Hi there! Natalie here today instead of Casey. Today I'm excited to share a writing tip from Royce Buckingham along with a giveaway of DEMONKEEPER, the first book in his MG series. Details about Royce's books and the contest are at the end of the post. First here's Royce's tip:
Advice for intermediate writers –
picking your best story.
Beginning writers just need to get
writing. True. Even years into the craft, the standard advice is to keep
writing. Always. Absolutely. But here’s a hint for those of you have been at it
for a little while and want to use your writing time as efficiently as possible.
The skill of determining in which
story to invest your time is an invaluable time-saver. It can take a year (or
more) to write a novel. You don’t want to write something that has an audience
of one (you) and cannot sell. I did this—for me it was a literary medieval
fantasy tragedy. The tragedy was that there was no market for my conglomeration
of genres and styles. And it didn’t help that it was boring. I had about a
zillion ideas, and I chose that one. Good practice, yes. But not a good use of
that year of my life.
As a writer, you ought to have
about one zillion ideas. Indeed, if you intend to make a career of it, you
must. So why write the first thing that pops into your head? I’ll go you one
further; why write the thing that pops into your head that you love the most?
Sacrilege you say? You think you
simply must, must, must write that story you absolutely love?
Let me put it another way. I love
all of my ideas. They’re like my children (you’ve heard this, right?). I submit
that you are not a single story. You’re a writer of many stories. So why not write
something you love (could be any of your children) that your potential (and
as-of-yet unknown) audience will love the most?
So many writers I meet are so
determined to write that one story that they love that they’ll forgo all
others, whether or not anyone else loves it. And, importantly, whether or not
it can sell.
Here’s my advice for avoiding
spending a year of your life writing something you think is great, but no one
else will.
Try writing a “one-page” for 5-10
different stories. Then try them on people. Everyone will tell you that a
single story idea is “good.” But it might be more valuable to have each of
those people tell you which story is the best.
This happened to me via contests. For
thirteen years, I wrote stories for competitions, but DEMONKEEPER was the one
that kept winning. Hmmm, I
thought, maybe that’s the one I should
work on for submission to publishers? I did. It sold. The rest is
history (and two sequels—DEMONEATER and DEMONOCITY).
The above advice is a tool, not a
rule. But it’s a tool I wish I’d had before I invested a year in my unsellable novel
and more than a decade in all of those other stories that did not win
competitions. It was all good practice craft-wise, and I certainly had to
practice for a number of years before anything
was good enough to sell, but after I was a competent writer (say seven years
in), I could have streamlined the getting published process a bit (by years) by
testing my story ideas on as many people as possible at the
outline/summary/synopsis stage before writing them all.
Best of luck!
Thanks Royce for your advice. Here's a description from Amazon of DEMONKEEPER, the first book in the series that Royce Buckingham is offering for a giveaway.
Demons are all around us—most of them are relatively harmless, like the
ones that go bump in the night or make you stub your toe. But some are
dangerous—some can kill. Since he was orphaned as a boy, Nat has been
trained by his aged mentor Daliwahl to be a demonkeeper, controlling a
menagerie of demons in their old, rickety house in Seattle. But now
Dahliwahl is gone and Nat is on his own.
Keeping demons isn’t a very
social activity, and when Nat goes on a date with Sandy, a junior
librarian’s assistant, it’s a disaster in more ways that one—while Nat’s
out, a very scary demon called the Beast escapes. Can Nat get the Beast
back to the house and make things right with Sandy—and do it all by
himself?With its fast-paced action, slapstick humor, and a winning, unlikely hero, Demonkeeper is a high-spirited romp that will keep readers glued to the page.
And a description of the second book, DEMONEATER, from Amazon:
It’s up to Nathaniel Grimlock, the teenage Demonkeeper, to control them, but when he discovers what’s stirring them up—a legendary monster known as the Demoneater—he finds that he’s in over his head yet again!
And finally here's a description of the final book in the series, DEOMONOCITY, from Amazon:
Seattle’s local Demonkeeper, Nathaniel Grimlock, is lost at sea. In his absence, the demons have taken over the city!
It’s up to his delinquent apprentice Richie and Nat’s two competing girlfriends to prevent Seattle’s destruction until he can find his way home to face the most powerful demon of them all.
Demonocity is the catastrophic conclusion to Royce Buckingham’s bestselling German series.
To enter the contest for DEMONKEEPER, all you need to do is be a follower (just click the follow button if you’re not a follower) and leave a comment by September 8th. I’ll announce the winner on September 10th. If your e-mail is not on Blogger, please list it in your comment. International entries are welcome.
The books sound awesome! I'll definitely pick them up for my classroom :)
ReplyDeleteGreat advice. Having the ideas definitely isn't a problem - choosing the right one is so important. Thanks for the tip!
Tremendous advice! Every idea we have is good but perhaps not the right one.
ReplyDeleteI totally agree that reaching out and asking others what grabs them can be a huge time saver when deciding what story to continue with. I'd love Demonkeeper. It looks exactly like the kind of book I can get into.
ReplyDeleteI just love how Royce's incredible writerly journey enlightened what works wonders for him! Take care
ReplyDeletex
This book sounds super awesome. I love the sound of these Demons (hope that does not make me evil, I just love the nasty elements, they bring a thrill and adventure into the stories.)
ReplyDeleteThanks Royce for the wonderful post and sharing your incredible writing journey with us. Good luck!.
