January 5, 2013--
I'm making mental preparations for what is going to happen this week.
I am going to be seeing some of my friends for the last time. Friends I have loved for eighteen years, which (doing some quick math, here) is more than half of my life.
On January 8, A Memory of Light by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson hits the shelves. I, however, am going to hit the floor in an insensible heap. The Wheel of Time will be over.
I know I am going to love the book. Folks, it's the Last Battle, finally. Our hero will have his moment. Hell, all our heroes in that series are going to have their moments. I'm not worried about how Sanderson will complete Jordan's work.
I'm worried about saying goodbye.
I have literally grown up with these characters. I met them on a balmy summer night when I was fifteen, ironically the same night I met my first ever boyfriend. While that teenage love didn't last, my relationships with Rand, Perrin, Matt, Nynaeve and Egwene, however, are bonds that never broke. I once joked that the series was taking so long, I'd be married with children by the time it was over.
Um. *crickets* Married with two kids, here.
True, characters never really leave you. Their stories stay in your mind and give you beautiful memories and daydreams for years to come. But in many ways, this is the end of something major in my life. I don't remember what my fantasies were like before the Wheel of Time. The series helped shape me in so many ways. I drew strength from Nynaeve's young wisdom when people told me I was too mature for my age. I channeled Mat Cauthon every time I tested my luck, and most times I won. And whenever anyone told me my dreams were too big, I just thought about Egwene, the youngest Amyrlin Seat in history.
But in the most profound way, it was Robert Jordan himself who changed my life. He showed me how deeply and profoundly a good book can affect you. He made me want to be a writer. Now, eighteen years later, I've made that dream come true. I've written a book that landed me my dream agent, and publishing success is just around the corner. This was because of Mr. Jordan, first and foremost. I recall the two times I met him and smile on those memories. He was so kind to me, and really took a moment when he signed my books to get to know the person whose name he was scrawling. I showed him the picture that is now my avatar-- cutting my wedding cake with a Heron Mark sword. He laughed and looked me in the eye. "You're a badass," he had said.
Robert Jordan called me a badass.
So of course I had the courage to write a novel of my own. I crafted my own worlds and characters that became stitched into the fabric of my soul alongside Rand and company. I could do it. I did do it.
So as this epoch of my life comes to a close, the new one is beginning: my own life and career as an author. I think the timing is pretty auspicious. I think, if he were still alive, Mr. Jordan would have enjoyed my writings, as silly and non-epic as they may be. I think Brigitte would like to sit down for drinks with my heroine, and Mat would love to throw some dice with my hero.
I don't know what's going to happen when I head to the book store and hold this treasure in my hands. I will probably cry on the way to the counter, all the way out the door, and put a box of tissues next to my bed for a week.
I know I will probably leave a piece of my soul on that last page.
PS-- Fellow Wheel of Time fans, I'd love to hear from you. How are you preparing for the Last Battle?
Raising four kids, tending to a thousand plot bunnies, and creating worlds.
Saturday
Wednesday
Writer Interview: Jamie Grey
Today’s interview is with none other than one of the YA Misfits, Jamie Grey. I’ve known Jamie on Twitter for a while, and I have to say, she’s one of the sweetest Tweeps out there. Plus the title of her MS, Ultraviolet Catastrophe, is probably the coolest title in the world. Let’s get to know her.
AG: Tell us about your current project.
AG: Tell us about your current project.
JG: My current
project is a YA Sci-Fi called Ultraviolet Catastrophe. Here’s the blurb:
Lexie’s first assignment as a student at prestigious Quantum Technologies leads her to uncover a mistake in the master equation for an Einstein-Rosen bridge. Instead of a wormhole, this equation produces catastrophically uncontrollable ultraviolet rays. Except, it isn’t a mistake at all. It’s a carefully crafted plan that could devastate QT—and the rest of the universe. When the lead scientist turns up dead in the cryo chamber, Lexie knows she’s running out of time. Someone wants scientists eliminated and the correct formulas destroyed. And if she doesn’t find a way to stop them, she’ll be next.
