For example, several months ago Janice Hardy, author and blogger extraordinaire, mentioned she'd just moved to central Florida and was trying to make her way through a pile of boxes. Wow! One of my favorite blog personalities was living just down the road from me! (Not exactly...but close enough.) I jotted an email and asked if we could meet sometime. It took a few months of coordinating schedules, but we finally met.
Here are some notes while we ate a delicious lunch at Turner's Kitchen and Bar in Leesburg, Fl. (BTW, they specialize in fresh, local food if you're in the area!)
Janice's Background
CAROL: I'm always impressed with your depth of knowledge about the writing craft. How did you learn so much?
JANICE: I taught myself "on the job" and by reading every writing book I could put my hands on. I learned a lot about writing by critiquing other people when I was a member of Critters Writing Workshop.
CAROL: I'm surprised. I thought you had a degree in writing!
JANICE: My training is in commercial art. I did that to make a living, but I’ve always wanted to write. When I was little I drew stories and then wrote stories about them.
Finding the Time
CAROL: You're a novelist with three fantasy books in print, you write and self-publish excellent books about writing (Planning Your Novel: Ideas and Structure Foundations of Fiction Volume I) plus you post A LOT of blogs. How do you find time for everything?
JANICE: I don't. (grin) Some stuff just doesn’t get done. And I have days when I feel like I'm behind in my own writing. My goal is a minimum of 2000 words a morning (I write for about 4-6 hours). If I'm disciplined I can write 80,000 words in two months. And that’s a book. I keep a structured schedule but make sure I take breaks.
This might not be the best writing in the world, but it’s a pretty good draft. In the afternoon I also try to write 1000 words a day on my writing books and/or blog posts.
I don’t check my email until noon and can walk away from it if it's not important.
It helps to have a guest authors every week on the site besides myself. I have posts that are just story prompts. My Indie column features Indie authors and I also have a monthly, "How do they do it?" series. I've recently begun re-posting old articles on my Refresher Fridays. Real Life Diagnostics runs on Saturdays, and sometimes they can be pretty quick to write, but not always.
I'm always trying to make writing easier for my readers, that's why I cross post to previous blogs. My husband Tom said it is more like a writer resource site than a blog.
Inside Fiction University
CAROL: What is your favorite thing to do on your blog?
JANICE: Finding different ways to approach a tough subject for people. For example, how do I explain show don’t tell? It's gratifying when I know I have helped a writer take the next step.
CAROL: What is the most common mistake you find in Real Life Diagnostics?
JANICE: A lack of conflict; no sense of a problem.
CAROL: What is the most common mistake you find in Real Life Diagnostics?
JANICE: A lack of conflict; no sense of a problem.
Inside Janice Hardy
CAROL: What are you working on right now?
I'm working on a writing book on revision that I will self-publish. Revising Your Novel: First Draft to Final Draft is due this summer; it's a more fleshed out writing workshop. I have a third Planning Your Novel Workbook that is a companion book to the writing book.
CAROL: How long did it take before your first novel was published?
JANICE: Fifteen years. I received lots of rejections in the beginning because I didn't know what I was doing. When I had the right book, the process of getting an agent and publisher went fast.
CAROL: What's your opinion on critique groups?
JANICE: The sweet spot is being in the middle skill-wise. Having a few people better than you who you can learn from and a few people under you who you can help is ideal. You learn by teaching; you'll see stuff in other people’s work and either check it in your own or realize you do it too.
I have critique partners who give me different types of feedback One on characterization, another on descriptions or worldbuilding. All my beta readers have different strengths and bring something strong to the table.
CAROL: If you could give advice to other writers, what would it be?
JANICE:
- Don’t send your manuscript out until it’s ready.
- Read and write a lot. Read widely. In your genre and other books also. It gives you ideas about how other writers handle things.
- Focus on what’s unique about your story and run with it.
- My high school creative writing teacher told me: “Stories are interesting people solving interesting problems in interesting ways." When your character resolves his problem, the book is over.
- Write your query first. Set up the world, the characters, and what the problem is and how they’re going to resolve it. The better you know the ending, the more you'll know where you're going with your book.
- A great story trumps writing skill any time.