Excerpt from Interview With Thriller Author Diane Capri
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Today’s post is written
by Debra Eve.
What can you tell writers with families and day jobs about keeping the
faith?
I often speak to groups of aspiring authors
who worry that they’ll never “make it,” because the field is “too crowded”
and they’re “not good enough” and it’s “too hard to get published.” I tell
them the truth: Believe me, not everyone wants to write a book.
In fact, millions of people don’t even want to
read a book, let alone write one. Yes, writing is a competitive business.
What work of any value is not competitive? But I believe that desire is a
gift; we don’t desire to do things we have no talent for; and if you have a
desire to write, you have at least some talent for it.
I can easily prove this to you by
demonstrating all the things I have absolutely no desire to do, and even less
talent for. (Like football. Seriously? Not only do I throw like a girl, I
can’t catch, either!) If you have the desire to write, you have talent, and
it’s up to you to develop that talent.
There are so many platitudes out there about
never giving up and perseverance. But they’re all true. You can’t succeed if
you don’t try. Don’t
get discouraged when you hear “overnight success” stories. Most of
the time, overnight success takes at least ten years!
The best news in today’s market is that
writers can self-publish and actually reach our readers, which gives us all
so many more options than we had before. Almost every author I know is
self-publishing something. (And I know a lot of authors!)
If you have the desire and you’re willing to
do the work, you can be a published author. No extraordinary faith required.
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Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Keeping the Faith
Sunday, April 1, 2012
SKULLS
Skulls adorning a landscape of hills
Teetering beside chasms
cut brown into green softness.
In the foreground, a folding of green
like my green crumpled dress
which I wore
when I went out with Robbie
who doesn't want me anymore.
I thought of the skulls
And how one day I'd be one.
Why wait fifty years?
They are flying above me
Against the skyline
like balloons of methane gas.
I want to be up there with them
looking down on my desolate world.
Laurel Lamperd
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Love to Read

Do you like to read? Do you like to write? Suzannah from Write It Sideways suggests that writers will write better if they are also readers.
Read the excerpt below. Contact suzannah@writeitsideways.com
to read the rest of the article.
1. Renew Your Love of Reading
Do you remember the first book you ever loved,
perhaps one that was read to you over and over again as a child? Or the first
book you read all by yourself? Or that love
story you read as a teenager that made you fall in love with falling
in love?
“All good books are alike in that they are truer than if they had really
happened and after you are finished reading one you will feel that all that
happened to you and afterwards it all belongs to you; the good and the bad, the
ecstasy, the remorse and sorrow, the people and the places and how the weather
was.” — Ernest Hemingway
I’m wiling to bet there isn’t a writer, dead or
alive, who hasn’t been transformed by reading. But when was the last time you
got lost in a wonderful story?
If you believe, as I do, that writers do half
the work and readers do the other half, then the act of reading is an act of writing.
Maybe we need a new word to describe this
phenomenon, but for right now, make a writerly commitment to enjoy reading on a
regular basis. Make a date with the library or that pile of books on your
nightstand, and rediscover the joy of reading.
Do you remember the first book you ever loved,
perhaps one that was read to you over and over again as a child? Or the first
book you read all by yourself? Or that love
story you read as a teenager that made you fall in love with falling
in love?
“All good books are alike in that they are truer than if they had really
happened and after you are finished reading one you will feel that all that
happened to you and afterwards it all belongs to you; the good and the bad, the
ecstasy, the remorse and sorrow, the people and the places and how the weather
was.” — Ernest Hemingway
I’m wiling to bet there isn’t a writer, dead or
alive, who hasn’t been transformed by reading. But when was the last time you
got lost in a wonderful story?
If you believe, as I do, that writers do half
the work and readers do the other half, then the act of reading is an act of writing.
Maybe we need a new word to describe this
phenomenon, but for right now, make a writerly commitment to enjoy reading on a
regular basis. Make a date with the library or that pile of books on your
nightstand, and rediscover the joy of reading.
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Defining a Paragraph

