Archive for March, 2010

Author Interview: Joan H. Young

I’ve been crazy about being outside since I was old enough to proclaim my wishes to the world, and to propel myself on two legs. Although I have other interests, I always seem to gravitate back to the out-of-doors– exploring, learning, drawing, writing, explaining my passion for all things natural to others.

Hiking has always been my first love, probably followed by botany. Both of these were put on temporary hiatus while raising a family of boys, without a camper or plant lover in the crew.

However, boys grow up! I quickly re-trained the husband to expect my disappearance for long stretches in the woods, and a childhood friend and I began hiking the 4000-mile North Country National Scenic Trail. Soon I was writing about that experience as well, and have now written the first book by a hiker of that trail, North Country Cache. If all goes as planned, I will also be the first woman to hike the entire trail, officially finishing my quest in August of this year, 2010. Read the rest of this entry »

I wrote this post in the forum the other day talking about something that happened to me with a book review I had done for a publisher. The author’s publicist contacted me, I did the review, and then later, when I reviewed the author’s next book, I saw my review blurbed on the front part of the book, with a mention of my blog in the blurb. How cool is that? That same day, I also was given a chance to send a partial of my manuscript, WHAT BROTHERS DO, to that same publisher.

The more I read and see things in the publishing world, the more I realize that sometimes, it really is who you know and the connections you make. If you want to be published, you’re going to have to make connections, somehow. You’ll need an agent. You’ll want to connect with a publisher. You’ll then need to connect with readers and build a platform and a readership that wants to buy your book before it ever comes out. Writing is all about connections – connecting with your characters, connecting with an agent, connecting with a publisher, connecting with readers, connecting…

One of the best ways to connect with all these things is to be active in promoting yourself in the industry. Read the rest of this entry »

Winner of the Book Giveaway

Our first book giveaway on the blog was drawn today by using the Random.org random number generator. If you don’t remember, I did THIS BLOG POST about internet publicity and about marketing and promoting your book.

The winner of Red Hot Internet Publicity: An Insider’s Guide to Promoting Your Book on the Internet! and the companion booklet is: Read the rest of this entry »

Today, I was scanning through some of my leads for paying writing jobs so I could post them on the forum for the paying writing leads section, and I ran across something that I see once in awhile. It was an online magazine that requested writers, had some pretty stringent guidelines, and then I look for the payments to writers, and I find there isn’t any payment. That’s bad enough. I mean, content and writing is what gets people to a website, and getting people to the website is what results in making money. So asking people to do work that makes someone money without being willing to pay them for that work is just wrong.

But it is abhorrent when that wrongness is coupled with something like this true, copied and pasted statement:

we cannot pay contributors for their published pieces, but we hope seeing the literary product of your hardwork and passion in electronic print will fill you with joy and a sense of accomplishment. Read the rest of this entry »

I’ve been crazy about being outside since I was old enough to proclaim my wishes to the world, and to propel myself on two legs. Although I have other interests, I always seem to gravitate back to the out-of-doors– exploring, learning, drawing, writing, explaining my passion for all things natural to others.
Hiking has always been my first love, probably followed by botany. Both of these were put on temporary hiatus while raising a family of boys, without a camper or plant lover in the crew.

However, boys grow up! I quickly re-trained the husband to expect my disappearance for long stretches in the woods, and a childhood friend and I began hiking the 4000-mile North Country National Scenic Trail. Soon I was writing about that experience as well, and have now written the first book by a hiker of that trail, North Country Cache. If all goes as planned, I will also be the first woman to hike the entire trail, officially finishing my quest in August of this year, 2010.

The husband is getting used to receiving calls from the police saying that my car has been abandoned in the woods, the boys just think I’m crazy, and I’m having the time of my life. Now, if I could just support this addiction…

Tell us a little bit about your book/s.

