<?xml version="1.0"?>
<rss version="2.0">
   <channel>
      <title>Lisa Shearin Group Bestselling Author by Calvin Wendorf</title>
      <link>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin</link>
      <description>Lisa is the national bestselling author of The Raine Benares novels, a series of six comedic fantasy adventures. Her next series—The SPI Files—is an urban fantasy that’s been described as Stephanie Plum meets Men in Black. It will debut on December 31, 2013.</description>
      <language>en-us</language>
      <pubDate>2014-05-21 09:53:45 UTC</pubDate>
      <lastBuildDate>2014-05-27 01:39:50 UTC</lastBuildDate>
      <webMaster>hello@padlet.com</webMaster>
      <image>
         <url>http://d20uo2axdbh83k.cloudfront.net/20140521/3d0a0dafc20980357a905b0409aa776b.jpg</url>
      </image>
      <item>
         <title>The Shearin Group Lisa National
Bestselling Author: Stay true to your voice, especially if it’s different</title>
         <author>calwendorf</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28551146</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p>Find your voice. Those three
little words rank right up there with “Read, read, read” and “Don’t give up” as
<b><a href="http://www.lisashearin.com/2013/09/24/stay-true-to-your-voice-especially-if-its-different/">the
advice most often given to newbie writers</a></b>.</p>
<p>Finding your voice isn’t the
hard part; it’s staying true to your voice once you’ve found it, believing that
it’s good enough to be published.&nbsp; We
authors are big on self-doubt.&nbsp; That
self-doubt starts in the author cradle, when we’re first starting out.&nbsp; Chances are if you’re a writer, you’ve always
known deep down that you wanted to be one.&nbsp;
But when you read a certain book or series by a particular author, you
knew you had to be one.</p>
<p>That’s how it happened to me.</p>
<p>I read Mary Stewart’s Merlin
novels and I knew I wanted to do that.&nbsp; I
wanted to write like her.&nbsp; Guess
what?&nbsp; There was no way in a hot place
that I was going to write like Mary Stewart.&nbsp;
Why?&nbsp; Because I’m not Mary
Stewart.&nbsp; But when I first got the
writing bug, she was my ideal of how a great author should write.&nbsp; Absolutely gorgeous prose.&nbsp; And if I couldn’t write like her, then I’d
never be a <b><a href="https://twitter.com/lisashearinLS">great
author</a></b> or even a good one.&nbsp;
I tried to write like her, and then like several other authors whose
work I fell in love with over the years—three manuscripts worth of trying.&nbsp; Those <b><a href="http://www.pinterest.com/calvinwendorf/lisa-shearin-group-bestselling-author/">books</a></b>
are in my office closet now, never to see the light of day.&nbsp; Why?&nbsp;
They weren’t me; it wasn’t my voice.&nbsp;
As a result, the words just lay there on the page.&nbsp; It was me trying to be someone I wasn’t.</p>
<p>I write quasi-traditional
fantasy.&nbsp; I say “quasi” because my
characters use modern speech.&nbsp; Yes, they
wear doublets and fight with blades (and bombs and buckets and whiskey
bottles), but for the most part, they talk like us.&nbsp; I’ve heard my books called The Lord of the
Rings meets The Sopranos.&nbsp; Definitely not
like Mary Stewart, or any of the other authors whose work I admire.&nbsp; It’s like me.&nbsp;
I don’t do fancy speeches and lush descriptions.&nbsp; I can’t do it; and now I don’t want to.&nbsp; I write like my heroine Raine Benares
talks—straight-shooting, plain-spoken, snarky with a dry and twisted sense of
humor.</p>
<p>That’s my voice.&nbsp; And that voice was what sold my series, first
to my agent, and then to my publisher. They offered representation and bought
my books because they were different.</p>
<p>So if your voice is different
from anything out there, don’t try to change it.&nbsp; You’re unique and so is your voice.&nbsp; Embrace it and run with it.</p>
<p>Being different can mean being
published.</p>
</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-05-22 02:39:20 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28551146</guid>
      </item>
      <item>
         <title>So you want to write a fantasy novel?</title>
         <author>calwendorf</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28640147</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><u>The Shearin Group Lisa National Bestselling Author</u></p>
<p><b><a href="http://www.lisashearin.com/2013/09/24/so-you-want-to-write-a-fantasy-novel/">So
you want to write a fantasy novel</a></b>, or in the case of many first-time
authors—the vaunted “fantasy trilogy.”</p>
<p>That’s how my Raine Benares
series started out—a trilogy.&nbsp; It grew,
as many fantasy series have a tendency to do.&nbsp;