It’s been such a fun book to write - kind of a cross between Eureka and Veronica Mars.
AG: Is it your first book?
Lexie’s first assignment as a student at prestigious Quantum Technologies leads her to uncover a mistake in the master equation for an Einstein-Rosen bridge. Instead of a wormhole, this equation produces catastrophically uncontrollable ultraviolet rays. Except, it isn’t a mistake at all. It’s a carefully crafted plan that could devastate QT—and the rest of the universe. When the lead scientist turns up dead in the cryo chamber, Lexie knows she’s running out of time. Someone wants scientists eliminated and the correct formulas destroyed. And if she doesn’t find a way to stop them, she’ll be next.
It’s been such a fun book to write - kind of a cross between Eureka and Veronica Mars.
AG: Is it your first book?
JG: Nope, I’ve been
writing since I was a kid. But, it’s only the 2nd book I’ve queried (if you
don’t count the book I sent out 5 queries on and then realized it was
completely awful!)
AG: How did you tackle the revision process before you queried? Did you use CP’s?
AG: How did you tackle the revision process before you queried? Did you use CP’s?
JG: I’d be lost
without my CPs! I don’t know what I’d do without them!
My revision process is to finish my first draft, do a read through and makes notes on what needs to change and how to fill in plot holes. I make those changes and do a line edit before sending to my CPs so they have a fairly clean MS to read through.
I usually do revisions using groups of CPs. So, I just sent out UVC to my first three CPs. I’ll fix the book based on their changes and then send it out to the next group. It works really well to get different people reading different version and catching different things.
AG: What was the querying process like for you? Any tips?
My revision process is to finish my first draft, do a read through and makes notes on what needs to change and how to fill in plot holes. I make those changes and do a line edit before sending to my CPs so they have a fairly clean MS to read through.
I usually do revisions using groups of CPs. So, I just sent out UVC to my first three CPs. I’ll fix the book based on their changes and then send it out to the next group. It works really well to get different people reading different version and catching different things.
AG: What was the querying process like for you? Any tips?
JG: I queried my
last book for about 6 months. It got a lot of interest, but in the end it just
wasn’t something agents thought they could sell. I think the biggest thing when
you get to a certain point in your skill level is to remember is that it’s not
always about your writing, it’s more about marketability. You could have the
best book in the world, but if an agent doesn’t think she can sell it, they’re
not going to take it on. It often has nothing to do with your skill.
AG: Do you blog? Where can we find you on Twitter and the internet?
JG: I blog at www.jamiegreybooks.com
I’m also a YA Misfit and blog over there as well - www.yamisfits.com
I’m on Twitter as www.twitter.com/jamie_grey
AG: What online resources have you used to help your writing and querying and revision process?
AG: Do you blog? Where can we find you on Twitter and the internet?
JG: I blog at www.jamiegreybooks.com
I’m also a YA Misfit and blog over there as well - www.yamisfits.com
I’m on Twitter as www.twitter.com/jamie_grey
AG: What online resources have you used to help your writing and querying and revision process?
JG: I love Query
Tracker - it’s become a bit of an addiction while I’ve been in the Query
Trenches. I also love the writing community and love to read everyone’s blogs
on process and writing. I’ve entered quite a few contests (Miss Snark’s First
Victim, The Writer’s Voice, etc) and have found some amazing CPs and developed
some amazing relationships through those. I highly recommend getting out there
in the community if you have the time.
Such good advice, Jamie. Now, everyone, go check out Jamie AND her fellow misfits! Thanks for talking with me, Jamie!
Such good advice, Jamie. Now, everyone, go check out Jamie AND her fellow misfits! Thanks for talking with me, Jamie!
Tuesday
Writer Interview: Alex Pendergrass
Friends, this week’s
interview comes from Alex Pendergrass, who has written a sprawling fantasy…and
those of you who know my reading tastes, know I eat that stuff up! Let’s hear more about his epic project!
AG: Tell us about
your current project.
