In the Manor of the Ghost Contest (Part One...)
To celebrate the release of my new book In the Manor of the Ghost this June 2010 through Desert Breeze Publishing, I am giving away (4) $20.00 Gift Certificates to Desert Breeze Publishing.
For a chance to win one, simply become a follower at this blog site, Write Where I Want to Be or one of the sites listed below by May 1st.
Winners will be chosen from the follower lists of said sites and announced by May 7th.
http://tinapinson.typepad.com/blog/
http://twitter.com/Tina_Pinson
Details for In the Manor of the Ghost Contest (Part 2)... coming soon
****Disclaimer.... entering this contest is considered a confirmation of eligilbility on behalf of the enterer in accord with rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws and is void where prohibited. Contest is open to U.S. Residents only. Odds of winning depend on number of entrants****
Friday, April 16, 2010
Labels:
celebrate,
contest,
Manor of the Ghost
Award Winning author Tina Pinson resides in Grand Junction, Colorado with Danny, her husband of thirty-eight plus years. They are blessed to have three sons, and 10 grandchildren.
It is her prayer that her stories, though fiction, will transport you to worlds beyond and touch your spirit and give you a closer insight to yourself and God.
Sunday, April 11, 2010
In the Manor of the Ghost.
My new ebook In the Manor of the Ghost will be available June 2010 from Desert Breeze Publishing. In celebration, I will be holding a contest to kindle some excitement. Details coming soon.
My new ebook In the Manor of the Ghost will be available June 2010 from Desert Breeze Publishing. In celebration, I will be holding a contest to kindle some excitement. Details coming soon.
Award Winning author Tina Pinson resides in Grand Junction, Colorado with Danny, her husband of thirty-eight plus years. They are blessed to have three sons, and 10 grandchildren.
It is her prayer that her stories, though fiction, will transport you to worlds beyond and touch your spirit and give you a closer insight to yourself and God.
Monday, April 05, 2010
Don't just tell the story... TELL THE STORY.
Okay that sounds like a contradiction.
And for some of you, like me, who love to put scenes in your stories that are rather telling or love to place omniscient clues through out, then it sounds rather like a license to TELL.
Perhaps it's a little of both. (Shhh don't tell anyone.)
Before anyone believes I'm saying it's okay to use alot of telling in your story, let me ask a few questions and hopefully explain what I mean when I say we need to learn to TELL THE STORY.
To me telling the story is a tool I use to help me extract my story from my brain, clarify what I see and write it down. Sounds simple enough. Right?
How do you tell people about your story or work in progress?
Do you sit down, set your face in a sour lemon sucking disposition and while using a monotone voice, say. . . This story is about such and such.. and so and so? I think you will find it interesting because this character does blah, blah, blah.
I can already see the audience squirming in their seats, patting their lips to keep from yawning and blinking steadily so their eyes won't roll back in their skulls. Surely you don't talk about your story, your baby that way.
If your like me when you tell someone about your story, you get a bit excited.
You try to paint the picture of your story through your words and the inflection of your voice, because you want people to be interested in your book.
I tend to get so excited in the telling I may freak a few people out. Or slap them silly with use of over exuberant hand gestures. LOL
When I see them running the other direction it's a sure sign I've shared more than they probably wanted to know. Seems they might not have wanted a paragraph by paragraph breakdown when they asked how my story was coming along.
Maybe there are times when a person can overshow. HMMM. Just a thought.
I have been criticized for writing telling scenes, but as I told you earlier, sometimes I like them. Sometimes I think we try to remove too much. On the other hand, I try to show more often too. And when I have a hard time with a scene I close my eyes and envision myself telling the story about my characters and their lives.
My family calls that LOST, day tripping or zoned out. They come in and find me crying and talking back and forth between my characters and wonder if I'm not going crazy or already there. But they have learned to leave me alone because they are never quite certain how a character might react if pulled from their scene.
Other times, I try to tell someone else about it and just to hear the words in my mind, or in my own voice, it helps me build on the scene and hopefully draw the reader into a world. A world they can see with their own eyes just because my words allowed them the ability to take the trip.
And isn't that what we as writers hope to accomplish? Of course we want to reach an audience with our stories. Several of us probably hope to sell a gazillion copies and become the next big name in writing.
I know I don't want people to buy my books, read the first chapter and toss the book aside because it was boring as spit and they could care less about the characters.
I realize not everyone is going to like the way I write. Just as I realize I shouldn't try to write like everyone else?
Then I lose the story teller's heart that I was gifted with. I don't care to go there. Do you?
What do you think about telling scenes?
What process do you go through to paint a picture with your words and get beyond the monochrome realm?
Do you think a person can over show in a story?
Okay that sounds like a contradiction.
And for some of you, like me, who love to put scenes in your stories that are rather telling or love to place omniscient clues through out, then it sounds rather like a license to TELL.
Perhaps it's a little of both. (Shhh don't tell anyone.)
Before anyone believes I'm saying it's okay to use alot of telling in your story, let me ask a few questions and hopefully explain what I mean when I say we need to learn to TELL THE STORY.
To me telling the story is a tool I use to help me extract my story from my brain, clarify what I see and write it down. Sounds simple enough. Right?
How do you tell people about your story or work in progress?
Do you sit down, set your face in a sour lemon sucking disposition and while using a monotone voice, say. . . This story is about such and such.. and so and so? I think you will find it interesting because this character does blah, blah, blah.
I can already see the audience squirming in their seats, patting their lips to keep from yawning and blinking steadily so their eyes won't roll back in their skulls. Surely you don't talk about your story, your baby that way.
If your like me when you tell someone about your story, you get a bit excited.
You try to paint the picture of your story through your words and the inflection of your voice, because you want people to be interested in your book.
I tend to get so excited in the telling I may freak a few people out. Or slap them silly with use of over exuberant hand gestures. LOL
When I see them running the other direction it's a sure sign I've shared more than they probably wanted to know. Seems they might not have wanted a paragraph by paragraph breakdown when they asked how my story was coming along.
Maybe there are times when a person can overshow. HMMM. Just a thought.
I have been criticized for writing telling scenes, but as I told you earlier, sometimes I like them. Sometimes I think we try to remove too much. On the other hand, I try to show more often too. And when I have a hard time with a scene I close my eyes and envision myself telling the story about my characters and their lives.
My family calls that LOST, day tripping or zoned out. They come in and find me crying and talking back and forth between my characters and wonder if I'm not going crazy or already there. But they have learned to leave me alone because they are never quite certain how a character might react if pulled from their scene.
Other times, I try to tell someone else about it and just to hear the words in my mind, or in my own voice, it helps me build on the scene and hopefully draw the reader into a world. A world they can see with their own eyes just because my words allowed them the ability to take the trip.
And isn't that what we as writers hope to accomplish? Of course we want to reach an audience with our stories. Several of us probably hope to sell a gazillion copies and become the next big name in writing.
I know I don't want people to buy my books, read the first chapter and toss the book aside because it was boring as spit and they could care less about the characters.
I realize not everyone is going to like the way I write. Just as I realize I shouldn't try to write like everyone else?
Then I lose the story teller's heart that I was gifted with. I don't care to go there. Do you?
What do you think about telling scenes?
What process do you go through to paint a picture with your words and get beyond the monochrome realm?
Do you think a person can over show in a story?
Award Winning author Tina Pinson resides in Grand Junction, Colorado with Danny, her husband of thirty-eight plus years. They are blessed to have three sons, and 10 grandchildren.
It is her prayer that her stories, though fiction, will transport you to worlds beyond and touch your spirit and give you a closer insight to yourself and God.
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