Tag: publishing

Letting Your Characters Go

Posted May 20, 2016 by Jennifer Ellision in blog, Self-Publishing, Writing / 2 Comments

Letting Your Characters Go
Writing Now and Again was a new experience for me in a lot of ways. I was publishing in a new genre, for a new audience, brushing the dust off of an old project that I hadn’t touched in years. But it was different in another way.

Let me explain.

When I published Threats of Sky and Sea, I was nervous. I mean, of course, I was nervous. I’m nervous with the publication of every book and this was my very first. I knew more people were going to read my work than ever before. More than my fanfic, more than my creative writing workshops, more than small literary magazines I’d submitted to in the past. I worried about whether readers would respond to my writing, the world I’d created, would they like the plot…? My God, the worries went on and on.

But one thing I didn’t worry about tooooo much?

My main character. Bree.

Sure, I knew Bree wouldn’t get along with everyone. Most real people don’t. But Bree is character that I think feels familiar to readers, especially those who are well-acquainted with the young adult fantasy genre.

But Em was… a little different.

First, unlike Threats of Sky and Sea, publishing Now and Again felt a little bit like letting people read my diary with regard to the walls Em throws up to protect herself. Em’s entire internal conflict is the struggle to let people in. She puts up walls that I was careful to cultivate in the telling of the novel.

I felt so worried for Em. She couldn’t let people in, so would readers let her in? Would her central character flaw, the crux of her journey alienate them entirely?

Letting your characters go is hard when the only way I could be sure she’d stay safe was if I kept her with me, safe and swaddled, like an infant. A book baby. In a way, I think that’s what took me so long to write Now and Again. I was protecting her. But I was holding onto a fear. 

I had to let her leave the nest.

And you know what? I wasn’t all wrong. Some reviewers couldn’t stand Em. They wanted to shake her, scream at her. But, you know… I don’t necessarily consider that a failure? Em is sort of meant to be polarizing that way.

And it made the reviews from readers who talked about how much they connected to Em that much more valuable. I think there’s something to be said about letting your characters go, even when you fear they aren’t entirely “likeable.”

Let

them

go.

Friends, I believe that, provided you get it out there and get eyes on it, provided you learn the lesson of letting your characters go, books will find their readers.

Can I properly put into words how it feels to have readers fall in love with a character that I’m Mama Bear-ing to death? I don’t think I can. It means so very much.

If I’d kept Em (and Cole, but really, let’s recognize whose story this is; no one was screaming about hating Cole) to myself, that would never have happened.

Do you have a character you feel protective of in that way?

Take a deep breath.

And let them meet the world.

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Talk About Your Books

Posted May 16, 2016 by Jennifer Ellision in blog, Self-Publishing / 0 Comments

 

talk about your books brandedI have a tendency to downplay my accomplishments to acquaintances in the real world. Yeah, I wrote a few books, but what do they care about that? I’m always so sure that if I bring it up, it will sound like I’m just #humblebragging, you know?

It took me a long time even to answer that I was an author when people asked what I “do.”

“Talk about your books!” my friends would urge.

I’d hem and haw and generally get a little awkward about it.

But the universe keeps reminding me that I need to stop that.

Here’s how I was reminded this weekend:

I went to a wedding this past weekend. I’d say I knew roughly half the guests there–both the bride and groom are friends from college. Some of my friends there have read– if not all, then at least one of– my books.

And then they told their friends about them.

See, I know that because, at this wedding, a couple of wonderful strangers approached me and told me that they had been told by So-and-So that I wrote books. What were they about? They sounded like something they’d like. Where could they find them?

Amazon, Barnes and Noble.com, iBooks… Oh, and they’re also available as audiobooks and paperbacks.”

They wrote the information down. One even followed me on Goodreads (hello, if you’re reading this!).

And, I mean, maybe they’ll read them and maybe they won’t. But if my friends hadn’t mentioned what I failed to, they’d never have known that my books existed. Look at the power of word of mouth! Maybe they will buy a book. Maybe one of them will a book and tell another friend about it. Maybe they’ll like it enough to leave a review on Amazon!

My point is, by keeping our books private, secret things, as though they are diaries that must be kept tucked under the mattress, we are not being noble.

We are doing our books a disservice.

Talk about your books, my friends. And start serving them right.

Choosing Done Lists Over To Do Lists

Posted December 7, 2015 by Jennifer Ellision in blog, Lists, Self-Publishing, Writing / 0 Comments

Choosing Done Lists over To Do Lists

For most of my life, I’ve been a big proponent of To Do lists. If you’re like me, you know that there is very little in life that is quite as satisfying as highlighting or crossing out an item on a To Do list. Marking it as complete. Accomplished. Finito. 

But lately, I’ve chosen a different sort of list.

Here’s the thing: my To Do lists lately include large tasks. Things like “Write your next book.” “Finish narrating an audiobook project.” Tasks that can’t be easily accomplished in a day.

Sometimes, I think ahead. I break it down to “Write a chapter.” “Narrate a chapter.” But then an email will come in that needs my attention and I have to switch gears to work on that instead. Didn’t get to take something off my list there either.

