Monday, April 23, 2012

Maryland Romance Writers May Workshop


We're low in numbers for our May workshop and need your help! Please post in whatever groups you belong to and in your private blogs as well. Thanks!

Please feel free to share and distribute!

The Maryland Romance Writers is proud to announce our May Workshop, Show Up Naked: Writing the Male POV.

Class Dates: May 1-29
Class Fees: $20 for MRW Members and $25 for non-MRW Members

Workshop Description

This class will take you on a funny and fun journey of discovery about men including why they act the way they do and how they express emotions. You'll discover how our society has socialized them and the stages they go through in life. At the end of class you will be able to write more realistic male characters while keeping them larger than life heroes.

Teacher Bio

Chris Redding grew up in a neighborhood with more boys than girls and learned to love baseball and hate Barbies. She spent much of her life in male dominated professions including pizza delivery and Emergency Medical Services. She graduated from Penn State with a degree in journalism. She has five books published, all romantic suspense.

To sign up for this workshop, please visit:

http://www.marylandromancewriters.com/may-workshop/

For more information about this or any other MRW workshop, please email amyvil at comcast dot net.

Maryland Romance Writers May Workshop


We're low in numbers for our May workshop and need your help! Please post in whatever groups you belong to and in your private blogs as well. Thanks!

Please feel free to share and distribute!

The Maryland Romance Writers is proud to announce our May Workshop, Show Up Naked: Writing the Male POV.

Class Dates: May 1-29
Class Fees: $20 for MRW Members and $25 for non-MRW Members

Workshop Description

This class will take you on a funny and fun journey of discovery about men including why they act the way they do and how they express emotions. You'll discover how our society has socialized them and the stages they go through in life. At the end of class you will be able to write more realistic male characters while keeping them larger than life heroes.

Teacher Bio

Chris Redding grew up in a neighborhood with more boys than girls and learned to love baseball and hate Barbies. She spent much of her life in male dominated professions including pizza delivery and Emergency Medical Services. She graduated from Penn State with a degree in journalism. She has five books published, all romantic suspense.

To sign up for this workshop, please visit:

http://www.marylandromancewriters.com/may-workshop/

For more information about this or any other MRW workshop, please email amyvil at comcast dot net.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Loved Fast Draft!

For two weeks from April 1 until April 14, I worked with a group of wonderful women from one of my local RWA chapters in doing a Fast Draft and let me tell you, it made a believer out of me.

Fast Draft is program set up and created by the wonderful Candace Havens to help plotters and pantsers alike get the first draft of a story started (or finished).  It was similar to Boot Camp for this Navy Veteran--but in a good way.  I learned just how far I could reach a goal.  Though I did keep up with the grueling 5,000 words a day for the first five days of the two week session, Easter weekend tripped me up but I still maintained a comfortable, approximately 2,000-4,500 words a day from there on.

At the end of the two weeks instead of having the 70,000 words intended (if you continue with 5k a day for two weeks), I still had a satisfying 45,000 words.  If you consider NaNoWriMo, the program in which you write 50,000 words in a month it--45k in two week is not too shabby at all.  (Yes, I've done two years of NaNoWriMo so I know 50k in a month can be done, too.)

But more importantly whether I made 'the' goal, I learned some valuable lessons. 
  • I needed something to inspire me to just sit and write again (don't think-just write).
  • I can set daily writing goals and achieve a good number of words a day.  Even a couple thousand words a day can get a story done.
  • I can be like the great Nora Roberts and write for 6-8 hours a day and pump out 5,000 words --though she probably has a higher word count. (Just might not be able to do it all the time).  Love her and her stamina! She's my heroine!
  • I learned my characters write the story--I'm just along for the ride.  (Which I hear is fabulous from some authors I've talked to lately.)
  • It's okay to have your plot change a bit--just keep writing. Don't stop!  Make the changes and editions later. (Take notes as you go along.)
  • Setting up 1,000 words in an hour (1k1h) sessions is fun for you and friends.  Take breaks in between to exercise, catch up on housework (change over that load of laundry), pick up the kids from school, prep dinner, etc.  MAKE SURE YOU STRETCH AND GET UP!  (Otherwise you will be sore and stiff.)
With these lessons in mind I realized even though I'm still pre-published, I CAN be the author I always dreamed of being.  I CAN get a first draft done in a month or less, I DO have time to write, I CAN still have a family life and my writing life.