I’m going on six books now, but that’s not why I’m here.&nbsp; I’m here to <b><a href="http://www.scribd.com/lisashearingroup">talk about fantasy</a></b>
and the gazillion permutations and sub-genres thereof.</p>
<p>If you walked up to someone on
the street and asked them what <b><a href="http://lisa-shearin-group.tumblr.com/">fantasy fiction</a></b> was, you’d
probably get the following in some shape or form.&nbsp; Fantasy is when elves, dwarves, humans, and
assorted allies are on a quest to find the long-lost magical thingie or elusive
sacred whatsit, which the bad guys (evil wizard, mad king, and their menacing
minions) will kill, enslave, or obliterate you to keep for themselves.</p>
<p>Yeah, that’s fantasy, but
that’s far from all there is.&nbsp; Subgenres
include epic fantasy, urban, contemporary, sword &amp; sorcery, dark,
historical, alternate history, steampunk, Arthurian, comic, mythic, fairy
tales, science, mystery, paranormal, erotic, romantic, and recently I’ve even
heard mention of zombie romantic fantasy. (Yeah, I don’t want to go there
either.)</p>
<p>Since it’d probably take half
the magazine to write about them all, let’s stick with six of the top
sub-genres, which as a beginning fantasy novelist, probably include at least
one of the pools you’ll be dipping your toes into for your first foray in the
worlds of fantasy.</p>
<p>High Fantasy—Also called Epic
Fantasy, this subgenre is what the general population thinks of as
fantasy.&nbsp; At its core is the battle of
good versus evil, the stakes are high, with races, civilization, or even the
entire world at risk. High Fantasy usually takes place in a quasi-Medieval or
Renaissance world.&nbsp; Quests and magic are
an integral part of the plot.&nbsp; The
classic example of this is Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings.</p>
<p>Urban Fantasy—The story takes
place in our world in the present or near-future. The setting is usually in a
city (hence the name “urban”).&nbsp; Magic and
magical/supernatural creatures either exist openly in our world, or covertly
with only a select few (the protagonist and their allies) aware of their existence.&nbsp; Just a few of the more popular creatures
inhabiting the urban fantasy world are monsters, fairies, vampires, werewolves,
ghosts, angels and demons.&nbsp; Two of my
favorite urban fantasy series are The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher, and The Cal
Leandros Novels by Rob Thurman.</p>
<p>My favorite quote about the
difference between High and Urban Fantasy comes from Scottish fantasy novelist,
Alan Campbell: “If high fantasy asked you to embark upon a quest to find a
magic stone, then urban fantasy would be waiting in the shadows, ready to mug
you when you got back.”&nbsp; Priceless.</p>
<p>Contemporary Fantasy—This
sub-genre, like Urban Fantasy, takes place in a modern setting, contains
magical or supernatural creatures, which either live in our world or crossover
from another realm.&nbsp; Also, the creatures
and magic tend to remain secret to the vast majority of the population.&nbsp; Great examples of this sub-genre are Emma
Bull’s War for the Oaks and J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter.</p>
<p>Sword &amp; Sorcery—This is
considered by many to be the “granddaddy of fantasy.”&nbsp; Think Conan the Barbarian.&nbsp; In Sword &amp; Sorcery, the quest is the
thing, with a small band of adventurers getting in dicey and dangerous
situations fighting their way to their goal with plenty of derring-do.&nbsp; Kind of like Dungeons &amp; Dragons in a
book.</p>
<p>Alternate History
Fantasy—Think “what would happen if . . .”&nbsp;
For example, what would happen if the Nazis invaded England and the
elves helped the Brits kick Nazi butt?&nbsp;
The possibilities are nearly endless here.</p>
<p>Steampunk—A relatively new
addition to the fantasy family, Steampunk is alternate history with a
twist.&nbsp; They’re set in the Edwardian or
Victorian era and make cool use of steam-powered technology.&nbsp; A great (and fun) example is Gail Carriger’s
Parasol Protectorate series.</p>
<p>The key when writing any kind
of fantasy is to take the expected and turn it on its head.&nbsp; Or take the tried-and-true and make it your
own.&nbsp; Find your distinctive voice.&nbsp; You’ll know when you get it; your work will
come to life for you.&nbsp; Believe me, if it’s
flat on the page (or screen) for you, it’ll be flat and boring for an agent and
editor. These folks look at literally hundreds of submissions a day—make sure
your work perks them up, not puts them to sleep.</p>
<p>And if the High Fantasy you’re
writing starts to veer into Urban Fantasy or Comic Fantasy territory, don’t
fight it.&nbsp; That’s one of the great things
