For a long while my dream of securing a book contract seemed like an impossible goal- like reaching for a castle in the sky.
If you missed Part 1, you can find it in the archives.
Here's a quick list of the Five Steps that helped me finally land my first book contract. It is with Prism Book Group for my inspirational romantic suspense novel, Summer of Deception, to be released in 2017.
Drum-m-m ROL-L-L! I have recently signed a second contract with Lighthouse Publishers of the Carolinas for my historical, In a Pirate's Debt! So now I am into edits on TWO books at the same time. (Yes, that's a prayer request in the subtext). Selling the second book has been quicker maybe because I started writing it before I sold the first one. ( :
Here are the five steps I listed in Part 1:
1) NEVER give up!
2) Keep Honing Your Craft
3) Importance of Conferences and Writing Groups
4) Help Other Writers
5) Learn how to Submit to Editors and Agents
Part 2 Keep Honing Your Craft!
Learn how to Plot a Novel - 4 Ways I’ve Studied
A)
The detailed Authors Boot Camp Manual
can be found at
There are tons of links compiled for every aspect of plotting and writing a
book! And it’s all free—the best articles from
some of the best authors you’ll find.
B)
The Snowflake Method by Randy
Ingermanson. Find his 10 detailed steps under Products at http://www.advancefictionwriting.com
Randy, a former software architect, lists 10 Steps that he compares to a snowflake in building a novel. He has a software program on it and a detailed book you can purchase on Amazon.)
Here are the first
4 steps briefly which he covers in detail on his site and in his book.
Step 1 - Take
an hour and write a one sentence summary of your novel idea.
Ex. “A rogue physicist travels back in time to kill the Apostle Paul.”
Step 2 - Take
another hour and expand that sentence into a full paragraph describing the story
setup, 3 major disasters, and the ending.
Step 3 –
Characters: Write a one-page summary for each character telling their name,
their storyline,
their motivation, goal, conflict, and epiphany (Details on site)
Step 4 –
Expand each sentence in your paragraph summary into a full paragraph each. The final paragraph should tell how the
book ends.
End each chapter with a cliff hanger! |
C) MaryLu
Tyndall’s basic method for historicals: Starts with research
1) Do detailed main character
sketches with photos and index cards of main characters
2) Write synopsis of basic story
line and chapter by chapter summary
3) Write the first draft down fast
in creative mode. No editing or checking research details. Get the
main plot points down, about 40,000 words
4) Rewrite/Expand adding the polish, research
details, DPOV, five senses add more tension/conflict, and
end each chapter with a cliff hanger.
5) Edit for final draft
6) She keeps three docs pulled up
in computer when writing:
a)Chapter by Chapter summary which she uses to write the first draft, (I have a Scene List doc for each chapter as I write the scenes)
b) A To-Remember Doc which lists things she needs to keep track of like
dates, back story,
ancestry, research items
c) Add-in Doc – lists all the extra ideas that she comes up with while
doing other stuff that she wants to add in
later
(In editing to cut my novel word count, I added a “Cuts” document to paste in all cuts which I may want to use later in blogs.
D) Prescription for
Plotting Notebook by Carolyn M. Greene (Pass it around)
A fantastic 3-ring binder with 75 pages of worksheets,
forms and easy instructions to help plot your novel. Order it from:
Carolyn
Greene, P.O. Box 412, Powhattan, VA 23139
Send check or money order for $25 plus $5
for shipping. Check out her site at http://carolynpd.fortunecity.ws/
(I highly recommend this notebook, if still available.)
The main romance plot between heroine Rachel and hero Luke.
The suspense/mystery subplot of who is smuggling drugs on the
Charleston coastline and
what really happened to Rachel’s brother declared dead by the DEA.
The spiritual subplot of Luke’s struggle to regain faith and the
testing of Rachel’s faith
The Spectrum for Spiritual
Plots for Inspirational novels from Ron Benry’s Writing Christian Fiction
♦ At the High End: A conversion/redemption scene
of a main character, grace in action
♦ The Middle Ground: Jesus at work in the
lives of one or more characters
♦ At the very least: Show progress in a
lead character’s Christian walk or reaffirmed faith.
OR: Challenge your protagonist’ moral
beliefs. Judith Rolfs in a new mystery release by Prism Books, Never Tomorrow, has a scene in which the
heroine’s moral belief in chastity is challenged by a character she has begun
to think of in a romantic way and the heroine gives a great “No” answer.
My
take on all this is: Weave in the spiritual plot through “parable/story style” not
preachy style.
Don't miss the next blog(s) when I will share other writing skills I had to gain mastery in: Goals, Motivation and Conflict; MRU's; and How to Show not Tell.
What has helped you most in plotting or planning your book? Please reply by leaving a comment and click and share this with friends on Twitter and FB.
Blessings on your day,
Elva Cobb Martin
What has helped you most in plotting or planning your book? Please reply by leaving a comment and click and share this with friends on Twitter and FB.
Blessings on your day,
Elva Cobb Martin