Joan H. Young: “Never do anything twice,” seems to be my life mantra. I have a collection of self-published and self-printed items. In 1986 I wrote and self-printed a collection of short biographies of historical Christians, called Would You Dare?. It continues to sell a few copies here and there. I have also self-printed a booklet, Devotions for Hikers, weighing under 2 ounces— perfect for backpackers. I’m also a word puzzle aficionado, and have created two booklets of puzzles for outdoor lovers. My biggest project is North Country Cache, a collection of essays recalling 2300 miles of hiking on the North Country National Scenic Trail. Each hike develops a unique feeling, and the reader can experience the joys, the pain, the relationships, the blisters, the jokes, and the never-to-be-forgotten moments of life on the trail. I am continually amazed that I actually finished a project of that size, and readers assure me that it was a worthwhile endeavor.

Are you currently working on any writing projects our readers should watch for release soon?

Joan H. Young: I am currently writing and illustrating a children’s book called Moose in Boots. Morgan, a teenage moose, is sent by his Mama into the northwoods to learn how to be a grownup moose. But Morgan has to learn some lessons before he is comfortable with himself. My hope is that this will be ready to go to a publisher this year, but completing the hiking is my highest priority.

The sequel to North Country Cache: Adventures on a National Scenic Trail

, which will chronicle the remainder of my journey on the North Country Trail, is in progress. It can’t be completed before I finish the hiking! Don’t expect to see it for at least a year. It is titled North Country Quest.

Have you ever won any writing awards? If so, what?

Joan H. Young: I won a few writing contests as a child, but the one that means a lot to me is that North Country Cache won an Honorable Mention from the Independent Publishers Association in 2005, for Regional Great Lakes entries.

Do you belong to any writing forums or organizations that have helped spur your career as a writer? If so, tell us about them and how they’ve helped you.

Joan H. Young: I joined Accentuate Writers Forum soon after it was launched, but didn’t really become active there until the fall of 2009. I was doing a lot of ghostwriting and writing for web sites, and was feeling really stifled. With the encouragement of forum founder, Michy Devon, I’ve started writing a bit of fiction again and have entered a few of the short story contests they sponsor. This has helped me feel that perhaps I do have a drop or two of creative energy left.

How did you feel the day you held the copy of your first book in your hands?

Joan H. Young: Although I had some articles previously published in anthologies, poems in school magazines, trip reports in trail magazines, and had even home-printed Would You Dare?, that has actually sold almost 1000 copies, these were nothing like opening the first case of North Country Cache. To see a book with a glossy cover and my name on it, my publisher imprint… with all the good stuff inside, all the mistakes, all the chapter essays that weren’t as good as I wished, all the chapter essays that I knew were really good… but all mine… the aroma of the ink and paper alone was enough to send me head-over-heels in ecstasy. (That lasted until we had moved all those cases a couple of times!)

When growing up, did you have a favorite author, book series, or book?

Joan H. Young: It would be impossible to pick a favorite book or author, as a child or even now. My favorite genre is the one I am reading at the moment. When I wasn’t outside (and sometimes when I was outside!) I always had my nose in a book. As I look back, I blame part of my case of terminal wanderlust on John Steinbeck, and Travels with Charley. I read this atypical Steinbeck when I was 12, and ever since have been drawn to books by travelers who have a knack of sharing their encounters with readers. Favorites include Peter Jenkins, William Least Heat Moon, and Brad Herzog.

What is your main goal or purpose you would like to see accomplished by or with your writing?

The answer to this is wrapped into the next one…

How has having a book or being published in a book changed your life?

Joan H. Young: Having a book to show people has given me a lot of credibility. I’ve now sold over 1000 copies of North Country Cache, which isn’t bad for a self-published book being promoted by a sloppy marketer (me). People tend to think of this as a niche book, only of interest to hikers. In truth, it avoids hiker lingo, is not a trail journal, and is really a book about life. There are sections for nature-lovers, history buffs, and a fair amount of humor. Since it is presented in short eclectic essays, if you don’t like one chapter there is always hope for the next one! I sense that people treat me differently with a book in my hand. Lots of people say, “I’m writing a book.” Heck, I used to be one of them. But now, I have accomplished that. It makes a difference. I am finding that as I come closer and closer to being one of the first 10 people to hike the entire NCT, and the first woman to do so, that I am getting even more respect.

