless self-promotion
I'm not above using excerpts from my 14 books for columns, and then shamelessly mentioning that they are available at www.amazon.com. And if you have a Web site with your best (?) columns archived, you can make references to it through out the entire column.
3. Don't be afraid of people thinking you're crazy
Henri Nouwen writes of the successful communicator: "He does not allow anybody to worship idols, and he constantly invites his fellow man to ask real, often painful and upsetting questions, to look behind the surface of smooth behavior, and take away all obstacles that prevent him from getting to the heart of the matter. The contemplative critic takes away the illusionary mask of the manipulative world and has the courage to show what the true situation is. He knows that he is considered by many as a fool, a madman, a danger to society and a threat to mankind."
2. Have a friend who is even crazier than you
I enjoy having lunch with a fellow columnist who wishes to remain anonymous (I'll call him "Michael Fraley"). Michael describes his mind as "a box of kittens" and he never ceases to get my brain cells firing on all neurons. Most of our brainstorms, however, aren't fit for print such as low-tech terrorist "Amish bin Laden"!
1. Create a Top Ten List
If all else fails, simply slap together a list such as "Top Ten Ways Britney Spears Can Be Taken Seriously as a Musician," "Top Ten Wishes for Turning 50," Top Ten Reasons Farming is a Great Occupation," etc.. etc. (Incidentally, those are all available at www.jameswatkins.com.)
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