Loved Fast Draft!

For two weeks from April 1 until April 14, I worked with a group of wonderful women from one of my local RWA chapters in doing a Fast Draft and let me tell you, it made a believer out of me.

Fast Draft is program set up and created by the wonderful Candace Havens to help plotters and pantsers alike get the first draft of a story started (or finished).  It was similar to Boot Camp for this Navy Veteran--but in a good way.  I learned just how far I could reach a goal.  Though I did keep up with the grueling 5,000 words a day for the first five days of the two week session, Easter weekend tripped me up but I still maintained a comfortable, approximately 2,000-4,500 words a day from there on.

At the end of the two weeks instead of having the 70,000 words intended (if you continue with 5k a day for two weeks), I still had a satisfying 45,000 words.  If you consider NaNoWriMo, the program in which you write 50,000 words in a month it--45k in two week is not too shabby at all.  (Yes, I've done two years of NaNoWriMo so I know 50k in a month can be done, too.)

But more importantly whether I made 'the' goal, I learned some valuable lessons. 
  • I needed something to inspire me to just sit and write again (don't think-just write).
  • I can set daily writing goals and achieve a good number of words a day.  Even a couple thousand words a day can get a story done.
  • I can be like the great Nora Roberts and write for 6-8 hours a day and pump out 5,000 words --though she probably has a higher word count. (Just might not be able to do it all the time).  Love her and her stamina! She's my heroine!
  • I learned my characters write the story--I'm just along for the ride.  (Which I hear is fabulous from some authors I've talked to lately.)
  • It's okay to have your plot change a bit--just keep writing. Don't stop!  Make the changes and editions later. (Take notes as you go along.)
  • Setting up 1,000 words in an hour (1k1h) sessions is fun for you and friends.  Take breaks in between to exercise, catch up on housework (change over that load of laundry), pick up the kids from school, prep dinner, etc.  MAKE SURE YOU STRETCH AND GET UP!  (Otherwise you will be sore and stiff.)
With these lessons in mind I realized even though I'm still pre-published, I CAN be the author I always dreamed of being.  I CAN get a first draft done in a month or less, I DO have time to write, I CAN still have a family life and my writing life.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Furious Fast Drafting!

Happy April Fools Day everyone!

With a week of prepping with a new plot for an old story (Immortal Heat--yes, I know my Critter friends, but I had to do it), I have headed into Fast Draft.  A two week, 5.000 words a day for fourteen straight days tour into wild writing--and nothing but writing!  I'm hoping to see 70,000+ words to the story by the 14th.

I managed to start the story a bit early last night with 3,143 words to kick it off.  Today I put in another 5,512 which made my Fast Draft goal, my 100x100 goal with Writing GIAM 100x100 which I am also doing rather well with, thank you.

Now, I'm off to bed, for tomorrow is another day.

G'night!  And Sleep Sweet!

Furious Fast Drafting!

Happy April Fools Day everyone!

With a week of prepping with a new plot for an old story (Immortal Heat--yes, I know my Critter friends, but I had to do it), I have headed into Fast Draft.  A two week, 5.000 words a day for fourteen straight days tour into wild writing--and nothing but writing!  I'm hoping to see 70,000+ words to the story by the 14th.

I managed to start the story a bit early last night with 3,143 words to kick it off.  Today I put in another 5,512 which made my Fast Draft goal, my 100x100 goal with Writing GIAM 100x100 which I am also doing rather well with, thank you.

Now, I'm off to bed, for tomorrow is another day.

G'night!  And Sleep Sweet!