I want people to learn about the North Country Trail, and to discover what a treasure it is. Everyone has heard of the Appalachian Trail, the Pacific Crest, and Continental Divide. But few people know about the NCT, and even fewer believe that it would be possible to have an interesting trail run through the Northeast/ Midwest United States.

A part of me enjoys the small pond celebrity status, I have to admit. But that is more about the satisfaction it brings me to know that I can make people feel things, care about causes, learn new facts, and stretch their own limits, rather than wanting to be adored.

It’s said that the editing process of publishing a novel with a publisher is can be grueling and often more difficult than actually writing the story. Do you think this is true for you? How did you feel about editing your masterpiece?

Joan H. Young: I chose to self-publish because I knew that this was going to be perceived as a niche book, and the style— essays of assorted styles— was not a common format. As it turned out, I really enjoyed the publishing process.

I found two people, one who does some professional editing, and the other a former English teacher, to edit my manuscript. Both were loving but brutal. My ego survived and the weak essays are better and the strong ones are really good, thanks to their guidance.

I liked working out the formatting, chasing down permissions for lengthy quotes, selecting a printer, creating the locator maps, and all of the parts of the production that go beyond the writing. The whole project got very rushed at the end because I was trying to have the book available for the 25th Anniversary of the Trail conference. The deadline was met, but I think I’ll take the sequel at a slightly slower pace!

Anything you want your readers to know?

Everyone wants to know what I am going to do after I finish hiking the trail. I’ll never run out of trails to hike! There are several connector trails to the NCT, sections which have been moved off road since I hiked there, and thousands of other interesting places to visit… and write about!

I’m hoping to be able to support this wanderlust habit by means of continued writing. For more information about programs that I give, book promotions, signings, and sales, go to http://booksleavingfootprints.com, then click Meet the Author. You can also read a sample chapter of North Country Cache.

Let's Talk About Book Promotion

One of the most interesting and confusing and boring things (yes, all at the same time) that I’ve ever read about on the internet are topics about book promotion. If you’re not trying to promote a book, then chances are, you don’t give a flying fig about book promotion and therefore, you probably won’t want to read my blog I’m about to write about book promotion. Don’t worry, I write about more interesting stuff most of the time, like this post and this post. If you’re not interested in book promotion, go read those instead.

If, however, you’re interested in book promotion, let’s get to it.

A GIVEWAY! Read the rest of this entry »

Lucinda Gunnin Mini-bio:

Lucinda Gunnin is a writer and freelance reporter who currently lives in Southern Illinois with her husband and fellow author Steven Thor Gunnin. She enjoys hot cocoa with her fellow dreamers and women writers at Longbranch Coffeehouse every other Sunday and spends as much quality time as possible each day with her cat Rain. When she isn’t writing, she enjoys cooking, photography and a good mystery novel.

As a freshman in college, Gunnin believed writing was easy, so the quote from Walter Wellesley “Red” Smith, “There’s nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and open a vein.” never quite worked for her until she tried her hand at fiction.

She first saw the line on a poster in the office of her journalism instructor and remembered it years later as she struggled to write her first novel. It was then her husband–author and graphic designer Steven Thor Gunnin–suggested she try writing a short story instead. Cindy took his suggestion and ran with it, discovering she loves the process of writing short stories. Still, she kept the story largely to herself until she found a home at Accentuate Writers Forum and with the love and support of her fellow forum members, she found the courage to share her writing with the rest of the world.

Since finding the Accentuate Writers, Cindy has had stories included in Elements of the Soul, Elements of Time, Best of Unsent Letters and is pending publication with Chicken Soup for the Soul in one of their themed collections. She also won third place in the Fall 2008 24-hour short story contest sponsored by Writers Weekly. She has rededicated herself to finishing that first novel and sharing it with others.

