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WRITERS' Journal
Table of Contents
January/February 2008
Volume 29, Number 1
.....Editor's Note,
by Leon Ogroske
Writers make a difference in
what people think. Take a look at a newspaper, a magazine, or a book and you
will see that writers are affecting people’s lives every day. How do you affect
others? On page 14, Nina Durfee challenges us to discover our purpose in her
article “Swapping Nouns for Adjectives.” Step back and evaluate yourself and
your writing. Writers need to take time for themselves. Drop the pen, shut off
the computer, and spend some time with yourself. Assess your assets! Who are
you? What do you want to accomplish? How do you want to make a difference?
Once you have a handle on your
purpose, you might want to dispel all your fears and quit making excuses. This
is a new year! Read how Dara Girard, on page 16, addresses some of the main
excuses writers use to not write. Then go to page 41 and discover how Tatiana
Claudy finds time to write with “The Perfect Time Schedule.”
All professionals need to
understand networking in order to utilize their skills to the greatest
advantage. Writers can network in an amazing number of ways, as explained by
Cynthia Lueck Sowden in “Networking for $$$” on page 46. See how she shows us
that networking contacts can reveal numerous avenues of income.
On page 22, Felice Prager
introduces us to an unusual freelance market: publications that use quizzes. I
never considered this type of market; yet I believe that many writers will find
creating puzzles and quizzes for children very fulfilling. Let’s not leave out
the adult market. Query one of your usual adult markets on this topic to
determine whether there might be an interest for such a column. After all, who
doesn’t like a challenge?
This issue highlights the
winners of the Romance contest—nothing too erotic; instead, just good heartfelt
writing. “Dog Tricks” offers an interesting point of view. The Write to Win!
grand prize winner “Pat Hand” should keep the poker player in you interested.
Leon Ogroske, editor
Columns
4 .....Readers'
P.O.V.
5 .....Massaging the Muse, Lynne Pisano
World-Building
from the Ground Up
6 .....Marketing Helps, Janet Elaine Smith
Hitch Your Trailer
Here
7 .....Vocabulary
Review, Carolyn Howard-Johnson
Stress
8 .....Effective Screenwriting,
by
Christina Hamlett
Baring All for the Spotlight
As
we go to press, I find myself reading the unpublished novel of a business
associate who has paid for my professional advise on whether I think her novel
would make a hot movie. "And every single word is true," she reminds me. "It's
important everyone know that."...
10 .....Computer
Business, by Angela Render
Nine Questions Your Developer Should Ask You
Building
a Web site is like building a house. Changes are easy to make before you've
broken ground, but time consuming and costly if you change something in the
middle or at the end of the build—not impossible, just expensive and time
consuming....
12 .....Photography Techniques, by Ronald D. Kness
Product Photography Made Easy
With
the advent of listing items for sale on eBay.com, Amzon.com, or your own
Internet Web site with a product catalog of your writings, it is now easier than
ever to show a picture of your item as part of the listing. It is a proven fact
that items sell better if the potential buyer can see the item. But, it is not
always as easy as it looks. Below are some of the things to watch out for when
taking product images....
58 .....For
Beginners Only, by Catherine L. Tully
Going Above and
Beyond
When
you are a freelance writer, developing long-term relationships with editors at
various publications can be an enormous help in the seemingly never-ending quest
for financial stability....
59 .....Words...Tools of Our Trade,
by Betty Garton Ulrich
Acknowledging the End of Another Part of WJ's Past
By
the time you read this, another year will be launched. But I write this in
September of 2007, and I have just returned from the funeral of Marilyn Bailey,
who, with me, cofounded the precursor of this WRITERS' Journal, known as
The Inkling. Marilyn was not only my cofounder and one of my cherished
"writing pals," but she was also a true friend....
60 .....WRITERS'
Journal Market Report, by
Laurie Graziano
January/February 2008 Market Report Plus, Kelly Koch of Soft Dolls & Animals!
and Scrap & Stamp Arts
What makes a doll unique is its ability to
transcend gender and age differences. Dolls are not merely vestiges of
childhood. In later years they are referenced frequently during momentous
occasions such as the first words out of a father's mouth upon holding his
"doll-like" baby daughter. From that moment, she is known as Dolly, because
dolls are forever, and Dollys give a lifetime of joy to all!....