about fantasy—there are as many successful combinations as your imagination can
dream to life.</p>
<p>So, let your muse out to play
and have fun!</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-05-23 02:51:01 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28640147</guid>
      </item>
      <item>
         <title>So you want to write a fantasy novel?</title>
         <author>calwendorf</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28640150</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p><u>The Shearin Group Lisa National Bestselling Author</u></p>
<p><b><a href="http://www.lisashearin.com/2013/09/24/so-you-want-to-write-a-fantasy-novel/">So
you want to write a fantasy novel</a></b>, or in the case of many first-time
authors—the vaunted “fantasy trilogy.”</p>
<p>That’s how my Raine Benares
series started out—a trilogy.&nbsp; It grew,
as many fantasy series have a tendency to do.&nbsp;
I’m going on six books now, but that’s not why I’m here.&nbsp; I’m here to <b><a href="http://www.scribd.com/lisashearingroup">talk about fantasy</a></b>
and the gazillion permutations and sub-genres thereof.</p>
<p>If you walked up to someone on
the street and asked them what <b><a href="http://lisa-shearin-group.tumblr.com/">fantasy fiction</a></b> was, you’d
probably get the following in some shape or form.&nbsp; Fantasy is when elves, dwarves, humans, and
assorted allies are on a quest to find the long-lost magical thingie or elusive
sacred whatsit, which the bad guys (evil wizard, mad king, and their menacing
minions) will kill, enslave, or obliterate you to keep for themselves.</p>
<p>Yeah, that’s fantasy, but
that’s far from all there is.&nbsp; Subgenres
include epic fantasy, urban, contemporary, sword &amp; sorcery, dark,
historical, alternate history, steampunk, Arthurian, comic, mythic, fairy
tales, science, mystery, paranormal, erotic, romantic, and recently I’ve even
heard mention of zombie romantic fantasy. (Yeah, I don’t want to go there
either.)</p>
<p>Since it’d probably take half
the magazine to write about them all, let’s stick with six of the top
sub-genres, which as a beginning fantasy novelist, probably include at least
one of the pools you’ll be dipping your toes into for your first foray in the
worlds of fantasy.</p>
<p>High Fantasy—Also called Epic
Fantasy, this subgenre is what the general population thinks of as
fantasy.&nbsp; At its core is the battle of
good versus evil, the stakes are high, with races, civilization, or even the
entire world at risk. High Fantasy usually takes place in a quasi-Medieval or
Renaissance world.&nbsp; Quests and magic are
an integral part of the plot.&nbsp; The
classic example of this is Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings.</p>
<p>Urban Fantasy—The story takes
place in our world in the present or near-future. The setting is usually in a
city (hence the name “urban”).&nbsp; Magic and
magical/supernatural creatures either exist openly in our world, or covertly
with only a select few (the protagonist and their allies) aware of their existence.&nbsp; Just a few of the more popular creatures
inhabiting the urban fantasy world are monsters, fairies, vampires, werewolves,
ghosts, angels and demons.&nbsp; Two of my
favorite urban fantasy series are The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher, and The Cal
Leandros Novels by Rob Thurman.</p>
<p>My favorite quote about the
difference between High and Urban Fantasy comes from Scottish fantasy novelist,
Alan Campbell: “If high fantasy asked you to embark upon a quest to find a
magic stone, then urban fantasy would be waiting in the shadows, ready to mug
you when you got back.”&nbsp; Priceless.</p>
<p>Contemporary Fantasy—This
sub-genre, like Urban Fantasy, takes place in a modern setting, contains
magical or supernatural creatures, which either live in our world or crossover
from another realm.&nbsp; Also, the creatures
and magic tend to remain secret to the vast majority of the population.&nbsp; Great examples of this sub-genre are Emma
Bull’s War for the Oaks and J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter.</p>
<p>Sword &amp; Sorcery—This is
considered by many to be the “granddaddy of fantasy.”&nbsp; Think Conan the Barbarian.&nbsp; In Sword &amp; Sorcery, the quest is the
thing, with a small band of adventurers getting in dicey and dangerous
situations fighting their way to their goal with plenty of derring-do.&nbsp; Kind of like Dungeons &amp; Dragons in a
book.</p>
<p>Alternate History
Fantasy—Think “what would happen if . . .”&nbsp;
For example, what would happen if the Nazis invaded England and the
elves helped the Brits kick Nazi butt?&nbsp;
The possibilities are nearly endless here.</p>
<p>Steampunk—A relatively new