In addition to fiction, Lucinda has written for Heartland Women newspaper and several online sites. She has been published in multiple national magazines in her maiden name, Lucinda Morgan.

Author Interview with Lucinda Gunnin:

It’s rare today to find an author who does nothing but write for a living. Do you have a ‘real’ job other than writing, and if so, what is it? What are some other jobs you’ve had in your life?

Lucinda Gunnin: I’m a reporter by profession and have worked professionally in the newspaper industry for about a decade. In between reporter gigs, I worked as a purchasing agent for a manufacturing company and a billing clerk for a doctor’s office. I started reporting in college for both the newspaper and radio. Now, I am a reporter/writer for a bi-weekly newspaper called Heartland Women and my husband and I co-manage a mini-storage complex.

Tell us a little bit about your writing projects and/or book/s.

Lucinda Gunnin: I have two great novels in the works, both about a dystopian future and the role of normal people in it. This is my favorite kind of book to read and I am especially fond of the sort of survivalist mentality that it takes to write this kind of book. I’ve also discovered I really enjoy writing short stories and am planning to spend more time working on them. I think the short story genre was pushed aside for awhile and now seems to be making a resurgence with readers, at least I hope it is.

Have you ever won any writing awards? If so, what?

Lucinda Gunnin: As a reporter, the writing and reporting are sort of tied together, so the writing awards I have received were all called reporting awards. In 1988, I was named journalist of the year for the Rocky Mountain College Press Association for a combination of feature, editorial and hard news writing. The contest is conducted at the annual conference for the RMCPA. I also won various awards for my content while writing for my college newspaper.

Then, during my first stint of reporting, I was part of a group that was awarded a community service writing award from the Illinois Press Association. The series we wrote about underage drinking was reprinted by the Illinois Department of Public Health as a public service.

Finally, in November, 2008, I took third place for my fiction writing in the Fall 24-Hour Short Story Content from Writer’s Weekly. It was, to date, the largest prize I’ve received for my writing.

What did you feel the day you learned you would be published?

Lucinda Gunnin: It seemed a bit surreal. The story that was first accepted for publication came from a snippet of a conversation I had with my uncle 15 years ago and story sort of took over my life one day until I got it on paper. It was also inspired by a garbage truck and my cat’s reaction to it, so it seemed rather serendipitous. There was a period of time when it seemed so ephemeral that I really wasn’t terribly excited by it, but in January, 2009, as I introduced myself to the local writer’s guild, I said, “My short stories are being included in an anthology printing in March.” Then, it hit me and I was dumbfounded by the reality of it all.

The main characters of your stories – do you find that you put a little of yourself into each of them or do you create them to be completely different from you?

Lucinda Gunnin: Most of my characters have a little bit, or sometimes a lot, of real people in my life in them. In my story “Jasper”, the character of the uncle is very loosely based on my real uncle who was a sheriff’s deputy in Oakland County, Michigan, for most of his adult life who once told me he would teach me to shoot if I moved to the city..

I find it difficult sometimes to separate the character’s actions from what I would do in the situation, so it’s been kind of fun to put the characters in situations that I have never even come close to. Despite the main character’s minor resemblance to me in “Jasper”, I have never owned a retired police dog or even fired a real gun.

Is there an established writer you admire and emulate in your own writing? Do you have a writing mentor?

Lucinda Gunnin: Recently, I discovered Laura Benedict’s writing and decided that I absolutely adore her. I met her at a book signing and found that we are both married to writers, so I hit her up for good advice when your spouse is a writer. I wouldn’t say she’s a mentor, per se, but I definitely would like to emulate her.

Michelle Devon has inspired me in ways she cannot even imagine, though less in fiction than in the other writing I do. Michy is just the type of person that you hope you can compare yourself with favorably.