Markets: Soft Dolls & Animals!, Scrap & Stamp Arts, Alternative Medicine,
ReadyMade, New York Spaces, Watercolor Magazine, Art & Antiques, Knucklebones,
his&hers.
Feature Articles
14
.....Swapping Nouns for Adjectives, by Nina Durfee
The Key to
Discovering our Purpose
Nothing beats the smug satisfaction of
nailing a complex concept with the clarity and precision of a single word. Less
is more. Writing our way down the Yellow Brick Road to Strunk-and-White
publishers and our readers. Serving ourselves is another matter....
16
.....Excuses, by Dara Girard
The Ultimate
Dream Killer
Excuses are some of the biggest dream killers
in a writer's life. When something happens and you're knocked flat, excuses give
you a great reason to stay down and never get up again. They are prevalent and
insidious, causing a lot of untold stories and ideas to remain so. Why? Because
everyone believes them.....
21
.....From Lowly Letters to the Big Time, by Jim Patterson
Marketing the
Small Stuff
You won't get rich writing letters to the
editor of a newspaper, but with some marketing savvy it could lead to a paid
assignment. Short, timely letters to the editor of a newspaper, especially the
national papers, can get your name in print quickly. But a writer can't settle
for only that. Apply a little marketing and you could find a paying job.....
22
.....Selling Smart Quizzes That Teach, by Felice Prager
Creating
Puzzles for Older Students
Serendipity
often plays a large part in the career of a writer. We know we are skilled,
creative, and driven, but it may take a little luck to direct us toward turning
our vision into a reality....
41
.....The Perfect Time Schedule, by Tatiana Claudy
Fact or Fiction?
What did Saint Benedict first introduce in his monastery at Subiaco, Italy, in
the sixteenth century, that became one of the pillars of modern life? "Fixed
times" for manual labor and for sacred reading—the time schedule. Eviatar
Zerubavel, professor of sociology, calls it "one of the most remarkable
inventions of Western civilization."...
43
.....Apples and Oranges, by Rob Loughran
Adapting Your Novel
When
I had an opportunity to adapt my novel High Steaks into a script, I
thought, much like Union soldiers who thought they'd be home from the war for
Christmas: "Great, it'll take a week; two, tops." But turning an 82,000-word,
255-page book into a 17,000-word, 112-page screenplay was probably the most
exacting and arduous writing task I've ever accomplished....
44
.....Finding the "Where", by Jill Jepson
The Right Setting Sharpens a Scene
Early
in Jan Smiley's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel A Thousand Acres, the
protagonist, Ginnie, runs into a neighbor, Loren Clark, at the bank. He tells
her his long-lost brother Jess is returning to town, an event that will
ultimately change her life. It's a quick scene—not more than a few sentences—but
it sets the stage for much of what happens in the remaining 365 pages of the
novel....
Fiction
July 2007
Romance Contest Winners:
27
.....The Gem, by Lauren King
First Prize
Winner of July 2007 Romance Contest
28
.....Rebounded, by Linda Thorne
Second Prize
Winner of July 2007 Romance Contest
30
.....Dog Tricks, by Sandra Gaffigan
Third Prize
Winner of July 2007 Romance Contest
More Fiction:
33
.....Your're Damned If You Don't, by Dale Worcester
H. M. Winner
of 2006 Fiction Contest
August 20, 2007
Write to Win! Winner
38
....."The Pat Hand"—"Four large...," by J. R. Kilgore
Poetry
51 .....Every Day With Poetry, by Esther M. Leiper
Folk
Poetry—No Joke
Where do the roots of poetry start? Can we in
our hope of producing a poet onto children who have nursery rhymes read to them
nightly, whose parents point out red lights, green lights, stop signs, and
detour markers, all of these begin visual stimuli having useful—indeed,
necessary—meanings? What about poets from deprived backgrounds who grasp for
words and reasons on their own? How do they develop and, in time, enclose core
beliefs and observations with ordered words?....
55 .....Esther Comments On..., by Esther M. Leiper
"The Blood in Babi Yar"
and "Fool Me Once"
"The
Blood in Babi Yar" presents the tale of a terrible slaughter that occurred
during the Second World War, when 100,000 Jews and other "undesirables" were
stripped, shot, and dumped down a ravine in the Russian Ukraine. The name of
this rift in the land (indeed this rift in the fabric of civilization) is Babi
Yar. The speaker remains nameless and could be a man or a woman....
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