How do you define a paragraph? Jessica Crockett, a member of YAWRITE@LISTS.PSU.EDU>
gives her view.
There is no hard and fast rule, but a paragraph should generally contain a
single 'thought' or 'idea'. This could be a phrase one character speaks, the
description of a place (which may be quite a long paragraph), or a coherent
bite of something like action where one major thing is happening.
Sometimes there will be one point in a paragraph, but sometimes there may
also be several unified points (this tends to happen more often in formal
writing like essays or other non-fiction works rather than in fiction, where
very long paragraphs risk slowing the pace of the work). A paragraph break
is also used to give readers a pause where one seems to be needed.
You really have to do it by feel.
single 'thought' or 'idea'. This could be a phrase one character speaks, the
description of a place (which may be quite a long paragraph), or a coherent
bite of something like action where one major thing is happening.
Sometimes there will be one point in a paragraph, but sometimes there may
also be several unified points (this tends to happen more often in formal
writing like essays or other non-fiction works rather than in fiction, where
very long paragraphs risk slowing the pace of the work). A paragraph break
is also used to give readers a pause where one seems to be needed.
You really have to do it by feel.
I was told when I began to write - one new paragraph for each character's dialogue. This was
turned on its head when in some classic novels more than one character spoke in
the same paragraph. I have decided on a new paragraph for each character
in my writing. Like Jessica says - you really have to do it by feel.
turned on its head when in some classic novels more than one character spoke in
the same paragraph. I have decided on a new paragraph for each character
in my writing. Like Jessica says - you really have to do it by feel.
Friday, March 23, 2012
Night Meeting
Free short story read - a bitter sweet love story.
"Damn," Darren cried aloud when he stopped the motorbike in frustration and realized what he'd suspected for the last twenty minutes. He'd taken the wrong turn.
He rode along slowly, looking for somewhere to camp, when in the
fading light he noticed the cottage by the river. He traversed the little used
track leading to the building. Getting off the bike, he stood for a moment
outside the broken gate, staring at the small garden enclosed by a tumbledown
fence. The grass grew thickly as it tried to smother the sprawling lavender
bush and straggling red geraniums. Pushing open the gate, he went along the
stone path and up the few wooden steps and knocked on the weather beaten door.
When no one answered, he tried the door handle. It opened protesting. "Is
anyone home?" he called a couple of times.
The room was sparsely furnished with a wooden table and several
chairs pushed into it. Against the opposite wall was an open stone fireplace.
Beside it was a small stack of wood.
He called again buy no one answered. The place looked deserted.
Read the rest of the story at www.authorsden.com/laurellamperd
Read my short story, Night Meeting, at www.authorsden.com/laurellamperdRead my short story, Night Meeting, at www.authorsden.com/laurellamperd
"Damn," Darren cried aloud when he stopped the motorbike in frustration and realized what he'd suspected for the last twenty minutes. He'd taken the wrong turn.
He rode along slowly, looking for somewhere to camp, when in the
fading light he noticed the cottage by the river. He traversed the little used
track leading to the building. Getting off the bike, he stood for a moment
outside the broken gate, staring at the small garden enclosed by a tumbledown
fence. The grass grew thickly as it tried to smother the sprawling lavender
bush and straggling red geraniums. Pushing open the gate, he went along the
stone path and up the few wooden steps and knocked on the weather beaten door.
When no one answered, he tried the door handle. It opened protesting. "Is
anyone home?" he called a couple of times.
The room was sparsely furnished with a wooden table and several
chairs pushed into it. Against the opposite wall was an open stone fireplace.
Beside it was a small stack of wood.
He called again buy no one answered. The place looked deserted.
Read the rest of the story at www.authorsden.com/laurellamperd
Read my short story, Night Meeting, at www.authorsden.com/laurellamperdRead my short story, Night Meeting, at www.authorsden.com/laurellamperd
Saturday, March 17, 2012
Waiting Women

WAITING WOMEN
She saw the young woman
Seated next to a lamp.
A painting by Harunobu.
And knew it was her
Waiting for her lover.
She saw the young woman
Seated next to a lamp.
A painting by Harunobu.
And knew it was her
Waiting for her lover.
Read the rest of my poem at www.authorsden.com/laurellamperd
Friday, March 16, 2012
New Books to Read
Looking for an interesting book to read? You can't go past http://museituppublishing.com
New novels just published.
Rosalie's Skinner's fourth book in her saga Exiled: Battle for Enderseer Hold
The Man in the Boat by Cheryl B Dale
Nic Brown's A Grave St. Patrick's Day
Earrings of Ixtumea - Kim Baccellia
Balance by Peter Giglis
Read about the books on http://wendylaharnar.blogspot.com.au
Wendy Laharnar's latest book is, Billy the Bonsai Bull
Download from www.kindlebooks.com & www.smashwords.com
My latest book, Journey from Walara, the second book in the Hennessy family saga is available for download at www.sonybooks.com
It is WW Two. Danny and Will, the two sons of Jack Hennessy, are off to fight for king and country leaving Jack to manage Walara, the huge Hennessy sheep property.
New novels just published.
Rosalie's Skinner's fourth book in her saga Exiled: Battle for Enderseer Hold
The Man in the Boat by Cheryl B Dale
Nic Brown's A Grave St. Patrick's Day
Earrings of Ixtumea - Kim Baccellia
Balance by Peter Giglis
Read about the books on http://wendylaharnar.blogspot.com.au
Wendy Laharnar's latest book is, Billy the Bonsai Bull
Download from www.kindlebooks.com & www.smashwords.com
My latest book, Journey from Walara, the second book in the Hennessy family saga is available for download at www.sonybooks.com
It is WW Two. Danny and Will, the two sons of Jack Hennessy, are off to fight for king and country leaving Jack to manage Walara, the huge Hennessy sheep property.
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