And, then there are my two personal editors, Emily Henderson and Chanda Green. Without them, I would make considerably more mistakes and probably not write as much. Both push and prod when I need it and help me stay motivated to write and both are excellent writers in their own right.

When growing up, did you have a favorite author, book series, or book?

Lucinda Gunnin: I have an aunt who loved to read and when I turned 9, she gave me the entire series of Nancy Drew books. They inspired me to read and I read them all dozens of times as a child. I also fell in love with “My Side of the Mountain” which Mrs. Rhodes, my fifth-grade teacher read to us. Once I got older, I read Tom Clancy because someone told me girls didn’t read that kind of thing and he’s probably my favorite author since then, though I also adore Stephen King, Dean Koontz and some of the people who write James Patterson’s books, like Maxine Paetro, who co-authored several of the Women’s Murder Club books.

Location and life experience can sprinkle their influence in your writing. Tell us about where you grew up and a little about where you live now.

Lucinda Gunnin: I was born in Michigan and moved to Colorado when I was 8, so I lived in the mountains near Buena Vista until I graduated from high school. The community I lived in before we left Michigan was the neighborhood my mother grew up in and my grandparents lived two blocks away, so during those early years, the neighborhood was like an extended family.

In Buena Vista, we were part of a very small, mostly mining and tourism community. I had 59 people in my graduating class from high school, many of whom I recently reconnected with on Facebook. It definitely impacted the way I look at hunting and environmentalism. I think once you live where people build habitat so they can preserve the animals and then hunt them for food, you have a different attitude toward hunting than you might if you lived elsewhere.

I went to college in Alamosa, often the coldest spot in the continental United States and then went to graduate school in Springfield, Illinois. After I got my M.A., I lived briefly in Michigan in Oakland County which is very much more city than anywhere else I have lived. Finally, I moved to southern Illinois where I have lived for the past 18 years. This is pretty rural with small cities at best, but Carbondale is a university community, so I had access to great speakers, entertainment and a constant flow of intellectual stimulation. St. Louis is just two hours away, so we have the best of all worlds, living where there are trees and plants and open space, but with ballgames, museums and more easily accessible.

We are hoping to move to the one of the coasts in the near future, either Pacific Northwest or New England because we want to get closer to the ocean and because the southern Illinois summers can be painfully long and hot. Once we’re there, we’ll be in our dream location, close to ocean, with the city lights not too far away.

Do you have any pets? What are they? Tell us about them.

Lucinda Gunnin: My cat Rain is my supervisor and inspiration (sometimes). She is a stray we adopted and quickly wrapped the entire family around her dew claws. She has inspired me to take a more active interest in the fate of feral or wild cats and to promote the cause of spaying your pets every chance I get. I adore her, but far too many kittens like her are born each year without loving homes.

Do you watch television? If so, what are your favorite shows? Does television influence of inspire your writing?

Lucinda Gunnin: I don’t watch a lot of network television. I have three or four shows that I enjoy and then buy them on DVD so we can watch them at our convenience. I love Heroes, but don’t talk to me about the current season. I’ll watch it when it’s out in a boxed set. I watch Psych, Bones, House and Eureka this way. We just finished Season 2 of Eureka and we’re watching Season 2 of Psych. I don’t think television influences my writing at all, usually, though I will apply some of the ideas from Jericho into my dystopian novel.

What about movies?

Lucinda Gunnin: We watch about 30 movies a month, maybe more, from old favorite to new releases. I watch a lot of horror and a lot big budget blockbusters. The biggest impact they have on my writing is that I look for things that make me go “huh?” and then make a mental note to avoid them. Recently, we saw the Spike Lee film “Miracle at St. Anna” and while I liked some parts of it, the dialogue seemed completely wrong for the era. So, I try to use movies as a gauge for language and making sure I use terms when they were in use. I don’t want my characters to all sound like they grew up when I did.

Is there anyone you’d like to specifically acknowledge who has inspired, motivated, encouraged or supported your writing?