AP:To Vivify Evil is a dark
fantasy novel where centuries of inequality, and opposing ideas on how to
resolve the disparity, come to a head with violent impact. The whole world
stands at the brink when a monstrous foe from the past returns from the dead,
intent on wiping out the bastions of power so that he might rebuild society in
his vision.
The novel follows the personal stories of seven characters trapped in the upheaval: a victimized assassin, two young lovers, a vengeful orphan, an industrious thief, a seer whose dreams may hold the key to mounting a resistance, and a hunter whose race was marched from society and granted territory in the inhospitable north.
The novel follows the personal stories of seven characters trapped in the upheaval: a victimized assassin, two young lovers, a vengeful orphan, an industrious thief, a seer whose dreams may hold the key to mounting a resistance, and a hunter whose race was marched from society and granted territory in the inhospitable north.
AG: Is it your first book?
AP: Yes and no. This is the first novel I began writing, over ten years
ago under a different title, but it remained stagnant for years during my stint
as a competitive gamer. At that time, it was little more than Lord of the
Rings fan fiction, simply derivative and poorly written. Then around
2007/2008, I began reading A Song of Ice and Fire. My ideas about what
fantasy could be completely changed, and I went back to square one.
I redid most everything, keeping a few location names and characters, and upped the content level. To experiment with a more mature style, I wrote a prequel novel that explores the origins of the villain and his motives. I finished that last year, and revised it, then received my first rejection letter before returning to this novel. I’ll revisit the prequel one day, I’m sure, but for now To Vivify Evil is my main focus.
I redid most everything, keeping a few location names and characters, and upped the content level. To experiment with a more mature style, I wrote a prequel novel that explores the origins of the villain and his motives. I finished that last year, and revised it, then received my first rejection letter before returning to this novel. I’ll revisit the prequel one day, I’m sure, but for now To Vivify Evil is my main focus.
AG: How did you tackle the revision process before you queried? Did you use CP’s?
AP: I begin revising, in earnest, by printing out the entire behemoth and
forcing myself to take a red marker to it. There’s something real about
having your story in a physical form, something about the feeling of it against
your fingertips that, at least for me, helps illuminate flaws. I make several
passes, focusing on grammar and spelling to start, and then one pass for each
character to examine the logic behind their arcs, another for thematic
cohesion, et cetera.
I’ve absolutely used beta readers. For several years, I’ve shared snippets of scenes or early concepts through various online writing communities including more than one run by one of your previous interview subjects, Benjamin Weller. Sidenote: I’ve had the honor to be one of Cloudnigh’s beta readers and it is glorious.
Recently, after completing NaNoWriMo last year, I joined a local writing group. There I’ve received critiques on the novel and helpful brainstorming sessions. I leave every Tuesday night riding a tidal wave of euphoric creativity. I highly recommend that authors find one of their own to join.
I’ve absolutely used beta readers. For several years, I’ve shared snippets of scenes or early concepts through various online writing communities including more than one run by one of your previous interview subjects, Benjamin Weller. Sidenote: I’ve had the honor to be one of Cloudnigh’s beta readers and it is glorious.
Recently, after completing NaNoWriMo last year, I joined a local writing group. There I’ve received critiques on the novel and helpful brainstorming sessions. I leave every Tuesday night riding a tidal wave of euphoric creativity. I highly recommend that authors find one of their own to join.
AG: What was the querying process like for you? Any tips?
AP: Still ongoing, and difficult. I’m trying to tell a truly sprawling,
epic tale with many narratives, so I have a hell of a time boiling it down to a
single page query letter. I’ve only sent one such letter, for the prequel
novel, and received a quick, well-deserved rejection.
AG: Tell us how you ended up with your agent.
AP: Well, not exactly an agent, but To Vivify Evil has been picked
up to appear chapter by chapter, in the serialized style of old, for the launch
of the website JukePop Serials. I think I
benefited by the unique nature of the site. They only asked for the first
chapter, so I wasn’t left trying to summarize the whole thing.
AG: Do you blog? Where can we find you on Twitter and the internet?