addition to the fantasy family, Steampunk is alternate history with a
twist.&nbsp; They’re set in the Edwardian or
Victorian era and make cool use of steam-powered technology.&nbsp; A great (and fun) example is Gail Carriger’s
Parasol Protectorate series.</p>
<p>The key when writing any kind
of fantasy is to take the expected and turn it on its head.&nbsp; Or take the tried-and-true and make it your
own.&nbsp; Find your distinctive voice.&nbsp; You’ll know when you get it; your work will
come to life for you.&nbsp; Believe me, if it’s
flat on the page (or screen) for you, it’ll be flat and boring for an agent and
editor. These folks look at literally hundreds of submissions a day—make sure
your work perks them up, not puts them to sleep.</p>
<p>And if the High Fantasy you’re
writing starts to veer into Urban Fantasy or Comic Fantasy territory, don’t
fight it.&nbsp; That’s one of the great things
about fantasy—there are as many successful combinations as your imagination can
dream to life.</p>
<p>So, let your muse out to play
and have fun!</p>
</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-05-23 02:51:03 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28640150</guid>
      </item>
      <item>
         <title>Revisions and Rewrites by The Lisa
Shearin Group Bestselling Author</title>
         <author>calwendorf</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28738293</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p><b><a href="http://www.lisashearin.com/2013/09/24/revisions-rewrites/">Revisions and rewrites</a></b>—they kind of sound the
same, but they’re not.&nbsp; Not by a long
shot.&nbsp; In my experience, revisions are
just a step or two above tweaking.&nbsp; Simple
problem, easy fix.&nbsp; A rewrite is just
what it sounds like, taking the editing chainsaw to a manuscript to fix some
serious issues (aka screw ups).&nbsp; At least
once, most writers experience that special moment when they realize that their
precious project is a skanky, stinky pile of tripe.&nbsp; Yep, I’ve been there and had to fix
that.&nbsp; It was a lot of work and it wasn’t
pretty, but the results were intensely satisfying once the dust settled.</p>
<p>To avoid the embarrassment of having your critique
group/beta reader/agent/editor witness your writer “duh moment,” it’s
preferable to discover for yourself where your plot train derailed. The red
flags for me should have been characters behaving uncharacteristically and more
than a few chapters that didn’t propel my story forward.&nbsp; They would have been red flags if I hadn’t
been too close to the book to see them.&nbsp;
Fortunately my agent was there to tell me where my plot train had
derailed—and crashed and burned.&nbsp; In the
instant when she pointed out the problem, I immediately saw how that problem
had spawned a snafu, which had caused my first sub-plot to . . .well, you get
the picture.&nbsp; I metaphorically smacked
myself in the forehead for being too dense not to have seen it all myself.&nbsp; I knew I had a rewrite on my hands, not a
revision.&nbsp; At that point, there was
nothing left to do but put on my hazmat suit and wade in.</p>
<p>I had a book contract and was on a deadline, so not
fixing the book was not an option.&nbsp; But
if you’re what I like to call “pre-published,” you might be tempted to throw in
the towel when faced with what you see as a book with insurmountable
problems.&nbsp; I’m here to tell you that it’s
never as bad as you think.&nbsp; If your core
story is solid, everything else can be fixed.&nbsp;
The key is to fix one problem at a time.&nbsp;
And if your solution causes more problems further on in the book than it
solves, you simply discard it and find another solution.&nbsp; For me, the key was to keep my emotions out
it, to look at my book from a dispassionate point of view, and to dissect it to
find the best way to fix it—not the easiest way, but the best way—the way I
knew would give me the best book possible.</p>
<p>And when the rewrite was done, the dust had settled,
and the finished book was on my editor’s desk, I was proud of more than that
book.&nbsp; I was proud of myself for digging
in, doing the work, and not giving up.</p>
<p>So who was my literary problem child?&nbsp; My second book Armed &amp; Magical, which
went on to become my first <b><a href="https://lisashearingoupbestsellinggroup.wordpress.com/2014/05/23/so-you-want-to-write-a-fantasy-novel/">national bestseller</a></b>.</p>

</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-05-26 01:48:58 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28738293</guid>
      </item>
      <item>
         <title>Lisa Shearin Group Bestselling Author: Research—How
much is too much?</title>
