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Dos and Don’ts of Getting Published Part Two )O(

My Mom’s pot of nasturtiums!

Merry meet all,

Today’s post is about more advice on getting your writing onto bookshelves in major retail stores across the country. Don’t we all wish it was so easy? I do. 

The road to success in publication is hard. It was never intended to be easy. There is no such thing as overnight success. If this is the path that you -and me, want, then plan to be working very hard at it. Very hard. Grab a coffee and settle in. It is daunting and may seem impossible, but millions of other more established writers had to start somewhere, right? Right. 

 

I just signed up for the Autocrit Novel90 Writing Challenge! A new horror novel idea is swimming like a (imagine scary fish) in your head. It won’t leave me alone. That is how I know that is what I should write. I have to write a novel in 90 days. I am up for thchallenge! This is one great way to get that novel written, by signing up for these challenges. The challenge forces you to write. I really want to write my new novel so this ensures it will be done! 

  • Do not use AI to help you write your novel or screenplay. Ever. Nope. Nil. Don’t do it. AI is a flashy siren song, sure, but these days, publishers, editors and literay agents can test your writing upon submission and automatically reject your submission/s. It won’t even get a chance, not even a tiny chance. If you want, you can even test your own writing for AI detection prior to submission. So you do still have to write it and edit it YOURSELF. 
  • Instead, do this. Once you have written your draft and taken some time from it, then looked at it with fresh eyes ( and that is all highly recommended, btw), enlist a trusted team of beta readers to help you where you may have overlooked theme, dialogue, plot or setting issues that need revision. I would never send out my writing without asking for a second or even third set of eyes on it. Beta read for them too. This is what I mean by building a support network of fellow writers. You can rally for each other when the going gets hard. And it will. But don’t give up!
  • Branding. Build a brand for yourself. First, decide which genre you love to write in. Look at which authors you love to read, which movies you most love to watch or your favorite podcasts. Do they all have something in common? Do you like westerns with a smidge of sci-fi? Do you prefer gritty grim dark? Or do police procedurals, mysteries or thrillers catch your eye? My brand is Conjuror of Gothic Horror. Publishers, editors and readers all know what to expect from me. I love gothic stories and I love to read them. I love the movies The Woman in Black, The Conjuring, Alien, the Grimm series, the Stranger Things series, Practical Magic and my favourite all time podcast is Lights Out Podcast. Now you get an idea of the genre I write in and enjoy. That’s an example of branding. 
  • Read what other authors have written. I have an unquenchable thirst for the written word. I devoured Necrotek by Jonathan Maberry, The Relic by Tim Lebbon, My Heart is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones, and countless other books. If you want to be a writer, read. Read in your chosen genre so you can see how other authors have done it, and read everything you can. Read anything you can get your mitts on. 
  • Find and read or subscribe to magazines for writers such as Writers Digest. Take the courses they offer. I’ve been reading Writers Digest magazine since I could stand. I love their magazines. I get a new issue every time it comes out. I also read Rue Morgue, magazines about the paranormal. I have about fifty magazines on the paranormal. I read, read, read. It has helped improve my writing a thousand times over. 
  • Take writing courses or join a mentorship. Participate in writing conferences or conventions. Just don’t expect to automatically score a lit agent on a novel at the convention asap. But those writing programs and conventions are a great way to meet people, meet professionals in the industry and learn so much more. Keep an open mind, leave your writing – and ego – at home and enjoy the experience. Do bring a blank journal if you wish and scribble in notes, names or maybe any inspirations you dream up. Some courses offer monthly payment options if money is tight. You can learn a lot from those opportunities. 
  • Be patient. Develop a thick skin for rejection letters and have patience. Nothing in publishing is instant. It takes time to be able to be good enough to have your writing published and it takes even longer from book contract to actual publication. Be grateful for what you do get and be nice to fellow authors and editors. Learn from the professionals. Rejections are inevitable. It just means that your writing was not right for that market. I get them too. I keep sending out my writing. Eventually with effort and luck, you can find the right markets for your stories too. 
  • This next tip ties in with what I was saying above. If you choose the paranormal- this is just an example, learn everything you can about it. I have learned all about the different famous hauntings in the world, read lots of magazines, and listened to a ton of podcasts on that subject. It is as deep as it is wide. 
  • The best tip I can give you is: Don’t Quit. You are not doing yourself a favor. If you quit, you will never know if you could have been your best self. You will be replaced by thousands of other writers who will be more than happy to take your place. This field suffers no fools. If you quit, you will never get that contract. So sit your butt in the chair and type. No one sees you writing, no one sees you editing except for Fido your cat, no one sees you rip that rejection letter to shreds. I know. It is hard work and there will be days when you will want to quit, but DON’T! The way ahead is hard and paved with very litte reward, especially at first when you get started. You need to be deeply dedicated to your craft. Like I said earlier, agents and publishers get tons of submissions all the time. Very few succeed in the ways we all dream about. But I can tell you if you quit, you will never know what you are capable of achieving. Look at me, a teacher once told my mother I would never be able to read. Flash forward to the future. Here I am, with a publishing contract, about to have my novella republished, written a thousand + blog posts, and had lots of short stories, poems and nonfiction published. It can be done! 
    • YOu just have to put in the effort. Believe in yourself! Perseverance is more important than talent! 