AG: Do you blog? Where can we find you on Twitter and the internet?
AP: I have a writing blog on Tumblr, The Literary
Gamer, which I use to give little updates on my writing
progress sometimes. But mostly I talk about my favorite things. You’ll find a
ton of A Song of Ice and Fire entries. I mostly bitch about my day job
and quote my favorite rappers (I might be the only fantasy author to listen to
Kendrick Lamar as mood music), with the occasional writing news on Twitter, @ajp88. And I’m in
the process of creating an author page on Facebook, which I find incredibly
narcissistic and yet necessary. The whole notion makes me uncomfortable but
that will go live as the September launch for To Vivify Evil nears, and
I’ll be sure to link to it through my other online presences.
AG: What online resources have you used to help your writing and querying and revision process?
AP: I’ve always frequented online writing communities and forums. Most of them are now sadly gone (but we had a good run, Ben). I check Writers' Digest often for leads on new agents and tips in general. One of my favorite authors, David B. Coe, contributes to a website called Magical Words. It’s a website devoted to helping aspiring authors, run by a collective of writers and agents in the business. They have daily articles about a wide range of topics pertinent to the industry, and quite often they ask for examples from readers’ own stories and give helpful guidance in the comments. Finally, I used author Holly Lisle’s wonderful selection of courses to help create the languages, maps, and cultures of my world.
AG: Any extra info you’d like to add or discuss?
AP: Thanks so much for the wonderful questions. I love talking about
artistry of all sorts. Particularly Martin’s novels, so feel free to engage me
in debates on all of the various theories!
Don’t you guys love that serial idea?
So Dickens! J Go check out
Alex and his awesome-sounding serial!
Monday
Writer Interview: Cassandra Marshall
Guys, Cassandra Marshall's new book THE STARS FELL SIDEWAYS is out and I have a GREAT interview with her! Make sure to check out Cassandra and STARS, because you're going to want to be on this bandwagon, kiddos!
AG:Where did you get the idea for your story?
CM: You know what's really sad? I honestly don't remember where the idea for STARS came from. I know parts of it, but not the first spark. :( It wasn't a dream and it certainly wasn't based on a real event. :P
AG: What was your query/submission process like?
CM: I wrote it after NaNo '10. I was exhausted by that book so I wanted something new and fun and different from anything else I was working on. I wrote it quickly, spurred on by writing buddies that were loving the pages. I finished it, let it sit for a while, edited, edited edited, let it sit, edited again, and started querying widely in March 2011. So many agents were loving it, just not enough to rep it. I let it sit a few months without thinking about it and when I re-read it I cried, I loved it so much and didn't want it to just sit in a drawer anymore. Earlier this year I won a trip to NYC to Backspace and met a few agents there and did another query push. Those agents also loved it, but not enough to rep it. Some even said they liked me and my writing, but they didn't know who they'd sell it to. So I figured I'd sell it right to the readers myself, as readers aren't worried about imprints and sales thresholds and all that stuff. I've done more editing since deciding to release it, several copy edits, polishes, and more polishes. Hopefully it's about as perfect as I can get it. And I hope the readers like it. The best thing about doing it myself is that I'll be able to easily tweak if people come back with glaring errors :)
AG:Tell us about MolliePup Press!
CM: It's named after my dog, Mollie. She has her own hashtag on Twitter, #MolliePup. I almost went with Wiggly Butt Press, but my friends know MolliePup so I went with that.
AG: What were the last five books you read?
CM: THE SELECTION - Kiera Cass
PALACE OF STONE - Shannon Hale
THE AGE OF MIRACLES - Karen Thompson Walker
UNBREAK MY HEART - Melissa Walker
JIM MORGAN AND THE KING OF THIEVES - James Mat Raney
AG: What are your other interests?
CM: Harry Potter, My Little Pony: FiM, my dog, crafting, and Jane Austen :)
AG: Do you believe Geek is the new Jock?
CM: I don't think I understand the question? Everyone is who they are, labels or not. The only thing that matters is whatever brings you joy.
