Showing posts with label blog hop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog hop. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2016

What do you LIKE to read on Murder by 4?

Welcome Murderers! Happy Spring and all that jazz...I have been very busy lately writing a non-fic(I know, right?) and posting gobs of long posts on my blog. I felt like my readers didn't really know me that well, so lately my posts have been a lot more personal. You can go on over there and check them out at my website, Kim Smith, author.

I have discussed making more money, getting more traffic, and writing goals.

If that ain't your bag, and you are truly a murderer of the highest order, well, you are on the right blog now.

I am also about to release book two of the Shannon Wallace mysteries. I haven't announced the name of book two just yet, considering writing up a contest or something. The cover art is about half-way finished and I should have final edits back by April 22. So, our hope is that book two is out by May 8, exactly three months or 90 days from book one.

You can get book one here:



My question for you guys today is this: what do you LIKE to read about when you come to MB4? I know, sometimes it's a fluke. You just love whatever we have, right? But...if you got to CHOOSE...what would you like to read? Do you want more murderous stories? More romance? More information for budding authors? We just got our shiny new award from Writer's Digest for 101 Best Sites and we want to keep those babies coming--so your input is valued.

Well, not much news from the news bag these days...but I will be back with something soon!

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

On Inspiration, the Writing Process and My best Advice for New Writers

By
Dora Machado


Here at MB4 we love being part of the writing community at large. So I was delighted when my dear friend, Eleanor Khuns, author of the fantastic historical mysteries Death of a Dyer, A Simple Death and Craddle to Grave, invited me to participate in the Sisters in Crime  blog hop.

Which authors have inspired you?
I'm one of those people who think that the human mind is influenced by every contact and every read, no matter how casual or light. I learn from every word I read. Heck, even when I don't enjoy a writer, I'm still learning from what him or her. As a young woman growing up in the Dominican Republic, I was exposed to many different influences. I thrived on young adult novels from Louisa May Alcott. I loved Enid Blyton and blazed through The Famous Five, The Seven Secrets and The Malory Towers series. I think I wanted to be a student at Malory Towers as much as my kids wanted to go to school at Hogwarts!

But, talk about being a hybrid of many worlds! At the same time I was reading Louisa May Alcott and Enid Blyton, I was also reading the Latin American classics. Books such as A Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter by Mario Vargas Llosas, and The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende left lasting impressions. I also tapped into my parents’ wonderful library, enjoying the Russians (I favored Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy), the French (Victor Hugo), the Germans (Eric Maria Remarque), the Spanish (Jose Maria Gironella), and the Americans (Hemingway, always Hemingway).

Later, when I came to the States, I discovered fantasy and was dazzled by J.R.R. Tolkien, Stephen Donaldson, Frank Herbert, Robert Jordan, and George R.R. Martin, way before he became popular, I should add. I also fell in love with commercial fiction. Diana Gabaldon, Bernard Cornwell and Anne Rice are some of my all-time favorites.

What's the best part of the writing process for you? What's the most challenging?
The best part of the writing process for me is the writing itself. I love working on a first draft, laying down the ideas, characters and structure of a novel for the first time, discovering the full story in my mind. There's something liberating about a blank screen, about the sentences turning into paragraphs and the paragraphs into chapters. I love the evolution of a story, the transformation that occurs as the story progresses, the unforeseen twists and turns that defy the outline and provoke the imagination.

The most challenging part of the writing process comes at the end for me, after the manuscript is done. I'm not one for self-promotion and yet the current publishing environment requires a great deal of it. I love talking to readers about writing and books, getting to know them, listening to their ideas and reactions to the stories and reading and writing in general. But tooting my own horn? It doesn't come naturally to me.   

If you were to mentor new writers, what would you tell them about the writing business? 
I enjoy mentoring new writers. I always tell them to educate themselves in the totality of the process upfront. It saves time if you have the basics covered, if the writer is proficient in grammar, punctuation, formatting and so forth. It also helps enormously if the writer has a good idea of how the industry works and how the market for her genre behaves.

I would also tell a new writer to submit their work to the highest possible standards of critical review prior to shopping for publishers. There's a lot of stuff clogging the pipeline and a polished, edited manuscript can make all the difference in the world. Editors, critique groups, other writers and beta readers who know the genre can be invaluable to the new writer.
Above all, I would tell the new writer to write, to complete the manuscript from beginning to end, to edit it, to trudge through the entire creative process and learn from it. Your first manuscript may never see the light of day. Maybe your second and third won't either, but no one can take away the treasure trove of learning that you gain each time you complete the creative process from beginning to end and the joy that comes from writing.

Thank you Eleanor for inviting me to participate in the Sisters in Crime blog hop. Hop on to the next blog and meet Barb Caffrey, the talented author of the comic, YA urban fantasy, Elfie on the Loose.


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