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Thu, 17 Nov 2011 |
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vivienne westwood online The journey tovivienne
westwood jewellery having my first novel for
children published has been riddled with road
blocks and shonky bridges. The good news? At every
rickety stage I\'ve picked up tips (and anti-tips)
which I\'m happy to share with Newswrite readers...
Read For me, this was the easy vivienne westwood uk
stage! Aspiring writers need to read like maniacs
to be aware of other writers\' work, both locally
and internationally. There is no point writing a
killer story if it resembles something already
published. Sadly, that means no scar-faced teen
wizards named Barry. Write Here\'s a simple
equation: the more you write, the better you become
at writing. By the time I was ready to be born I\'d
already completed my first three manuscripts (spent
most of the time looking around for somewhere to
plug in my laptop). When the doctor smacked me on
the backside I squinted at him and went, \'Waaah!\'
Which of course meant, \'Ah, you must be my
agent!\' I went on to scrawl home-made comics
throughout my childhood before I began writing for
surf magazines at age 17. Since then, I\'ve had
thousands of art Vivienne Westwood Belts icles and
pieces of fiction published. A lot were \'hack\'
stories; a few won me awards and contests. All
helped build my writing skills and voice. Feedback
A local teacher read my first manuscript to his
class (thank you, Bob Swoope). The feedback was
terrific. One kid enthused, \"It\'s just like Harry
Potter, only funnier!\" I dined off that compliment
for a month. I\'m lucky ten year olds believe
payment in Paddle Pops is the industry standard for
editors, else I\'d be broke by now (well, actually
I am broke). I read all my stories to my daughter,
her friends, and any young relatives I can bail up.
Whenever my juvenile focus groups wander off to the
vivienne westwood online nearest TV, I know the
chapter I\'m reading needs major reconstruction.
Whenever the kids sit glued to their chairs and
demand more, I know my story is heading in the
right direction (and I\' Vivienne Westwood
Bracelets ve bought the right glue and Paddle
Pops). It\'s useful to let adults rip into your
story as well. Adult writers, that is. I\'ve
learned it\'s best to avoid family members and
friends, unless you enjoy making these people flee
whenever they see you. Join a local or online
critique group instead. Growing elephant-thick skin
will also help you through this stage. Rewrite
Finally, you think your book is ready. It isn\'t.
Time to let the manuscript breathe for a month,
before revising it with fresh eyes. Be ruthless.
Hack those excess adjectives that editors loathe.
Delete every scene that does not sparkle, advance
the plot on multiple levels and compel the reader
to keep reading. Rewrite again As a writer for
children, you\'re not only competing against the
mutant slush pile from Hell and other kid\'s books,
but against the internet, computer games and 24
hour cartoon networks. Remember: the modern kid is
smarter, more savvy and easily bored than any
generation before. Submitting Crunch time. When you
submit your first manuscript, get stuck straight
into writing the second. When your manuscript
returns unloved, send another submission out on the
same day (or even better, send two). For every five
rejections, rewrite. Never surrender. Over the
course of several months, I sent my manuscript to
every agent in the country. They all rejected until
I was dejected. So I directly targeted publishers
instead. I almost fell out of my computer chair
when the second one immediately replied. The
wonderful Ibis Publishing of Melbourne liked my
story so much, they asked me to commit to writing
two more in the same series. Truth is, to be
published, I would have committed to writing a
sequel naked in a bubble in the middle of Pitt
Street. Luckily, they didn\'t. But I still have my
bubble. Pre-publication Over a year has gone by
since my book was accepted. My patient editor
Belinda Bolliger has driven me through two more
rewrites to add backstory, cull my ellipsis fever
and tone down my more extreme jokes. My major
character has become less obnoxious and had a sex
change from girl to boy. Why? Apparently, girls
will read about boys; but boys aren\'t happy
reading about girls. I originally named my book
after the plan Melissa Vivienne Flip Flops et of
talking horses and mutant chooks at the centre of
my story. However, Uponia (too strange) was changed
to Planet Horse Fart (too rude) to ZAPP to Planet
Horse (too horsey) to Raz James and The Amazing
ZAPP Discovery (too vague) to Erasmus James and the
Galactic ZAPP Machine (too... wait, that\'s it!).
The cover art has changed almost as many times
while the date of publication has been put back
from last Christmas to May to June to September.
Fingers crossed on that last one! It is vital to
remain flexible and posi vivienne westwood outlet
tive through such changes and delays. Yoga helps.
Better to get everything right than to rush out an
inferior product. The extra time has also given me
time to set up a website, work out a battle plan
with the Ibis marketing team Anthony and Paola and
watch my hair turn even more grey. Meanwhile, my
bank account has nose-dived, but who really needs
fancy mod-cons like electricity and food? On the
road Last month I drove to Sydney to psyche up the
Pan Macmillan sales team. I delivered a ten minute
standup comedy routine and was as surprised as
anyone when the friendly team laughed at my feeble
jokes and seemed enthused about selling my book. On
the long drive home, I realised this would be but
the first of many such promotional trips: to
schools, book signings, anything and everything
that will help me sell a few more copies and keep
doing what I love so much. Then the rain began to
bucket and my f Vivienne Westwood Bags ront tyre
blew out. As I bounced into the bush, I realised I
was about to experience another first on the scenic
detour known as Publication Road. DC GREEN BIO DC
Green is the author of the soon-to-be-published
\'Erasmus James and the Galactic ZAPP Machine\', a
funny and action-packed tale of friendship,
intergalactic zapping, flatulent horses, Vivienne
Westwood handbagsenvironmental havoc and
bus-sized chooks. An award-winning fiction and
non-fiction writer, DC used to travel the world for
surf magazines, mainly because he couldn\'t afford
his own air tickets. He lives on the NSW South
Coast of Australia with one slightly crazy daughter
and three very crazy cats.
Related article:
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