Tuesday
Writer Interview: Nicole Steinhaus
Today’s interview is with Nicole Steinhaus, whose YA thriller is repped by the fabulous Bree Ogden. Check out Nicole’s success story!
AG: Tell us about your current project.
AG: Tell us about your current project.
NS: The project currently out on submission
is a YA suspense that follows a sixteen-year-old girl’s journey into proper
diagnosis of dissociative identity disorder: Ellie Cox can’t remember--her
childhood or how she got the tattoo on her stomach. It started out
small...forgetting a drive home or a conversation with a friend. But her blackouts
are getting worse, more difficult to disguise as forgetfulness. When Ellie goes
missing, no one expects to find her in the apartment of another boy. Not even
Ellie. Or her boyfriend, Shane. Another three days have escaped her and, if
that isn’t bad enough, the boy, Griffin, keeps calling her “Gwen.” Ellie is
branded a cheater at school and, fighting for Shane’s forgiveness, she
struggles to regain her three days and understand why she lost time in the
first place. After discovering her biological last name, Ellie sets out to
learn more about her past. And it turns out “Gwen” isn’t just a name Griffin
calls her. Gwen is a real person. Living inside Ellie. Created by Ellie’s
childhood mind to protect her from the horror she used to call home. Gwen now
wants to take over Ellie and live her own life...at Ellie’s expense.
AG: Is it your first book?
AG: Is it your first book?
NS:This was the third manuscript I wrote,
though the first after spending a few months intensely studying the craft of
writing. I read craft books, devoured the entire YA section of my local library
and basically trained myself to write under the guidance of Donald Maass and
others alike.
AG: How did you tackle the revision process before you queried? Did you use CP’s?
AG: How did you tackle the revision process before you queried? Did you use CP’s?
NS: I signed with Bree Ogden of D4EO Lit.
Agency almost exactly one year from when I finished the first draft. I rewrote
the manuscript twice (start to finish) during that year. I used my trusted CPs,
but also feedback from contests and online forums. I don’t have any crazy
revision routines. I usually outline after the draft is complete to look for
plot holes and assess character/plot arcs then--my favorite part--line and copy
edits.
AG: What was the querying process like for you? Any tips?
AG: What was the querying process like for you? Any tips?
NS: By the time I was querying the third
version of my manuscript, I’d learned to query a handful of agents, wait for
feedback, revise, then query another batch. Luckily, I didn’t have to query too
many within that round. I guess my tip would be to do just that--not query
dump. During the first few rounds of querying, I received such great feedback
from industry professionals, that it, for the most part, guided my revisions.
In time, I worked out most of the issues and the manuscript became what it is
today.
AG: Tell us how you ended up with your agent.
AG: Tell us how you ended up with your agent.
NS: I laugh now because even though I’d
researched Bree before querying her and had read she was looking for a
“Dexter-type” story, because I don’t watch much TV, I had no idea who or what
Dexter was. I mean, I’d heard of it--I’m not that far out of the loop, but I
didn’t realize how to-her-taste my manuscript actually was. Fortunately, my
writing style was to her taste as well.
AG: What is that relationship like? What is doing agent revisions like?
AG: What is that relationship like? What is doing agent revisions like?
NS: I love working with Bree. She’s funny,
easy to talk to, and--whether she knows this or not--is slowly training me out
of my got-to-get-it-done-right-now tendencies. When I signed with her, Bree
didn’t see any need for revisions before the submission process, so I haven’t
had to go through that yet. She does have a second manuscript of mine which I’m
waiting for her opinion on, so we’ll see...
AG: Tell us about the editor submission process from your experience.
AG: Tell us about the editor submission process from your experience.
NS: Can you say STRESSFUL? The huge
difference between editor submissions and agent submissions is I don’t have
worry every time I open my inbox if there’s going to be rejection letters. Bree
handles all of that and every few weeks will send me an update of where we
are--which I love. It gives me more time to WRITE and focus on my editorial
internship with Entangled Publishing rather than worrying about what I should
revise next.
