Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Crazy agent alert

I am excited to announce that there is an agent here on blogspot who is certifiably insane. His name is Nathan Bransford, and he is having a first page contest on his blog. This is a great excuse to tinker with the first page of any manuscript, or to make a new one up. I entered after a lot of thought (when last I looked there were around 250 entries), but decided that the opportunity was too good to ignore after a while. There are good prizes and everything. Go to his page (http://nathanbransford.blogspot.com/), and enter if you'd like. All contest rules are there. Be sure to enter under the contest post, and not under any of those that followed.

On a more personal note, I may celebrate tonight because I finished the long edit of my book only minutes ago. You may not know what the long edit is (though it's close to what it sounds like), but it is a complicated process for me. I'll explain more about this important step in a later entry (maybe tonight), but for now I just wanted to promote the contest.

Good luck to all who enter.

Taylor

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Formatting novel manuscripts

Tonight I decided to make good on my promise to help out other aspiring writers, and I am sharing what information I have gathered on how to format the manuscript for a novel. For those who need clarification bear in mind that novel almost always means fiction. I will try to cover nonfiction in a later post.

Much of the information I have gathered comes from a useful book, Formatting and Submitting Your Manuscript, 2nd edition, by Cynthia Laufenberg and the Editors of Writer's Digest Books. I recommend this book highly. It's well worth the $19.99 you'll pay or a new copy, and you can probably find it cheap used. Knowing this stuff is important because formatting your manuscript properly can easily give you an edge over a lot of the unpublished writers out there who play fast and loose with the rules. Sticking to proper formatting greatly increases your chance of getting published.

With that out of the way I'll get to the topic at hand. There are specific formatting tips that I would recommend that any aspiring writer should stick to. Remember, while creativity in writing is appreciated, it is universally hated in formatting. Stick to what is common. Otherwise, you risk alienating any potential agent or publisher. Having said that I know some books require odd formatting, but most don't. Avoid it whenever possible.

Stick to 1 inch margins on all sides. To change those in Microsoft Word you need to go to file, and then Page Setup. You can change your margins there, and can make it easier on yourself by setting 1 inch on all sides as the default.

It is also important to include a title page. I'll specifically address the formatting to this seemingly simple but surprisingly complicated page in the future.

Number the pages of the book. Not the title page. Start numbering with the first chapter, introduction, prologue, or whatever is the first official part of the book. It is common to put the page number in the top right corner of every page.

On the same line as the number (in the page header) your last name and book title should be on the left. Example- Smith/KILLER MONKEYS FROM SPACE. Yes, I am aware I capped the book title. I meant to. It's proper formatting.

Never have two chapters on one page. Start each chapter on its own page, and one-third of the way down on said page.

Also, a good way to make sure that each chapter stays on its own pages is bY using CTRL+ENTER. By doing this as the end of each chapter it automatically inserts a page break. It can save lots of time in editing.

The first part of each chapter page should be the chapter title, and the chapter name (should one exist). Example of this in proper formatting: CHAPTER 1--KILLER MONKEYS EAT BRAINS Once again, all CAPS is intentional, as is the two hyphens.

After the chapter title begin the first paragraph of the chapter four to six lines below the chapter title. When indenting for each new paragraph, indent five spaces. It's possible to get your tab button to automatically indent five spaces so that it is not necessary to press the space bar five times each time. I highly recommend taking this step.

If something in your text needs tO be italicized then it should be underlined in the manuscript.

This should be obvious, bu don't single space. Double space. Always double space.

The final, and perhaps most important formatting tip, is to use a standard font. It is commonly accepted to stick to 10- or 12 point Times New Roman, Arial, or Courier. I'd recommend sticking to Times New Roman because some agents and publishers are biased against anything else. Times New Roman is quickly becoming the standard.

There you go. Those are the basics for formatting a novel. Don't ask why these are the rules. There is not a reason. They just are the rules. Follow them, and it will help you out. If I didn't answer any questions you have about formatting feel free to ask me. I'll answer the best I can. Also, feel free to correct me if I was wrong about something. I don't want to lead anyone in the wrong direction.

Taylor

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Stamina

In my last entry I talked about something all writers must do (prioritize). This time I'll talk about something all writers must have that is equally (perhaps more) important. Stamina.