Lucinda Gunnin: My husband is the one who first challenged me to write a short story, before jumping headlong into a novel. That first effort needs a lot of polishing still , but I am very attached to the story because it was the first complete fiction story I told. He is my harshest critic and most fervent supporter.

I also owe a lot of thanks to the women in my family who have always supported my love of reading and then of writing, my grandmother Wilva Morgan, my aunt Alice Morgan and my mother Sandra Smith.

Thinking about your writing career, is there anything you’d go back and do differently now that you have been published?

Lucinda Gunnin: I had a publisher tell me years ago that he’d like to see more of my work and I took it as rejection and stopped writing fiction for a lot of years. My only regret is that I didn’t just write earlier. I’ve found that if I’m writing, the motivation to eek out publication follows.

Many authors have said that naming their characters is a difficult process, almost like choosing a name for their own child. How did you select the names of some of your lead characters in your book/s?

Lucinda Gunnin: Jasper, the police dog in the story of the same name, came from the first working police dog I ever met. I suspect he has retired by now, but when I chose the name, I based it on a real dog. A lot of my other characters are named because I want the name to not be someone I know. I’m always afraid that if the character’s first name is the name of someone I know, I might unwittingly slip some of that person into the character, so generally I choose names I like, but that are not real people. The exception is last names. I am horrible about choosing last names for my characters, so I usually choose a name from my past.

Now, anything else you want your readers to know?

I’ve started a couple blogs, but always get distracted from them fairly quickly. I find Facebook and Twitter to be very great ways to keep in touch and make new friends and use my MySpace page largely for keeping up with friends and family. Anyone who doesn’t already know too much about me can find me on Facebook where I’m sure my closest friends will reveal all my secrets.

The Accentuate Anthology is available through retailers both in person and online, or you can order with discounts directly from the publisher, Twin Trinity Media.

Lucinda Gunnin Mini-bio:

Lucinda Gunnin is a writer and freelance reporter who currently lives in Southern Illinois with her husband and fellow author Steven Thor Gunnin. She enjoys hot cocoa with her fellow dreamers and women writers at Longbranch Coffeehouse every other Sunday and spends as much quality time as possible each day with her cat Rain. When she isn’t writing, she enjoys cooking, photography and a good mystery novel.

As a freshman in college, Gunnin believed writing was easy, so the quote from Walter Wellesley “Red” Smith, “There’s nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and open a vein.” never quite worked for her until she tried her hand at fiction.

She first saw the line on a poster in the office of her journalism instructor and remembered it years later as she struggled to write her first novel. It was then her husband–author and graphic designer Steven Thor Gunnin–suggested she try writing a short story instead. Cindy took his suggestion and ran with it, discovering she loves the process of writing short stories. Still, she kept the story largely to herself until she found a home at Accentuate Writers Forum and with the love and support of her fellow forum members, she found the courage to share her writing with the rest of the world. Read the rest of this entry »

About ten years ago was when I started writing fiction with a serious intent that I might some day finish a book and get published, I set out on the journey with absolutely no experience. I started writing, but everything I did ended up being a personal essay or a journal-type entry or poetry. Writing fiction, with a real story, dialogue, characters that are whole and complete, with a storyline… that takes a skill set I didn’t yet have, but I sure had the burning desire. It seems strange to think of it now, but ten years ago, the internet wasn’t what it is today. In my small West Texas town where I used to live, cable internet was brand new and super slow (compared to now, but super fast compared to the phone!) I had a phone line that I would unplug from my phone and plug into my computer.

I remember when Call Wave was the big deal, so that I could see who was calling me while I was on the computer and didn’t have to turn off my call waiting or get kicked off when someone called. A lot has changed since then, and now, I work on a super high-speed internet connection – though not nearly as fast as the one I used to have back home, but that’s another story altogether – and the internet is an everyday waking, breathing, pulsing part of my life. I can’t imagine going back to where I’m only on a few hours in the evenings after the kids have gone to bed and no one would possibly be calling me. Read the rest of this entry »

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