AG: Do you blog? Where can we find you on Twitter and the internet?
AG: Do you blog? Where can we find you on Twitter and the internet?
NS: I run a community blog called YA Stands (http://yastands.blogspot.com) where several authors and I blog daily
about everything YA (book reviews, writing craft, and industry tips). I’m also
on Twitter (https://twitter.com/NicoleSteinhaus), and Facebook (
http://www.facebook.com/#!/NicoleSteinhausAuthor)
AG: What online resources have you used to help your writing and querying and revision process?
AG: What online resources have you used to help your writing and querying and revision process?
NS: I used to enter
a lot of contests like WriteonCon and also used forums like those found at
Agent Query and Query Tracker. I made a lot of friends and, more importantly,
found some valuable CPs.
Thanks, Nicole! Sounds like you and Bree are a fantastic match, and I wish you all the best in the submission process! Go check out Nicole and her blog, everyone!
Thanks, Nicole! Sounds like you and Bree are a fantastic match, and I wish you all the best in the submission process! Go check out Nicole and her blog, everyone!
Monday
Announcement!
Well, I've been wanting to say these words for some time now: I HAVE AN AGENT!
And all last week, I've been absolutely desperate to add: AND IT'S JESSICA SINSHEIMER!!!!!!!!!
When I began thinking about how I wanted to tell our agent story, I immediately got a little panicky. We do not have a traditional courtship to share, and I didn't want Jessica to get flooded with unconventional emails and the like, so I asked her if she didn't mind if I shared exactly how we got together.
She, being the wonderful and awesome human she is, said of course.
Ok, how'd I find Jessica? A contest. Specifically, Cupid's Agent Invasion (AWESOME blog with AWESOME contests, btw. www.cupidslitconnection.blogspot.com). But that's not the unconventional part.
How'd I get her interest? Tweeting about a WIP I hadn't even started.
Oh snap, you guys are thinking, that is really not smart of you, sword-bride-girl.
Oh, I know, I know.
Anyway, it went a little something like this. Jessica had tweeted that once an agent and author corresponded enough, you may want to start talking about WIPs. She had asked for my manuscript a month prior, and I tweeted back a little bit about my next project.
Jessica's a foodie-- I knew this. I thought the tweet would make her smile and maybe she'd remember it. I said, "My WIP is about a time-travelling food critic."
I expected a smiley-face at best.
I got a "tell me more".
Oh dear. I hadn't started GASTROPHYSICS yet. I had an outline and a query. Ok, ok, I'm a nerd who writes queries ahead of time. Sue me.
Anyway, I sent her the details (she knew I had zero word count) and she said she squealed out loud in her office when she read it. Then five minutes later she clarified the squeal and bounce was a good thing and that her intern may be terrified of her.
So we begin corresponding about this WIP. Then I wrote a little.
THEN SHE ASKED TO READ THE LITTLE TINY SAMPLE.
Oh no you didn't! is what you're thinking, isn't it. Why on earth would you share a rough, unfinished first draft, unbeta-ed, with your dream agent?! ARE YOU CRAZY?!
She was very persuasive. I sent it. She asked for more. I wrote more. This little dance continued and one day that email about "when's a good time to talk" showed up in my inbox and...
... The rest is history.
Needless to say, I'm thrilled and truthfully a little smitten. We've talked on the phone a few times and she makes me positively giddy. We're in sync in so many ways, it's actually baffling to me how I could find someone so perfect to represent me. Plus, Sarah Jane Freymann Literary Agency is so amazing and prestigious! Wow!
Ok, so there it is. I have been smiling for a week straight thanks to this funny, professional, smart and charming agent. My agent. :D
And all last week, I've been absolutely desperate to add: AND IT'S JESSICA SINSHEIMER!!!!!!!!!
Time for the dance of joy!
This is how she makes me feel.
When I began thinking about how I wanted to tell our agent story, I immediately got a little panicky. We do not have a traditional courtship to share, and I didn't want Jessica to get flooded with unconventional emails and the like, so I asked her if she didn't mind if I shared exactly how we got together.