         <author>calwendorf</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28793090</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p>Most writers (myself included)
can’t look up a word in the dictionary without stopping to read other nifty
stuff along the way. (Yeah, writers are probably some of the few people who
find dictionaries cool.) Sometimes I get so engrossed in reading other stuff
that I forget the word I was looking up in the first place. The same thing can
happen with <b><a href="http://www.lisashearin.com/2013/09/24/research-how-much-is-too-much-2/">research</a></b>.</p>
<p>For certain genres, it’s
critical to do at least some research before you start <b>writing</b>. Say you’re doing an urban fantasy, thriller, mystery,
romance, or pretty much anything that takes place in an actual non-make-believe
place. You have to know about the place where your story is set, pertinent
details about your characters’ professions, and any items that your characters
might either have or use—for example a Prada bag or night vision goggles—or,
even more intriguing, both.&nbsp; When you’re
dealing with actual places and real things, it’s critical that you get the
details right. Your readers will know, and they’ll call you on it if you try to
fake anything. But at the same time, we <b>writers</b>
can get so engrossed in digging out those fun facts and details that before we
know it, our deadlines are a heck of a lot closer than they should be. So do
the research you need to get it right, then get back to work. You can always
read more about Elizabethan country house architecture later.</p>
<p>Then there’s the question of
how much of your research to include. When it comes to weaving in authentic
details about your protagonist’s career, for instance, your readers don’t want
to know every aspect of a character’s daily work life. However, well-placed
details that pertain to your character’s personality or have a direct impact on
the plot will make the story more real and help draw your readers in. The
devil’s in the details, so never underestimate their importance for enriching
your story.</p>
<p>However, research doesn’t have
to be dry fact finding. It can help you to differentiate your characters and
your work. It’s important to read what’s popular in your chosen genre, so you know
what’s been done to death. And since you’ll have plenty of competition for
readers’ attention, whatever you write has to be different, or take what the
readers expect and turn it on its head for a fun twist. It’s worked great for
me with my goblins. Most people think of goblins as gnarled, ugly, with
post-nasal drip, and either stupid or only moderately clever. I went with tall,
sexy, chiseled features, and a formidable intellect. It was different from any
other goblin out there, and it’s gotten me a lot of nice attention.</p>
<p>Research can help you set your
work apart by enriching your book with details, inspiring you to strike out in
a different direction, and taking a character type that’s become a cliché and
spinning it into something fresh.&nbsp;
Something that is uniquely you.</p>
</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-05-27 01:40:03 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28793090</guid>
      </item>
      <item>
         <title>Really get to know your characters by The
Lisa Shearin Group Bestselling Author</title>
         <author>calwendorf</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28873941</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p>For
me, hitting a snag in a book usually happens like this: I’m writing,
everything’s going great, I’m in the zone and the words are flowing.&nbsp; Then I move on to the next scene or chapter
and I hit a wall.&nbsp; The writing slows to a
trickle or stops dead in its tracks, and my characters refuse to
cooperate.&nbsp; And the only thing
force-feeding words into their mouths is going to get me is more bogged down.</p>
<p>Most
often the problem is that I don’t feel comfortable with the scene, and if I’m
not comfortable, my <b><a href="http://www.lisashearin.com/2013/09/24/really-get-to-know-your-characters/">characters</a></b>
aren’t comfortable. All this discomfort boils down to one of two things—either
I’m writing the wrong scene for the wrong time in the book, or the scene
doesn’t belong in the book. Period.</p>
<p>But
what if I know it’s the right scene at the right time and the words still
aren’t flowing? When I’m in the zone, it’s like I’m eavesdropping on my
characters and typing what they’re saying as fast as I can. It’s like a
“runner’s high” for writers. To get into the zone, I have to do two things:
shut up and listen.</p>
<p>I’m
a bit of a control freak and that control seeps onto the page or screen.
