Prepping for #PitMad

Image by Bruno/Germany from Pixabay

Since joining Twitter in 2013 I’ve been an avid fan of pitchfests, but I’ve never actually participated in one. For this Thursday’s #PitMad I thought I’d give it a shot.

What’s #PitMad, you ask? It’s an event on Twitter where authors pitch their book projects in 280 characters or less to an audience of literary agents in the hopes of landing one. Agents follow the hashtag throughout the day and favorite pitches they’re interested in. That favorite represents an invitation to the author to submit their query.

How likely is it to find an agent this way? Probably not very, but it’s still worth joining the party. The writing community is super supportive and fun to engage with, and no matter the outcome, trying to sell the idea of your novel on the strength of one or two punchy sentences is an important skill.

I have three completed manuscripts polished up and ready to go. Etiquette allows for three Tweets per project, ideally spread out through the day, and also encourages retweeting other authors to show support. It can get a little noisy, but it’s such a blast! That said, if you mute me for the day I won’t be offended.

Here are a few of my pitches:

HALLOWEEN ETERNAL (middle grade horror)

SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES X GOOSEBUMPS

12 y/o Jonah and his friends are thrilled when a Halloween carnival comes to town—until they find out it’s haunted. Can they escape before the night is through, or are they doomed to an eternal Halloween?

 

THE HOUSE ON LINDEN WAY (adult horror/gothic suspense)

THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE X FEVER DREAM

When Amber revisits her childhood home, her young daughter vanishes inside. Trapped by living memories, Amber must fight the lure of her past—and the ghosts who reside there—before her child is lost forever.

 

SWEET DREAMS MYSTERIES #1 (young adult mystery)

SCOOBY DOO X MURDER

When her favorite teacher mysteriously vanishes, HS senior and ice cream slinger Genevieve decides to investigate. But things get complicated when she finds a dead body. Can she and her meddling friends solve the murder before someone else gets iced?

Wish me luck!

The Secret to Social Media–One Year Later

Image from Flickr by mkhmarketing

Image from Flickr by mkhmarketing

This month I’m celebrating a birthday. No, not mine! What are you thinking? I turned 39 in July, and I’m not ready to turn 40 quite yet. 😉

What this month marks is one year of blogging, tweeting, pinning, and goodreading, although my computer tells me that’s not a word. In one of my earliest blog posts, The Secret to Social Media, I wrote about my initial reactions to each of the following four sites, and in this post I’ll tell you what’s changed a year later.

Pinterest

Then: As a writer, I’d forgotten the pure joy of expressing emotions solely through visual imagery. With Pinterest, you can create boards that reflect the things you care about, and you never have to say a word.

Now: Yep, sounds lovely, but Pinterest was the one to go. I still have an account and I’ll probably revisit it sometime, but it’s just not possible to juggle five or six social media accounts. I knew this going in, but I figured the one to fall would be…

Goodreads

Then: What I love most about this site, so far, is I have one place to list my “to be read” books. Now I can collect all the scraps of paper, sticky notes, and electronic lists buried in my phone and shelve those titles in Goodreads.

Now: For a long time, this was all I could do on Goodreads. The problem is that it’s not a user-friendly site. But on January first, I resolved to read a book each week for 2014. Goodreads came in handy for this resolution because of their Reading Challenge—where you publicly declare a reading goal for the new year. Anyone can view your progress. That was the motivation I needed to stay on task, so I dug my heels in and learned how to navigate the site. Now I truly love Goodreads, and I’m only three books behind my goal.

Twitter

Then: This was supposed to be my favorite, because that’s what everybody says. I do like Twitter—there’s something about the immediacy of it that’s freeing—but it’s confusing.

Now: Surprise! Guess which social media site is my favorite? Twitter did take time to understand—in fact, it would be months before I caught on. But once I got comfortable jumping into conversations with total strangers, I met some amazing people. Most are generous—Twitter is all about sharing and discovering. Many are also fall-down funny; I’ve laughed myself to tears on more occasions than I can count. The only downside is that it can be a distraction.

Blogging

Then: My personal favorite. This has been a shock—I worried about the time it would take to blog, I worried no one would read my blog . . . now I know it’s about perspective.

Now: I admit I’ve lost that perspective several times. There’s no question that blogging can feel frustrating because it is time-intensive and once in a while seems as though you’re talking to yourself. To ease that frustration, I made some adjustments:

  1. I no longer spend several hours on each post. Yes, I did that. Those early posts were drafted on Mondays and heavily edited throughout the week, then published on Fridays, which could take all morning.
  2. I stopped worrying excessively about typos.
  3. I started posting less frequently. In the beginning, I posted weekly, but twice a month works better for me and I actually get more visitors that way. I think you have to give people a chance to miss you. 🙂

One great thing about blogging is looking back on old posts; it was sweet to read the first one—written a few days after I received my contract. I was so unsure of what lay ahead: I didn’t know what the book title would be, or what the cover would look like, or when it would get published. All I knew back then was a dream had come true, and that was enough.

Oh, and the secret to social media? It hasn’t changed: give yourself permission to have fun.

(See the original post HERE.)

Dear Writer on Twitter: Don’t Be a B*!#*

Image from Flickr by chrisinplymouth

Image from Flickr by chrisinplymouth

I love writers, and I love Twitter. But I’m getting tired of writers on Twitter. Why?

Because writers tend to brand themselves so successfully they become nothing more than their brands.

And that’s sad, right? None of us is one dimensional. When a person is passionate about a topic to the point of obsession, it can be sweetly endearing. But there’s a difference between someone reaching out to others for a shared sense of belonging and someone selling their brand, and the difference is always obvious on Twitter.

Honestly, I’m not all that interesting. If Facebook broke down the subject of my posts into percentages, I’m sure 90% would be about my children. So I hate to judge others for being boring. 😉

But when writers only tweet about their writing, or the subject of their writing, or links to other authors’ writing in the hopes that those authors will then tweet links to their writing, it’s beyond boring, it’s self-defeating. These tweets are just thinly veiled commercials, and people tune them out.

A blog should be focused—readers are coming to you for a particular reason. But Twitter is a conversation, and it’s much more fun when the conversation is varied. Pick three things besides your writing that you love, do a search for those subjects and connect with others who share your interests. I reached out to people passionate about writing and reading, but also to those tweeting about parenting, baseball, and my favorite bands. The music fans are the most fun. 🙂 What drags down my Twitter feed are the writers.

Please stop selling yourself short. Stop selling yourself period. I get it—you’re a writer. Hey, me too! That’s probably why we connected in the first place. Now do us both a favor and talk about something else.

I promise not to unfollow you if you sometimes post about your cat, or the sunset, or how great it felt just now when a song you love came on the radio at exactly the moment you needed to hear it. Be inspiring, be interesting, be funny, be vulnerable, be nerdy, be cool, be yourself.

Don’t be a brand.