She, being the wonderful and awesome human she is, said of course.
Ok, how'd I find Jessica? A contest. Specifically, Cupid's Agent Invasion (AWESOME blog with AWESOME contests, btw. www.cupidslitconnection.blogspot.com). But that's not the unconventional part.
How'd I get her interest? Tweeting about a WIP I hadn't even started.
Oh snap, you guys are thinking, that is really not smart of you, sword-bride-girl.
Oh, I know, I know.
Anyway, it went a little something like this. Jessica had tweeted that once an agent and author corresponded enough, you may want to start talking about WIPs. She had asked for my manuscript a month prior, and I tweeted back a little bit about my next project.
Jessica's a foodie-- I knew this. I thought the tweet would make her smile and maybe she'd remember it. I said, "My WIP is about a time-travelling food critic."
I expected a smiley-face at best.
I got a "tell me more".
Oh dear. I hadn't started GASTROPHYSICS yet. I had an outline and a query. Ok, ok, I'm a nerd who writes queries ahead of time. Sue me.
Anyway, I sent her the details (she knew I had zero word count) and she said she squealed out loud in her office when she read it. Then five minutes later she clarified the squeal and bounce was a good thing and that her intern may be terrified of her.
So we begin corresponding about this WIP. Then I wrote a little.
THEN SHE ASKED TO READ THE LITTLE TINY SAMPLE.
Oh no you didn't! is what you're thinking, isn't it. Why on earth would you share a rough, unfinished first draft, unbeta-ed, with your dream agent?! ARE YOU CRAZY?!
She was very persuasive. I sent it. She asked for more. I wrote more. This little dance continued and one day that email about "when's a good time to talk" showed up in my inbox and...
... The rest is history.
Needless to say, I'm thrilled and truthfully a little smitten. We've talked on the phone a few times and she makes me positively giddy. We're in sync in so many ways, it's actually baffling to me how I could find someone so perfect to represent me. Plus, Sarah Jane Freymann Literary Agency is so amazing and prestigious! Wow!
Ok, so there it is. I have been smiling for a week straight thanks to this funny, professional, smart and charming agent. My agent. :D
Sunday
Writer Interview: Meghan Drummond
Ok, so dream theories, the Trojan war, teen
ghost hunters and manuscripts under your mattress? All in a day’s work for today’s writer
interview with Meghan Drummond. Come get
to know this up and coming talent!
AG: Tell us about your current project.
MD: I’m currently working on two. One is in
the querying stage, and the other is almost complete. The one I’m querying for
is about a sixteen year old who turned to paranormal investigations after the
death of her younger brother. Actually finding a ghost turns out to be more
trouble than she expected, especially when it follows her from the haunted
house she was investigating to her New England boarding school.
The work that is still in progress is almost finished, that one I’ve been laboring over for close to six months. It’s a retelling of the Trojan war, but with a young adult paranormal twist. I don’t want to give too much away, but I did get to spend a lot of time researching the nature of dreams for it. Which was so much fun. Everyone should spend an hour reading about dream theories before going to bed, you’ll have the craziest dreams ever.
AG: Is it your first book?
MD: Nope! I’d always heard you needed at least one under the mattress. I have three. Mattress novels are really useful for a few reasons. There was one character that I absolutely loved from a mattress novel, but as I reread I realized I had created a novel that was all character and no plot. Now that character is a side character in the book I’m querying for. It’s great to have over a hundred pages of backstory for one side character. And I still read my mattress novels whenever I think my writing hasn’t improved.
AG: How did you tackle the revision process before you queried? Did you use CP’s?