All of this occasionally leads to me staring down at the day’s To Do list with too few items crossed off and a horrible, sinking feeling of guilt, bordering on depression, over it. Not the healthiest feeling in the world. And the need to feel good about what I do each day is why I’ve switched to making Done lists at the end of the day instead.

Staring down at a specific list of what I have accomplished makes me feel a hell of a lot better and often– I’ll be honest– looks a hell of a lot more impressive than what I didn’t.

For instance, here’s today’s done list so far:

  1. Set up a ___ account
  2. Return message about audiobook
  3. Write and publish blog post

And I still have plenty of hours left in the day to add to it.

Have you tried making a “Done” list over the traditional To Do lists? Would you? And let me know which of them, if any, you prefer!

My first school visit

My first school visit

Last week, I had the pleasure of attending a high school book club, where the club read Threats of Sky and Sea this month. Equal parts nervous and elated, I left Day Job early and pulled up to a place that I don’t think I’ve been to since 2006– when I graduated from there. This was my first school visit and I tried to disregard the surrealism of the situation– along with the urge to cry out that “I DON’T EVEN GO HERE.” Not someone who is innately comfortable with attention, I was pretty dang nervous, but the informal setting quickly helped me relax. I’d estimate that about 20 students attended. We pulled together chairs in a loose circle around a table, and let the questions fly.   The school visit was off, and moving fast. A lot of questions that […]

Turning a profit

Turning a profit

I have waited quite a few moons to be able to make this post– but this month has finally done it. Threats of Sky and Sea is finally earning a profit! (All you need for my emotions here are 0:20-026) Wait, what do you mean it’s earning a profit? You’ve sold books before now, right? Yes, thankfully I have! But between cover design, formatting, editing, and publicity, I tossed a good chunk of change into making Threats of Sky and Sea a success… roughly $2,000 worth. Though I released in May, it’s only now that I’m starting to actually profit, meaning I’ve earned back the money that I’ve invested. I expected that, and knew I was in this for the long haul, but man, it feels good to be officially earning from my writing. I’ve always found posts from fellow self-publishers regarding their […]

New York, New York! A.K.A. Book Expo America

New York, New York! A.K.A. Book Expo America

Today, I’m on my way to New York City, for my third time attending Book Expo America. It’s sure to be a B-E-A-utiful time! I’m going more with my blogger hat on (for The Bevy Bibliotheque) than my author hat, but if you see me wandering around the Javits Center (or, hey, the city) please say hi! This is my face: And these are the places I’m planning to be: Events outside the conference: -The Teen Author Carnival -Macmillan Happy Hour -Book Blogger Picnic In the Javits:  -Adult Book & Author Breakfast (with Neil Patrick Harris as emcee) -Children’s Book & Author Breakfast -Sarah J. Maas signing -Morgan Matson signing -Heather Demetrios signing Attempting to obtain ARCs of:  Mortal Heart Salt & Storm The Secret Diary of Lizzie Bennet I really hope to see you there! And I’ll even have a […]

A quick thank you

Posted January 20, 2014 by Jennifer Ellision in blog, Uncategorized / 4 Comments
A quick thank you

It’s been almost exactly a week (give or take a few hours) since I announced the coming publication of Threats of Sky and Sea and I just wanted to take a quick moment to say THANK YOU to all of you. The YA blogging community has been incredibly supportive of the decision and there was a point (okay, more than one) this week where I was so overwhelmed by how WONDERFUL you all were that I teared up. I found fellow writers and authors offering their support and congratulations. I realized that I’m now a part of the self-published author community too, which has been warm and welcoming. Some kind self-pub authors who know what they’re doing far more than I do have already helped me out with some advice (shout-out here especially to Tammy Farrell and Jamie Grey). So […]

It’s a big, big, big day!

It’s a big, big, big day!

I always assumed that my first book would be a traditionally published one. To that end, over the years, I spent a lot of time researching query letters, synopses, and pitch contests. And I wrote a book. I revised (and revised and revised) it. My amazing beta readers and critique partners told me that my novel about a teenage barmaid in a world filled with Elementals and royalty, was ready to meet the world. So, I began querying, jumped into pitch contests, and waited. And waited. And waited. While I waited, I closely followed the paths of Leigh Ann Kopans and Jamie Grey, who both self-published their debut novels last year. Game-changer. I saw that they were putting out quality novels. I heard about the speed of self-publishing, the control that’s available to them, the decisions that they get to […]

That’s so fetch.

Posted July 2, 2013 by Jennifer Ellision in blog, Uncategorized / 2 Comments
That’s so fetch.

Stop trying to make fetch happen, Jen. Okay but really, this post was supposed to be about trends– specifically writing to trends. So you can see where I veered off a little because I believe that one should always seize the opportunity to work in a Mean Girls quote where one can. Ahem. But moving on. So a couple of things happened recently that brought this topic to mind for me as a blog post. The first that I’ll mention is the #MSWL or Manuscript Wishlist Twitter tag. Because a few writers that I saw in the tag were trying to jump on writing things that the agents and editors tweeting requested. If they were simply inspired, nbd, writers, do yo thang. But if they’re specifically trying to address a trend, we’ve got a problem. And that brings me to […]