 

Blessed Be, Spiderwitch )O(

 

 

 

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The dos and don’ts of getting published 101 )O(

Merry meet all,

Today’s post is about my advice in getting your writing published. I have a novella published and so I want to share my experience and knowledge with you. First I want to say that Wicked Shadow Press has published my 12th flash fiction story, The Uninvited, in their anthology, Exorcists of the Dead: Diabolique. I want to buy the two anthologies and I can’t wait to read the stories. I bet they will make my spine shiver and keep me awake at night. 

I improve my own writing by reading what others have written. I believe it will be easier for me to pen a possession story if I see what scares and horrors were dreamed up by my fellow writers. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I want to share personal experiences about publishing with you today, dear readers. Think of this as a – what you do and don’t do – to get published. During my career, I have had many wonderful experiences in working with editors and been shown amazing support from fellow writers, even when they were more successful than me. I wish the same for you, my dear readers. I have also had a few negative experiences too. But it has all been mostly good. That’s what counts. 

The tips for getting published 101:

  • Send your very very best writing. You get 1 opportunity to impress an editor, publisher or literary agent.  One. Even if you are under contract, the author is expected to do 99% of the editing work. They will guide you along the way, but never expect them to do all the work. That is unrealistic. Do your very best. Get help from a friendly fellow writer or find a trusted circle of beta readers. 
  • Do not go alone in your writing career. They always say, it takes a village. It’s true. Having a circle of supportive writers that you help and that equally help you is the best thing you can do for yourself.  I’m a member of the Horror Writers Association  and I love it. I love all the amazing support I receive. 
  • Learn how to proofread, edit and do revisions on your own. Brush up on your grammar and proofreading skills. Learn how to do a developmental revision on your own too. Writers who can competently perform their own edits are given more attention to and possibly contracts than those who are sloppy and never make any effort. Buy a grammar book or two and practice on yourself or someone else’s writing. 
  • Learning how to do your own developmental edit on your writing will save you thousands of dollars in the future. You have to learn what your writing and stories need. You have to be your best own harsh jduge, a merciless judge of your own writing. I said that you have only one chance to ever impress an editor. Make it count. Make it count by pushing yourself to be the best you can be and your writing by not submitting a manuscript before it’s ready. You will know when it’s ready. You have to be willing to make mistakes, learn from them and improve on your own. That’s when you are getting somewhere as a writer. 
  • If you won’t take it seriously, neither will they. They will champion you if you are willing to go above and beyond what you thought was your very best. They receive manuscripts from thousands of hopefuls. In order to stand out with an ORIGINAL story, (more on that soon), you have to professional and confident and know that you have put all the required hard work in. They will too. 
  • This is not meant to discourage you from writing. This is meant to push you to succeed. 
  • If you are ever lucky enough to snag a publishing contract – and I hope that come true for my readers, do not nag or harass the editors. You are not the only author out there. They have a million things to do and they are very busy people. If they love your story, they will be in touch. While you wait for your book to be produced, write another book, poem, story or play. Keep reading, keep improving your writing and keep trying. 
  • Write the first draft with abandon. That is the creative process. Writing the first draft -when you can dream and be messy. You are free to get it all out on paper. Publishing is a business. During the revisions and editing stage, you polish the manuscript. During the early revisions, you can still be messy and creative, even rewrite the drafts a few times, maybe fifity times. But when you are getting it ready for publication, you have to cast a cold eye on your story, novel or screenplay. That is when you write and edit for readers. When I wrote the first early drafts of The Cult of the Spider People, a lot was edited out of the book with the generous aid of Stephanie Ellis. By the time it was published, I no longer recognized my manuscript. Fifteen pages of the characters just standing there and talking was omitted and reworked. Edit, edit, and edit some more. 
  • There is a huge difference between when you falsely believe your mauscript is ready and when it actually is. Sending your ms out before it’s ready is what gets you rejection letters. Be open to getting rejection letters. I have twelve flash fiction stories published by Wicked Shadow Press. I know that not all of the stories were written as the best they could be. But my most recent one, Halloween Candy, I edited it to be the best flash fiction story I ever wrote. It was a completely changed story. You have to edit as best as you possiby can so your story even stands a chance during submissions. 
  • I subscribed to Autocrit.com. I love it. I found a new supportive community of writers and I participated in their horror and paranormal writing courses. I have learned so much and I will miss the teachers, especially Gareth. He is amazing. I have learned a lot from him. In the writing/ publishing world, be openminded and never stop learning. 
  • Know how to market your own book. Publishers these days expect authors to do a big chunk of the marketing themselves. Yup that’s right. It helps to identify your target readers before submitting a novel to get published. That can help you to know how to market the book. It might be a good idea to focus on that before and during submissions. 
  • Write the book that only you can write. Write without fear, write with abandon. Editors are not looking for the next mockup of Stephen King’s Pet Cemetery  or It. They are looking for your book. Be original. They have seen it all. Do something no one has even thought of before. It does not always have to be your first novel idea. It can be your 20th idea. If it won’t leave you alone in your head when you are out drinking, driving or dreaming, that is the one you explore. 
  • Create something born from your passions in life, what gets under your skin. What gets you out of bed in the morning? Do what rallies you, angers you or inspires you. Do it all. If you work nights at a morgue, have you ever seen something scary or unusual while working there? I would read that. Do you work the night shift in a cemetery? There’s potential for a creepy story. I heard a story about a local witch who pissed off every other witch in her coven by trying to wake the dead on Samhain Eve/ October 1st. See if you can pen a story from that. Necromancy is generally or should be forbidden. Don’t try it on your own, but it sure could make for a spine-tingling story. 
  • You can have a huge oak/ mahogany wood desk to write at, but I have been writing for years using a simple desk/ table and a computer (desktop monitor). I buy pens, notebooks, and other writing supplies. I love Staples. The point here is, you have to write. You write and write and write. You always have to improve on your self and your writing. You can own the most state of the art laptop or chromebook, but you still have to write. Go ahead and invest in an external hard drive, fountain pens if you wish, a thousand ebooks, a big coffee mug. But you still have to write. Always save your files and back them up regularly on that external hard drive. But you still have to write. 