MD: I took a month off right after I finished. I was too in love with my own work to see it clearly, let alone revise it. I needed that month of believing it was perfect. Then I re-read it. And cringed. It was so far from perfect! I started sending it off to a few friends who wrote, begging them for honest feedback, and I got it. Finally, I knocked out the dents and added some shine, then I started querying. Finally an agent told me that my MC was too old for Young Adult, and I needed to change EVERYTHING. It was hard to hear, but I looked around and they were right. I changed a ton of details, rewrote the character and created a timeline for all of their new birthdays and important life events that reflected the three year backwards jump. I just finished that process and have started querying again. It took me a month to write my first manuscript. It’s taken me close to a year and a half to get it revised. I understand that after I get an agent, there will probably be even more revisions.
AG: What was the querying process like for you? Any tips?
The work that is still in progress is almost finished, that one I’ve been laboring over for close to six months. It’s a retelling of the Trojan war, but with a young adult paranormal twist. I don’t want to give too much away, but I did get to spend a lot of time researching the nature of dreams for it. Which was so much fun. Everyone should spend an hour reading about dream theories before going to bed, you’ll have the craziest dreams ever.
AG: Is it your first book?
MD: Nope! I’d always heard you needed at least one under the mattress. I have three. Mattress novels are really useful for a few reasons. There was one character that I absolutely loved from a mattress novel, but as I reread I realized I had created a novel that was all character and no plot. Now that character is a side character in the book I’m querying for. It’s great to have over a hundred pages of backstory for one side character. And I still read my mattress novels whenever I think my writing hasn’t improved.
AG: How did you tackle the revision process before you queried? Did you use CP’s?
MD: I took a month off right after I finished. I was too in love with my own work to see it clearly, let alone revise it. I needed that month of believing it was perfect. Then I re-read it. And cringed. It was so far from perfect! I started sending it off to a few friends who wrote, begging them for honest feedback, and I got it. Finally, I knocked out the dents and added some shine, then I started querying. Finally an agent told me that my MC was too old for Young Adult, and I needed to change EVERYTHING. It was hard to hear, but I looked around and they were right. I changed a ton of details, rewrote the character and created a timeline for all of their new birthdays and important life events that reflected the three year backwards jump. I just finished that process and have started querying again. It took me a month to write my first manuscript. It’s taken me close to a year and a half to get it revised. I understand that after I get an agent, there will probably be even more revisions.
AG: What was the querying process like for you? Any tips?
MD: At first, I just kinda flailed my arms
at the query process, and failed hard. I don’t recommend that. This time I’ve
been a lot more organized.I started following a lot of agents on twitter, and
made an excel spreadsheet with all of my ‘dream’ agents, complete with the
agencies they worked for, and what they needed in a submission packet. I’ve
been querying one or two at a time, and just slowly making my way down the
list. I think a list is really important. Before I was wasting a lot of time querying
multiple agents from the same agency, or querying people based on order in the
alphabet on querytracker, or because they looked like they had kind eyes in the
picture on their agency website.
AG: Do you blog? Where can we find you on Twitter and the internet?
AG: Do you blog? Where can we find you on Twitter and the internet?
MD:
I love twitter, and can be found @meghdrummond. I don’t blog much, just
because my writing time is precious and usually gets dedicated to works in
progress. You can find my blog at Snarkyforhire.blogspot.com.
AG: What online resources have you used to help your writing and querying and revision process?
AG: What online resources have you used to help your writing and querying and revision process?
MD: Agents blogs are wonderful, and can be
an unexpected source of revelation when you can’t figure out why your query got
rejected. I love scribophile, and think that the community there is a great one
if you need some help with revisions; they have provided some of the most
honest feedback I have ever received.I actually pretty soundly got my butt
kicked by some of the folks on Scribophile, and thanked them for my asskicking
whole-heartedly. Recently I found the Teen Eyes website, which provides a lot
of great services for writers.
AG: Any extra info you’d like to add or discuss?
AG: Any extra info you’d like to add or discuss?
MD:A while back a close friend told me
something that really made writing less frustrating for me, and I think it was
good advice. Publishing is the goal, but writing is the dream. Don’t lose sight
of the goal, and work toward it, but don’t forget you’re already living the
dream.
Ok, that’s my new favorite quote,
Meghan. Thanks for sharing! Everyone, go follow Meghan and her
snarkiness!
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