Listening seems like such a simple thing, but it ain’t easy to do.&nbsp; Writers on a deadline want to control the
direction their book takes, the pace at which it is written, and the schedule
that it should stick to. I’m on my fourth book and it’s just now starting to
sink through my thick skull that I really don’t have much, if any, control over
these things, and I never will. A book is a creative work, and creativity
refuses to punch a time clock.</p>
<p>The
only way I can get the words flowing again is to sit quietly and completely
immerse myself in the scene.&nbsp; I’ve been
with my characters a long time and I know them well. But just like family and
friends, my characters will occasionally throw me a curve ball.&nbsp; Like real people, characters grow and
change.&nbsp; I learn more about them with
each book.&nbsp; Their personalities, physical
mannerisms, and the way they talk and react in a given situation changes over
time.</p>
<p>The
key to good writing is to get to know your characters just as well as you know
the real people in your life.&nbsp; I should
probably say “flesh-and-blood” people, because as most writers will tell you,
their characters are like real people to them.</p>
<p>You
know what your husband/wife/significant other/best friend would say or do in
any given situation because you know them that well.&nbsp; Though sometimes they will surprise you and
do something completely different and unexpected.&nbsp; It’s what keeps life interesting.&nbsp; And when the same thing happens with your
characters, and you capture it in your book, it’s what will keep your readers
turning the pages.</p>

</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-05-28 01:07:13 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28873941</guid>
      </item>
      <item>
         <title>The Lisa Shearin Group Bestselling Author: Plots, plans, and party crashers</title>
         <author>calwendorf</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28955171</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p>Most
<b><a href="http://www.lisashearin.com/2013/09/24/plots-plans-and-party-crashers-2/"><span>writers plot out their books</span></a></b> to
some degree. Some go with a loose sketch; others know exactly what happens from
A to Z. I’m glad I’m not the former, I envy the later.&nbsp; I fall somewhere in the middle.</p>
<p>For me, plotting a <b><a href="http://www.epubbud.com/book.php?g=F5HVVFLA"><span>book</span></a></b>
is just like writing one—some parts are inspired and I can’t write fast enough,
other times I’m completely and utterly stuck, and I wonder if pounding my head
against the nearest wall will shake loose some ideas. Tempting to try, but I’ve
always managed to resist that urge.&nbsp; I’ve
had a concussion before. Not fun.</p>
<p>My ideas come to me in bits
and pieces, parts of dialogue and chunks of chapters. Then comes the
“sitting/pondering/staring at the computer” part of the writing process.&nbsp; Or what comes to me at 4 a.m., or in the
shower, or driving home from work. The subconscious mind is a wonderful thing.