This was an absolutely fantastic post and something I've been thinking about all summer. So thank you for it! I think I definitely still fall into the beginner category and certainly my current WIP is not something I'm in "love" with , but I'm enjoying I guess along the way. I think I'm worried that yes, I have a lot of ideas, but not sure which one I ought to committ the time to when I start the next one. Particularly when I'm not a young gal anymore, I work full-time 10 hour days at a unenjoyable job, and I am so new to all this.
ReplyDeleteBut what you said about writing out an actual page and running it by about 5 people , sounds good! I don't even have friends to ask about that and I don't have CP's yet. I guess I've been waiting to have a full novel done, and fully revised before I'd even consider letting someone see it...so I"m not sure how comfortable I'd feel posting any ideas online in contests or sharing with others. Like I feel I need to "grow" more as a writer, but maybe I'll always feel that way.
So much learn and so so little time in the course of day :( Rats.
I'd love to have an email chat with you :)
Congratulations on the novel. They sound fantastic. And I especially love the cover art on the 2nd and 3rd installments!!
So glad you enjoyed the post. You might want to check out some of the resources to the right, like SCBWI, Absolute Write, etc. for places to connect with other writers when you're ready to find a critique group. Good luck!
DeleteWonderful advice, Royce. Thanks for sharing with us. This looks like another fun series I'll have to read!
ReplyDeleteGo Royce! I'm not a believer that all story ideas are created equal, and the ones an author loves may not be the best in the long run. Writing (as with most of the fine arts) is completely an artistic endeavor only if the writer has no interest in publishing and is writing for fun. Otherwise, it's half-art, half-business. Thanks for pointing that out and sharing your path to being published. Best wishes to you in everything you do. :-)
ReplyDeleteGreat tip, Royce. Start trying out my ideas before I've spent over a year on them:)
ReplyDeleteThan you!
Sounds really good!! Thanks for the chance to win!
ReplyDeletenatasha_donohoo_8 at hotmail dot com
Thanks for sharing, Royce.
ReplyDeleteGFC follower.
lesly7ch(at)yahoo(dot)com
thanks for the advise. sometimes i got so much idea but always the problem is about writing :(
ReplyDeleteeli_y83@yahoo.com
Thanks for the share.
ReplyDeleteGFC: maly
msbookworm22(at)yahoo(dot)com
Having just returned from SCBWI-LA where everyone kept saying "write what you love" this tip really resonated with me. Of course you need to write what you love, but it is important that publishers, agents, and readers love it too! Great advice, Royce. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteI really like the idea of asking readers to pick the best, especially if you have a too nice critique group.
ReplyDeleteI'm kind of on the fence about this advice. On the one hand, if a story isn't strong, it isn't strong. And you're right. Knowing the stories that "work" and the ones that don't is a skill. But just because a book doesn't fit neatly into a category doesn't mean it isn't worth one's time. Once you start building a following, it seems your readers want to read everything you write. Look at Stephen King! :D LOL. Just my 2 cents~ <3
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ReplyDeleteDemonkeeper sounds great. I like the idea of Demons (hope that does not make me evil). Thanks Royce for this great post.
ReplyDeleteI really like the idea of hunting demons - but honestly, it was the covers on the three books that convinced me to enter. If I saw them at my bookstore, I would pick up the first in the series.
ReplyDeleteI follow by email (nrlymrtl [at] gmail [dot] com) and by twitter (@nrlymrtl).
I tweeted: https://twitter.com/nrlymrtl/status/238297261799530497
This sounds like a fun book! I wish I could bring it back in time and read it to my fourth grade class :)
ReplyDeleteWhat you say makes sense, Royce, but your advice is so-o hard to follow! The one page selection choice is a great idea because I'm not sure I can see the best tree in the forest of ideas.
ReplyDeleteI follow at wbgreenley (at) gmail (dot) com.
As a fellow published author of "Bakemono" http://liferattle.ca/publishing/bakemono.html a collection of short stories about things that go bump in the night, I appreciate your advice about writing all the time. Congratulations on your success! As part of a digital publishing team I also appreciate the work you have done on your blog and hope to connect with you soon regarding a hot launch we have coming up.
ReplyDeleteThank you
christy[at]premierdigitalpublishing[dot]com
That's a great tip, and yet another reason writer's groups are invaluable! I've done this (sort of, in a round-about way) with my group and I can definitely tell which stories they like best. I just never thought of doing it deliberately as a career-tool. Thanks for sharing this, Natalie! :D
ReplyDeleteThank you for bringing this book to my Attention. It sounds something that my niece would enjoy!
ReplyDeleteI would like to invite you to my blog for some Trivia Fun!
http://b00kr3vi3ws.blogspot.in/2012/08/meme-trivia-time.html
Oh wow, that's a good idea. I have a whole slew of ideas that I love, and it's never occurred to me to see if anybody else likes them. Sounds like a shortcut to avoid a lot of heartache. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteI follow via GFC : Caroline F**ic
ReplyDeleteE-mail: caroferic [at] yahoo [dot] fr
Tweeted: https://twitter.com/LyricFG/status/239898170602172416
Thanks for the giveaway!
Follow via GFC: Anubha
ReplyDeleteand via Email: anubha56(at)gmail(dot)com
Tweet: https://twitter.com/miliminni/status/240157153569148928
thank you very much for the giveaway... :)
Super Tip!! As always :) And super contest! Whether I am lucky enought to win or not - I'll be getting this book ASAP! Thanks.
ReplyDelete