I'm not talking about physical stamina here. I'm talking about stamina as a writer. Any writer cannot write two hours in a month and be exhausted after that. No writer can write even an hour a week, and feel that is enough. The natural instinct of the mind and body is to be lazy, and any successful writer must fight the minds lazy instincts to pretend that writing very little is okay. It's not okay. It never is.

Stamina is something some writers just have naturally. They learn to write, and they write a lot from the start. Others, like me, have to teach ourselves to have it. In order to do that we must understand what kind of stamina we must have. Think of writing like a full time or a part time job, depending on your situation. If it's full time then think of how often one works at a full time job. 40 hours, and usually 5 days a week. Make this your goal. If part time then your goals can be lower. Somewhere between 10 and 30 hours throughout the week should be good depending on the situation.

This may sound daunting, but that's just an excuse. A full time writer that can't dedicate full time hours to writing is just lazy. If it's your full time job then work it like a full time job. If you refuse then you should get another job. Dreams must be worked for. Truthfully, putting this kind of time into writing is quite easy. Remember that writing involves more then just writing. It often involves research, reading, planning, and editing. The things we read don't even have to be related to what is being written. One could write a blog entry, research for a historical novel, edit a short story, and read a romance novel in the same day. It can be easy, but it takes stamina in order to do this.

It doesn't matter if you don't naturally have it. I didn't either. There were a couple of years early in life that I just didn't write much. Eventually I realized that I needed to be more dedicated to it if I hoped to spend my life doing it, and I built up the needed stamina in order to make being a writer an integral part of my life. I'd recommend all writers do this same thing. Decide if you consider your writing to be a part time or full time job, and put the appropriate hours into it as a result. I can almost guarantee this this will help any writer become a better writer.

Taylor

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Priorities

I've returned from my long break, and I do so with a new laptop to use. I'm currently typing this entry on the laptop, but I have yet to get used to doing so, and I ask that you excuse the occasional error that will certainly be caused by my inexperience.

Now, I will explain why I was absent because it is directly related to my newest post. Since December 22 I have been busy doing Christmas stuff, spending time with family, and doing many things that didn't involve writing. Make no mistake. I edited my book, but not nearly so much as I would have usually. Why didn't I? Because for about a three week period I had different priorities, and that's the subject of tonight's post.

Every writer must prioritize. Every writer must decide just how important their writing is to them. A writer that cannot usually does not write. A writer that does not is like I was a couple of years ago. A writer who rarely writes. This is a sad thing to be, but any writer who doesn't prioritize can be like this.

I don't necessarily mean that writing must comes first. I mean that everyone must know what is more important and what is less important then writing. I'll use my own life as an example. I'm a man of faith. I'm married. I have a job. I have a family. I play video games. I eat. I write. These are just the main things. I must prioritize these things. I must decide what things are important in order to live a complete life. Usually, it's easy. I am blessed to usually have the ability to incorporate all of these things into my life. Often my days go eating, praying, writing, working, spending time with my wife, playing games. This isn't exact (I obviously eat more then once a day as well as other activities), but it's a simple example of my common day.

I set up this schedule for the benefit of my writing. I had to realize writing was important, and make it a priority. It's that simple. All writers must do the same, but it won't always be so easy as described above. Sometimes it is difficult to keep priorities where they should be. I mentioned the three week break I took because of family stuff. It's times like that when priorities must be known. When time is tight what will any of us choose to do? Write or read? Write or spend time with a loved one? Write or work? Write or pray? Write or eat? Sometimes there simply isn't time to do everything, and without priorities ones entire life can be sacrificed to things interfering with the schedule. Specifically, one can give up writing completely if one chooses to do something besides write too often.

A writer must find a balance. A writer must prioritize. A writer must be careful to ensure that writing doesn't consume their entire being. A writer must also be careful that just the opposite doesn't happen, and ensure that another aspect of their life, whether a job, a marriage, or a hobby, doesn't keep them from ever writing. A writer that isn't careful to make sure that doesn't happen becomes someone who one day looks back on the days that they once had a family before they let writing consume them, or looks back and remembers the ancient days when they used to write. A life without priorities can get horribly out of whack, and this is especially true for a writer.

Taylor