It works 24/7. I don’t work 24/7 (though my husband would be the first to
dispute that claim).&nbsp; The human gray
matter has to go through all kinds of contortions to determine how a book gets
from beginning to end, where the main characters make their entrance, what
turns a snooze-fest of a plot into a page-turner of a novel.</p>
<p>First there’s the struggle to
get what’s in my head onto the screen. But mainly my problem is that I’m still
working out the guts of the story while I’m writing it. I know the beginning,
some scenes scattered throughout the book, and I know the ending. The trick is
to come up with the story to link all of those together while staring down the
barrel of a tight deadline.</p>
<p>But sometimes you end up
tossing it all out the window.</p>
<p>Say you’re happily writing
along, everything going according to plan. Character A is behaving perfectly.
Then Character B—or even a character you’ve never met before—suddenly enters
the scene. Everything changes. Dang it! So much for your plotline, right?</p>
<p>Wrong. It’s become my
experience that this is a very good thing. It means that your story is taking
on even more of a life of its own. It means that your muse is in residence, and
she’s just vetoed your plan, staged an intervention, whatever you want to call
it, to keep you from doing something stupid that you’ll regret later.</p>
<p>Whenever this happens to me,
I’ve learned to run, don’t walk, after the interfering Character B. That
character knows what they’re doing and why they’re there even if you don’t. The
key here is to go with the flow. Some of my most fun characters have come into
existence by crashing my plot party. In a book, party crashers are always
welcome. For me, they’re either being pulled into a dark alley, or pushed out
of a bar. I’ve learned to pay attention to these people. They’re worth watching
and listening to—and they’ll keep your readers turning the pages.</p>

</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-05-29 01:48:34 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/28955171</guid>
      </item>
      <item>
         <title>The Lisa Shearin Group Bestselling Author:
Momentum matters and persistence pays</title>
         <author>calwendorf</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/29085881</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p>As I discover every day, no daily <b><a href="http://www.lisashearin.com/2013/09/24/momentum-matters-and-persistence-pays-2/">writing session</a></b> stands alone, each hour of work,
each day of work ties to the one before—and connects to the one to come after.
Writing builds on itself.</p>
<p>With everything we all have going on in our daily
lives, our minds can only be expected to hold on to a plotline for so long.
Let’s face it, life gets in the way.&nbsp; I’m
a walking/talking example—I’m a month behind my personal schedule as a result
of real life (and two colds) keeping me from writing. Life has an annoying
tendency to take our minds away from our characters and make us talk to and interact
with actual living, breathing people. When this happens and I get back to my
writing, what momentum I’d built up has gone bye-bye.&nbsp; Then I have to take valuable writing time to
go back over what I’d done before to bring myself back up to speed.</p>
<p>It’s not just the words that we lose our grasp on
when we don’t (or can’t) write every day. A particular character’s emotional
state, emotions they had in the scene where you stopped were right there,
bubbling on the surface of your consciousness, ready to be tapped again. If you
lose a day or two, that bubbling has stopped.</p>
<p>To write every day takes discipline and persistence.
Discipline to do it, and persistence to see it through to the end of the book,
and beyond to getting an agent and publisher.&nbsp;
For those who want it badly enough, the dream of reaching that final
goal is enough to keep us moving forward. There are plenty of roadblocks: life,
family and friends who don’t understand (or worse yet, who don’t believe in
you), and just the cold, hard truth that writing is hard work. It’s lonely
work. If you want to be a published writer, you have to trudge on despite all
of this.</p>
<p>I have a full-time job, so carving out time to write
wasn’t (and still isn’t) easy; but I really wanted to be published, so I found
the time. I started writing on a more regular schedule, and I could see the
improvement. And when I saw the improvement, I wanted to write more. With that
came confidence and a determination to reach my goal.</p>
<p>I’d still be writing even if I wasn’t published,
because writing isn’t just what I do—writing is who I am. It’s like an
addiction, you can’t stop, and you don’t want to. When I’m not writing, I’m
thinking about writing. When I’m writing, I’m happy. When I’m between projects,
I can get a little cranky. Just ask my amazingly patient and supportive
husband.</p>
<p>Writing for publication is like any other goal worth
working and fighting for.&nbsp; You have to
put your nose to the proverbial grindstone and just do the work. Believe me,
after working for it for over twenty years, it is so worth it.</p>

</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-06-01 00:50:55 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/calwendorf/lisa-shearin/wish/29085881</guid>
      </item>
   </channel>
</rss>