I hope these tips will help and inspire you to pen your own stories. They are meant to encourage, not discourage. I can’t wait to see what you achieve. 

Bright Blessings, Spiderwitch

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The Feminine Macabre

Merry meet all,

I am very excited to announce I’ll be featured in the all-female paranormal journal The Feminine Macabre Volume 2. It will be released in August 2021.

Volume 2 of The Feminine Macabre is out in a couple of months and look at the amazing list of writers who have contributed to this volume and if you’ve not heard of this before, search online for Volume 1 or if you’re UK based click here: amazon.co.uk/Feminine-Macab

The Feminine Macabre is an all-female paranormal journal. Paranormal investigating is not the exclusive domain of men. Damn right. Woman are way more in touch with their intuition. Ghosts are not exactly tangible. It does require having a sharp sixth sense to detect ghosts anyway. That is not what most men do. I am not trying to be sexist here. Paranormal investigations are very scientific too. It is just fascinating. 

I am proud to be included in this journal. It is the first all-female paranormal journal I have heard of. Volume 1 contains a foreword written by Patti Neghri, of Ghost Adventures. I don’t know who is writing the foreword for Volume 2. I am sure both journals will contain fascinating stories. I can’t wait to read both journals. My article focuses on the unsettling true history of my beloved haunted hometown of Halifax, Nova Scotia. 

I will help promote the second issue of The Feminine Macabre. Amanda, the editor and genius of this project is hosting interviews on Facebook. I can’t wait to be a part of that! This all sounds so exciting. I don’t get paid for this but I do get a free copy. I am so happy to be involved that I don’t mind that I am not paid. The payoff is this opportunity. I am very grateful. 

I just happened upon the website Spookeats. It is how I got involved in this. Good thing too! Hm, now that the lockdown is over, I may dive back into my solo paranormal investigating. 

Till then, stay spooky

Blessings, Spiderwitch

 

 

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